http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,35758,00.html
Smallpox Attack Exaggerated
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Friday,
October 05, 2001
By
Steven Milloy
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Concern over the possibility of terrorist attacks
involving biological agents—especially the smallpox virus—is developing into
full-fledged hysteria. Sen. Bill Frist claimed last week that a smallpox attack
could kill 40 million Americans.
But
a new study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, slated to
appear in the November-December issue of the journal Emerging Infectious
Diseases and detailed here for the first time, should provide some relief
to a worry-worn public.
The CDC researchers say smallpox appears much less
infectious than commonly thought. This assessment calls into question the
widely publicized results of last summer’s bio-terrorism war game called
"Dark Winter" – a primary rationale for the current scare mongering.
Dark Winter was designed to simulate U.S. response to
terrorism with smallpox. The exercise was developed by the Center for Strategic
and International Studies, Johns Hopkins Center for Civilian Biodefense Studies
and the ANSER Institute for Homeland Security, and held at Andrews Air Force Base
near Washington, D.C. in June 2001.
Its participants, including more than a dozen current and
former government officials and news media personalities, reacted to a
make-believe smallpox attack.
Dark Winter began with a report that, on December 9, 2002,
24 persons reported to Oklahoma City hospitals with a strange illness. The CDC
confirmed the illnesses as smallpox and the players reacted to control the
epidemic. They pretended to fail so that, within two months after the epidemic
started, three million cases of smallpox and one million deaths had occurred
hypothetically.
Dark Winter ended with the collapse of interstate commerce,
crowds rioting in the streets and the National Security Council discussing the
need for martial law – a chilling scenario.
But like any other hypothetical exercise, Dark Winter is
limited by the reality of its underlying rules and assumptions. One key
assumption was that each person with smallpox would infect at least 10 other
people and that those 10 people would each infect 10 more people and so forth.
Dark Winter’s designers claimed this was a low or "conservative"
assumption.
This assumption, and its use as the basis for the
simulation, arises from Dark Winter participants at the Johns Hopkins Center
for Civilian Biodefense Studies. Center director D.A. Henderson likes to
emphasize a 1970 outbreak of smallpox in Germany where one patient appeared to
infect 17 others and a 1972 outbreak in Yugoslavia where one infected person
infected 38 others.
But the authors of the new CDC study regard these infection
rates as extreme and unusual. They call the Yugoslavia incident "probably
a record number" and describe the German incident as caused by "close
sustained contact in a hospital."
The CDC researchers looked at data from a number of
different outbreaks around the world in the 1960s and 1970s. They report that
most outbreaks averaged less than two persons infected per infectious person.
Most outbreaks recorded less than one person infected per infectious person. In
all outbreaks, some infected persons did not transmit a symptomatic case of
smallpox to another person.
The researchers cite the last case of naturally occurring
smallpox in October 1977 as further evidence of the difficulty for one person
to infect others. Of the 161 persons who had contact with the infected person,
12 unvaccinated persons had face-to-face contact. None of the 12 became ill
with clinical cases of smallpox.
Although evidence exists that one person can infect many
others and that many in the U.S. are susceptible to smallpox—meaning they’ve
never been exposed or vaccinated—the CDC researchers concluded "the
probability that the average transmission rate will be greater than two cannot
be demonstrated reliably."
So should we blindly accept the Dark Winter scenario when
the war game may have been critically flawed?
This is not to say that the possibility of bio-terrorism via
smallpox should be ignored. But the hysteria grounded in Dark Winter should
cease. It should be replaced with a more sober approach to the possibility of a
smallpox attack.
The U.S. Government has accelerated the order of 40 million
smallpox vaccines—a rationale move, and not only to squelch an epidemic. Dark
Winter players believe that, "Forcible constraints on citizens may likely
be the only tools when available vaccine stocks are depleted."
Physicians, hospitals and local public health officials
should be calmly reminded about the symptoms of smallpox and actions to take in
case of a breakout. Channels of communication between local and national public
health officials need to be improved. The sooner infected individuals can be
isolated and populations can be vaccinated the sooner an epidemic can be
halted.
None of these actions, however, require the public to be
panicked.
Steven Milloy is the publisher of JunkScience.com, an
adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and the author of Junk Science Judo:
Self-defense Against Health Scares and Scams (Cato Institute, 2001).
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