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Journal Article

Citation

Kim YS. J. Prev. Med. Pub. Health 2008; 41(4): 214-218.

Affiliation

Division of Infectious Diseases, Asan Medical Center, University of Ulsan College of Medicine. yskim@amc.seoul.kr

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Korean Society for Preventive Medicine)

DOI

10.3961/jpmph.2008.41.4.214

PMID

18664726

Abstract

Bioterrorism events have worldwide impacts, not only in terms of security and public health policy, but also in other related sectors. Many countries, including Korea, have set up new administrative and operational structures and adapted their preparedness and response plans in order to deal with new kinds of threats. Korea has dual surveillance systems for the early detection of bioterrorism. The first is syndromic surveillance that typically monitors non-specific clinical information that may indicate possible bioterrorism-associated diseases before specific diagnoses are made. The other is infectious disease specialist network that diagnoses and responds to specific illnesses caused by intentional release of biologic agents. Infectious disease physicians, clinical microbiologists, and infection control professionals play critical and complementary roles in these networks. Infectious disease specialists should develop practical and realistic response plans for their institutions in partnership with local and state health departments, in preparation for a real or suspected bioterrorism attack.


Language: ko

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