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&lt;p&gt;Smallpox disease was declared eradicated in 1980, the result of a collaborative global campaign. To date, it is the only disease affecting humans to be eradicated from the world. Global eradication of smallpox ranks among the great achievements of humankind. Gone, through determined human effort, is a disease which has brought death to millions, frequently altering the course of history, and traveling through the centuries to every part of the world.  &lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;The vital contributions made by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are highlighted. Official government correspondence, meeting transcripts, policy statements, surveillance reports and mortality statistics tell a part of that story. Adding depth to these traditional archives are the personal stories of the public health pioneers who worked tirelessly on the frontlines of the smallpox eradication campaign.&lt;/p&gt;
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              <text>&lt;pre&gt;&lt;strong&gt;
 Interview Transcript
&lt;/strong&gt;
This is an interview with Leo Morris about his activities in the West
Africa Smallpox Eradication Program. His wife, Jane Morris, is also
present. The interview is being conducted at the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, on July 14, 2006. This is during the 40th
anniversary celebration of the launching of the Smallpox Eradication
Program. The interviewer is Kata Chillag.

Chillag:    How did you come to choose public health as a career?
Morris:     It was a bit serendipitous. My background is statistics, and I
           was studying statistics at the University of Florida. Usually
           every summer, I went home to Miami to work, usually in the
           hotels, to get money to go back to school the next fall. But
           during my junior and senior year, I thought I'd better get some
           experience. The Public Health Service had a traineeship program
           for statisticians, and 1 other person and I were selected from
           the University of Florida. Our assignments were just random. He
           got assigned to the Department of Agriculture, which turned out
           to be pretty boring, he tells me; and I got assigned to the
           Tuberculosis Program, Public Health Service, before it was
           transferred to CDC.
                 After that summer, they asked if I'd consider coming back
           after graduation. And I might add, in those days-'59, late '50s-
           a statistician, even one with just a bachelor's degree, was in
           great demand. There just weren't many around. And I said, "Well,
           you know, I'd like to stay closer to Florida," and they told me
           about CDC. The Serfling-Sherman Polio Immunization Surveys were
           being conducted then, so CDC was looking for statisticians. So
           they recommended me to CDC, and there I was.
Chillag:    And so, how did you get tracked into smallpox eradication?
Morris:     I started out in the Polio Surveillance Unit, when we had cases
           of polio in the United States. I worked in that unit for 3 years
           in the EIS [Epidemic Intelligence Service]. Then Dr. Langmuir
           [Alexander Langmuir] supported me for employee development, and
           I left and got my Ph.D. at Michigan, where our first child was
           born. (The first was born in Michigan where I got an MPH in
           biostatistics in biostatistics, the 2nd in Atlanta, and the 3rd
           in Brazil,.) Then I worked with D. A. Henderson [Donald A.
           Henderson], mostly on viral diseases in the Surveillance
           Section. The Investigations Unit was devoted to bacterial
           diseases back in those days, with Phil Brachman. I also worked a
           lot in reviewing material for the MMWR [Morbidity and Mortality
           Weekly Report]. That was '63. I worked on a big St. Louis
           encephalitis outbreak that year in Houston, Texas.
                 In '65, I worked with Larry Altman. He became the first
           person to go to West Africa in the measles program in West
           Africa on a TDY [tour of duty].
                 We were getting involved in some smallpox work, and I was
           chosen to be part of it. We had a 5-person team in '65,
           including Don Millar [J. Donald Millar], who later became head
           of the Smallpox Unit at CDC, to evaluate the vaccine produced in
           Brazil. Basically, we were comparing the Wyeth freeze-dried
           vaccine with the freeze-dried vaccine produced in Brazil. We
           worked in the Amazon territory of Amapa, which is now a state.
           We were gone about 5 weeks. When we left here, it was winter. In
           fact, we had a snow storm, and that day we didn't know whether
           we were going to get to the airport or not. And there, of
           course, it was summertime and 100° in Rio de Janeiro before we
           went up to the Amazon. That was my first trip to Brazil.
                 I did some polio work in Chile and Puerto Rico in 1960 and
           1961. I really sort of fell in love with the culture in Brazil,
           and the people and so forth. That was '65.
                 Then '66 was the start of the smallpox program, so I stood
           up with D. A. Henderson and others in the original group that
           started the Smallpox Eradication Program. I was in charge of the
           statistical end and evaluation. In '66, we trained the first
           group that went to West and Central Africa. I had interviewed
           many of the nonphysicians who had applied.
                 Then the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) came to
           CDC. At that time, Brazil was the only country with endemic
           smallpox in the Americas. There were some overflow cases into
           neighboring countries. It was variola minor, not variola major,
           so it didn't get the publicity of some areas. But PAHO, which is
           part of WHO [World Health Organization], said they were going to
           put advisors into Brazil. They had a newly created Smallpox
           Eradication Program, and they needed a statistician, an
           evaluation person. They had 3 physicians, 1 from Paraguay, 1
           from Peru, who was the team leader, and 1 from Colombia. So I
           was asked if I might want to go to Brazil. I said, "Where do I
           sign up?" I was very eager for that. In February of '67, we left
           for Brazil. And that's how I got to Brazil. I was there 3 years
           as advisor to the Smallpox Eradication Program after I had
           participated in sending the first trained group over to West
           Africa.
Chillag:    And, Mrs., Morris, how did you feel about that?
Mrs. Morris:     I loved it. When Leo asked me, "What do you think about
           going to Brazil?" I said, "When?"
Morris:     We both learned how to samba.
Chillag:    Yeah, there you go.
                 So, you mentioned that before the actual smallpox
           eradication, you did the trial between the 2 vaccines, correct?
Morris:     In '65.
Chillag:    In '65. And then, after that, was there a typical day for you
           as a statistician working on this in Brazil?
Morris:     Well, we had several primary objectives. I spoke Spanish
           reasonably well, but I took some Portuguese courses so I could
           forget my Spanish because it's hard to combine the 2 languages.
                 The director of the program in Brazil was a man named
           Silva. He had recently retired from being the head of malaria
           control in all of the Americas at PAHO in Washington and
           returned back to Brazil. Because of his vast experience, they
           talked him into taking over this new Smallpox Eradication
           Program. He was the only one in the office who spoke English.
           Now if you went up to the Ministry of Health in Brazil, a good
           percentage of the people spoke English. But he was the only one
           who spoke it in this office back then in 1967. So on my first
           day there, we conversed in English, about the surveillance we
           needed, reporting, and so forth, and then he said to me, "This
           is the last day I'm going to speak to you in English," and he
           never spoke to me in English again. So in that environment, it
           was easy to really improve my Portuguese.
                 We had 3 primary objectives. First was to develop a
           reporting system, which they didn't have. There were 22 states
           at that time, and I think only 6 or 7 were reporting cases of
           smallpox . Sao Paulo, the biggest state, with the most cases,
           never reported. Starting a surveillance report based on the
           reporting was the 2nd goal. And the 3rd was to start thinking
           about evaluation. I had worked on the system that they were
           going to use in West Africa for evaluating the vaccination
           program. We wanted to extend it to Brazil, although in Brazil we
           could be a little more sophisticated because they had better
           census data to use as a sampling frame.
Chillag:    When you talk about evaluation of vaccination, what all does
           that entail?
Morris:     Two primary things. One would be a sample of villages or towns,
           sometimes big cities in Brazil, to look at 2 things: 1) asking
           everybody in the sample households if they had been vaccinated
           in the campaign; and 2) checking everybody 
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                  <text>Malaria Control: CDC Beginnings</text>
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&lt;p&gt;In 1942, when the U.S. was mobilizing for the Second World War, the U. S. Public Health Service set up a program to protect the personnel of military bases in the Southeastern states from malaria. This disease had long been rampant in the area, and posed serious threats to the health of the military and civilian populations. The program known as Malaria Control in War Areas (MCWA) was created to carry out the work. The lack of space in Washington due to the war effort allowed the program to base its headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia, and closer to the work at hand. During the war years, the program was expanded to include the control of other communicable diseases. Because its work was so successful, a new organization was created around the nucleus of MCWA, the Communicable Disease Center (CDC). The date was July 1, 1946. This archive chronicles the agency’s early history from 1941-1951, including the contributions of local businessmen and Emory University. The buttons to the right will connect you to a searchable database of documents, oral histories, photographs and media. To conduct an advanced search, use the link in the blue navigation bar above. Use of this information is free, but please see &lt;strong&gt;“About this Site”&lt;/strong&gt; for guidance on how to acknowledge the sources of the information used.&lt;/p&gt;
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                <text>A black and white photograph of an individual spraying larvicide to target larvae in the breeding habitat before they can mature and spread, location unknown.</text>
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                <text>The David J. Sencer CDC Museum at the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road, Atlanta, GA 30333&#13;
www.cdc.gov/museum&#13;
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                <text>1943</text>
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