Smallpox vaccine preparedness starts just in case
By BILL KETTLER
Mail Tribune
A few pinpricks in Jim Hosticks arm mark the local start of a national
campaign to protect Americans from an ancient scourge.
The Jackson County Jail nurse is the first Rogue Valley health worker to be
vaccinated against smallpox as part of a national smallpox preparedness program.
Hostick and a few other soon-to-be-vaccinated health workers would immunize
others if the disease surfaced in or near Oregon.
Local smallpox response teams across the United States would be the first
line of defense if smallpox resurfaced. Each local team would vaccinate hospital
workers, ambulance crews, police, physicians and others who might encounter
infected individuals, said Dr. Jim Shames, Jackson Countys health officer.
"There needs to be a core group of health care workers who can immunize
without putting themselves at risk," Shames wrote in an April letter to Jackson
County health care providers. "This team also would serve to immunize future
vaccinators quickly in the case of an outbreak."
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Smallpox has been eradicated in the natural world, but in recent years there
has been growing concern that terrorists could reintroduce it. American
physicians stopped vaccinating against smallpox in the early 1970s, thinking
smallpox was gone for good. Now millions of people are vulnerable to a disease
that kills one-third of its victims and leaves survivors terribly scarred or
blinded.
Hostick was vaccinated last week when a group of health care workers met in
Bend. Others, including Shames, probably will be immunized in June.
"The vaccination itself is a real piece of cake," Hostick said. "They just
dip a little short two-pronged needle into the vaccine and poke the outside of
your arm a few times. It feels kind of like they took a straight pin and poked
you in the arm."
Smallpox vaccine is effective if administered within three days of a persons
exposure to the virus. That 72-hour margin of safety allows health care workers
to immunize others with a strategy known as "ring vaccination."
"You isolate the individual (with smallpox) and form a ring (of vaccinated
people) around that person," Shames said in an interview on Wednesday.
Health officials have chosen to avoid vaccinating the general public because
the vaccine poses some risks. For every 1 million vaccinations, about one person
dies, and 15 to 20 people have life-threatening reactions. Fifteen to 20 percent
of all those vaccinated come down with a fever and swollen lymph nodes for a day
or two.
Those complication rates led local hospitals to postpone immunizing health
care workers until smallpox actually reappears.
"As long as there is not one case of smallpox anywhere in the world, the
risks outweigh the benefits," said Carlene Lawrence, an infection control
specialist at Providence Medford Medical Center.
Providence Medford and Rogue Valley Medical Center have both screened their
staffs to determine who could be immunized without undue risk.
Shames said complications from immunization have become a bigger concern
because more people have compromised immune systems these days. People who are
on chemotherapy, for example, or organ-transplant recipients who take strong
anti- rejection drugs might be more likely to have complications.
Although a bioterror attack on Southern Oregon seems unlikely, the region
lies astride the West Coasts major north- south travel artery. People who might
be infected in a larger city could expose Rogue Valley residents to the disease
as they passed through.
"Even though were just little Medford, were on Interstate 5," said Susan
Patronik, an infection control specialist at Rogue Valley Medical Center. "So
weve got to have a plan."
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?"