PHILADELPHIA (Jan. 21, 2003) -- The current smallpox vaccination
policy of vaccinating a very limited number of first responders to a
potential smallpox outbreak and avoiding mass vaccination is the best
vaccination strategy, say two smallpox experts in an article in Annals
of Internal Medicine.
The article is released today online at
http://www.annals.org and will be
published in the March 18, 2003, hard copy edition of the journal.
In the absence of a known threat of smallpox exposure, mass
vaccination of the entire population or selective or voluntary
vaccination would be dangerous to many who might get the vaccine, their
contacts and the public health initiative, say J. Michael Lane, MD, MPH
and Joel Goldstein, MD, in the article.
The authors cite studies from the 1960s documenting the complications
associated with smallpox vaccination, including spread to close
contacts, and note that the risks of vaccination may be greater today
because of the larger number of people with immunosuppression and atopic
dermatitis.
Dr. Lane was formerly director of the smallpox eradication program at
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dr. Goldstein, a
practicing pediatrician and a clinical instructor in pediatrics at Emory
University School of Medicine, was involved with the evaluation and
treatment of smallpox vaccination complications at the CDC.
Previous studies have shown that smallpox does not spread rapidly
under natural conditions; in fact, it takes a "leisurely" course, the
authors say.
Thus, a "reasonable mix of judicious vaccination of close contacts
and effective isolation of patients can readily stop outbreaks within
two infective generations,"(about four weeks), the authors say.
Because of the morbidity and mortality associated with vaccination,
in the absence of a documented threat of bioterrorism, the authors
conclude that appropriate immunization of a small number of medical
workers is an adequate and reasonable policy. "Any increase in vaccine
usage will lead to an increase in side effects and possibly death," said
Dr. Goldstein. "We must be very careful about the vaccination strategy
we select."
At the same time, the authors recommend a systemic public health
effort to build vaccine supplies, institutionalize vaccine production
capacity, develop and expand laboratory expertise and train public
health authorities and first-response clinicians.
Besides evaluating the risks and benefits of several pre-attack
vaccination strategies, the authors discuss how smallpox is transmitted,
kinds of vaccines, normal vaccination response, and the three types of
rare but potentially fatal complications that can follow vaccination.
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Annals of Internal Medicine, the world's most widely cited and
peer-reviewed specialty journal, is published twice monthly by the
American College of Physicians-American Society of Internal Medicine (ACP-ASIM)
in Philadelphia. ACP-ASIM, with more than 115,000 members, is the
second-largest medical association in the United States. ACP-ASIM
members are internists: specialists in the prevention, detection, and
treatment of illnesses that primarily affect adults.
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/01/030122072259.htm