Hurricane Helene: Public Health Department Closures

Latest updates: Hurricane Helene

Our public health departments' hours of operation may be affected by power and staffing outages. This means that some closures may not appear on the state government office delays and closings map. The health and safety of our employees and our clients remains our highest priority. We are working to get services restored as safely and quickly as possible.

Learn more about DPH's role with hurricanes, floods, and weather emergencies.

Sarin

Sarin is a human-made chemical warfare agent that is classified as a nerve agent. Sarin is a clear, colorless, and tasteless liquid that has no odor in its pure form. Sarin, also known as GB, can evaporate into a vapor (gas) and spread into the environment. Sarin is not found naturally in the environment, but was developed in 1938 in Germany as a pesticide. Nerve agents, the most toxic and rapidly acting of the known chemical warfare agents, are similar to certain kinds of pesticides (insect killers) called organophosphates in terms of how they work and what kind of harmful effects they cause. However, nerve agents are much more potent than organophosphate pesticides.

Basic Sarin References

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (www.cdc.gov/) maintains a web page devoted exclusively to sarin (https://emergency.cdc.gov/agent/sarin/index.asp) which includes excellent technical documents about the nerve agent. Links are provided below to these documents, selected from the several dozen available, as useful for persons, including health care professionals, looking for a rapid, basic orientation to sarin.

Information for the General Public from the CDC

Information for Health Professionals from the CDC

More Information About Sarin

Sarin Reporting

Physicians and health care facilities should report suspected cases of exposure to sarin to their local county health department.

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Risks and Hazards
Disaster Preparedness