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The scourge of the Americas. This article is designed to accompany the video shown in class.
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Here it is
2009 and we're still dealing with a threat of Smallpox Smallpox is the most deadly
disease in our species’ history. Variola virus causes this disease and
humans are the virus’ only natural host. It is transmitted
person-to-person, most commonly through the air. Infected people exhale
the virus from blisters in their mouth, and anyone who comes within 10
feet of a smallpox victim can inhale the aerosolized virus and catch
All Americans are susceptible
to smallpox. A majority of the population, born after 1972, has never
been vaccinated. The As conceived by America’s Founders, government’s main function is to protect the liberty and property of its citizens. Self-ownership underpins a truly liberal society. Individuals are free, within the constraints of honoring their contracts and not encroaching on other persons and their property, to do what they want. From this perspective, each citizen should decide whether he or she wants to be vaccinated. But many people today who call themselves liberals hold a different view of government and the state. They think the state must take charge of the health and welfare of its citizens.
The ACIP updated its "recommendations" on smallpox vaccination in its June 2002 Draft. They are: 10 to 20,000 medical workers "pre-designated by the appropriate bioterrorism and public health authorities" should be vaccinated for smallpox. The committee opposes voluntary mass vaccination. Its parent agency, the CDC, controls all the smallpox vaccine in the country, enough, properly diluted, to vaccinate all 288 million people in the United States. The ACIP contends that the vaccine should not be made available to the general public because, in the committee’s opinion, "the potential benefits of vaccination do not outweigh the risks of vaccine complications." People who disagree with this assessment and think that the benefits of vaccination do indeed outweigh its risks and want to be vaccinated are out of luck. The CDC keeps a tight lid on its stockpile of smallpox vaccine. Smallpox has an ancient lineage. Egyptian writings 5,700 years old describe this malady, and there is a mummified pharaoh in the Cairo Museum (who died in 1157 B.C.) that has pustules indicative of smallpox on its face and hands. According to Jonathan Tucker in Scourge: The Once and Future Threat of Smallpox, when Columbus discovered America in 1492 the native population of North and South America was around 72 million. By 1800 it had decreased to 600,000, in large part because of smallpox, which Europeans brought with them. Queen Elizabeth I, George Washington, and Abraham Lincoln contracted this disease. Smallpox left Elizabeth with disfiguring facial scars and bald, requiring her to wear a wig and heavy makeup for the rest of her life. America fought the Revolutionary War in the midst of a smallpox epidemic, which British forces exploited to their advantage (by sending infected civilian refugees into the American lines).
The overall
mortality rate for smallpox in unvaccinated people is 30 percent – 40
percent in young children, 20 percent in adults, and 30 percent or more in
the elderly. (Flat-type smallpox has a 95 percent mortality rate; and a
mild form of the disease, variola minor, has a 1 percent mortality rate.)
Boston had its final smallpox epidemic in 1901 (when the average life
The full extent of the Soviet bioweapons program in the 1970s and 80s, which focused on smallpox, is now known. Ken Alibek (Kanatjan Alibekov), one of its directors, reveals its extent in Biohazard: The Chilling True Story of the Largest Covert Biological Weapons Program in the World—Told From the Inside by the Man Who Ran It, published in 2000. With the breakup of the Soviet Union the thousands of scientists working in this program became unemployed and some of them, along with their families, destitute. Both their services and stocks of variola virus came onto the black market. Richard Preston in "Demon in the Freezer," published in The New Yorker in 1999 (he has written a book with that title that was published in October 2002), points out this irony with regard to the eradication of smallpox: "The eradication [with the Soviet Union’s help] caused the human species to lose its immunity to smallpox, and that was what made it possible for the Soviets to turn smallpox into a weapon rivaling the hydrogen bomb." He writes, "The Central Intelligence Agency has become deeply alarmed about smallpox" and reveals that the U.S. government keeps a classified list of states that it suspects has weaponized smallpox. Iraq is on the list (along with Russia, China, Pakistan, N. Korea, and Cuba). The November 16, 2001 issue of Jane’s Foreign Report (#2664) says that a reliable source tells them that Iraq bought smallpox virus from Russian scientists, who now work there; and "agents [are] provided with smallpox to spread abroad." Jane reports, "Our informant reckons that Saddam might try such an attack only if he felt the game was over and he faced death." That was the line until the invasion of Iraq proved all the assertions of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) to be false. The Federal government, in its September 16, 2002 Smallpox Vaccination Clinic Guide, outlines how state and local public health authorities can set up and staff clinics to carry out "voluntary, large-scale, post-event smallpox vaccination" should a "smallpox outbreak" occur. The 48-page guide states that "once Federal authorities have authorized release of vaccine" it could distribute 280 million doses around the country within five to seven days, and by following the template provided in the guide local public health officials (utilizing a staff of 4,600 people) could vaccinate 1,000,000 people over a seven-day period. This plan would supplement standard measures of surveillance and control and "ring vaccination" (tracking down and vaccinating every person who has been within ten feet of a smallpox victim). Health officials used these techniques to eradicate smallpox. Ring vaccination in natural outbreaks of smallpox worked because people infected with smallpox virus can escape the full effects of the disease and not pass it on if they are vaccinated in the first four days of the infection. "Post-event" mass vaccination is predicated on this fact. This most likely would not be the case in a biological attack. The strain of smallpox virus that the Russians weaponized and what Iraq most likely has is the India-1 strain, which is highly virulent. Soviet laboratory tests showed that monkeys exposed to an aerosol of this strain would contract smallpox in 1 to 5 days rather than the usual 7 to 17 days with other strains. In a biological
attack In the last smallpox outbreak that occurred in this country, the one in New York in 1947, a man who became infected with smallpox in Mexico rode a bus to New York while he was in the prodromal phase of the disease and developed a skin rash (which doctors misdiagnosed) when he arrived in the city. That single, naturally occurring case, when it was discovered to be smallpox in people that he had infected, created havoc. In a biological attack a likely scenario would be that a terrorist, carrying an aerosolized can like that used for hair spray, would spray freeze-dried smallpox virus in a shopping mall, airport, or sports stadium. Aerosolized smallpox sprayed in the men’s rooms of a dozen airports around the country by a group of terrorists would, two weeks later in an unvaccinated population, create a crisis of unimaginable proportions and turn "post-event" mass vaccination into a logistical nightmare.
Why will Federal authorities not release the vaccine to Americans who want to be vaccinated? They are concerned that people with skin disorders, like eczema, and people with immune system deficiencies who have cancer, organ transplants, and AIDS might inadvertently get vaccinated. Such people are at an increased risk for an adverse reaction, including death, and should not undergo vaccination. (This includes pregnant women and young children.) But as Dr. William Bicknell points out in his article in the New England Journal of Medicine titled "The Case for Voluntary Smallpox Vaccination," an increased level of immunity in a vaccinated population will "reduce the overall risk of infection among immuno-commpromised persons in the event of an attack." Also, more careful screening on a patient-by-patient basis can be done in a pre-event setting to avoid vaccinating people with immune system deficiencies than would be possible in a crisis atmosphere after a biological attack. Smallpox vaccine is a live virus (vaccinia virus). People who are inoculated with it can spread virus particles at their vaccination site to others in close contact with them, particularly if they do not observe standard precautions of keeping the site dry and bandaged until the scab falls off and washing one’s hands thoroughly after changing the bandage. Secondary infection contact rarely happens, but the CDC obviously does not want to be confronted by an irate AIDS Lobby protesting its pre-event release of the vaccine if a person with AIDS should die from a vaccinia infection acquired by contact with a person who has been recently vaccinated. If the government refuses to release smallpox vaccine to the general public, there is still a way to be inoculated against smallpox. One can be vaccinated "arm-to-arm." We can, if we have to, vaccinate ourselves the way people sometimes did it in the 19th century. We can, Edward Jenner discovered smallpox vaccination in 1796 (after a milkmaid told him that cowpox, which she contracted from a cow’s utter, protected her from smallpox, and he then noticed that milkmaids rarely exhibited the facial scars of smallpox). Absenting cows with cowpox to provide material for inoculation or refrigeration to store and transport stocks of it, people would transfer the vaccine from one person to the next arm-to-arm. The Spanish brought smallpox vaccine to the New World this way. A group of orphans were recruited for the long voyage, and two children were vaccinated shortly before departure. When cowpox pustules developed on their arms the ship’s doctor would take material from their lesions and use it to vaccinate two more children, repeating this procedure each time new pustules formed in successive children until they reached Venezuela, with yet two more children providing an aliquot of active vaccine for people in South America. The government plans to vaccinate military personnel and health care workers (officials have not yet decided how many, but it will be somewhere between 20,000 and 500,000). These people could provide a source of active vaccine for their family and friends arm-to-arm reminiscent of those orphan children bringing smallpox vaccine to the New World. The technique of vaccination is fairly simple (and it does not require a bifurcated needle). If you cannot obtain vaccinia vaccine one way or another, a devastating biological attack has occurred and smallpox is rampant, in a worse case scenario you can do the kind of vaccination that people employed for centuries before Jenner. That is variolation. Rather than have to suffer the disease with its 30 percent mortality rate and disfiguring facial scars, people inoculated themselves with the smallpox virus itself obtained from a pustule on a smallpox victim. Smallpox introduced through the skin rather than the lungs results in a much-attenuated disease, with only pustules forming around the inoculation site. Variolation, known as "buying the smallpox," has a fatality rate of 1 percent, much better odds than with the full-blown disease. One thing we must do, especially with the prospect of a biological attack looming, is to maintain optimum health and to keep our immune system strong. This will improve the odds that we will survive it. Read Dr. Russell Blaylock’s booklet Bioterrorism: How You Can Survive. Let us hope that our government leaders will release smallpox vaccine for voluntary, pre-attack, mass vaccination. |