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A Look at the past: Army germ lab shut down by CDC in 2019 had several 'serious' protocol violations that year, 2019
WJLA ^ | 01/22/2020 | by Diana DiGangi

Posted on 05/03/2020 11:43:46 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

FREDERICK, Md. — In 2019, an Army laboratory at Fort Detrick that studies deadly infectious material like Ebola and smallpox was shut down for a period of time after a CDC inspection, with many projects being temporarily halted.

The lab itself reported that the shutdown order was due to ongoing infrastructure issues with wastewater decontamination, and the CDC declined to provide the reason for the shutdown due to national security concerns.

ABC7 has received documents from the CDC outlining violations they discovered during a series of inspections that year, some of which were labeled "serious."

Earlier that year, the US Army Medical Research Institute had announced an experiment at the Fort Detrick laboratory that would involve infecting rhesus macaque monkeys with active Ebola virus to test a cure they were developing.

Several of the laboratory violations the CDC noted in 2019 concerned "non-human primates" infected with a "select agent", the identity of which is unknown — it was redacted in all received documents, because disclosing the identity and location of the agent would endanger public health or safety, the agency says. In addition to Ebola, the lab works with other deadly agents like anthrax and smallpox.

Select agents are defined by the CDC as “biological agents and toxins that have been determined to have the potential to pose a severe threat to public health and safety, to animal and plant health, or to animal or plant products.”

Here are some of the violations the CDC observed during inspections of Fort Detrick that year:

OBSERVATION 1 Severity level: Serious

The CDC reported that an individual partially entered a room multiple times without the required respiratory protection while other people in that room were performing procedures with a non-human primate on a necropsy table.

“This deviation from entity procedures resulted in a respiratory occupational exposure to select agent aerosols,” the CDC wrote.

OBSERVATION 2 Severity level: Serious

The CDC reported that the lab did not ensure that employee training was properly verified when it came to toxins and select agents.

“These failures were recognized through video review of laboratorians’ working in BSL3 and ABSL3 labs,” their report said. “[These] indicate the [lab]’s means used to verify personnel understood the training had not been effective, leading to increased risk of occupational exposures.”

The CDC went on to specify that a laboratorian who was not wearing appropriate respiratory protection was seen multiple times “partially entering” a room where non-human primates that were infected with [redacted] were “housed in open caging.” They also observed a laboratorian disposing of waste in a biohazardous waste bin without gloves on.

OBSERVATION 3 Severity level: Moderate

In this violation observation, the CDC went into more detail on the incident of the worker not wearing gloves while disposing of biohazardous waste, writing that “biosafety and containment procedures must be sufficient to contain the select agent or toxin.”

The corrective action they recommended was to confirm that relevant personnel have been trained to wear gloves to prevent exposure to hazardous materials.

OBSERVATION 4 Severity level: Serious

In this observation, the CDC notes that the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases had “systematically failed to ensure implementation of biosafety and containment procedures commensurate with the risks associated with working with select agents and toxins.”

The violation specifically observed involved “entity personnel [...] propping open” a door while removing “large amounts of biohazardous waste” from an adjacent room, “[increasing] the risk of contaminated air from [the room] escaping and being drawn into the [redacted]” where the people working “typically do not wear respiratory protection.”

OBSERVATION 5 Severity level: Moderate

The CDC reported that the laboratory failed to safeguard against unauthorized access to select against. They wrote that personal protective equipment worn while decontaminating something contaminated by a select agent had been stored in open biohazard bags, in an area of the facility that the CDC has redacted for security reasons.

“By storing regulated waste in this area, the entity did not limit access to those with access approval,” they wrote.

OBSERVATION 6 Severity level: Moderate

The CDC reports that someone at the lab did not maintain an accurate or current inventory for a toxin.

OBSERVATION 7

Severity level: Low

The CDC reports that a building at the Fort Detrick laboratory didn’t have a “sealed surface to facilitate cleaning and decontamination.” This included cracks around a conduit box, cracks in the ceiling, and a crack in the seam above a biological safety cabinet.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; History; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: army; cdc; fortdetrick; germlab
It looks like China isn't only country having problems securing their germ labs. We have had our problems as well. Better make sure that what happened there doesn't happen here.
1 posted on 05/03/2020 11:43:46 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Didn’t they transfer the goodies from Plum Island there, the supposed home of Lyme Disease


2 posted on 05/03/2020 11:59:23 AM PDT by meridenite
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To: SeekAndFind

To be honest, the provided details of the violations read like a single incident mishandling hazardous waste in a lab being dissected for all the different procedural/training/security violations that were committed.


3 posted on 05/03/2020 12:04:41 PM PDT by Captain Rhino (Determined effort today forges tomorrow.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Every virus lab should have a few OCD EHS monitors watching every room and constantly yelling at the scientists.


4 posted on 05/03/2020 12:05:05 PM PDT by \/\/ayne (I regret that I have but one subscription cancellation notice to give to my local newspaper.)
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To: SeekAndFind
They've had problems for years. The scientists work in an old crappy building. A brand new replacement facility has been standing there without any move to occupy it and close down the old facility. That take's money the Army didn't budget for.

The lab's most recent problems came to light when the steam fired decontamination system (basically huge autoclave) was wrecked by flooding. Instead of fixing it (the new facility would take of things), they switched to chemical decontamination. The workers there did not handle the chemical waste properly and things went to hell.

5 posted on 05/03/2020 12:12:48 PM PDT by IndispensableDestiny
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To: IndispensableDestiny

God forbid smallpox, which we have already eradicated, comes back because of accidental mishandling!!


6 posted on 05/03/2020 12:43:34 PM PDT by SeekAndFind (look at Michigan, it will)
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To: SeekAndFind

Yes, that’s not a training lab. It’s the kind of lab run by civilians.


7 posted on 05/03/2020 12:50:38 PM PDT by familyop (Hell hath no fury like a scorned parrot.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Needs better officers, more of them and more discipline.


8 posted on 05/03/2020 12:52:10 PM PDT by familyop (Hell hath no fury like a scorned parrot.)
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