(California Department of Health Services)
CDC Smallpox Information Hotline
English: (888) 246-2675 Español: (888) 246-2857 Hearing Impaired: (866) 874-2646 Hotline Availability (Pacific Time): Monday-Friday: 5 a.m. - 8 p.m. Saturday/Sunday: 7 a.m. - 5 p.m.
What's Below:
Smallpox is a contagious viral disease that usually causes a severe whole body rash. The rash starts out as red spots that enlarge, become pus-filled, and then scab. Other symptoms include fever, lack of energy, headache, backache, and vomiting. Smallpox is caused by Variola virus.
In most cases, smallpox is spread from one person to another by face-to-face contact for several hours. During close contact, a "healthy" person can breathe respiratory droplets from a sick person. Individuals with smallpox are most infectious during the first week of illness.
Following exposure, the incubation period is about 12 days, but can range from 7 to 17 days.
The majority of patients with smallpox recover, but death may occur in as many as three out of every 10 individuals who become sick with the disease.
There is currently no proven treatment for smallpox. Patients with smallpox may feel better from therapy such as intravenous fluids, medicine to control fever or pain, and antibiotics for any secondary infections that may occur.
There is an effective vaccine to prevent smallpox
If the vaccine is given within four days after exposure to smallpox, it can prevent illness or lessen its severity.
The last naturally acquired case of smallpox occurred in Somalia in 1977. In the United States, routine vaccination against smallpox ended in 1972.
Concerns over the potential use of biological agents as weapons have heightened our awareness of the possibility of such an attack.
At this time, the California Department of Health Services has no information that suggests an imminent smallpox threat.
Any suspected cases of smallpox should be immediately reported to your local health department, which is responsible for notifying the state health department, the FBI, and local law enforcement. The state health department will notify the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Patients with symptoms of smallpox are capable of spreading the virus. Patients should be isolated so that they will not continue to spread the virus. In addition, individuals who have come into close contact with smallpox patients should be vaccinated immediately and closely watched for symptoms of smallpox. Vaccination and isolation of contacts are the most effective strategies for stopping the spread of smallpox.
The CDC has been preparing for the remote possibility of an outbreak of smallpox as an act of terror. Those preparations have intensified since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. Although we are planning for this possibility in order to protect public health, the Department of Health Services has no indication that there is an imminent threat. As part of the ongoing effort to increase preparedness, CDC has distributed a draft smallpox preparedness plan. The State of California and local health departments have developed a comprehensive state plan. Federal, state, and local health officials, working with health care providers, will continue to improve this plan and our readiness to respond to the possible reintroduction of smallpox.
Vaccination is not recommended at this time and the vaccine is not available to the public. Routine smallpox vaccination was terminated in the U.S. in 1972 because the risk of complications outweighed the threat of the disease. In the absence of a confirmed case of smallpox anywhere in the world, there is no need for the general public to be vaccinated against smallpox. The CDC maintains an emergency supply of vaccine that can be released, if necessary, since vaccination is still effective after exposure has occurred.
Side effects from successful vaccination, particularly in those receiving their first dose of vaccine, include tenderness, redness, swelling, and a lesion at the vaccination site. In addition, the vaccination may cause fever for a few days and the lymph nodes in the vaccinated arm may become enlarged and tender.
The overall risks of serious complications of smallpox vaccination occur more frequently in those receiving their first dose of vaccine and among young children. An estimated one to two deaths occur for every million persons vaccinated. One of the most frequent serious complications is encephalitis (brain inflammation), which occurs in about one in 300,00 children who are vaccinated, and one in 200,000 vaccinated adults. Other vaccine-related adverse events include generalized rash due to the vaccine virus itself.
The government currently has 15 million doses which can be diluted to 75 million doses and still retain its potency. The drug company Aventis Pasteur has donated an additional 80 million doses that could be used in an emergency. The government is also buying 220 million doses which are being made by a new technique. Delivery of the new doses is expected by the end of 2003.
Not necessarily. Routine vaccination against smallpox ended in 1972. The level of immunity, if any, among persons who were vaccinated before 1972 is uncertain; therefore, these persons are assumed to be susceptible. For those who were vaccinated, it is not known how long immunity lasts. Most estimates suggest immunity from the vaccination lasts 3 to 5 years. This means that nearly the entire U.S. population has partial immunity at best. Immunity can be boosted effectively with a single revaccination. Prior infection with the disease grants lifelong immunity.
The CDC and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services are considering various options for smallpox vaccination. These possibilities include recommending that some or all Americans be vaccinated before a bioterrorist attack of smallpox occurs, or waiting until such an attack actually takes place. Getting the vaccine within four days of exposure to the virus can prevent illness or reduce its severity.
Smallpox vaccine should not be given to individuals with a history or presence of eczema or other skin conditions, pregnant women, or persons with immunodeficiency diseases and among those with suppressed immune systems as occurs with leukemia, lymphoma, generalized malignancy, or solid organ transplantation.
No. Because smallpox is a virus, antibiotics such as ciprofloxacin will not fight the infection.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
El Dorado County Public Health Department at (530) 621-6100 or California Department of Public Health