Interim smallpox guidelines for the United Kingdom
Open Access
- 14 December 2002
- Vol. 325 (7377) , 1371-1372
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.325.7377.1371
Abstract
Last week, the Department of Health in London published interim guidelines for responding to a deliberate release of smallpox in the United Kingdom. 1 2 The guidelines describe contingency plans for diagnosis and management of the first cases, vaccination strategies before and in the event of an outbreak, and other essential measures to ensure outbreak preparedness and control. Two of us (RH and DM) have contributed to the development of the guidelines, and the aim of this editorial is to give a brief summary and highlight some of the underlying evidence. (Comments on the guidelines may be sent to smallpoxplan@doh.gsi.gov.uk before the end of this year.) Developing policies to combat an eradicated infectious disease is difficult for two reasons. Firstly, it is impossible to balance the benefits and risks of interventions against the potential risk from disease. No one knows whether variola virus exists outside the two laboratories approved by the World Health Organization, whether it has fallen into the hands of organisations or individuals with the will and ability to use it as a weapon, or whether it can actually be disseminated in a way that would cause mass casualties. Secondly, the underlying evidence relies on historical data, which were collected in a different, now outdated context and are often incomplete. Nevertheless, analysis of historical data has provided valuable insights into the disease and …Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Containing Bioterrorist SmallpoxScience, 2002
- Emergency response to a smallpox attack: The case for mass vaccinationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2002
- The Case for Voluntary Smallpox VaccinationNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- The Case for Voluntary Smallpox VaccinationNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- Modeling Potential Responses to Smallpox as a Bioterrorist WeaponEmerging Infectious Diseases, 2001
- The use of smallpox virus as a biological weapon: the vaccination situation in FranceEurosurveillance, 2001
- Smallpox in Europe, 1950-1971The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1972