ORLANDO, Fla. Dec. 3 Orange County
Sheriff Kevin Beary didn't wince Tuesday as he was pricked in his left arm
15 times with a small, two-pronged needle containing the smallpox vaccine.
Beary hopes most of his department's 1,400 deputies follow his example by
becoming among the first law enforcement officers in the nation to get
inoculated against the deadly virus.
The sheriff decided to get his deputies immunized independent of plans by
the federal government to inoculate 500,000 emergency workers and 500,000
military personnel. President Bush was expected to announce immunization
plans this week. Eventually, all Americans are expected to have access to
the vaccine.
"The best place to be is the lead dog on the sled," Beary said. "We on
the local level are waiting for the federal government to get things done.
They're doing a good job up there but I don't have time to wait."
Routine vaccinations in the United States ended in 1972, making the
population vulnerable to an attack. In 1980, the disease was declared
eradicated worldwide, and all samples of the virus were to have been
destroyed except those held by special labs in Atlanta and Moscow.
The broad fear is that terrorists might get their hands on some samples,
or somehow come up with their own virus, and use it to attack unprotected
citizens.
The highly contagious virus, for which there is no known treatment,
historically killed 30 percent of its victims when it was able to spread
unchecked by inoculations.
Officials at both the International Association of Chiefs of Police and
the National Sheriffs' Association in Alexandria, Va., said they knew of no
other sheriff's office that had moved to get deputies inoculated.
Llelwyn Grant, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, said the agency is leaving it up to local authorities to decide
whether to immunize law enforcement officers.
Beary said he decided to proceed with immunizations because Orlando was
home to a clinical trial to create a treatment for people who get sick from
the smallpox vaccinations. The department is getting the vaccine from
Mid-Florida Biologicals, which is overseeing development of the treatment.
On the Net:
Orange County Sheriff's Department:
CDC:
Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
|