When I was a child, I noticed a peculiar scar on my mother’s upper arm — a ring of small indents surrounding a larger one. It fascinated me for a while, but like many childhood curiosities, I eventually forgot about it. Years later, while helping an elderly woman off a train, I saw the same distinctive mark in the same spot. When I finally asked my mother about it, her answer surprised me: it was from the smallpox vaccine.
Smallpox was a deadly viral disease caused by the variola virus. It spread rapidly from person to person and killed about 30% of those infected, often leaving survivors permanently scarred. For centuries, it devastated communities across continents, shaping history through repeated outbreaks. Entire populations lived in fear of a disease that had no reliable cure and few effective treatments.
Everything changed with the development of a vaccine and coordinated global immunization campaigns. The World Health Organization led an unprecedented international effort that ultimately succeeded in eliminating the disease. In 1980, smallpox was officially declared eradicated, marking the first time humanity had completely wiped out a major infectious illness. Routine vaccinations in the United States had already ended in 1972, as the threat steadily declined.
The vaccine itself was unlike most modern shots. Administered with a bifurcated needle, it delivered a live virus called vaccinia — related to smallpox but far less dangerous — into the skin. A blister would form, then scab over and heal, leaving behind the circular scar that became a recognizable symbol of protection. Today, that small mark serves as a reminder of one of medicine’s greatest triumphs — proof that science, persistence, and global cooperation can defeat even the deadliest diseases.READ MORE BELOW