# The WHO Declares Smallpox Eradicated: April 7, 1978
On April 7, 1978, something remarkable happened that had never occurred before in human history: the World Health Organization (WHO) announced that the last known case of naturally occurring smallpox had been recorded in Somalia the previous October. This set in motion the final countdown to what would become humanity's greatest public health achievement—the complete eradication of a disease that had terrorized civilization for at least 3,000 years.
Smallpox was an absolute monster of a disease. Caused by the variola virus, it killed roughly 30% of those infected and left survivors with disfiguring scars, often causing blindness. The disease didn't discriminate—it toppled emperors and peasants alike. It killed an estimated 300-500 million people in the 20th century alone, more than all the wars of that bloody century combined. Ancient Egyptian mummies, including Pharaoh Ramses V, bear the telltale pockmark scars, showing this scourge has haunted us since antiquity.
The final push toward eradication began in 1967 when the WHO launched an intensified global campaign. At that time, smallpox was still endemic in 31 countries, infecting 10-15 million people annually. The strategy was brilliant in its simplicity but devilishly difficult in execution: vaccinate everyone possible and implement "ring vaccination" around outbreaks—essentially creating immune barriers around each case to prevent spread.
The heroes of this story weren't just in laboratories—they were epidemiologists, local health workers, and volunteers who traveled to the remotest corners of Earth. They traversed war zones, crossed deserts, and navigated dense jungles with portable freeze-dried vaccines and bifurcated needles (a clever invention that made vaccination easier and more efficient). They encountered suspicion, political obstacles, and logistical nightmares that would make modern supply chain managers weep.
The last natural case was Ali Maow Maalin, a hospital cook in Merca, Somalia, who developed symptoms on October 26, 1977. (Tragically, there would be one more outbreak in 1978 in Birmingham, England, caused by a laboratory accident, killing medical photographer Janet Parker—but that was the final chapter.)
After April 7, 1978's announcement, the WHO waited cautiously, monitoring the globe for any resurgence. Finally, on May 8, 1980, the WHO officially certified that smallpox had been eradicated from Earth—the first and still the only human disease to achieve this status.
The implications were staggering. Routine smallpox vaccination ended worldwide, saving billions of dollars annually and countless lives from vaccine complications. The variola virus now exists only in two secured laboratories—one in the United States and one in Russia—and debates continue about whether these last remnants should be destroyed.
This victory proved that international cooperation could achieve the seemingly impossible. It demonstrated that science, persistence, and global solidarity could defeat even ancient enemies. Every person born after smallpox eradication lives in a world freed from a plague that shaped human history, influenced the outcomes of wars, decimated indigenous populations during colonization, and filled countless graves.
The lessons from smallpox eradication continue to guide public health efforts today, from polio (tantalizingly close to eradication) to pandemic response strategies. April 7 remains World Health Day, commemorating the WHO's founding and celebrating achievements like this one.
So on this date in 1978, humanity could finally, definitively say: we won. Not against each other, but against a common enemy that had killed and maimed for millennia. It remains one of science's finest hours.
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