Cases in Simulated Disaster Medicine | Chapter 39

Document Type

Book Chapter

Publication Date

2-6-2026

Editor

Andrew Milsten and John Broach

Abstract

This case presents a scenario involving a botulism bioterrorism attack targeting a small rural community, where restaurant salad bars were intentionally contaminated with botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT). The local emergency department of a 45-bed hospital is overwhelmed with multiple patients exhibiting progressive neurological deficits and respiratory distress after consuming contaminated food. With limited critical care resources, including only four ventilators, the hospital faces the challenge of managing a rapidly escalating crisis. Key teaching points include the diagnosis and management of botulism, advanced airway support in severe cases, and coordination with national emergency preparedness resources for procuring antitoxins. The scenario emphasizes the transition from conventional to contingency and crisis operations, triggering the hospital’s incident command system (HICS) and raising ethical questions about critical care resource allocation. It highlights the importance of disaster preparedness, collaboration with public health authorities, and effective crisis management in responding to a mass casualty bioterrorism event.

First Page

263

Last Page

270

Chapter Title

Chapter 39 - Botulism Bioterrorism in a Small Rural Hospital

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

ISBN

[9781009279024, 9781009279017]

Rights

© Cambridge University Press 2026

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