Reassessing the Foundations of Smallpox Eradication – By Bhattacharya & Campani

Abstract

Abstract : An expansive, worldwide smallpox eradication programme (SEP) was announced by the World Health Assembly in 1958, leading this decision-making body to instruct the World Health Organization Headquarters in Geneva to work with WHO regional offices to engage and draw in national governments to ensure success. Tabled by the Soviet Union’s representative and passed by a majority vote by member states, the announcement was subject to intense diplomatic negotiations.

This led to the formation, expansion and reshaping of an ambitious and complex campaign that cut across continents and countries. This article examines these inter-twining international, regional and national processes, and challenges long-standing historiographical assumptions about the fight against smallpox only gathering strength from the mid-1960s onwards, after the start of a US-supported programme in western Africa.

The evidence presented here suggests a far more complex picture. It shows that although the SEP’s structures grew slowly between 1958 and 1967, a worldwide eradication programme resulted from international negotiations made possible through gains during this period. Significant progress in limiting the incidence of smallpox sustained international collaboration, and justified the prolongation and expansion of activities. Indeed, all of this bore diplomatic and legal processes within the World Health Assembly and WHO that acted as the foundation of the so-called intensified phase of the SEP and the multi-faceted activities that led to the certification of smallpox eradication in 1980.

Keywords: Smallpox Eradication, World Health Organization, World Health Assembly, International Health, Global Health, VariolaThe World Health Assembly (WHA) of May 1980 hosted the celebrations of the worldwide eradication of naturally occurring smallpox. Caused by the variola virus, the disease had been striking different corners of the globe in regular epidemic cycles, and an international commission of experts met in Geneva in December 1979 to confirm its disappearance in nature.

This certification had been justified with the help of data generated through an intensive, two-year long worldwide search for naturally occurring smallpox, after what turned out to be the last recorded case in 1977 inside Somalia.1 Celebrations of such successes are generally balanced on hagiographic references to the past and this event was no different.

The achievement of smallpox eradication was linked to Edward Jenner’s 1796 discovery of an early version of a smallpox vaccine, even if there was extremely little in common between it and the great variety of vaccinal products, immunological understandings, epidemiological concepts, administrative innovations and societal interventions that had underpinned the worldwide fight against variola. The celebrations also began to manufacture exclusionary myths, built on the privileging of certain projects and their managers over the work of other actors.

The resultant narratives generally ignored the longer histories of smallpox vaccination around the world throughout the twentieth century, as well as the influence of discussion, disagreement and accommodation between the World Health Organization’s Headquarters (WHO HQ) in Geneva, its regional offices and their member states in creating a multi-faceted programme.

This article shows that it is more beneficial to adopt a different frame for the study of smallpox eradication. Interrogating Multiple Historiographies It would be fair to say that existing institutional histories, participant autobiographies and biographies, and academic studies of worldwide smallpox eradication have generally failed to provide us with nuanced assessments of the many organised efforts to improve and widen smallpox surveillance and vaccination work across Latin America and Asia during the 1950s and early 1960s.

For example, official histories prepared or sponsored by the US Centers of Disease Control (CDC) propose a very distinctive historical and temporal frame, which argues that innovations by officials in western and central Africa, from the mid-1960s onwards, were central to the Smallpox Eradication Programme’s (SEP’s) worldwide success.3 This is a narrative describing how relatively small groups of US actors moved from one national context to another, all acting in seemingly uniform ways and spreading a core wisdom supposedly developed by a handful of visionaries that then acted as the driver for worldwide smallpox eradication.4 Herein, the embrace of these 1 World Health Organization, The Global Eradication of Smallpox: Final Report of the Global Commission for the Certification of Smallpox Eradication,

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