December 17, 2002
Smallpox Victim Urges Polio Vaccine Use
OSMAN HASSAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS
MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) -
Ali Maow Maalim knew smallpox was lurking in Somalia, but when his fellow
hospital workers were getting vaccinated a quarter century ago, he couldn't
bear the thought of a needle jabbing his arm. So he rolled up his left shirt
sleeve and pretended he had already gotten a shot.
"I made myself miss the vaccine thinking I was cheating the others. But
later it turned out I was cheating myself," Maalim, now 46 and the last
known victim of smallpox in nature, said in an interview Tuesday.
Still bearing the scars of the disease that ravaged the world before it
was declared eradicated in 1979, Maalim now works with the World Health
Organization and the U.N. Children's Fund to encourage Somalis to ensure
their children gulp down the vaccine that will wipe out polio from its final
redoubts in Africa.
Maalim came down with "furuq" - as the Somalis call smallpox - in October
1977 when he was working at the government hospital in Merca, 60 miles south
of Mogadishu on the Indian Ocean.
He and his colleagues were sent to rural areas to vaccinate nomadic camel
herders, subsistence farmers and workers building an irrigation system on
the Juba River.
"Unfortunately, one day a boy and a girl suffering from the disease were
brought to the hospital, and I had to take them to a quarantine facility
outside town," Maalim said.
About a month later, the 21-year-old came down with a high fever and
began vomiting. Rather than go to the hospital and admit he had not been
vaccinated against smallpox, Maalim said he went to a traditional healer who
rubbed her spit on his body. It didn't help.
He learned the girl he had taken into quarantine had died; then, he was
taken to the same quarantine facility.
"I couldn't lie on my back or my stomach because the pustules grew worse
and worse," recalled Maalim, who still has scars on his legs and neck. "But
with the help of Allah, after 55 days, I recovered."
Now married with two wives and five children age 2 to 20, Maalim says
that being the last person known to have acquired smallpox in nature, "does
not make me any happier, nor does it make me gloomy."
A final smallpox case in 1978 occurred as a result of a laboratory
accident in England.
But, Maalim says, his infection has motivated him to encourage people to
trust vaccines against polio and tuberculosis.
"Because I had the sad experience of defying the vaccine and then
suffered as a result, now I work as a polio vaccine agent with WHO and
UNICEF," he said.
Even in war-torn Somalia, which has had no functioning central government
since the ouster of longtime President Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991, the guns
fall silent on the days health workers fan out to administer the doses of
polio vaccine.
Smallpox, an acute infectious disease caused by a virus, used to kill 3
million to 4 million people per year and left millions more hideously
scarred and blind. A WHO-sponsored vaccination campaign led to its
eradication.
All stocks of smallpox virus were supposed to have been destroyed after
that except for samples in two official labs in Russia and the United
States. But experts fear hostile nations or terrorist groups may have the
virus and could use it in an attack.
On Friday, President Bush said he would take the smallpox vaccine along
with the military personnel and health care response teams who will soon
begin to receive inoculations.
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