WASHINGTON -- President Bush is expected to approve soon a national pandemic influenza-response plan that identifies more than 300 specific tasks for federal agencies, from determining which front-line workers should be the first vaccinated to expanding Internet capacity to handle a flood of people working from home computers.
The Treasury Department is poised to sign agreements with other nations to produce currency if US mints cannot operate. The Pentagon, anticipating difficulties in acquiring supplies from the Far East, is considering whether to stockpile millions of latex gloves. And the Department of Veterans Affairs has developed a drive-through medical exam to quickly assess patients who suspect they have been infected.
The document is the first attempt to spell out in some detail how the government would detect and respond to an outbreak and continue functioning through what could be an 18-month crisis, which in a worst-case outcome could kill 1.9 million Americans.
Bush was briefed on a draft of the implementation plan on March 17, and he is expected to approve it within the week, but it continues to evolve, said several administration officials who have been working on it. White House officials offered a briefing on the near-final version of its 240-page plan.
http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2006/04/16/us_readying_response_to_flu_outbreak/