Hoboken medical technician offers reassurance as N.J. readies vaccine
Tuesday, January 28, 2003
BY ANGELA STEWART AND KEVIN COUGHLIN Star-Ledger Staff
As New Jersey bioterrorism experts prepare for the worst, a Hoboken man has
some words of hope.
There is life after smallpox.
Sometimes.
"I don't know why they're making it such a big thing," said Rajnikant Amlani,
62, who survived smallpox as a boy in India.
The state plans to start smallpox vaccinations for public health workers on
Friday, when 100 people, including state epidemiologist Eddy Bresnitz, are
scheduled to get the immunization. Today, state officials will train 50
vaccinators on how to give the smallpox vaccine.
It's all part of a controversial federal program. New Jersey hasn't lost
anyone to smallpox since 1914, and the world's last natural case of smallpox
occurred in Somalia in 1977. In rare cases, the vaccine itself can be fatal.
But smallpox, the disease, is far deadlier, typically killing a third of its
victims. With the threat of war in Iraq fanning bioterror fears, the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is urging inoculations of key health
volunteers.
Amlani said he never will forget the scorching fever and red, itchy, rash
that nearly drove him crazy as a boy of 7 or 8. Several of his six siblings
caught the disease, too.
"In India, it was very common," said Amlani, a medical technician at
Hoboken's St. Mary Hospital. He came to America in 1970 and has two grown
children.
Smallpox has no cure. You survive, or it kills you.
Amlani recalls herbal treatments.
"I had to be put in a room by myself at home," he said, noting the disease
was highly contagious. He missed weeks of school.
Yet common as smallpox was, Amlani didn't know anyone who died from it. And
he escaped the gruesome scars that mark many of his friends who survived the
deadly virus.
"I never really considered it dangerous," said Amlani.
Officials from the state's 85 acute-care hospitals have been calling the New
Jersey Hospital Association with questions about the vaccine, and about legal
protections and health coverage for immunized workers who become ill or infect
others.
"As people step forward to participate in the program, they want assurances
they will be afforded some protection," said Valerie Sellers, the association's
senior vice president for health planning and research.
State health officials met yesterday with more than 300 hospital personnel
and regional epidemiologists from county health departments to brief them on
potential adverse effects of the vaccine and what medications may be used for
treatment.
Across the state, some hospitals have been coming up with dozens of
volunteers, only to find out later through screening that many of their
employees are not eligible.
The vaccine is not recommended for people with skin problems, such as eczema,
or those with weakened immune systems from HIV, organ transplants or cancer.
People with close family members in those categories should avoid the vaccine,
too.
In addition to the first wave of health care workers, the state is also
planning to immunize as many as 200,000 police, firefighters and emergency
medical personnel, but that will not likely occur before spring.
Because Amlani has had smallpox, he is immune now.
But one of his colleagues at the hospital, emergency room doctor Achyut
Gandhi, is ready to be re-immunized.
He treated smallpox victims in India in the 1970s and doesn't take the
disease lightly.
"It's better to be prepared than be caught unaware," Gandhi said.
ALL INFORMATION, DATA, AND
MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR GENERAL INFORMATION
PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS
OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR
LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND
COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH
YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"