A population survey--would Australian general practice be the first point of contact during an anthrax bioterrorism event?
- 1 March 2006
- journal article
- Vol. 35 (3) , 172-4
Abstract
Anthrax bioterrorism is a new threat to Australians. How they would respond to an anthrax bioterrorism event is unknown. A national telephone survey of Australian adults. We successfully interviewed 1001 Australian adults (response rate 63%). The threat of anthrax bioterrorism was of medium to high concern to 57% of survey participants. In the event of an anthrax bioterrorism event, the first point of care would be GPs for 60% of survey participants, and 71% were confident in their doctor's ability to recognise anthrax. Most would accept vaccination if anthrax bioterrorism cases were reported locally, or even elsewhere in Australia. Australian GPs should be included in any bioterrorism planning to respond to such threats.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: