D.A. Henderson, who led
effort to eradicate smallpox, dies at 87
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[August 22, 2016]
By Jon Herskovitz
(Reuters) - Donald A. Henderson, who headed the World Health
Organization vaccination effort that wiped out smallpox in 1977 and
later became a U.S. bioterrorism expert, has died from complications
following a hip fracture, officials said on Sunday. He was 87.
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The 1966-1977 smallpox program at first was given little chance of
succeeding. It required the development of labs around the world to
produce vaccines, a constant scramble for funding, arm-twisting of
governments to join in, and halting outbreaks as soon as they
emerged by focusing on vaccinating people who came in contact with
those infected, Henderson told the WHO.
"The most important legacy of smallpox eradication was its
demonstration of how many people could be protected through
vaccination, so rapidly and inexpensively with a well planned
program and quality-control monitoring," the man known as "D.A.,"
said in an interview published by the World Health Organization a
few years ago.
Smallpox is a highly infectious virus that kills 30 percent of its
victims and scars the rest for life.
In 1972, he flew to Belgrade in the former Yugoslavia to help stamp
out the last smallpox outbreak in Europe, the WHO said.
After the campaign to wipe out the disease, Henderson became dean of
the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health from
1977 to 1990, expanding the school's reach and making it a national
leader in addressing HIV/AIDS, said Michael Klag, dean of the
school.
"D.A. was a force of nature who, until relatively recently, seemed
invulnerable. Public health has lost a hero," Klag wrote adding,
smallpox is the only human disease ever to have been eradicated.
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In 2001, Henderson was named by then U.S. President George W. Bush
to head a newly formed Office of Public Health Preparedness, set up
to coordinate the national response to public health emergencies,
including a spate of anthrax attacks that took place at the end of
that year.
In 2002, he received the nation's highest civilian honor when he was
awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
Henderson died on Friday at a Baltimore-area hospice, officials
said.
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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