(begin transcript)
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
April 26, 2009
PRESS BRIEFING ON SWINE INFLUENZA BY SECRETARY NAPOLITANO,
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY, JOHN BRENNAN, ASSISTANT
TO THE PRESIDENT FOR HOMELAND SECURITY AND COUNTERTERRORISM,
DR. RICHARD BESSER, ACTING DIRECTOR, CENTERS FOR DISEASE
CONTROL AND PREVENTION, AND ROBERT GIBBS, PRESS SECRETARY
James S. Brady Press Briefing Room
12:34 P.M. EDT
MR. GIBBS: Good afternoon, guys. Thank you for taking some
time out of your Sunday afternoon. We wanted to bring together
many of the people that have the primary governmental responsibility
in dealing with the situation and to discuss the government's
capacity and capability to discuss the steps the government
is taking to address this.
Three people we'll hear from today and then we'll take
some questions: First, John Brennan, Assistant to the President
for Homeland Security and Counterterrorism; Dr. Richard
Besser, the Acting Director of the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, and Janet Napolitano, the Secretary of Homeland
Security.
So with that I'll turn it over to Mr. Brennan.
MR. BRENNAN: Thank you, Robert. And thank you, everyone,
for coming here today.
Obviously, President Obama is very concerned about the
recent cases of swine flu that have been identified in the
United States, as well as the outbreak in Mexico. The President's
thoughts are with those who have been affected by this illness.
He is monitoring the situation very closely and has supported
a very active, progressive and coordinated response by his
administration.
The President wants Americans to be fully informed of the
situation, which is why we have convened this press briefing
today. The vast majority of these cases have occurred in
Mexico. Building on the close bilateral cooperation that
President Obama advanced during his recent visit to Mexico,
he has asked me to publicly convey his full support to President
Calderón, the Mexican government and the Mexican
people in their efforts to contain the outbreak.
Both the U.S. and Mexican governments are taking steps
to reduce the potential for further transmission. Our goal
is simple: to communicate information quickly and clearly
for our citizens, to rapidly address any new cases that
emerge, and to have the capacity to effectively limit the
spread.
At this point a top priority is to ensure that communication
is robust and that medical surveillance efforts are fully
activated. This will enable both the rapid identification
and broad notification of any new cases that may occur in
the U.S., as well as in Mexico.
We believe that our increased surveillance efforts have
resulted in the identification of new cases over the last
24 hours. Early identification is vitally important to the
overall effort. In the event that additional cases or sites
of infection occur within the United States we want to recognize
them quickly and then respond rapidly with appropriate guidance
for the public health community and the general public in
the infected area. We also want to ensure medical surveillance
and testing and the provision of medications and medical
supplies are distributed where necessary.
I would like to share with you some of the steps the administration
has taken to ensure that information about this evolving
event is flowing swiftly among federal, state and local
partners, between U.S., Mexican, Canadian and other governments
and with the World Health Organization.
First, the President is receiving regular updates and briefings
on the situation. I updated the President earlier today.
The President has reviewed our national capabilities to
mitigate the effects of a broader outbreak in the United
States and the steps we are taking to support state and
local governments and their public health experts.
I am consulting closely with Secretary Napolitano, who
is the principal federal official for domestic incident
management with responsibility for spearheading our efforts.
The Homeland Security Council has convened an interagency
body of senior federal experts to facilitate coordination
among the federal departments and agencies that have a role
in recognizing, responding to, and communicating with domestic
and international partners regarding health incidents that
have the potential for significant impact to our nation's
well-being.
This group has been conferencing daily to share updates
and to identify actions we can take now to respond to developments
in an accelerated and effective manner. The information
and decisions of the group are reported daily to senior
leaders in the federal government and throughout the White
House. Additional reports are provided as new information
of significance becomes available.
While the President and his administration are actively
coordinating the overall government response, individual
departments and agencies with specific responsibilities
as well as unique expertise and experience in dealing with
public health risks are leading key elements of the effort.
For example, the Department of Health and Human Services
is responsible for the overall effort to coordinate disease
surveillance, medical preparedness, and guidance to public
health professionals in the event that further cases are
detected. The Departments -- Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention has responsibility for identifying and tracking
the spread of the disease and for communicating health-related
information to the government, media, and public. To this
end, the CDC has held regular public briefings since Friday.
In a moment, Dr. Richard Besser, the Acting Director of
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, will provide
an update on the situation in the United States and Mexico,
as well as where health professionals and the public can
go for reliable information and guidance on swine influenza.
As I mentioned, Secretary Napolitano and the Department
of Homeland Security have the overall lead for coordinating
the federal response to an influence epidemic in the United
States. The department is closely coordinating with Health
and Human Services and CDC to monitor the situation.
After Dr. Besser speaks, you will hear from Secretary Napolitano,
who will update you on the department's efforts to coordinate
response preparations and actions to date. The Secretary
also will describe actions that are underway to ensure communication
of timely and accurate information at land borders and at
ports of entry as well as to travelers who seek additional
information.
Clearly we all have individual responsibility for dealing
with this situation. We should all be practicing good hygienic
practices, such as hand-washing on a regular basis; if you
feel sick, it makes sense to stay home; and then also following
the other practices that are common sense when we deal with
an outbreak of flu every year.
I would ask that you hold your questions until after Dr.
Besser and Secretary Napolitano have finished their remarks.
DR. BESSER: Thank you, Mr. Brennan. First, I want to say
that our hearts go out to the people in Mexico and the people
in the United States who've been impacted by this outbreak.
People around the country and around the globe are concerned
with this situation we're seeing, and we're concerned as
well. As we look for cases of swine flu, we are seeing more
cases of swine flu. We expect to see more cases of swine
flu. We're responding and we're responding aggressively
to try and learn about this outbreak and to implement measures
to control this outbreak.
Let me provide for you an update in terms of where we are
today and what kinds of public health actions are being
taken here as well as abroad. Today we can confirm that
there are 20 cases of swine flu in the United States. We
have five affected states: There are eight cases confirmed
in New York City, there's one case confirmed in Ohio, two
in Kansas, two in Texas, and seven in California.
And again, as we continue to look for cases, I expect that
we're going to find them. We've ramped up our surveillance
around the country to try and understand better what is
the scope, what is the magnitude of this outbreak.
The good news -- all of the individuals in this country
who have been identified as cases have recovered. Only one
individual had to be hospitalized. But I expect as we continue
to look for cases, we are going to see a broader spectrum
of disease. What we know about this virus is it looks to
be the same virus as is causing the situation in Mexico.
And given the reports out of Mexico, I would expect that
over time we're going to see more severe disease in this
country.
There are some things that it's important people understand:
Flu viruses are extremely unpredictable and variable; outbreaks
of infectious disease are extremely unpredictable and variable.
And so over time what we say about this and what we learn
will change. Expect changes in terms of the number of cases.
We're going to try and give you consistent information and
have it on our web site once a day, so that we don't get
into the situation where you're hearing different numbers
of cases throughout the day -- we're going to report that
daily.
We expect that we're going to be changing our recommendations
over time based on what we learn. And that's an important
thing. You'll start to see different activities taking place
in different parts of the country, depending on the local
outbreak picture -- and that's good. You want people to
respond based on what the situation is in their community,
based on what situations are in particular countries.
Because of this speed in which things are progressing,
you will at find -- at times find inconsistent information,
and we're going to work really hard to make sure that that
doesn't stay up for long. But as we're updating recommendations
and they're going out through various sources, you may find
some inconsistency and we will work to minimize that.
This is moving fast, but I want you to understand that
we view this more as a marathon. We do think that this will
continue to spread, but we are taking aggressive actions
to minimize the impact on people's health.
It's important that people understand that there's a role
for everyone to play when there's an outbreak going on.
There are things that individuals do, there's things that
families do, communities do to try and reduce the impact.
At the individual level, it's important people understand
how they can prevent respiratory infections. Very frequent
hand-washing is something that we talk about time and time
again and that is an effective way to reduce transmission
of disease. If you're sick, it's very important that people
stay at home. If your children are sick, have a fever and
flu-like illness, they shouldn't go to school. And if you're
ill, you shouldn't get on an airplane or another public
transport to travel. Those things are part of personal responsibility
in trying to reduce the impact.
It's important that people think about what they would
do if this outbreak ramps up in their community. We understand
that in New York City there's a cluster of disease in a
school and New York City has announced that they're not
having those children come back to school on Monday, so
that they can understand better about transmission in that
school. There's a similar situation in Texas. Those are
very smart public health decisions. If there are other communities
where we saw cases in a school, we would be recommending
that they take those actions as well.
So it's time for people to be thinking -- forward-thinking
about, well, if it were my child's school, what would I
do, how would I be prepared for that kind of an event. We
view the public as partners in the efforts to try and control
what's going on.
There are a number of sources of information. I want people
to know that the CDC web site -- www.cdc.gov -- has our
latest information on swine flu. There's a link from there
to very current information and there's a link there to
a Spanish language site as well.
So let me talk about some of the public health actions
that are going on. We are working very closely with state
and local public health on the investigations going on around
the country. We're providing both technical support on the
epidemiology as well as support on the laboratory in terms
of confirming cases.
We're also doing a lot of work with the World Health Organization,
the Pan American Health Organization, and the governments
of Mexico and Canada on this outbreak. There's a tri-national
team that is working in Mexico to try and understand better
the spread -- why are they seeing more severe disease in
Mexico than we are here? That's a critical question. We're
working to assist Mexico in establishing more laboratory
capacity in-country. That, again, is very important because
when you can define someone as a truly confirmed case, what
you understand about how they acquire disease takes on much
more meaning.
We issued two days ago an outbreak notice on our web site
regarding travel to Mexico. It indicated that if you are
traveling to Mexico, that you look at that to see what precautions
could you take as an individual to reduce the likelihood
that you became ill. We're going to continue to evaluate
the situation in Mexico, and if need be we will increase
the warnings based on what the situation warrants.
Later today we're going to be putting out some additional
community guidance so that public health officials will
know what our general recommendations are should they see
cases in schools or additional cases in their community.
And I think that the last thing I want to mention is that
whenever we see a novel strain of influenza, we begin our
work in the event that a vaccine needs to be manufactured.
So we've created that seed stock, we've identified that
virus, and discussions are underway so that should we decide
to work on manufacturing a vaccine, we can work towards
that goal very quickly.
Our support to the states and locals will continue. We
provide epidemiologic support, laboratory support, and we
provide them support in terms of their medications and other
material that they need to work on this outbreak.
So thank you very much, and I'll turn it over to the Secretary.
SECRETARY NAPOLITANO: Thanks, Dr. Besser. A number of things
going on and the purpose of today, this briefing, is to
give you the most current information about what is happening.
And as has been mentioned before, this is a changing picture.
And so we intend to conduct these types of briefings daily
for a while so that, you know, it can help up communicate
to the public what is happening and so that with knowledge
people know what kind of issue we're dealing with.
The first thing I want to announce today is that the Department
of Health and Human Services will declare today a public
health emergency in the United States. That sounds more
severe than really it is. This is standard operating procedure
and allows us to free up federal, state, and local agencies
and their resources for prevention and mitigation; it allows
us to use medication and diagnostic tests that we might
not otherwise be able to use, particularly on very young
children; and it releases funds for the acquisition of additional
antivirals.
So you'll see those declarations coming out today. And
when I say "standard operating procedure," that's
exactly what I mean. We issued similar declarations for
the recent floods in Minnesota and North Dakota and for
the inauguration.
Second, I want to give you some information about where
we are with respect to antiviral drugs. These are the kinds
of things you would take should you get sick with this strain
of flu. We have 50 million treatment courses of antiviral
drugs -- Tamiflu and Relenza -- in the strategic national
stockpile. We are releasing 25 percent of those courses,
making them available to all of the states, but particularly
prioritizing the states where we already have confirmed
incidents of the flu. In addition, the Department of Defense
has procured and strategically prepositioned 7 million treatment
courses of Tamiflu.
The United States Department of Agriculture is heavily
involved in monitoring and testing to ensure that there
is no issue with our food supply, and everything looks fine.
I want to underscore that you cannot get the swine flu from
eating pork. So that's very important. And we're screening
and testing livestock to monitor any developments there.
Next, in the Department of Homeland Security, we have a
number of components with direct responsibility here. The
CBP is inventorying for every duty station and every employee
our resources, personal protective equipment, and so forth,
to make sure that we have adequate supplies on hand at the
borders themselves.
Secondly, we have implemented passive surveillance protocols
to screen individuals who may arrive at our borders. All
persons entering the United States from a location of human
infection of swine flu will be processed through all appropriate
CBP protocols. Right now those are passive. That means that
they're looking for people who -- and asking about, are
you sick, have you been sick, and the like; and if so, then
they can be referred over for further examination.
Travelers who do present with symptoms, if and when encountered,
will be isolated per established rules. They will be provided
both with personal protective equipment and we will continue
to emphasize universal health measures like hand-washing
and gloves. And if and when the situation develops all CBP
sites can implement and we can deploy additional personnel
to the borders.
In addition, at the TSA, many of the similar measures are
being implemented there with respect to the protection of
our TSA workers and also their experience with travelers.
To date, the State Department has not issued official travel
advisories for particularly Mexico, but again, as I said
earlier, these situations are very fluid and so you need
to keep up to date on that. In addition to the CDC website,
the Department of State has a website that will keep travelers
posted on what the situation is not only with our neighboring
countries, but with countries around the world.
As I said earlier, our intent is to update you daily on
this situation so that you can know what is happening within
the federal government. State and local governments obviously
now are in the loop. State and local public health authorities
obviously are working very hard and will be working hard,
because as the doctor said, this will be a marathon, not
a sprint, and even if this outbreak is a small one, we can
anticipate that we may have a subsequent or follow-on outbreak
several months later, which we will be prepared for.
And again, the government can't solve this alone. We need
everybody in the United States to take some responsibility
here. If you are sick, stay home. Wash your hands, take
all of those reasonable measures; that will help us mitigate,
contain how many people actually get sick in our country.
Thank you.
MR. GIBBS: With that, let's take a few questions.
Q: Thanks, Robert. Are there any U.S. clusters that suggest
this is easily spread? Have we seen any pockets of suspected
cases in the U.S. that suggest this could be on the scale
of Mexico? And you say it's a marathon. How long is this
marathon going to be?
DR. BESSER: Thanks for those questions. In terms of duration,
my comment earlier about every outbreak is unique is really
important to remember. And so it's very hard to say. There's
one thing in our favor; we're nearing the end of the flu
season, we're nearing the end of the season in which flu
viruses tend to transmit very easily. And so we would expect
to see a decline in cases, just like we're seeing a decline
in cases of seasonal flu, at some point.
The issue of clusters is an important one, and New York
City earlier talked about their school cluster, and that's
important. Some of our early epidemiologic investigations
are showing that contacts of people who have been diagnosed
have a significant rate of respiratory infection -- not
confirmed to be this; we only have one documented by viral
isolate case in this country of person-to-person spread
-- and that was an individual who had gone to Mexico and
came back, and then there was a spouse who was diagnosed
as well, and both are doing well.
Q: Robert, how concerned are you about the potential for
this outbreak to set back the hopeful economic recovery
both here in the United States and globally? And secondly,
what if anything are we meant to read into the fact the
President Obama decided to go golfing today? Is this part
of your effort to reassure Americans that there's no need
to panic?
MR. GIBBS: I'm not sure I would draw a direct conclusion
between the news today and the President's golf. (Laughter.)
I think as Mr. Brennan said, the President has been updated
regularly on this and we'll continue to do so as we will
continue to regularly update you.
In terms of anything that is affected economically both
here and worldwide, I think it's probably far too early
to determine whether that will be a case or whether that
will have some factor. We just want to ensure that people
understand the steps that are being taken both here and
throughout government to address the situation, as well
as, as each of these speakers have said, understand the
individual responsibilities that people have. If you have
questions, go to the CDC website at cdc.gov. And as the
doctor mentioned, there's also a Spanish version of that
site.
Q: First to you, Robert. Why was it necessary to have the
President checked this morning?
MR. GIBBS: The President hasn't been checked this morning.
Q: Ms. Jarrett indicated today on a Sunday morning program
that he had been.
MR. GIBBS: I will double-check. I don't know of any reason
why he would have been.
Q: And Dr. Besser --
MR. GIBBS: Let me expand that a little bit. I think these
guys obviously have more medical degrees than I do, but
the incubation period for this is a 24-48 hour incubation
period. The doctors advised us that the President's health
was never in any danger. We've been gone from Mexico for
now more than nine days.
Q: Dr. Besser, you mentioned seed stock for vaccines. What
is the threshold that you have to meet before you consider
developing that vaccine and deploying that vaccine?
DR. BESSER: There are a number of things that we look at
going into the decision as to whether to make a vaccine.
One is the severity of the strain, its sustainability in
the community; do we anticipate that it's a virus that will
be here next flu season -- so you want to prepare for that.
Then there are issues in terms of production. Currently
manufacturers are working on seasonal flu vaccine for next
season, which has three types of influenza virus -- or influenza
antigen in it. We have to have discussions to determine
could they add a fourth; would it require substituting or
changing production in another way?
All of those discussions are underway, so that if there's
a decision to move in that direction we'd be ready.
Q: I notice that you're not recommending that people, even
if they're ill, become vaccinated. Has the President been
vaccinated by Tamiflu or Relenza? And at what level does
this have to get before we go from a public health emergency
to a federal pandemic plan?
DR. BESSER: I wanted to clarify a couple things you said.
Oseltamivir and zanamavir are not vaccines. Those are antiviral
drugs that can be used to treat somebody who is ill.
One of the points I didn't make before is that if someone
is ill with flu-like symptoms, in particular if they've
traveled to an area that's been involved, they need to contact
their doctor and determine what type testing and treatment
is indicated.
At this point there is not a vaccine for this swine flu
strain. It's a new strain of influenza. And so what we're
talking about is whether it's warranted at this point to
move toward manufacturing a vaccine.
Q: Two questions. First, I want to know if the public health
emergency declaration allows the federal government to invoke
any kind of quarantine powers. And if so, how would that
be used? And second, we've been hearing for years that we
could have another 1918-like pandemic. So based on what
you know right now, how likely is it that this could be
a very, very severe outbreak?
SECRETARY NAPOLITANO: The public health declaration does
not, in and of itself, convey quarantine authority. And
most quarantine authority is held at the local and state
level, and we're nowhere near that sort of a decision. The
decisions that have been made to date are the common-sense
ones, the few places where we've had a U.S. outbreak, to
close a school here, close a school there. But most quarantine
authority is held at the state and local level. And this
declaration does not, in and of itself, provide that.
DR. BESSER: The other part of your question had to do with
1918 and what we're seeing here. One of the very important
issues that we're looking at is how severe is this outbreak
that's taking place. What we're seeing in this country so
far is not anywhere near the severity of what we're hearing
about in Mexico, and we need to understand that.
It's also important to recognize that there have been enormous
efforts going on around the country and around the world
for pandemic preparedness and that our detection of this
strain in the United States really came out as part of that.
There was work going on in San Diego in terms of developing
a point of care test kit, something that could be used in
doctors' offices, that detected a strain they couldn't identify,
and that was identified in our laboratories as the swine
flu strain. And so that -- really some of the preparedness
activities, the laboratory capability that we have now is
not what it was five years ago, let alone in 1918. We understand
a lot about how flu should be managed and treated.
Q: And if I could just follow with one other question.
Relenza and Tamiflu, how effective are they in treating
this particular strain, if at all?
DR. BESSER: At this point, it's premature to talk about
how effective they are. Those are some of the studies that
we would want to undertake and assist Mexico in undertaking.
We do know from seasonal flu that early treatment with antivirals
can shorten the course of illness. But in terms of this
situation, we know that the strain is susceptible, it's
not resistant to those drugs. It is resistant to other drugs,
amantadine and rimantadine. But it's not resistant to oseltamivir
and zanamavir, which are the drugs that we've been stockpiling.
SECRETARY NAPOLITANO: I just wanted to clarify -- on the
declaration of emergency, I wish we could call it declaration
of emergency preparedness, because that's really what it
is in this context. It's similar to what we do, for example,
when we know -- when a hurricane may be approaching a site,
we will go ahead and issue an emergency declaration that
allows us to preposition -- frees up money, resources to
get pre-positioned, to get ready. A hurricane may not actually
hit a particular landfall, but it allows you to undertake
a number of preparatory steps. And really that's what we're
doing right now, the government. We're leaning forward,
we're preparing in an environment where we really don't
know ultimately what the size or seriousness of this outbreak
is going to be.
Q: Dr. Besser, you said we were likely to see more cases
and the CDC's Dr. Ann Schuchat said yesterday, "We
do not think we can contain the spread of this virus."
What exactly does that mean?
DR. BESSER: In strategies for outbreak control there's
a concept of containment where if you can detect it very
quickly in one community, that you could swoop in and try
and quench it and knock it out so it doesn't go further.
We don't think that that's a possibility, but we do think
that it's very possible to mitigate or reduce the impact
of this infection around the country.
In terms of detection, what we're seeing in this country
is mild disease -- things that would never have been detected
if we weren't ramping up our surveillance. And so my comment
there is that by our efforts of asking doctors to culture
-- we are asking doctors when they see someone who has flu-like
illness who has traveled to an affected region to do a culture
-- take a swab in their nose and send it to the lab so we
can see, is it influenza, is it this type. And I expect
that as we do that we're going to find cases all -- in many
different parts.
When I mentioned the states we're seeing cases in right
now, they're not all contiguous. The travel patterns of
people now are such that we would expect that we're going
to see cases in more states.
Q: If I could follow up on that, is it true that it took
a week until after Mexico had invoked its own protective
measures before the U.S. was notified of this? And is it
a significant concern that HHS is in charge of this at a
time when it doesn't have a Secretary?
DR. BESSER: In terms of detection and reporting, you know,
the confirmation of swine flu from Mexico was shared with
us immediately. There was great collaboration between Canada
and Mexico on doing that testing. I'm in daily communication
with their public health leadership and the collaborations
have been absolutely superb. We share information about
what we're seeing here and they're sharing information about
what they're seeing in Canada and in Mexico.
Q: They sent those tests to Canada rather than the U.S.,
apparently because of paperwork.
DR. BESSER: Well, we have -- there are quite a number of
isolates that we've tested here from Mexico as well.
MR. GIBBS: In terms of a Secretary, I think these guys
have given you a pretty good indication of the response
mechanisms that are in place and that have been activated
relating to this. So I think it's all hands on deck and
we're doing fine. I would say we're hopeful that we have
a new Secretary very shortly.
Yes, ma'am.
Q: Secretary Napolitano, I believe Japan and South Korea
have both now announced that they're going to begin testing
on passengers coming in from the U.S. Why is the U.S. not
doing that with passengers coming in from Mexico? And then
also, do you have any indications -- I know it's still very
early yet -- but any indications that perhaps this might
have been caused by bioterrorism, this new strain of flu?
SECRETARY NAPOLITANO: I'll let John answer the second part.
With respect to that, we're doing, as I said, passive surveillance
now. Right now we don't think the facts warrant a more active
testing or screening of passengers coming in from Mexico,
although obviously we are letting air carriers and our employees
at the gates on those flights make sure that they are asking
people if they're sick; and if they're sick, that they shouldn't
board the plane -- you know, that sort of thing, passively.
But again, this is a changing dynamic that we may increase
or decrease that as the facts change over the next 24, 48,
72 hours.
DR. BESSER: Yes, the question about the strain that we're
seeing here, we analyzed that strain and are continuing
to do further analysis of that strain and we expect to see
the emergence of new flu strains. That's something that
we are continually watching for to ensure that we're ready
should a strain emerge that there's not immunity and protection
in the community for it. This strain is not unlike other
new strains that have emerged. It's an assortment -- it's
got genetic components from a number of sources, including
human, swine, and avian sources. And that's something that
you see with new strains.
And so there's nothing that we have seen in our work that
would suggest anything but a naturally occurring event.
Q: But from a security perspective, nothing to rule it
out either -- the possibility of bioterrorism?
MR. BRENNAN: We are looking at all different aspects here,
but as the doctor said, there is no evidence whatsoever
that we have seen. But clearly, in order to make sure that
we're doing everything possible, we're looking at all potential
explanations here -- but no evidence whatsoever on the bioterrorism
--
Q: How do the -- Madam Secretary, how do the stocks of
effective antivirals today compare to previous outbreaks
-- SARS, for example? And will DOD stocks be available for
the public, or are those just for DOD?
SECRETARY NAPOLITANO: Right now the DOD stocks I believe
are for the DOD personnel, but I'll have to confirm that
for you later. I believe that to be the case. We have 50
million courses that are in the national stockpile. As I
said, we're freeing up a quarter of those for use by the
states, in addition to whatever state stockpiles they have,
should they need it. Priority will go to the states that
have confirmed outbreaks of disease. And I don't have the
history on how that compares to what we had on hand for
SARS.
DR. BESSER: The strategic national stockpile has considerable
assets for treating flu. In addition to the antivirals,
there's the supplies should we see hospitalizations that
would warrant support. SARS is a different picture in that
there were -- there was not a medication that people could
take to treat it, and so this is a very different situation.
And as part of our planning for a large outbreak this pre-deployment
of availability is a leaning-forward step. We know that
many states aren't seeing any cases, but it was our belief
that having things there ahead of time was the way to go,
rather than waiting until it got to a point where people
were asking.
Q: Secretary Napolitano, you mentioned the quarantine power
and, you know, that's really a state and local issue. What
additional authority does the President have, what other
powers does he have to contain this, to mitigate it, whatever.
What else can he do?
SECRETARY NAPOLITANO: I don't want to give you a legal
brief on that right now, but that's --
Q: Perhaps later? (Laughter.)
SECRETARY NAPOLITANO: Yes, exactly. (Laughter.)
We want to make sure that it's very precisely explained
to you and to the public. So perhaps we could brief that
to you later on this week.
Q: But there are additional things? You guys are confident
that -- measures that you can take, beyond a declaration
of emergency -- things that you can do at the federal level?
SECRETARY NAPOLITANO: Yes.
Q: Okay. And Robert, actually, can you follow up on that
eco question, on the eco trade. I just want to be clear,
you're not at all studying this, measuring what sort of
effect this could have economically -- you're just not at
that level yet?
MR. GIBBS: I'll check with NEC. I don't know of anything
related to that at this point, but we can certainly check.
Yes, ma'am.
Q: What haven't you banned U.S. travel to Mexico and why
haven't you changed the U.S. alert level in the face of
this -- unless the declaration of public health emergency
is doing that?
DR. BESSER: I can comment. We have at CDC posted an outbreak
notification regarding Mexico, and we're continuing to watch
the situation there and evaluate. And should it be warranted,
we would make a change in that regard.
In terms of the stages and phases of pre-pandemic situations,
the real important take-away is that we have an outbreak
of a new infectious disease that we're approaching aggressively.
And it matters much less what you call it. Those things
are designed to trigger actions, but we trigger our actions
based on what we're seeing here in-country as well as what
we see around the globe. And given that this new strain
is something we're experiencing here on the ground, we're
being very aggressive and addressing that based on what
we're seeing in each community.
Q: What has been discovered so far about why people in
Mexico have died, but not elsewhere?
DR. BESSER: That's an unanswered question. We have folks
on the ground and we haven't been able to find an answer
for that. There are a number of different hypotheses and
I'm hoping that we'll be able to shed some light on that
as these teams get more established and continue their studies.
Q: For Dr. Besser, is there evidence of ongoing transmission
in Mexico, or are the cases being picked up there ones that
happened in the last couple of weeks and are over? Or are
there new chains of transmission being generated?
DR. BESSER: Again, I don't want to comment on the situation
on the ground in Mexico. I've not heard that it is stopping.
Their overall flu surveillance is only showing a small increase
from what they would see annually, which, again, makes it
difficult to use some of the surveillance tools to measure
the impact of a new strain when you're in the midst of another
flu season.
Q: Just to follow up on what the President -- for you,
Robert -- what the President -- did you say that he has
not been treated with any kind of --
MR. GIBBS: I said yesterday that he had not been. I will
recheck with the doctor. Again, based on the incubation
period, neither he, nor anybody that he traveled with, nor
anybody in the press corps that I'm aware of would have
exhibited any symptoms that would have caused any heightened
awareness.
Q: But the doctor didn't check him out --
MR. GIBBS: No. Again, in the absence of symptoms -- I think
this probably goes without saying, too -- in the absence
of symptoms, you shouldn't go get tested. That's going to
crowd any sort of either public health or private health
infrastructure. If you are sick or you do have symptoms,
then you should take precautions. But there's not reason
to believe that his -- or anybody that traveled with him
-- health was in any sort of jeopardy.
Q: Just to follow up on the HHS question. Apparently, HHS
--- CDC, Surgeon General assured there are no --
MR. GIBBS: I thought he was doing a pretty good job. (Laughter.)
Q: But it raises a political question about how movement
there has been stalled because of HHS. I mean, do you have
-- has the President expressed concern about the fact that
you don't have a team in place there, or at the --
MR. GIBBS: No, because -- I want to be very clear here.
There is a team in place. The team is -- part of it is standing
behind me, and part of it is working as we speak to identify
exactly what the doctor and others have talked about. I
think this notion somehow that if there's not currently
a Secretary, that there's not the function that needs to
take place in order to prepare for this either this or any
other situation is just simply not the case.
Thanks, guys.
END 1:16 P.M. EDT
(end transcript)