About the Book
The Balmis Expedition from Spain to the New World in 1806, launched off the heels of Jenner's publication on vaccinia vaccine a few years previously, was likely the world's first eradication initiative. The mission was to eradicate the deadly smallpox from the Americas and beyond. That goal, over a century and half later conceptualized and implemented under the guidance of the World Health Organization (WHO), was eventually realized. The
core content of this textbook is designed to reflect the teaching elements of an intensive, one-week eradication course given first to graduate students at the School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins
University (JHU) in Baltimore, United States, during the summer of 2012. The faculty of four consisted of the two editors of this textbook; Dr. Ciro de Quadros, former smallpox eradicator in Ethiopia and architect of the original polio eradication strategies; and Dr. D.A. Henderson, former head of the global smallpox eradication initiative, WHO. All four of us spent a full week together lecturing and mentoring JHU graduate students. In 2014, under the direction of Dr. Breman, the course was
expanded and provided to graduate students at the Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University. The materials in this textbook reflect the discussions in that course,
especially with regards to what the co-editors believe to be the most practical, field relevant experiences and definitions. Given the rapidly changing medical and development world, this textbook highlights essential issues for success, illustrated by disease-specific case studies.
Table of Contents:
Foreword
Dr. Tedros A. Ghebreyesus
Preface: Perspectives on the Principles and Practice of Disease Eradication
Jon Kim Andrus, Joel G. Breman
1. Smallpox Eradication: Triumph of Science and Management
Joel G. Breman, William H. Foege, Leigh A. Henderson, Rosamund F. Lewis, Anne W. Rimoin, Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfun
2. Rinderpest: Successful Global Eradication of an Animal Virus
Tannia Clark, Mallenshappa Rajasekhar
3. Towards the Eradication of Polio: Perspectives on the History, Strategies, and Recommendations for Success
Jon Kim Andrus, Khusbu Patel, Prabha Raghavan, Sara Seper, Nevien Ismail, Sunil Bahl
4. Global Measles and Rubella Eradication: Status Quo at What Cost?
Jon Kim Andrus, Eleanor Capozzi, Jessica Drew, Katie Kolar, Hayley Lipson, Sydney Nelson, Emma Robinson, Sudhir Khanal
5. Dracunculiasis (Guinea Worm Disease) Eradication
Ernesto Ruiz-Tiben, Mark L. Eberhard, Sharon L. Roy
6. The elimination of Group A meningococcal meningitis from Sub-Saharan Africa after the introduction of a new Group A meningococcal conjugate vaccine
F. Marc LaForce, Mamoudou Djingarey, Andre Bita, Suresh S. Jadhav, Prasad S. Kulkarni, Simonetta Viviani, Marie Pierre Presiosi
7. Disease Elimination - Successes and Challenges: examples from River Blindness, Lymphatic Filariasis and Trachoma
David Molyneux, Agatha Aboe, Roland Bougma, Sunday Isiyaku, Iain Jones, Patrick Ndongmo, Joseph Oye, Sarah Bartlett, Finlay White, Phillip Downs, Simon Bush
8. Cholera
Jacqueline Deen, John D. Clemens
9. Malaria elimination: principles and practice
Kim A. Lindblade, Kamini Mendis, Blanca Escribano Ferrer, John Chimumbwa, Richard W. Steketee
10. HIV Principles and Elimination Efforts
Jesse O'Shea, Pascale Wortley, Robert A. Bonacci
11. Controlling Pandemic COVID-19: Is Eradication Possible?
David M. Morens, Gagandeep Kang
12. Global Elimination of Mother-to-Child Transmission of Syphilis - the Power of Comprehensive, Integrated Antenatal Care Programming
Lori M. Newman, Melanie M. Taylor, Morkor Newman Owiredu, Teodora Elvira C. Wi, Maeve B. Mello, Nathalie J. Broutet, Mary L. Kamb
13. Mpox Control and Prevention: Addressing new disease modalities and adapting control strategies in the face of an evolving disease
Adva Gadoth, Megan Halbrook, Nicole A Hoff, Danae Witte, Didine Kaba, Emile Malembi, Robert Shongo, Placide Mbala Kingabeni, Joel G. Breman, Jean Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum, Anne W. Rimoin
14. Surveillance for eradication: turning surveillance upside down
David L. Heymann, Rosanna Peeling
15. Cost-Benefit and Cost-Effectiveness Analyses: The Unique Challenge of Eradication Programs
Leigh A. Henderson
Acknowledgements
Jon Kim Andrus, Joel G. Breman