The Laboratory Response Network (LRN) is a collaborative effort within the US federal government involving the Association of Public Health Laboratories and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Most state public health laboratories participate as reference laboratories (formerly level B/C) of the LRN. These facilities support hundreds of sentinel (formerly level A) laboratories in local hospitals throughout the United States and can provide sophisticated confirmatory diagnosis and typing of biological agents that may be used in a bioterrorist attack or other bio-agent incident. The LRN was established in 1999.
Levels
The LRN consists of a loose network of government labs at three levels:[1]
Sentinel Laboratories
These laboratories, found in many hospitals and local public health facilities, have the ability to rule out specific bioterrorism threat agents, to handle specimens safely, and to forward specimens to higher-level labs within the network.
Reference Laboratories
These laboratories (more than 100), typically found at state health departments and at military, veterinary, agricultural, and water-testing facilities, can rule on the presence of the various biological threat agents. They can use BSL-3 practices and can often conduct nucleic acid amplification and molecular typing studies.
National Laboratories
These laboratories, including those at CDC and U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID), can use BSL-4 practices and serve as the final authority in the evaluation of potential bioterrorism specimens. They provide specialized reagents to lower level laboratories and have the ability to bank specimens, perform serotyping, and detect genetic recombinants and chimeras.
References
See also
United States biological defense program |
|---|
| Organizations | Federal administrative | | DHS |
- DHS Chemical and Biological Defense Division
- DHS Office of Health Affairs (National Biosurvelliance Integration Center, BioWatch)
- National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasures Center
- National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility
- National Bioforensic Analysis Center
|
|---|
| DNI |
- National Counterproliferation Center (Advisory Committee on Bioterrorism)
|
|---|
| DHHS | |
|---|
| DoD |
- Assistant SECDEF for NCB Defense Programs
- Defense Threat Reduction Agency
- Global Emerging Infections Surveillance and Response System
- Joint Program Executive Office of Chemical and Biological Defense (JPEO-CBD)
- National Center for Medical Intelligence
|
|---|
|
|---|
Federal research | Trans- departmental | |
|---|
| Military |
- U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases
- Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
- Edgewood Chemical Biological Center
- Dugway Proving Ground
|
|---|
| Civilian | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Response | |
|---|
Non- governmental | Academic centers and think tanks |
- Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security (formerly Center for Biosecurity)
- Henry L. Stimson Center
- Center for Advancing Microbial Risk Assessment
- Center for Biodefense and Emerging Pathogens (Brown University)
- Middle-Atlantic Regional Center of Excellence for Biodefense and Emerging Infectious Diseases Research
- Center for Biodefense Immune Modeling (University of Rochester)
- Johns Hopkins Center for Civilian Biodefense Strategies
- National Center for Biodefense and Infectious Diseases (NCBID; George Mason Univ.)
|
|---|
Government contractors |
- Battelle Memorial Institute
- SRI International
- Idaho Technology
- Phoenix Air
|
|---|
|
|---|
|
|---|
Programs and projects | | Threat reduction |
- Nunn–Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, implemented the Defense Threat Reduction Agency and Biological Threat Reduction (DoD) plus
- Project Bacchus
- Project Clear Vision
- Project Jefferson
|
|---|
| Biosurveillance | |
|---|
| Biosecurity/Biosurety | |
|---|
| Medical intelligence | |
|---|
| Disaster response |
- National Response Framework of the National Strategy for Homeland Security (DHS; including NIMS and ICS)
- National Disaster Medical System (DHHS)
- Strategic National Stockpile (CDC, DHS)
|
|---|
|
|---|
Technology and equipment | | Protection | |
|---|
| Detection |
- Cell CANARY
- Biological Materials MASINT
- Autonomous Pathogen Detection System
- Joint Biological Agent Identification and Diagnostic System (JBAIDS)
|
|---|
| Biocontainment | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Law | | Treaties |
- Geneva Protocol (1925, 1975)
- Statement on Chemical and Biological Defense Policies and Programs (1969)
- Biological Weapons Convention (1972)
|
|---|
| Legislation | |
|---|
|
|---|
International representation |
- Global Health Security Initiative
- Global Partnership Against the Spread of Weapons and Materials of Mass Destruction
- United Nations Security Council Resolution 1540 (2004)
|
|---|
| History | Past biological incidents | |
|---|
Defunct organizations and programs |
- United States Army Medical Unit
- United States biological weapons program
- Sunshine Project
- Aeromedical Isolation Team (DoD)
|
|---|
|
|---|
| Related topics |
- Agro-terrorism
- Biodefense
- Biosecurity in the United States
- Biological agent
- Biological hazard
- Biological warfare (BW)
- Biosurveillance
- Bioterrorism
- CBRN defense
- Decontamination
- Entomological warfare
- Isolation (health care)
- Select agent
- Smallpox virus retention debate
|
|---|