Biodetection2014 edition of updated first responder biodetection technology guide available

Published 11 April 2014

A 2014 update to a detailed product guide listing biodetection technologies and sampling products is now available. The updated digest, Biodetection Technologies for First Responders: 2014, provides a comprehensive compilation of commercially available detection devices and products published to help first responders when purchasing equipment and supplies needed to rapidly assess biological threats.

A 2014 update to a detailed product guide listing biodetection technologies and sampling products is now available. The updated digest provides a comprehensive compilation of commercially available detection devices and products published to help first responders when purchasing equipment and supplies needed to rapidly assess biological threats.

DHS’s Science and Technology Directorate and the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) just made the revised report — Biodetection Technologies for First Responders: 2014 — available free of charge. A PNNL release reports that the technology summaries in the new version of the report provide web links, equipment specifications, pricing, and annotated references from peer-reviewed publications for about thirty detection technologies and twenty-five sampling products from nearly two dozen companies (PNNL notes that it does not sell or endorse any of these products).

This report updates the previous edition, which was downloaded more than 5,500 times. The revised 2014 report can be found here.

We believe first responders and purchasing specialists will find the updated report a valuable product-buying guide,” said Cindy Bruckner-Lea, PNNL principal investigator. “With dozens of companies, technologies and sampling products listed, the report provides a convenient and useful resource to fire fighters, law enforcement and hazardous materials response teams.”

More than 69,000 publicly reported suspicious powder incidents have occurred in the United States since the 2001 anthrax attacks. The events continue across the nation at a rate of about five per day, including several incidents involving ricin in 2013.

Rapid biodetection is essential to the first responder community,” said Seattle Fire Department Assistant Chief, A.D. Vickery. “These professionals are on the front lines everyday ensuring public health and safety is protected and preserved.”

In addition to the report, PNNL is nearing completion of its first round of independent biodetection technology performance evaluations. The initial focus of the product appraisals will be on the ability of the products to detect anthrax and various forms of ricin, as well as the impact of a wide range of commonly encountered hoax powder materials. PNNL intends to provide its initial results of this independent analysis at the International Association of Fire Chiefs conference later this year.

PNNL team members and other first responder hosts will be sponsoring a 90-minute session at the IAFC International Hazardous Materials Response Teams Conference, to be held 29May-1 June in Baltimore, Maryland. The 30 May session will include brief presentations on technology testing results as well as use and instrument limitations. The session’s primary focus, however, will involve interactive discussions on the needs, gaps, priorities and useful tools that can assist first responders in making informed choices when facing a potential bioevent.