Meeting Surge Capacity Needs within the US Veterinary Workforce

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Meeting Surge Capacity Needs within the US Veterinary Workforce Michael J Gilsdorf, DVM, MS, BS USAHA Diagnostic Laboratory and Veterinary Workforce Development Committee Chair

disease outbreaks? Notice: This information has been gathered from various sources and has not been verified by all the agencies involved If discrepancies are found, please let me know

Do we have adequate veterinary workforce surge capacity to respond to major animal health and public health disasters and disease outbreaks? Is data available to answer this question?

Do we have adequate veterinary workforce surge capacity to respond to major animal health and public health disasters and disease outbreaks? If we cannot answer this question, we do not know our nation s core emergency management capabilities, including Prevention, Protection, Mitigation, Response, and Recovery

What is meant by Surge Capacity? Surge means the swift deployment and response of experienced experts and other specialized personnel Surge capacity is used when there are unforeseen emergencies, disasters or crisis

What is meant by Public Health Surge Capacity? The capacity to implement core public health activities such as mass prophylaxis and vaccination, risk communication and epidemiologic investigation, and other activities

What is meant by Diagnostic Surge Capacity? The capacity to implement core diagnostic laboratory services with access to additional resources, personnel, and materials needed for surge sample collection and laboratory sample testing

If the US had a Major Animal Disease Outbreak or Public Health Event, Who would lead the effort? Major animal disease outbreak Nationally APHIS VS would be in charge State Animal Health Authorities would be in charge locally DHS would help coordinate Major zoonotic disease, public health event, or food defense issue- Nationally DHHS would be in charge State Public Health Authorities would be in charge locally DHS would help coordinate

What is the state of the veterinary workforce surge capacity now? Let s look at the segments of the US veterinary workforce APHIS/Veterinary Services Department of Health and Human Services FEMA FSIS State Veterinary Response Teams Non-Government Veterinary Response Teams Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratories Canadian Veterinary Reserve (CVR) Example

APHIS/Veterinary Services Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity The VS workforce has been reduced 11% since 2009 from about 1850 total employees to 1650 31% of the VS workforce are veterinarians The VS VMO workforce has decreased by 8% from about 562 in 2009 to less than 520 in 2013

APHIS/Veterinary Services Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity The VS budget has been reduced by more than $53 million 64% of the VS VMO workforce is located in regional or field offices 6% of the VS VMO workforce are working in the laboratory and 14% in headquarters

APHIS/Veterinary Services Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity 49% of the VS VMO s are over 55 years of age 27% of the VS VMO s are over the age of 60 10% of the VS VMO s are over the age of 65 23% of the VMO s are eligible to retire

APHIS/Veterinary Services Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity VS has had a retirement trend of 3-4% per year for the past 5 years with a total of 75 veterinarians retiring VS has also hired 76 veterinarians over the past 5 years Most were hired between 2009 and 2011 with less than 16 hired in 2012 and 2013 because of budget cuts

APHIS/Veterinary Services Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity All of this means that APHIS/VS has fewer than 250 deployable veterinarians to immediately respond to a major animal health event and 4 Incident Command teams APHIS/VS also has the National Animal Health Emergency Response Corps (NAHERC)

APHIS/Veterinary Services Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity NAHERC is the US s largest emergency response organization designed to provide surge capacity and sustainment of Federal veterinary assistance during an event NAHERC assists the Federal and State response to domestic and international animal disease outbreaks, threats, or natural disasters

APHIS/Veterinary Services Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity NAHERC staff can be activated and supplement existing Federal and State employees for periods of three weeks for domestic deployments or 30 days for international deployments Deployments can be extended if necessary These positions are paid upon activation of the NAHERC and include overtime, lodging, per diem, and travel expenses

APHIS/Veterinary Services Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity NAHERC has approximately 1000 veterinarians who have volunteered There is an online training site created by the Center for Food Security and Public Health, located at Iowa State University in the College of Veterinary Medicine

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity For responses to state and local public health emergencies, DHHS has the following volunteer opportunities for skilled Health professionals: Emergency System for Advance Registration of Volunteer Health Professions National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) Citizen Corps Commission Corps

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity Emergency System for Advance Registration of Volunteer Health Professions (ESAR-VHP) This program is responsible for assisting States in developing volunteer health professional registration programs and developing a national network of State ESAR-VHP programs for use at the local, State or national level Veterinarians are one of the required professions identified by the ESAR-VHP program All states are required to have the ability to register and verify the credentials of veterinarians

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) NDMS assists state and local authorities in dealing with the medical impacts of major peacetime disasters primarily through coordination efforts

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity National Disaster Medical System is comprised of five response teams: Disaster Medical Assistant Team (DMAT) Disaster Nurse Response Team (NNRT) National Pharmacy Response Team (NPRT) Disaster Mortuary Operational Response Teams (DMORT) National Veterinary Response Team (NVRT)

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity National Veterinary Response Team (NVRT) Each response team has a set number of authorized positions within their team Each team has required types of specialists needed to fill these vacant positions for their team Each response team position has pre-requisite training requirements that must be met before individuals can apply If accepted, individuals become intermittent part-time Federal employees upon deployment on a mission

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity National Veterinary Response Team (NVRT) There are 200 members on 5 NVRT that are now being combined into 1 NVRT with 10 regions Regional NVRT leaders engage with the State Veterinarians either directly or through the NVRT members in the respective states

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) The MRC is community-based and works to locally organize and utilize volunteers MRC volunteers supplement existing emergency and public health resources MRC volunteers include medical and public health professionals such as physicians, nurses, pharmacists, dentists, veterinarians, and epidemiologists

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity Medical Reserve Corps (MRC) The Medical Reserve Corps units have about 2100 volunteer veterinarians

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity Citizen Corps Citizen Corps includes everyone, not just health professionals, to embrace the personal responsibility to be prepared They receive training in first aid and emergency skills They support local emergency responders, disaster relief, and community safety efforts

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps Veterinarians Commissioned Corps is a team of more than 6,000 full-time, well-trained, highly qualified public health professionals (100 veterinarians) dedicated to delivering the Nation's public health promotion and disease prevention programs and advancing public health science

DHHS Veterinary Workforce Surge Capacity The USPHS Corps is composed entirely of officers who have been commissioned on the basis of their health-related training They are deployable similar to the military

Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Surge Assistance FEMA is an agency of the United States Department of Homeland Security The agency's primary purpose is to coordinate the response to a disaster that has occurred in the United States and that overwhelms the resources of local and state authorities The governor of the state in which the disaster occurs must declare a state of emergency and formally request from the president that FEMA and the federal government respond to the disaster

Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Surge Assistance National Response Framework Emergency Support Function (ESF) Annexes: ESF #6 - Mass Care, Emergency Assistance, Temporary Housing and Human Services ESF #8 - Public Health and Medical Services ESF #11 - Agriculture and Natural Resources

Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Surge Assistance Response Core Capabilities: Core capabilities are the distinct elements needed to achieve the National Preparedness Goal There are 14 covered in the National Response Framework: Planning Public Information and Warning Operational Coordination Critical Transportation Environmental Response/Health and Safety Fatality Management Services Infrastructure Systems Mass Care Services Mass Search and Rescue Operations On-Scene Security and Protection Operational Communications Public and Private Services and Resources Public Health and Medical Services

U. S. Army Veterinary Corps Surge Assistance U. S. Army Veterinary Corps Brings both veterinary clinical and public health capability as a partner of the National Disaster Medical System to support an ESF-8 response These individuals are trained in zoonotic disease control, as well as in food inspection and food facility inspection, to aid in preventing human illness from food or animal sources They also bring significant experience in biomedical research and management of bio-threats

U. S. Army Veterinary Corps Surge Assistance U. S. Army Veterinary Corps The US Army has one Veterinary (VET) detachment on call with NORTHCOM Their mission is to provide support in national emergencies That would include a total 58 person detachment with eight veterinary corps officers

U. S. Army Veterinary Corps U. S. Army Veterinary Corps Surge Assistance The Army might be able to provide one more of those detachments if they aren't engaged in multiple DoD supports such as Afghanistan and Iraq at the same time The Army s fixed facility support veterinarians may also be available to support by including up to fifteen additional officers Support is dependent the combination of multiple time and mission requirements of DOD

Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS)Veterinary Surge Assistance USDA/FSIS reported that between 34 and 42 series 701 VMO s retired each year during the past 5 years for a total of 184 individuals (70 in the last 2 years) out of 1000 total However, FSIS also hired 436 veterinarians in the past 5 years (but only110 in the past 2 years because of budget cutbacks) FSIS still has an 11% veterinarian vacancy rate (110 out of 1000) Most FSIS veterinarians would not be deployable in an ESF 8 or ESF11 emergency

State Government Veterinary Surge Assistance SART - State Animal Response Teams Interagency state organizations dedicated to preparing, planning, responding and recovering during animal emergencies in the United States A public private partnership, joining government agencies with the private concerns around the common goal of animal issues during disasters SART programs train participants to facilitate a safe, environmentally sound and efficient response to animal emergencies on the local, county, state and federal level The teams are organized under the auspices of state and local emergency management utilizing the principles of the Incident Command System (ICS)

State Government Veterinary Surge Assistance In addition to SARTs, there are many other types of organizations at the State level including: CART- County Animal Response Team (# of veterinarians?) VMRC- Veterinary Medical Response Team (# of veterinarians?) VRT- Veterinary Response Team (# of veterinarians?) SAADRA- Southern Agriculture & Animal Disaster Response Alliance (# of veterinarians?) NASAAEP- National Alliance of State Animal and Agricultural Emergency Programs (# of veterinarians?) There are also others

Non-Government Veterinary Surge Assistance The American Veterinary Medical Associations- Veterinary Medical Assistance Teams (VMAT) serve as first responders to ensure high-quality care of animals during disasters and emergencies There are 140 members in the VMAT that includes veterinarians, technicians, and others

Non-Government Veterinary Surge Assistance When requested by a state, VMATs provide operational assistance in emergency response programs to state animal health authorities, and organize and provide training preparedness programs to animal health authorities, veterinary medical associations, and other relevant organizations, including: Early assessment of veterinary conditions and need Primary field care to augment overwhelmed local capabilities Emergency-related lectures and training for state veterinary associations, professionals and colleges, regarding emergency animal medical assistance

AVMA Veterinary Workforce Study The purpose of the study was to forecast future supply and demand for private practice veterinarians; identify research gaps; and develop modeling capacity for private practice veterinarians The study reported that current state of private practice veterinary profession has an excess capacity estimated to be 12.5% in 2012 (equivalent to 11,250 veterinarians) and will be 11-14% by 2025

Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory Surge Assistance In preparation for a major animal heath surge event, the National Animal Health Laboratory Network (NAHLN) laboratories are trained, proficiency tested, and follow standardized testing protocols for the following diseases: Avian Influenza (AI) Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) Classical Swine Fever (CSF) Exotic Newcastle Disease (END) Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) Pseudorabies Virus (PRV) Scrapie Swine Influenza Virus (SIV) Vesicular Stomatitis Virus (VSV)

Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory Surge Assistance Laboratory capacity was not available and depends on the disease outbreak

Canadian Veterinary Reserve The Canadian Veterinary Reserve (CVR) is a national voluntary group of trained veterinarians that was created by the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association to provide supplemental veterinary resources ( surge capacity ) to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) in the event of a foreign animal disease outbreak in Canada that exceeds the veterinary response capacity of the CFIA

Canadian Veterinary Reserve The CVR is a pool of trained non-government veterinarians ready to assist first responders in large scale animal emergencies. In FAD outbreaks or civil emergencies, the urgent requirement for human resources can exceed what governments and government agencies can be realistically expected to provide The CVR offers an invaluable surge capacity to the people on the ground so that animal emergencies can be dealt with as quickly, effectively, and completely as possible

Canadian Veterinary Reserve Because the CVR provides a public good, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), which has a clear mandate for dealing with reportable FADs, provides the fiscal resources to fund the CVR Since 2006, 140 reservists have received initial training A compensation package has been developed so that reservists and their private practices neither suffer financially nor profit excessively while reservists are being trained or deployed

Meeting Surge Capacity Needs within the US Veterinary Workforce In Summary: There are numerous veterinary response groups established to respond to animal health and public health disasters/events In several instances we have estimates of veterinary workforce capacity However, there is not a national assessment of the veterinary workforce surge capacity in the US

Meeting Surge Capacity Needs within the US Veterinary Workforce In Summary: An national assessment is needed to determine if the veterinary workforce surge capacity is adequate It is proposed that all veterinary and animal health groups and stakeholders join together to conduct such as assessment This assessment information can be use d to establish workforce needs and identify permanent funding gaps and resolve those gaps to maintain the workforce A cost/benefit analysis could then be conducted to show the benefit of maintaining the veterinary workforce