pandemic

The Eradication of Smallpox: Humanity's Greatest (Forgotten) Achievment

by: Daniel De Groot

Wed Nov 04, 2009 at 18:00


The disease, for which no effective treatment was ever developed, killed as many as 30% of those infected. Between 65-80% of survivors were marked with deep pitted scars (pockmarks), most prominent on the face.

In some ancient cultures, smallpox was such a major killer of infants that custom forbade the naming of a newborn until the infant had caught the disease and proved it would survive.
WHO fact sheet on smallpox

In a conservative estimate by experts, in the 20th Century, smallpox killed 300 million people.  More than Hitler, Stalin and Mao combined.  It left about twice as many as it killed, scarred (literally) for life.  By 1967, there had been a number of failed efforts to eradicate diseases from humanity, including an effort at US behest on malaria.  Defying expectations, a shoestring operation run out of that inefficient and (if you listen to conservatives) useless organization, the United Nations, managed to organize a program of vaccination and isolation that resulted in smallpox afflicting its last victim in 1977 (excepting a tragic case in a British research lab).

If the UN never did another useful thing (it has done many), this alone would justify its existence.  It is past time that liberals remember this marvellous achievement, and begin to reference it more often.  This is the potential of big (read: "effective") government, and speaks to the proven capacity for coordinated global cooperation to solve humanity's most pressing (and depressing) problems.  

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Swine Flu - A Product of Antivirals and CAFOs?

by: counterspin

Sun Sep 20, 2009 at 13:36

There is an increasing concern that the overuse of antibiotics in the food supply is a major contributor to the rise in drug-resistant supergerms.

This column is based on a single and quite extraordinary statistic: Food animal production accounts for 70 percent -- 70 percent! -- of the antibiotics used in the United States. That doesn't even include the antibiotics used for animals that actually get sick. That figure is for "non-therapeutic use" such as growth promotion and disease prevention.
 
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Weekly Pulse: Days of Swine and Roses

by: The Media Consortium

Wed Apr 29, 2009 at 11:29

by Lindsay Beyerstein, TMC MediaWire Blogger

Yesterday, Senate Republicans prioritized human life over anti-abortion grandstanding and confirmed Gov. Kathleen Sebelius as Secretary of Health and Human Services. When the world totters on the brink of a pandemic, slow-walking the future health secretary begins to look unseemly.
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