What is DORSCON

DORSCON is short for Disease Outbreak Response System and it lists out the list of responses that Singapore will take as a nation when threaten by a pandemic flu or infectious agent.

The different levels of DORSCON are green, yellow, orange, red and black.

GREEN
  • No novel influenza virus causing severe disease in humans OR
  • Occasional animal - human infections
  • No Human - Human Transmission or rare cases of spread requiring very close and prolonged contact.
  • Healthcare worker/ institution’s response - current triage of patients with fever in Emergency depts and polyclinics;
  • Public response - hygiene measures, mask wearing, social responsibility

YELLOW
  • Inefficient human-to-human transmission. Requires sustained close contact.
  • Small clusters of cases may occur.
  • Isolated imported cases may occur but there is no sustained local transmission.
  • Healthcare worker/ institution’s response - staff in high risk areas (Emergency Depts, ICUs, Triage stations) in PPE
  • Public response - GREEN measures + contact particulars recorded when visiting hospitals & clinics.

ORANGE
  • More efficient human-to-human transmission. Virus not fully transmissible. Requires close contact.
  • Larger clusters of cases in Singapore.
  • Healthcare worker/ institution’s response - All areas with patient contact : staff in PPE
  • Public response - YELLOW measures + No visitors to hospitals
    • Encourage temperature taking at schools and non healthcare establishments
    • Consider closure of schools and suspension of public gatherings and events

RED
  • Pandemic is underway. Virus is fully transmissible from human-to-human
  • Community-level spread.
  • Mild - moderate morbidity & mortality (e.g. 1957 & 1968 pandemics)
  • Healthcare worker/ institution’s response - ORANGE measures + antiviral prophylaxis when local cases occur.
  • Public response - ORANGE measures + social distancing when local cases occur

BLACK
  • Pandemic in Singapore with high morbidity and mortality (e.g. 1918 pandemic)
  • Healthcare and other social systems overwhelmed.
  • Healthcare worker/ institution’s response - as in RED
  • Public response - more rigorous social distancing measures
    • Suspension of all schools, social gathering and institutes of higher learning
    • Advise public to stay at home and even consider curfew

Management of cases under DORSCON

Pre-pandemic (Green to Orange)
  • TTSH/ CDC is the designated treatment facility for any case of potentially infectious disease.
  • Clinics and step down care facilities will refer suspect cases to TTSH Emergency Department for assessment and admission, if necessary
  • Hospitals will isolate all suspect cases and transfer confirmed cases to TTSH/CDC. Confirmed cases, including children and pregnant patients will be centrally managed at TTSH/ CDC. Paediatric and obstetric services will be set up at TTSH/ CDC by KKH when necessary. They will be activated by MOH. When TTSH/ CDC approaches full capacity, other restructured hospitals (RHs) will also have to manage influenza cases.

Pandemic (Red to Black)
  • Flu Clinics will be established at polyclinics and participating primary care clinics to provide outpatient care.
  • Patients with influenza, aged 1 year and older, will be treated with anti-virals. The severe cases will be referred to restructured hospitals for treatment.
  • Due to the expected large number of asymptomatic cases who could present other complications, both restructured hospitals and private hospitals will need to manage flu as well as non-flu patients. Hospitals and Flu Clinics should segregate flu and non-flu cases to minimise transmission.
  • There is a dedicated ambulance service for transportation of potentially infectious cases to TTSH/ CDC.