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air passenger quaranitine Posted on: Fri, 21 Oct 2005 16:41:00 +0000 (UTC)


LA Times story....

# With the airport a major entry point from Asia, officials are
considering how to sequester a jet's passengers to prevent the spread
of disease.

By Jennifer Oldham, Times Staff Writer

Officials at Los Angeles International Airport are racing to devise
plans to quarantine hundreds of passengers on the airfield for days to
prevent the spread of bird flu.

Federal officials could order travelers on a flight confined, if they
suspect that one of them is infected with the deadly disease.


In the last week, airport executives have stepped up planning for the
virus, meeting with health agencies to discuss how to handle a
potential outbreak. As the nation's No. 1 gateway for Asian travelers,
LAX could be a hot spot if the bird flu were to turn into a form than
could pass between humans.

"This is a logistics nightmare," said Michael DiGirolamo, a deputy
executive director for Los Angeles World Airports, who briefed the
city's Airport Commission on Monday.

Twenty-six flights arrive at LAX each day from Asia - more than twice
as many as at any other U.S. airport. Every day, up to 10,000
passengers disembark from those aircraft. Aviation officials worry that
the bird flu could mimic severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS,
which journeyed to five countries in 24 hours after emerging in rural
China in spring 2003.

The H5N1 strain, which is spread by migrating waterfowl, first appeared
in Southeast Asia two years ago. Last week, it was found in birds in
Turkey and Romania. Scientists fear that the virus could mutate into a
form that could be passed among people, leading to a flu pandemic. So
far, it has killed about 60 people who have had direct contact with
infected birds.

Airport officials are preparing plans to quarantine up to 1,600
passengers in four locations. They are wrestling with how to shelter
and feed them and with how many toilets are needed, as well as whether
to use force to keep travelers from leaving. They also are studying who
would pay for the costly operation.

"Let's say we go with inflatable buildings," said Paul Haney, an
airport spokesman. "You can't just stick them on the ground. There's
got to be a foundation. You have to have electrical out there. You have
to get water out there."

The efforts by the city's airport agency followed criticism earlier
this month from health authorities that California was strikingly
under-prepared for a global influenza outbreak.

LAX is no stranger to crisis planning. In spring 2003, health workers
at the airport screened scores of people on flights from Asia for SARS
symptoms. Ultimately, no individuals with SARS came through LAX and
only a single Southwest jetliner was isolated on the tarmac for an hour
in April 2003 after a passenger told a flight attendant that he might
be infected - a claim later proven false.

But SARS did cause overseas travel and concession revenues at LAX to
fall dramatically after carriers canceled dozens of flights from Asia
in early 2003.

The fallout prompted officials to establish more detailed plans for
health emergencies.

As with all matters at LAX, planning for bird flu involves cooperation
among myriad local, state and federal agencies. Passengers, pilots,
health authorities and airport operations personnel would have to keep
tabs on the virus.

The Centers for Disease Control has advised flight crews to isolate ill
passengers on airplanes, provide them with masks, and urge them to
practice "cough etiquette" by covering their mouths and disposing of
tissues in designated bags.

The pilot is supposed to notify the CDC that a sick traveler is in
transit and health officials are supposed to board the plane once it
lands.

At LAX, such an aircraft probably would be sent to the remote gates on
the western end near the sand dunes.

The ill passenger would be taken to a hospital, while the CDC - which
doubled its staff at LAX this year to eight - decided whether to
quarantine the rest of the passengers for 48 hours. The city's airport
agency would feed and house travelers, and U.S. Customs and Border
Protection officials at the airport would enforce the quarantine.

In a severe case, passengers could be quarantined for seven days or
more.

If there were a quarantine, health officials would provide antibiotics
to passengers who were seated nearest to the infected traveler and
would monitor others for fever or other symptoms.

"We've looked at taking these people off airport, but who's going to
want them driving through their community to the Forum?" DiGirolamo
said, referring to the arena in Inglewood.

Airport officials expect to have a plan within the month.

The airport also is considering purchasing hand-wash dispensers filled
with alcohol-based cleaner and placing them in the U.S. Customs areas
in the Tom Bradley International Terminal. The city's airport agency
has also checked its stocks of masks and gloves should security
screeners require them to handle travelers' baggage.

"It could happen in six months, or three years," DiGirolamo told
commissioners. "This is going to be a major effort on our part, but we
will be prepared to help the CDC."

214248. air passenger quaranitine
214248. air passenger quaranitine