1963 smallpox epidemic in Wrocław explained

1963 smallpox epidemic in Wrocław
Location:Polish People's Republic
Confirmed Cases:99
Deaths:7
First Case:A public officer returning from India (or another Asian country)
Disease:Smallpox
Virus Strain:Variola vera
Dates:17 July - 19 September 1963

An outbreak of smallpox occurred in the city of Wrocław in Poland in the summer of 1963. The disease was brought to Poland by an officer in the Ministry of Public Security who had returned from India. The epidemic lasted for two months, causing 99 people to fall ill and seven to die. It caused Wrocław to close and quarantine itself.[1] [2]

It was one of the last smallpox outbreaks in Europe (the 1972 Yugoslav smallpox outbreak was last)[3] and the biggest disease outbreak in Europe until the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]

Poland started vaccination against smallpox in 1919 and eradicated it in 1937.[5]

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Patient zero

The officer who brought the virus was a lieutenant colonel, Bonifacy Jedynak. He had returned from Delhi, India on 22 May 1963 and became infected by an unknown disease. He went to the hospital of the interior ministry in Wrocław where he was diagnosed with malaria. Meanwhile, smallpox was transmitted to nurse who had mild symptoms and was considered to get chickenpox.[6] Her son, daughter and the attending doctor were infected and died later.

Progress of epidemic

Lonia Kowalczyk was the first person who died because of the infection.[7] On 15 July 1963, an anti-epidemic emergency was announced in the city, 47 days after the first case of the disease. 10,000 vaccines were delivered from the Polish capital Warsaw that day. Around 1 million of vaccines was delivered from Soviet Union and from Hungary. Vaccination was mandatory from 1 August 1963. Non-stop vaccination centre was at Wrocław train station. Vaccination campaign took 2 months.

Initial estimate of WHO was that epidemic will last for two years with 2,000 deaths. Thanks to fast response and availability of vaccination, epidemic was suppressed and it was officially ended on 19 September 1963. 8.5 million of people were vaccinated in total.

Notes and References

  1. News: Epidemic in Wrocław in 1963 . Institute of National Remembrance . 18 March 2020 .
  2. News: . SMALLPOX BATTLE WIDENED IN POLAND . The New York Times . 27 July 1963 .
  3. Żuk . Piotr . Żuk . Paweł . One of the recent attacks of smallpox in Europe: A massive vaccination campaign during the epidemic in Wrocław in 1963 . Vaccine . 24 September 2019 . 37 . 41 . 6125–6131 . 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.08.038 . 31455585 . 201654865 .
  4. Web site: 2021-01-30 . Jak socialistické Polsko zvítězilo nad epidemií pravých neštovic . 2024-01-12 . A2larm . cs-CZ.
  5. Web site: Majmurek . Jakub . 2021-01-26 . Obowiązkowe szczepienia i cała władza w ręce lekarzy. Jak PRL uporał się z epidemią . 2024-01-12 . KrytykaPolityczna.pl . pl-PL.
  6. News: Jasińska . Joanna . 5 April 2020 . Lockdown and isolation: the summer a Polish city defeated an outbreak of one of the world's deadliest diseases . The First News.
  7. News: Rosalak . Maciej . Wrocław w szponach zarazy. Miasto zostało odcięte od reszty kraju . Wrocław in the grip of a plague. The city was cut off from the rest of the country . pl . Historia Do Rzeczy . 21 October 2020 .