Overview of Smallpox

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One of the world’s most dreaded plagues for centuries, smallpox is now eradicated. Vaccination programs were pushed worldwide by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the disease was eliminated from the world. This push resulted in the last naturally occurring case in the world being almost 40 years ago. Once eradicated the once routine or mandatory vaccinations were stopped for the general public and it was deemed no longer necessary to prevent the disease. Although currently eradicated worldwide, two medical laboratory stockpiles still remain in Russia and the United States. With these stockpiles in existence the possibility of bio terrorism emerges and fear of these stockpiles getting into the wrong hands and being weaponized for use against the public is rising. The smallpox disease is highly contagious and easily communicable and currently there is no cure for this disease. If reintroduced, an epidemic would be devastating worldwide.

From as early as we know epidemics and plagues have drastically affected mankind all over the world. With no regard to race, creed, religion, gender, social class or economic status, they have ravaged and devastated the human race across all continents. Small Pox, one these voracious and merciless diseases, has had its hand in this devastation. The highly contagious disease is responsible for the death of hundreds of millions of people over thousands of years with three hundred million of those deaths, coming from the 20th century alone (Carrell, 2004).

As early as AD 100, in Rome smallpox ravaged for 15 years, causing two thousand deaths daily. The disease spread throughout Europe, Asia and Northern Africa from the 12th through the 15th century. Colonists and explorers from E...

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...only likely occurrence), it can be concluded that the reappearance of the smallpox disease would cause devastation of great magnitude. Because of the eradication of smallpox so long ago, it is believed that any occurrence would be due to a bio-terror event (Centers of Disease Control and Prevention, 2009). The United State’s has a viable plan for response in the event of smallpox falling into the wrong hands and becoming weaponized. Hopefully worldwide endemics of the past would not reoccur.

Works Cited

Carrell, J. L. (2004). The Speckkled Monster: A Historical Tale of Battling Smallpox. New York, NY: The Penguin Group.

Centers of Disease Control and Prevention. (2009, February 6). Retrieved from http://emergency.cdc.gov/agent/smallpox/overview/disease-facts.asp

Sherman, I. (2007). Twelve Diseases That Changed Our World. Washington, D.C.: ASM Press.

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