Science and Health

There Are Several Good Reasons To Keep A Smallpox Treatment Ready

The last widespread outbreak of smallpox in the U.S. was in 1949, but the FDA just approved the first drug treatment for it. Do we need it?

There Are Several Good Reasons To Keep A Smallpox Treatment Ready
CDC: Dr. Fred Murphy; Sylvia Whitfield
SMS

Even though the last widespread outbreak of smallpox in the U.S. was almost 70 years ago, the FDA just recently approved the first drug treatment for it. 

This drug is called TPOXX, and while it might seem unnecessary, it could end up being critical. The U.S. stopped widespread vaccination in the '80s. So if smallpox came back today, a lot of people would be in trouble because they wouldn't have any immunity. 

Officials are worried smallpox could be used as a bioweapon, as it has been in the past. In the French and Indian War, British soldiers distributed smallpox-infected blankets to American Indians. The Soviet Union created a smallpox aerosol biological weapon in the 1980s. It included versions which could be put inside intercontinental ballistic missiles. 

Guinea Worm May Be The 2nd Human Disease To Be Completely Wiped Out
Guinea Worm May Be The 2nd Human Disease To Be Completely Wiped Out

Guinea Worm May Be The 2nd Human Disease To Be Completely Wiped Out

With only a few dozen cases per year, the guinea worm could soon join smallpox as a thing of the past.

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Bioweapon concerns resurged in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. Then, New York and other states participated in a smallpox preparedness program where teams of health care workers were vaccinated in case they needed to help treat a smallpox outbreak.

And there's always the risk of accidental infection. In 1976, a microbiologist at a British medical school inadvertently let the disease loose and infected a woman whose office was above his lab. The woman's illness lead to hundreds of quarantines in the UK and even mass healthcare surveillance in North Dakota.