Learning from smallpox How to eradicate a disease Julie Garon and Walter A. Orenstein

For most of human history,

medical workers sought
to treat diseases or cure them.

The rise of vaccination
in the 19th century

enhanced the potential to prevent people

from contracting illnesses
in the first place.

But only in recent decades did it
become possible

to ensure that a particular disease
never threatens humanity again.

The story of smallpox,

the first and, so far, the only disease

to be permanently
eradicated from the world,

shows how disease eradication can happen
and why it is so difficult to achieve.

Smallpox emerged in human populations
thousands of years ago

as a contagious virus that spread rapidly,

primarily through close,
face to face contact,

causing fever, aches and rashes.

It killed up to 30% of its victims

and often left survivors with life-long
disfiguring scars.

The devastating impact
of smallpox was so great

that several cultures had religious
deities specifically dedicated to it.

In the 20th century alone,

it is estimated to have killed
more than 300 million people worldwide.

With the effective
deployment of vaccination,

the number of cases began to decrease.

By seeking out infected individuals,

isolating them,

and vaccinating their contacts
to prevent further transmission,

scientists realized that the spread
of the disease could be haulted.

In fact, because smallpox could
only survive in human hosts,

vaccinating all of an infected persons'
potential contacts

would stop the virus dead in its tracks

and eliminate it from that region.

Once this strategy had succeeded

in ridding most industrialized countries
from disease,

health officials realized that eradicating
it worldwide was within reach.

But this was not an easy process,

proving especially difficult in places
suffering from poor infrastructure

or civil wars.

The eradication effort took decades

and involved millions
of people working together,

from world leaders
and international organizations

to rural doctors and community workers.

In India, one of the last
strongholds of the disease,

health workers visited every one
of the country’s 100 million households

to search for cases.

Through this unprecedented
worldwide effort,

in which even rival
superpowers cooperated,

smallpox was finally
declared eradicated in 1980,

saving approximately 40 million lives
over the following two decades.

There were several factors

that made smallpox
an ideal candidate for eradication.

First, humans are essential
to the smallpox lifecycle,

so breaking the chain
of human to human transmission

causes the virus to die out.

In contrast, many other pathogens,
like ebola or the bubonic plague,

can survive in animal carriers,

while the bacteria that cause tetanus
can even live in the soil.

Secondly, individuals
infected with smallpox

displayed a characteristic rash,
making them easy to identify,

even without a lab test.

The lack of such practical
diagnostic tools

for diseases with non-specific symptoms,
or that have long incubation periods,

such as AIDS,
makes their eradication more difficult.

Third, the availability
of a smallpox vaccine

that provided immunity
for five to ten years in a single dose

meant that there was
an effective intervention

to stop the virus from spreading.

And finally, the initial success
of several countries

in eliminating the disease
within their borders

served as a proof of principle
for its eradication worldwide.

Today, the same criteria
are applied to determine

whether other diseases
can be similarly eliminated.

And even though smallpox remains
the only success story thus far,

several other pathogens
may be next in line.

Great progress has been made
towards eradicating guinea worm disease

simply by use of water filters.

And vaccination for polio,

which previously disabled hundreds
of thousands of people each year

is estimated to have prevented 13 million
cases of paralysis,

and 650,000 deaths since 1988.

With a 99% drop in infections
since the eradication effort began,

one final push is all that is needed

to ensure that polio
will never paralyze another child.

Disease eradication is one public health
effort that benefits all of humanity

and challenges us to work together
as a global community.

Beyond eliminating specific diseases,

eradication programs benefit
local populations

by improving health infrastructure.

For example, Nigeria recently
used facilities and personnel

from their polio eradication program
to effectively control an ebola outbreak.

Further more, globalization
and international travel

means that even a single infection
anywhere in the world

can potentially spread to other regions.

By helping to protect others,
we help to protect ourselves.

Disease eradication is the ultimate gift
we can give to everyone alive today,

as well as all future
generations of humanity.