00:00:00Robert Kim-Farley
TORGHELE: It is May 15, 2017. I am Karen Torghele, and I'm at the Los Angeles
County Public Health Department with Dr. Robert Kim-Farley, who was an EIS
[Epidemic Intelligence Service] officer in 1981. He is now the director of
communicable disease control and prevention at the L.A. [Los Angeles] County
Department of Public Health, and is also at the UCLA [University of California,
Los Angeles] School of Public Health as a professor in the Department of
Epidemiology, and is the associate editor of the American Journal of Public
Health. Welcome, Dr. Kim-Farley.
KIM-FARLEY: A pleasure to be here.
TORGHELE: Yes, it's nice that you could talk with us today about your
experiences. Would you start by telling us a little bit about your background
before you came to CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]?
KIM-FARLEY: Yes. Actually, I started out kind of the backwards route. I started
as an electronic engineer from UC [University of California] Santa Barbara, and
then on graduation went to the Food and Drug Administration--the Bureau of
00:01:00Radiologic Health in the Washington area--in the area of protecting the
population against the hazards of electronic production radiation, like x-rays
from color TV sets, microwaves from microwave ovens. That kind of mixed, if you
will, engineering and public health, which got me very excited and interested in
public health. I then, actually, after two years with the Food and Drug
Administration, went and did volunteer work for the Bahá'í Faith--went around
the world for a year, mainly in Africa.
During that time, I think that's when I especially got interested in
international health and public health, realizing the great needs in other
countries besides in the United States. And I think that was my earliest
intimation about being concerned about polio, too. Because I remember being very
clearly in a village setting in Africa--this person had gotten off the bus. He
had a coat and tie, but he had polio, and because, of course, in the village
there were not any walkways or pathways for a wheelchair, he actually had to get
down on his hands and knees and actually crawl along the road in the village.
00:02:00And to me that was such an impact that I still remember today, about the
devastating effect that polio can have.
After that I decided to go then for a master's in public health at UCLA. And
because I did not have the biomedical prerequisites for medical school, I ended
up doing not only the master's in public health in population, family, and
international health, but I went ahead and did the biochemistry and other
biomedical courses that you needed to have for applying to medical school. I
went on, then, to the University of California, San Francisco Medical School and
it was very nice because they already knew I was interested in public health.
So, for example, I was working with CDC at that time as a student to develop
what they called a Peer Education and Prevention activity, where you brought in
fellow students to orient them about prevention and public health majors. So it
00:03:00was kind of fun to do that in medical school.
I also--because of that international interest--ended up being chairperson of
the American Medical Student Association International Health Committee. And we
had the first all-medical student group go to China, so that was very exciting
in 1978. I was used to traveling because my dad was in the Navy when we grew up.
Every couple of years we moved. I was in Panama for a couple of years and the
island of Kodiak in Alaska. In Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, I was evacuated during the
Cuban Missile Crisis when I was 14. So anyway, there was a number of things that
had gotten me excited about international work.
So between the third and fourth year of medical school--I had gotten married in
second year--my wife and I also then took one year off and did some work for the
Bahá'í Faith. And we went around the world again, this time the other
direction from what I had done, mainly in the South Pacific and Asia. And during
that time we spent one month at the National Hospital of Western Samoa, and for
00:04:00me this is really, again, suddenly another encounter with polio that I think was
very formative for me. I happened to be there during a time when they had a
group of visiting orthopedic surgeons, very senior in their field, training the
Samoan doctors in some of the more current techniques.
So they were letting me in the operating room and I was sewing up here and there
a few things, and one of the surgeons turned to me and he said, "Bob, what do
you plan to go into?" And I said, "Well, actually, I plan to go into public
health." He didn't say anything, went back to working on his patient, and I
could just see, you know, this surgeon is going to downplay the role of public
health. But in fact, what happened is he stopped again on the patient, turned to
me, and he said, "You know something, you are going to have more impact in your
career than I have ever had in mine." He said, "Here we are working on this
child with polio, who should never have gotten polio to begin with," and for me,
00:05:00at that stage--again, as a formative stage of a medical student--to have someone
who could have been easily, you know, very much putting down public health, to
recognize the value of public health, was very reinforcing to me.
I realize, of course, in public health I'm never going to have the experience
like when that child comes off the table to say, oh, Doc, thank you so much, I
feel so much better now, or, I now can walk with this brace, et cetera. I'm
never going to see a parent come up to me and say, gee Doc, I just want to tell
you my child didn't get measles today, thank you so much. It's not going to
happen. So you have to realize that the idea of the community being your patient
as compared to individual--but that was, again, a formative period for me. So
after that I came back to finish off medical school, did my rotating internship
at the U.S. Public Health Service Hospital in San Francisco, and then went on to
the Epidemic Intelligence Service at CDC, which of course, brings us to the CDC
story part of it.
TORGHELE: So when you came to CDC you probably were interested in a number of
00:06:00different areas, so how did you settle on the one that you ended up in?
KIM-FARLEY: Well, when you come to CDC as an EIS officer, you may have ideas and
thoughts of where you'd like to be, but that doesn't necessarily always be what
you matched with. I was fairly flexible and open when I first came, and I
matched with the National Immunization Program and it was a very, very good fit
for me. Some of the other people, no doubt you'll be interviewing for the
Chronicles, that had significant roles to play, things like--people like [Dr.
Walter] Walt Orenstein or [Dr.] Alan Hinman. Walt Orenstein, at that time, was a
section chief, my immediate supervisor as an EIS officer. I also remember
talking with Alan Hinman too, who was the division director at the time, and I
asked him, you know, do you think there is really a career in immunization? It
seems like we've got all these vaccines now, the diseases are going down. He
said, don't worry about it, there will be a career in immunizations. He
certainly was right about that.
00:07:00
Walt Orenstein was very supportive and basically had me as the polio
surveillance officer for the United States, including some other activities with
vaccine-preventable diseases. I told him I was very interested in international
health work and that I also wanted a variety of experience, and he certainly was
able to provide that. So my first outbreak I ever went on was an outbreak of
diphtheria in the Yemen Arab Republic. We were there for six weeks, virtually no
communication. We had this--couldn't even use the phone--we had these teletype
machines going back and forth with questions they might ask for us, because
there were two of us that were on the assignment. And so it was a very
illuminating experience about working in the developing world in an outbreak setting.
And then, a bit later on, another encounter with polio in 1982. There was a
major outbreak of polio in Taiwan, which was very interesting because the
government actually had very high levels of immunization coverage and was kind
00:08:00of scratching their heads as to, why would we be seeing polio? And so myself and
another EIS officer, [Dr.] George Rutherford, I remember, went for six weeks
again to Taiwan. And what we found as we did our epidemiologic investigations
was that yes, on average the immunization coverage was very high, but there were
pockets of unimmunized children, and that's what the polio virus was seeking
out, was those pockets. That was enough to keep it going in different places. So
we launched major national immunization efforts to be able to curtail this
outbreak, which it responded to very quickly. But it was very interesting to see
for myself polio in its worst forms, if you will, of an actual outbreak going
on. And again, it caught the government by surprise. We were actually--very
interesting there, because the sense--at that time even, Taiwan was not formally
recognized by the United States as a separate national entity, but rather under
00:09:00the mainland Chinese. So basically, we actually had to go with our personal
passports and not be able to go to an embassy. We actually had the U.S. Trade
Mission that we were reporting to. So it was very interesting.
TORGHELE: So you wouldn't be a representative of the United States.
KIM-FARLEY: Exactly, so you're not formal representatives of the United States,
exactly right. And so, when we also went to the Western Pacific Regional Office
of WHO [World Health Organization], to be able to report out our findings that
we had, again, they were just receiving us in an informal fashion. And it was
very interesting, many years later when the Minister of Health of Taiwan came to
CDC as a visitor, again, CDC was not able to actually formally have a reception
for him. So they asked if I could have the reception in my home. So it was very
interesting--we had the reception for the minister in our home in Atlanta.
TORGHELE: Interesting.
KIM-FARLEY: Yeah.
TORGHELE: How did you identify the pockets where there was still polio?
KIM-FARLEY: So what we did is we looked, again, those who were coming down with
paralysis--which is kind of the marker of polio, obviously. It's not everybody
00:10:00gets it. You take one hundred people that are infected with polio, and only one
will come down with paralysis, so it's kind of the tip of the iceberg
phenomenon. But we went ahead and we found out where those cases were being
reported. They actually had a very good surveillance system in Taiwan. And so
then we could go and find out, well, what is the characteristics of these? And
it turns out, they were mostly not immunized. We said, well, how can this be
happening? So we learned that there were basically these pockets of unimmunized children.
So from that, I guess, in terms of the EIS experience, I then went on for
advance training at CDC. They had a system at that time where you could apply in
your first year of the EIS to do the preventive medicine residency, which would
make me board certified in preventive medicine as a medical specialty. I already
had the master's in public health, which is another requirement at that time, so
I needed two years, then, of supervised experience. So they let the second year
00:11:00of the EIS count for that, and then I stayed for an additional year, but during
that year is when I had the first assignment internationally.
TORGHELE: Did you have other roles within immunization?
KIM-FARLEY: Yes, I actually did a number of other diseases. I remember going on
a mumps outbreak in Ashtabula County, Ohio. That was very interesting too,
because we looked at the whole issue of vaccine efficacy. Again, this was with
Walt Orenstein, who probably is the guru of vaccine efficacy. And what we did is
kind of interesting. We looked at what the vaccine efficacy was by reported
vaccination of the child, in terms of what the mother had reported, or the
father. Then we looked at, well, what about the vaccine efficacy based upon the
actual medical record that they had, the immunization card? And then, finally,
we actually did a record review of the physician offices to see, was there
documentation of the actual vaccine having been given? It turns out that as you
00:12:00progressively improved the actual definition of vaccination through these
different--whether it was understanding, or record that they had in the home
versus in a doctor's office--the vaccine efficacy continued to increase each
time. So the more accurate you got, the better the vaccine efficacy.
I also was on an outbreak of measles at Indiana University, one of the first of
the big outbreaks we'd had in a college campus. And that was kind of funny
because typically, CDC--when we go into an outbreak--we kind of have a bit of a
joke about it, that we always come in on the downswing of the epidemic. Because
by the time it's gotten big enough at a local level that they've brought the
state in--by the state time they'd say, hey, we need some additional resources
here--by that time, the outbreak usually is kind of beginning to burn itself
out. So as I came into Indiana University, it was going down. But it turns out,
all of a sudden, while I was there, it started rearing back up again because of
the fact you'd had your incubation period for measles. In fact, they had a
00:13:00bigger second wave than we had even on the first wave. So it was kind of an
interesting experience, being on the ground, lots of media attention to this
vaccine-preventable disease.
But during the time when I was there as the EIS officer, responsible for polio
eradication, I worked with all of the lab staff. And you may also be
interviewing people like [Dr.] Olen Kew and others as well--[Dr. Lawrence] Larry
Schonberger. We actually put out a paper on the eradication of polio in the
United States, because what happened was--although the last case had been in the
'70s, with an Amish outbreak coming in from the Netherlands--no one actually
said, "Well, I guess it's over." We still had about six cases a year, but that
was due to the vaccine, because one in every three million doses administered,
you get an adverse reaction of actual polio with oral polio vaccine, the live
polio vaccine. But that was all the disease that was happening. There was no
wild virus. So we actually wrote a paper specifically on that issue, of being
00:14:00able to declare that polio had been eradicated in the United States.
TORGHELE: And how long then was it until it was eradicated in the Western Hemisphere?
KIM-FARLEY: It was not until '90, as I recall. The Pan American Health
Organization was the leading edge for polio eradication in the world. The
regional elimination first occurred there, Dr. Ciro de Quadros was extremely
instrumental in that, and many others, obviously, from the Pan American Health
Organization. And so really that lead that they had done, I think, was what
spurred the 1988 resolution of the World Health Organization for the eradication
of polio by the year 2000.
TORGHELE: I've heard about Dr. Ciro de Quadros before. Can you talk about him a
little bit? Did you know him?
KIM-FARLEY: Yes. A very passionate individual, very knowledgeable, and just
recently unfortunately passed away a couple of years ago. But he is really
00:15:00credited, I think, not only for polio, but did visionary work for measles
elimination too. So I think he had that vision of the reality of being able to
eradicate disease like smallpox. He had been very active in the smallpox effort,
and so I think he applied some of those principles to be able to move the world
towards thinking of eradication of other diseases.
TORGHELE: You said earlier that you were interested in international work. When
did that start for you, and how was that?
KIM-FARLEY: Yes, your question about international work is, I think, very
interesting, because as you noted, I was very much wanting to get into this. And
I told my boss, again--Walt Orenstein and Alan Hinman, again. They were very
supportive. I think I've mentioned to you about the diphtheria outbreak in the
Yemen Arab Republic, the polio outbreak in Taiwan. And then what happened was
that the government of Indonesia asked CDC to send an expert in diphtheria for a
consultation on the status of diphtheria and the impact of immunization programs
00:16:00in Indonesia on the disease. And so CDC looked around and says, well, who knows
anything about diphtheria? And they said, well, Bob knows because he was on an
outbreak, because we just didn't have any in the United States. So I suddenly
became the resident expert on diphtheria, having been on an outbreak.
So I went there for six weeks as well, and we were able to show the impact of a
vaccination program on diphtheria. And then what happened was that the World
Health Organization requested that CDC station a medical officer in the
Southeast Asia Regional Office of WHO, which covers about ten countries in
Southeast Asia, located in New Delhi. And so they had a little mini-competition
within CDC for this position, because always the international positions are
somewhat plums. And it turns out that--a couple of things, because oftentimes,
at that time, they had a very strong international health program office that
technically they might draw from for a person to be selected for that. But I
00:17:00remember Don [Hopkins], who was heading up that, was very open to the idea of
others being able to be considered for this position. And because I was already
working with immunization programs, and this medical officer position was for
the expanded program of immunization--the immunization program--that that was a
good match.
And then the other thing that was interesting--and I sometimes tell this to
students that I'm mentoring or advising about who have international health
interests, because typically, how do you get international health positions
unless you've had international health experience? But how do you get
international health experience unless you've been hired for those positions? So
that kind of catch-22 exists, and I think sometimes personal travel can make a
difference. So the fact that I had actually travelled with my wife to seven
countries of the region--we actually spent one month at the National Institute
of Nutrition in Hyderabad in India and we made our own WHO study tour, so I had
00:18:00actually been at the regional office for about a week, meeting with the
different people in several of the country offices. So I could show on my resume
and my interviewing for this position, Southeast Asia Regional Office, that I've
actually been to many of the countries of the region. You can definitely count
on me to able to go there and not run back, because I've lived in India itself
for over a month. And so I think that all helped to be able to be assigned to that.
So that was in 1983. We went for basically five years--my wife and my daughter,
who was at that time two years of age. So we went off to Delhi. And it was a
very exciting time for me because we were at the stages, in the immunization
program, to be able to start expanding on measles. For example, in India,
vaccine--they had just recently introduced this into their program on a national
scale. The efforts of working with a very highly international group--this was a
00:19:00great opportunity for me to learn that experience with WHO and how to handle that.
Also, it was very interesting to me--it was right away a good lesson for me in
terms of, how does CDC operate within a United Nations framework? And the issue
came up very early on, because about three or four months into the assignment,
CDC asked me, well, where is your quarterly report? And I said, quarterly
report? We hadn't actually talked about a quarterly report back to CDC. And I
said, but you know, that's fine, I'll be glad to go talk to the regional
director and say that, you know, I'd like to have a quarterly report. And I
remember it's Dr. U. Ko Ko from Myanmar, Burma, at that time--very nice guy. I
really considered him a mentor in terms of helping me learn about United
Nations. And he turned to me and said, "Bob, you're going to have to make a
00:20:00decision, are you working for WHO or are you working for CDC?" He says, "If
you're working and sending quarterly reports to CDC, then that's not
acceptable." So it was very interesting. So I went back to CDC. I said to them,
well, you know, this is what the regional director says, you know, if you loan
me to WHO, then really I'm in WHO's hands now. And so CDC said, well, great,
okay, we accept that and everything was fine. And then about six months into
this they said, well, you know, it's time for your personnel evaluation, but we
don't really know that much of what you're doing because you're not sending
quarterly reports. So I could see this little dilemma was going to be an
interesting one. And so what I did is I discussed again with the regional
director and we decided this: I would write the regional director a quarterly
report of my activities, and he had no objection for me to share that with CDC.
00:21:00So, problem solved. But it's very interesting sometimes how these come up.
There's another one, if you'd like me to share, too. I remember another subtle
point of working internationally from CDC was in Indonesia--we'll come to
Indonesia a bit later in the interview. But we had a situation where the
President [Muhammad] Suharto, the collapse of that regime--the United Nations
was evacuating all nonessential personnel, women and children, but they were
requiring that heads of mission--which I was at that time, their country
director for Indonesia--to stay. On the other hand, in parallel, the United
States government, the ambassador to Indonesia, was doing a parallel activity.
He was having all nonessential American staff return back to United States, and
00:22:00he had listed me as being nonessential--which I was to the American government
at that stage, to the embassy--but I was essential.
So here we had a situation. And I brought it up with WHO, and I had the
situation of, I'm liable to a court martial, because I'm a commissioned officer,
if I don't obey the ambassador. And I'm liable to dereliction of duty to WHO if
I left the post. So we got WHO and lawyers talking to the State Department back
in Washington about, what do we do about Kim-Farley here, because we both have
claims to him? It turns out then there was released a memo from the State
Department to WHO that no one had ever seen before. And basically it was an
internal memo at that stage, saying that any U.S. government staff assigned to
the United Nations was under the United Nations authority in purview during that
00:23:00assignment, except for the situation of an evacuation. And under that exception,
the person must follow the ambassador. So then they started--and this was news
to WHO and the United Nations, because they said, well, look, we can't put your
people at high levels in our organization if we have that concern that they
suddenly might abandon the post right at the time when we need them the most. So
what happened was lots of conferring going on, together with the ambassador, and
they finally decide, okay, that the U.S. ambassador would declare me an
essential personnel. And so we resolved that little bit of crisis. However, it
got to where they had a million people in the street. They were going to try to
overthrow the government. And the aircraft carrier was standing off the coast.
They were about ready to even evacuate the ambassador. Luckily the situation got
diffused. But we never got to that point where it turns out that all
Americans--I think by that time, all United Nations staff had probably been
00:24:00evacuated too. But anyway, it was an interesting situation, a study in
diplomacy, shall I say.
So that was--going back now to the issue of in my course of duties in Southeast
Asia Regional Office--working as a medical officer, working in different
countries of the region during immunization coverage surveys and looking at how
we could improve immunization programs in the different ministries of health.
And also, we were able to have a very good collaboration among the different
countries working together--I was very pleased with that. We'd have WHO meetings
with immunization programs so the immunization program directors would come
together. And we'd try to make policies and strategies for the region that would
make sense and have collaboration.
We tried to work on surveillance issues. For example, in the past it used to be
that there was this border town in India that had a case of polio. Well, they
00:25:00had to report that to their provincial level, and the provincial level had to
report it to state central level in Delhi, and then that would go over to the
WHO, and it would then go over to the other WHO office on the other side, and
down again through this to finally the border town in the other side in Nepal,
but it could be weeks before that happened. So we then were able to work on
cross-border communications, so that someone in a local health department in the
border town could actually communicate to their fellow border town in the other
country next to them. So you wouldn't have a problem with delays because, again,
we know these diseases know no boundaries and, you know, don't need visas to
cross over countries. So that was an exciting part of it as well.
Then about three years into the assignment in SEARO [South-East Asia Regional
Office], my boss was actually from the Soviet Union at that time, [Dr] Rafi
Aslanian. He was very nice. I remember we had a good collaboration together. And
00:26:00at that time, the Soviet Union would not allow their employees to stay longer
than five years in United Nations at any one time. So they recalled him, and I
was able then to become the regional advisor for immunization programs for
southeast Asia region. So that's how I ended the situation in program. Then what
happened is that CDC, at that time, kind of had a limit on amount of time
overseas, about five years at that time. So they said, well, we'd kind of like
you to come back to the mothership. But at that stage, the person who was
actually Walt Orenstein's boss, which was [Dr. Kenneth] Ken Bart, he had gone
and was in charge of the Bureau for Child Survival activities for USAID [United
States Agency for International Development] in Washington. And so when he heard
00:27:00that I was coming back to the United States he said, well, why don't you come to
work with us? So he was able to get permission, since it was still coming back
now into the United States, for CDC to loan me to USAID for that year. I was
expecting to be there for a long time, but what happened actually is that the
director general then called the very next year and asked if I might come and
head up the global immunization program in Geneva.
So while I was at USAID, I was a child survival specialist. So I dealt with
things like immunization programs including polio, control of diarrheal
diseases, acute respiratory infections, that sort of work. And then what
happened was [Dr. Ralph] Rafe Henderson, another name that's certainly well
connected with immunizations and polio, was promoted to the assistant director
00:28:00general in WHO. And so the director general, he asked if I could come then and
lead the global program. And although it had only been a short time back in the
United States, I think the CDC realized the importance of that position and what
the prestige for the United States would be to have someone that was from the
CDC and U.S. there, so they agreed to that loan. And so that started another
five-year period approximately, until 1999, and so I was basically in charge of
the global program.
We were majorly involved with polio eradication by that time. And so we worked
on things like improving the surveillance system--the Acute Flaccid Paralysis
Surveillance System, for example--for polio, and the policies and strategies to
promote polio eradication. So at that time we had what was called the Global
Advisory Group, or GAG for short--we now have the Scientific Advisory Group of
00:29:00Experts, SAGE, was taken over for that now--and we would convene this group once
a year to establish policies for both polio as well as other vaccine-preventable
diseases. A number of CDC people were involved with that. You had also [Dr.
Donald Ainslie] D.A. Henderson was involved, Alan Hinman at one time the
secretary for it, and also Walt Orenstein served as the secretary for the Global
Advisory Group as well. And in that we prepared things like, for example, we
were able to introduce the first new vaccine into the expanded program
immunization since its creation after the smallpox eradication. And so that was
hepatitis B vaccine.
It was a big step because at that time, the hepatitis B vaccine cost was the sum
of all the other components of the vaccine program, so it was a big step
forward. It was requiring a lot of new efforts too. How do we promote more
00:30:00indigenous manufacturers of the vaccine, too, in addition to just being able to
have the vaccine manufacturers in Europe and UNICEF [United Nations Children's
Fund], which were great partners in terms of being able to get vaccines into
children? But we also saw India come up and Indonesia come up to do vaccine
development during that time. It was also in 1993--another major polio
resolution brought to the World Health Assemblies, World Health Assembly
Resolution 46.33. And it was, again, reiterating the priority to the global
community for polio eradication. And I remember, just kind of as an effort that
I did on my part was to go to as many country delegations as I could, to
actually have them become cosponsors of this resolution. I think it's had the
greatest number of cosponsors that they had had. I'd have to go back and take a
look at the total number, but it was really--I mean, it was going to pass, but
00:31:00it was nice to have all these countries signing in as actual cosponsors to the
resolution. And I think that gave, again, another impetus to the work of polio,
reframing it, again, as a global priority. We also, at that time, used the
opportunity to present the director general's Health-for-All gold medal to
Rotary International, that had been a major instigator and player and partner in
the polio eradication effort. And so that was very exciting, to have that
opportunity to have the director general give that award at that stage, in
recognition, again, of the work towards polio eradication. So that kind of puts
us through to the time in Geneva, at least, and the headquarters.
TORGHELE: Your role expanded into a global role, and there are also, at the same
time, issues around OPV [oral polio vaccine] versus IPV [inactivated polio
vaccine], and decisions that were made around those and which to use. Can you
00:32:00talk a little bit about that?
KIM-FARLEY: Yeah, I think the whole issue of oral polio vaccine and inactivated
polio vaccine is a good one. Obviously, the first vaccine developed was by Salk,
the IPV--had tremendous efficacy. We saw tremendous drops in the United States
on its use. And then was subsequently developing with the OPV, with oral polio
vaccine, with Sabin, and there was a transition then over to oral polio vaccine
in the United States. I think there was a number of reasons why that I would say
for early phases in an eradication effort, oral polio vaccine has some benefits.
So for example, inactivated polio vaccine, its administration requires the
injection, which means a licensed professional. Whereas oral polio vaccine,
because it's given by drops--or as you probably may have heard about in the
United States, we called Sabin Oral Sundays, SOS, when they give it on a sugar
00:33:00cube to children--It makes the administration much easier to get large numbers
of people.
Secondly, the fact of the type of immunity that you get from these vaccines. So
primarily the inactivated polio vaccine, being given by injection, gives you
antibodies or protection in the bloodstream. Oral polio vaccine, when it's given
by mouth, gives not only the immunity in the bloodstream but also gives an
immunity in the gut, in the intestines, because there's an infection going on
there, and you get this other type of antibody, called secretory antibodies, in
the gut. So what this means, again, for the eradication is very important.
Because if, for example, someone who has been vaccinated with inactivated polio
vaccine gets exposed to the wild poliovirus that's caused by disease, they're
protected, because, again, they have the antibody in the bloodstream. But that
00:34:00virus can grow in their gut and they can excrete it. Fecal-oral spread is how
the disease spreads out. And that then means that they will not be a barrier to
transmission from wild disease. Wild disease can come to that person. They won't
get the disease, but they can be a transmitter of disease. So again, the benefit
of oral polio vaccine under that setting. So, basically, this ease of
administration, the type of immunity being developed by oral polio vaccine were
all really important for the eradication effort.
However, what happened is also the recognition of vaccine-associated polio, and
this was noted in the United States, about one case for every three million
doses distributed. You'd get about six cases or so a year in the United States
where you give the vaccine to the individual--and two-thirds of the cases of
vaccine-associated disease were not in the individual who received it, but in
00:35:00family members or others surrounding them. Because--and what's happened is that
typically, when the polio vaccine is taken orally and it grows in the gut, it
can mutate a little bit. So what's being excreted by that person is not the same
as what they took, and it can revert to being more neurovirulent, we call it,
which can affect the nervous system. So the fact that we were, in the late '70s,
'80s, recognizing that the only polio really occurring in the United States was
the vaccine-associated polio, that the risk was not there really for wild
disease, so that we switched then from oral polio vaccine to inactivated polio
vaccine. So we continued to keep the immunization guard up, but we didn't have
to have that concern about that side effect of the rare case of actual
vaccine-associated polio. Again, when you have lots of numbers of polios going
00:36:00on, that is just a miniscule risk compared to what the wild disease risk is. But
when you have no wild disease going on, then that comes out.
So I think that that's really one of the things that happened in the Global
Advisory Group, the discussion between oral polio vaccine and inactivated polio
vaccine that was going on. There was some concern about, what happens at the
late stages of the eradication effort, will we need to use inactivated polio
vaccine? And so some wanted to have more research being done in its use. Others
felt that, well, we know all the research that we need to have, but if we start
emphasizing at all inactivated polio vaccine, of having any role, that it could
distract from the emphasis we're trying to place on oral polio vaccine. So there
were some tensions surrounding that. But I think now we're seeing that, in
fact--again, when we're down to just forty-two cases, I think, last year in 2016
in the world and Afghanistan and Nigeria and Pakistan--that the
00:37:00vaccine-associated disease becomes more of a concern. And the idea is, how would
you know when you really wiped out polio--perhaps then to switch over at the end
stages to inactivated polio so that there's no circulating virus of any type,
wild or vaccine-associated. So that was one thing that I think was the driving
factor for oral polio vaccine, which I think was the right choice for the major
tool for eradication. But when you're talking about the endgame strategy, there
may be roles here for the inactivated vaccine to come into play.
There was also another tension that I think existed in what I would call the
eradicationists versus the integrationists. The eradicationists, the hard line,
would say, don't bother me with any other vaccines or any other things, let me
get this done as fast and expeditiously as I can, because ultimately, we can
00:38:00stop vaccinating for polio and save billions of dollars. The opposite extreme is
what I would call the integrationist, and would say, well, you know, this is our
whole portfolio of vaccines that we have, and we shouldn't do anything more for
polio than we would do for BCG [bacillus Calmette-Guerin] vaccine. And you know,
we need to be doing all of these at the same pace and the same route. What I
think we ultimately have done, and I think was the right course, is to say, yes,
we recognize both of those polarities exist, but let's recognize that polio has
a priority, but let that priority help drive the other vaccine antigens that we
use. So for example, if we're going to build, to reach out to the periphery of
cold chain, to be able to deliver the polio vaccine, let's make sure that the
cold chain is big enough to handle the other vaccines that also need to be in
that cold chain. If we're going to go ahead and develop a surveillance system to
detect acute flaccid paralysis for potential polio cases, let's make sure that
00:39:00that surveillance system can be used for other things of high public health
priority. For example, it was used in the Americas for cholera surveillance. If
we're going to develop what we call a reverse cold chain--that is, to be able to
take stool specimens from children who have paralysis and be able to keep that
under cold conditions, then bring it back to a laboratory to be able to check,
is this paralysis due to actual poliovirus--let that reverse cold chain, let
that reverse mechanism for getting specimens back from the periphery to central
laboratories, be used again for other diseases of high public health priority.
So I think that that balance we finally were able to get was an important one,
but there's always those who had felt were doing too much for this disease or
not enough for the other diseases. But I think that ultimately got resolved, and
I think we're moving forward in a balanced way, but recognizing that polio has a
priority from it.
00:40:00
I remember that supposedly Salk and Sabin, they said they agreed on one thing;
that is, that their vaccine was the best. So anyway, they both had difficulties
with each other to be able to accept those roles. And it would have been nice, I
think, for them to see, again, this phase where we realize, gee, there's a role
for both to play, and both have important contributions to make to public
health. And let's make sure that we all recognize we're on the same team and
making it happen.
I would think it would be appropriate at this time to talk about the use of
acute flaccid paralysis--I've mentioned a couple of times is an indicator for
the surveillance systems. Actually, we're fortunate, in a sense, with polio,
because we had one difficult problem. And that is, again, mentioning that if you
had a hundred people infected with polio and maybe only one would come down with
actual paralysis. So as compared to smallpox, where virtually everybody who came
00:41:00down with smallpox had visible pox that you could see and you could ask people
about, again, ninety-nine of your cases in polio for every hundred are going
without anyone knowing about it.
So what happens is, it turns out that if you look at a population, that there
are other things that can cause paralysis. They can be Guillain-Barré syndrome,
there can be other Coxsackie viruses or enteroviruses that can cause paralysis,
usually more transient in nature. But on average, at least one per hundred
thousand population will have some paralysis. And so if you can start looking at
your surveillance system as you're trying to improve it for the polio
surveillance, if you choose--rather than just polio as your surveilling
activity, you actually choose acute flaccid paralysis, of which polio is one of
the types of flaccid paralysis you can have--you know that, if you can get a
surveillance system capable of giving you over one per hundred thousand cases of
00:42:00acute flaccid paralysis, that if there were polio there, you should be able to
find it. And so that's one of the success stories that we use. We look for acute
flaccid paralysis. We do stool samples on them to be able to see whether or not
this was actually due to poliovirus. And if we had that level of surveillance
going on, we knew we should be able to detect it.
So these are the types of things that this Global Advisory Group dealt with,
trying to understand and promote surveillance practices, immunization practices,
the issue of having national immunization days and also having the ability of
doing what we call mop-up operations. And maybe I'll discuss that a little bit
as we move to a next chapter that happened in my life.
It was then, after about five years of being in the global program, the director
general asked if I would like to go and be the country director--or WHO
representative, as it's called--to the government of Indonesia, which is our
00:43:00second-largest country program in WHO. And so, my whole family decided that this
would be something very nice for us to do. I remember our daughter was in the
eighth grade at the time, and so we decided we'd make this a family decision.
And so we sat down, writing pluses and minuses and kind of expecting her--you
know, it's Geneva, nice school, et cetera--to say, well, Mom, Dad, I'd just as
soon stay here. But she actually said, "I know I remember being in India a
little bit." And she said, "I'd like to maybe have one more experience in a
developing country before I go on to college." And so she was all in favor. And
I think because the fact that she was in international schools all her life,
with students coming and going, it wasn't quite the same thing as what you might
see in the United States, where, you know, you're suddenly the only one going
and everybody else is staying. So she had friends that were going and coming all
the time, so it was not that much of a problem from that point of view.
So we all went to Indonesia. We took intensive language training together. I got
to where I could speak Bahasa Indonesia, which is the language, pretty fluently.
00:44:00I was actually giving television interviews in Indonesian, because basically--as
compared to India, where most of the senior folks could speak English, or
certainly in the United Nations people were speaking English--in Indonesia,
really, mostly people spoke Indonesian, and so you really needed to have that
language facility. And they were always so kind, you know, they were saying, "Oh
you're so fluent," and I said, "I know I'm not that fluent," but at least they
really appreciated people making an effort to it.
So it was a very fascinating story in Indonesia, because when I arrived, I was
met by the UNICEF representative and the Rotary International representative.
And they had talked about how, over the last year, they had been really striving
to work with the Ministry of Health--Professor [Achmad] Sujudi, who was the
minister at the time--to be able to embark on the major polio eradication
initiative for Indonesia, but it wasn't happening. So they asked, you know,
well, maybe I, as the new representative on the block, could be able to help on
00:45:00this. So I went and talked to Professor Sujudi, who was a microbiologist by
training, and so he was very knowledgeable of polio. And he just basically had
very much concern, scientifically, about the issue. Was polio really eradicable
in the sense that he knew about, that only one per hundred cases showed? And,
you know, is this really possible? So what I did was go ahead and we convened an
international meeting in Bali, in Indonesia--brought actually Ciro de Quadros
over to be able to share his experiences in the Americas. And by the time that
that meeting was finished, Professor Sujudi was very convinced, yes, actually,
this is doable. And he was very supportive of that.
And so, I said, "Okay, well then, are we ready to go?" And he said, "Well, no."
He says, "You know, we have to get the president, President Suharto, to be able
to agree to this." I said, "Okay, well, that's good." He said, "I will go and
talk to President Suharto and let you know the outcome." So after a week or two,
00:46:00he came back to me and he said, "You know, Bob, I am so sorry, but the president
has not agreed to go forward with polio eradication, with national immunization
days and things in Indonesia." I said, "Well, why, what did you say?" He said,
"Well, I talked to him about the fact that I'm now convinced that it can be done
technically, and, you know, that we could do these efforts in Indonesia and
reduce the cases and ultimately eradicate. And the President asked me, 'Do you
think we should do it?'" And of course, if I was there I would have been saying,
yes, of course you should do it, you don't want to be exporting the polio out of
the country and things like this. But in Indonesian culture, for those who may
be familiar with it, they never say no. And so the fact that the president just
asked the question, "Do you think we should do this?" was, to the minister, a
statement that he was not in favor of it.
So I said to him, "Well, what do we do now?" And I said, "Well, how about this?"
00:47:00I said, "What if I had the director general"--it was Dr. [Hiroshi] Nakajima at
that time--"come to Indonesia, and he will meet with the head of state," because
that's the usual protocol for the head of the WHO to do when they visit a
country. "And then we could ask the same question, but maybe we could say
something more." He said, "Well, you're foreigners, you could do that, there's
no problem with it." He said, "I can't go back at this stage." So we did that.
After about three or four months, the director general came. And we're meeting
with President Suharto, Professor Sujudi was there too, and we brought up the
same issue. I said, gee, we're embarked in a global program of polio
eradication, it would be wonderful for Indonesia to be a part of this. And the
president said exactly the same words that Professor Sujudi had mentioned, you
know, well, "Do you think we should do this?" But we were able, at that stage,
to say, "Yes, we think it's a very good thing to do, because you don't want to
have your polio going to Malaysia. You don't want to be the last country in the
world still having polio. Think of, again, the burden to your country and the
00:48:00citizens," et cetera. And so, it didn't take any convincing, really, in my mind.
President Suharto said, "Well, yes, then. We should do it."
And in Indonesia, which was such a command and control country at that stage,
very centralized in its functioning, when the president said something,
everything cleared away and it happened. So he had the army and the navy and the
air force all at Professor Sujudi's disposal. And with six thousand inhabited
islands in Indonesia, you needed all of those things to get to remote places.
The only thing Professor Sujudi asked me was, "I know that they call this
National Immunization Day," he said, "but look, with all of these territories,
again, the six thousand inhabited islands, I just don't think it can be done in
a day. So can we call this Pekan Imunisasi Nasional, which means National
Immunization Week?" I said, "Sure, you can call it anything you want to call it,
as long as we're moving and doing it." And so we did all this. They prepared the
00:49:00day--they had all the instructions going down to even just village level,
because, again, the command, the central command, just everything was at their
disposal. And later, the minister of health and I laughed because we probably
could have called it National Immunization Hour, because that first day, all the
children--even before the immunization thing opened up--were all lined up in the
village to get their vaccine. And so within about an hour, I think probably 70%
of all the children had been immunized. It was just incredible. But the amount
of--and I would go with them on helicopters to places, we went on navy ships to
places, and things like this.
So everything was opened, and it was a very exciting time to actually see us go
to zero cases of polio. And I remember back then about that incident we talked
about back in medical school, when the orthopedic surgeon was saying, "You're
going to have more impact in your career than I ever had in mine, because here
00:50:00we are working with this child with polio who should never have gotten it." And
here I was thinking, oh my goodness, we've gone to zero cases of polio, this is
what this surgeon was prophesizing twenty years earlier. So it was very exciting
to see that come to fruition. But I think that again, that issue that no one was
in charge, in the sense of being solely responsible for the eradication--it was
really a team effort, from village levels up to UNICEF and Rotary and WHO and
UNDP [United Nations Development Programme] and World Bank, all working together
with ministries of health to make this possible. And this was happening all over
the world. And so I think that it was a very exciting time to be able to see
that effort being able to get to actually zero cases of polio.
After six years in Indonesia, the director general asked if I could go to head
up the country program in India, so we went back to New Delhi. This time, as
00:51:00compared to being in the regional office, I was actually in the minister of
health's offices--Nirman Bhavan, it's called--and heading up the country
program, which is our largest country program of WHO. And in it we had people,
again, working with the polio eradication area out of the regional office also.
Jon Andrus is another person that is a CDC, U.S.-trained, very involved with
PAHO most recently--but he was there, and he was working with a team that we had
of 750 staff in India, three hundred of which were professionals, and others
being drivers and things like this. They were actually working with the
different provincial ministries of health and the central government in terms of
being able to do the acute flaccid paralysis. The national immunization days--we
had a big launch in 2001 with Prime Minister Vajpayee himself delivering the
00:52:00vaccine. I've got a picture that I can show you on that. And the efforts were
such that it really mobilized the country with over a billion people. It was
really something to see, all the zero to fives [ages].
And not only that--then, of course, we still had cases of polio occurring in
India, and we would do what we call the mop-up operations. This is where, when
you actually detect cases of polio going on--in addition to the national
immunization days, which were happening three times a year--you actually then go
in and what do what we call mop-up operations, where you go door-to-door making
sure that all children under five were receiving oral polio vaccine in those
areas we actually had cases. And these were the strategies that were being used,
not only national immunization days, but mop-up operations and the routine
immunization program. Those three things together--like three legs of a stool,
so to speak--was really the platform of which the polio eradication effort was
00:53:00founded on, including, then, of course, the surveillance to be able to detect
and then be able to focus our program operations to those areas of greatest need.
We also had to do sophisticated epidemiologic work too; for example, to make
sure that our vaccine was still a potent and strong and working well for us. And
in fact, it turns out it was a very interesting experience--we started to notice
that the vaccine efficacy for type III vaccine--the vaccine has three types in
it because there are three types of polio--was not at the levels we would have
anticipated. And so we were looking at different things that this might be due
to. Do we have breaks in the cold chain? Do we have breaks in the way in which
the vaccine is being administered in the field? What could possibly be causing
this? And we were scratching our heads about it, and finally we said, well, why
don't we also bring in some experts from Geneva to talk about--to go over to the
vaccine manufacturer here in India and look at what they're doing. And it was
00:54:00very interesting because they knew the WHO standards, and it required a certain
amount of titer of each of the components of type I, II, and III in the vaccine.
And in the vial, as it was going out the door, it was meeting those standards.
But kind of unbeknownst to them, it was the fact that the standard actually goes
beyond just what is it like as it goes out your door, but it's also supposed to
be able to meet those same minimum standards two years in storage.
The vaccine manufacturers in Europe recognized that this type degraded over
time, so what they did is that when it goes out the door of their plant, it's at
a much higher titer, so that after two years, it's still above the standard. But
what was happening in India was that it was going out the door at the standard
and over time it was degrading. So it was a simple fix. The vaccine
manufacturers went ahead and upped the titer in the vaccine, and we didn't have
00:55:00that problem again. But it was kind of, again, showing where the role of
epidemiology, the role of looking and testing and seeing--how is your vaccine
doing in the field, where are you seeing disease, why could these people be
having this level of vaccination but still coming down with disease--how that
works. It's a very exciting part of sleuthing, if you will, in the epidemiology
world about vaccines.
And so I think, also--I might digress on one thing that you might find of
interest--is that I also had the concept that looked at, as the WHO, as the
Ministry of Health, we should be practicing what we preach. And I don't know if
some of the folks that are listening to this and hearing this and seeing this
have seen sometimes government buildings in India, but oftentimes they are not
so well kept up--abandoned furniture in the stairwells, things like this,
00:56:00unclean bathrooms, et cetera. And the Ministry of Health is no different. So
because my offices, though, were in the Ministry of Health, not in the regional
office, I said to the minister, I said, "Look, how about if we had a project?
We'll call it the Healthy Public Building Project, and we'll start here. And a
healthy public building should be at least safe and reasonably clean." And he
agreed, he said, "Okay, that sounds good." And so what we did, we started having
a group of us go around once a month--and we had people from the general
services and from the Department of Public Works and from the electricians, et
cetera--and we said we'd start by identifying things.
So the first thing we identified was just these abandoned file cabinets and
furniture that were in the stairwells and the hallways. A safety hazard for
fire, but they said, "No, we can't take it out, because we tried that once and
people would come out and say, 'Oh no, that was my valuable file cabinet you're
taking away. You can't take that.'" So we said, "Okay, we'll write all five
00:57:00thousand people in the building"--it was a big building--"and tell them that in
two weeks' time, if there's something important to them that's in the hallways
or the stairwells, put it into a room." So then after two weeks, we just took it
all out, and no one could complain, because they had been given a warning about
it. So that was kind of nice. You saw a little bit of space now to walk. Then we
handled the bathrooms because it smelled. The building smelled the minute you go
in. So it was a matter of communication, that the general services people
thought the Department of Public Works is supposed to take care of that. Public
Works said, "No, no, we'll take care of something broken, but the general
hygiene and maintenance has to be done by general services in your building."
And so with the two of them together, the fact is that half the fans weren't
working. So that was Public Works, so they got the fans working in the
bathrooms. And then, at least, a modicum of cleaning going on by general
services. And within about four or five months, there was no longer any smells
in the building.
So now people were being kind of interested about this. So we said, what are we
00:58:00going to tackle next? And then--it was a major problem, and it happens in some
buildings in India, is we had these small monkeys that come in at night and
they're really vicious. And I had one of my staff members bitten, in fact, by
one of these. They'll just have monkey doo all over the place, and anything
that's in the hallway they'll just rip up and tear apart. And so one of the
people in the group that we had going around once a month said he had heard
about hiring an animal trainer with a langur, which is a big monkey, that this
guy could walk around and that the little monkeys are the--their natural
predator--the big one is the natural predator of the small ones, and that they
are scared. So I said, "You know, it's worth a try." Incredibly, in one day's
time, with this guy walking this monkey around, there were no monkeys to be seen
in the building, and not even the parking lot, because they used to tear off
people's mirrors in the cars and all that sort of stuff. And although we had to
have him go by once every day, but it completely solved the problem. So it's
00:59:00kind of an interesting situation where again, by just slowly and methodically
being able to address it, we actually came up with a clean and healthy building.
So I think again, in India, one of the things that we learned is, again, the
importance of being able to communicate about vaccination and the vaccination
program and the polio eradication program. We had some setbacks--and remember,
this has happened in other countries, Nigeria as well, where sometimes rumors
start to spread that the vaccine is somehow sterilizing children or something
like this. And I know this happened in a few of the Muslim villages--it was
happening in India. And so how we best dealt with that was to be able to, again,
reach out to the influencers, the imams and the mosques, and be able to talk
with them. And they understood then, and then they were able to preach in the
mosques about the importance of the polio program, or they themselves would give
the polio vaccine, or their children would come and receive the polio vaccine,
01:00:00so you could see that that trust and nature of it. And I think that 2000
National Immunization Day launch with Prime Minister [Atal Bihari] Vajpayee also
himself giving the vaccine was another powerful message for people to see that
was widely circulated in the country. I think those are some of the things that
we were trying to do.
I think that this whole issue about concerns about the side effects of vaccines,
we often see it less, actually, in developing countries, because parents see the
difficulties of the wild disease occurring. They see children dying of measles.
They see children becoming paralyzed from polio. So usually it's not such a hard
sell, if you will, to say, hey, we've got vaccine here. There's usually a clamor
for it. They want to have that vaccine. And I think, actually, it's been more of
a situation that occurs in the developed countries, like back here now in the
United States, where what's happened is that there's a complacency that's set
01:01:00in. That parents look around and they don't see these diseases, and so they hear
about side effects, some of which is false, some of which is exaggerated. Of
course, we always try to recognize that vaccines are safe and effective, they're
not perfectly safe and they're not perfectly effective. But they're a lot better
than the wild disease. And I used that. Recently there was an editorial I put in
the American Journal of Public Health, and I called it "The Dangerous Curve and
the Guardrail: Disease and Vaccination," in the sense that you have a situation
that occurs if you look over a dangerous curve in a road--so over the last year
a hundred people died going over this dangerous curve. That's like having the
disease, okay? Now what do we do? Well, we put up a guardrail. Well, that's like
having the vaccine as a safety feature. Now the next year, the statistics show
that nobody was killed going over this dangerous curve. However, three people
01:02:00were hurt hitting this guardrail. And some people would say, oh my goodness,
we've got to take down the guardrail because it's injuring three people a
year--just like the side effects, you know, very rare, but it happens on
vaccines. So some people would say, oh my goodness, we've got to take down this
guardrail, we've got to stop vaccinating, when of course what will happen is
that you'll go back to the pre-guardrail era of a hundred people dying going
over the curve, or pre-vaccine era where we had--like in polio, you know, fifty
thousand cases a year occurring in the '50s. So people have to understand that
problem that we face. So sometimes that analogy helps groups to understand that
I can't compare side effects of vaccine against current levels of disease, which
are low because of the very success of our vaccination programs. I have to
compare of what would happen in the absence of vaccination.
So I think that in India also, we again recognize the importance of lots of
people working together in a partnership. Again, it was with UNICEF, Rotary
01:03:00International, WHO, UNDP, Asian Development Bank--all of us working together
with the Ministry of Health in a partnership. And that's really the only way you
can achieve these sorts of goals and strategies. It was in 2002, actually, that
I left India after a little over three years. My wife, unfortunately, had
developed breast cancer. Fortunately, she's done well, but at the time the U.S.
government wouldn't let us stay in India if she was on chemotherapy--concerns
about decreased immune status, susceptibility to infection. And I'll always be
grateful to CDC, they were able to accommodate me as a career field epidemiology
officer, stationed here in Los Angeles. My wife was able to go to the Revlon
UCLA Breast Center. And I was then stationed at the--half-time at UCLA and
half-time here in the Department of Public Health in the area of bioterrorism
preparedness, because that's of course where the funds are. I had to develop a
smallpox plan for Los Angeles County at that time. I also prepared a course on
01:04:00preparing for a smallpox at a bioterrorist event at UCLA.
And then this position of director of communicable disease control prevention
opened up. And it was just the right timing in my career to be able to leave, at
that time, government service, because I had up to thirty years' retirement as a
commissioned officer, and so a second career here in this capacity. And I've
been able--because one of the five programs that I had administered overseas,
the immunization program--I've been able to keep involved with
immunization-related activities. And so again, this issue of looking at vaccine
concerns and relationships to community groups, to be able to develop stronger
vaccination for new vaccines, like our human papilloma vaccine, things like
this. It's been a very nice, opportune time to be able to stay very much
involved with immunization programs while looking at an even wider portfolio of
communicable disease programs as well.
01:05:00
I think, in reflecting back on lessons learned in polio eradication, I think a
number of things in my mind. Firstly, for CDC itself, the recognition it is a
global leader and a global player in this field, that it gives prestige to the
United States government as well as to just CDC itself. To have its staff
involved in these activities providing expert guidance, providing reference
laboratory--the CDC that really developed some of these techniques of what we
call oligonucleotide mapping, which is like fingerprinting of the poliovirus to
be able to detect, where did this actual polio virus come from? As you get more
and more polioviruses typed and oligonucleotides mapped, you can actually have a
geographic map and figure out where these things have come from, and will help
you then in your detection of how to stop the spread of disease. I think that
being able to provide epidemiologists--and for persons involved with the
01:06:00immunization program at high levels in the organization--has been able to
provide CDC with a visibility that even though, yes, I had a UN hat on or a WHO
hat on, everybody realized I was CDC. In reality--which is that we didn't try to
promote this--we were trying to promote the fact that we were now under a United
Nations flag at this stage and all of us were partners in this. And with now the
Gates Foundation and others that have become involved with private sector even
more, I think that again, it's important that we understand CDC is often one of
those drivers, together with WHO, for the research that's necessary to help
develop the strategies, and to fine-tune the strategies that are necessary for
the eradication effort like we're doing now with this role of IPV and OPV at the
end role. The ability to detect this vaccine-associated polio and what is its
contribution to the remaining polio in the world and how to be able to
01:07:00ultimately use, perhaps, IPV to be able to stem that problem as we move to a
polio-free world.
I think that the CDC has been very generous with its time and expertise, and I
think, again, it just has been to the betterment of CDC and the United States
and its perception in the world. And I think that all of us who have been
involved at one time or another in the polio eradication effort, it's like the
next generation that came after the smallpox, which was, again, a cadre of
people that were very much involved with a global worldwide effort that resulted
in success of the eradication of smallpox. And we're right in the middle of the
end stages, now, of those who were involved with the polio eradication to see
that goal finally coming to fruition. And that again, will be, I think, probably
one of humanity's greatest achievements in the twenty-first century, is going to
be the eradication of polio. I know we have kind of a friendly rivalry with
those that are working in Guinea-worm or dracunculiasis eradication, which is
01:08:00another great story to be told. Each side was saying, okay, we're going to reach
it first, and then each side had just a little bit more to go. So it's still a
little bit up in my mind which one is going to actually get to eradication
first, but obviously the polio is a much wider-spread problem. But it is a
healthy competition. And again, CDC, [Dr. Donald] Don Hopkins and others have
been very, very influential in that effort. And it's been kind of nice to see
the cross-fertilizations occur that way in a safe, healthy competition as well.
So I think, in summary, certainly the polio eradication initiative has been one
of the defining aspects of my own career, something that I take great pleasure
in having been a part of. And again, I emphasize being a part of it. I don't
think anyone can ever say, you know, they own it. But I think all of us working
together--we're much stronger than any of us as an individual. And I think that
is really, perhaps, the real lesson learned in this, is that partnerships,
01:09:00collaborations, and cooperation can achieve things that no individual could ever
expect to.
TORGHELE: That is a perfect way to end. Thank you so much. You gave such good
examples of using creative ways to overcome problems that were effective. And
you were able to maximize use of all your resources that other people will be
able to then use in the future.
KIM-FARLEY: Yeah. I'm glad it served what you needed.
TORGHELE: Thank you so much.
KIM-FARLEY: My pleasure.