Prevention
Vaccination
The
smallpox vaccine
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is the only known way to prevent
smallpox if a person is exposed. When given within 3
days of exposure, the vaccine can prevent or greatly reduce the severity of
smallpox symptoms in most people. Getting a shot 4 to 7 days after exposure may
also help.2 The smallpox vaccine is made from the
vaccinia virus, which is similar to variola virus, but safer. The vaccinia
virus does not cause smallpox illness.
In the past, the smallpox
vaccine was used to get rid of smallpox infection worldwide using:
- Ring vaccination of all people who were
or may have been exposed to smallpox.
- Mass vaccination, to
prevent infection of an entire population. Before 1972, all children in the
United States were vaccinated before they started school. Routine smallpox
vaccination ended in 1972 when smallpox risk in the United States became
minimal.
Many disease-control experts think ring vaccination would
be better than mass vaccination if there were a documented smallpox case
today.
In
the U.S., vaccination is being offered to medical personnel and other people
who would be exposed to the virus if an outbreak of smallpox occurred (first
responders). The smallpox vaccine does not give lifelong protection, and there
are risks of a serious reaction from it. That's why routine smallpox
immunization does not take place at this time. Health workers should always
wash their hands or use a
hand sanitizer after any contact with the vaccine or
with the vaccination site.
The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) has guidelines about who should not receive the vaccine.
Those at increased risk of having complications from the vaccine include:
If you have
heart problems or three or more risk factors for heart disease, you should not
be vaccinated until more is known about a possible relationship between the
smallpox vaccine and heart problems, including heart attack.
But if you are directly exposed to smallpox, you should be
vaccinated even if you fall into one of these groups.5
In such a situation, the risk of death from smallpox is greater than the risk
of having a harmful reaction to the vaccine.
Isolation and infection control
People who get
this disease must stay away from others to help prevent it from spreading.
Smallpox spreads by:
- Face-to-face contact with someone who has
smallpox (usually someone who already has a smallpox rash).
- Direct
contact with infected bodily fluids or an object such as bedding or clothing
that has the virus on it.
- Exposure to smallpox virus released in
the air (aerosol).
Ideally, an infected person would be isolated and cared
for in a medical facility to prevent the spread of infection. Also, a person
who may have been exposed should be vaccinated and isolated until it is certain
he or she does not have the disease.
Clothing and bedding that
have been in contact with an infected person should be washed in hot water with
bleach. Hospital-strength disinfectants, such as hypochlorite and quaternary
ammonia, can also kill the virus.
Scabs from smallpox lesions may
contain the variola virus and could be infectious for months. They should be
handled and disposed of as infectious medical waste.