In 1956 the World Health Organisation (WHO) sponsored reports of dried smallpox vaccine showed they were “stable for months at the temperatures met with in the tropics”, unlike the usual calf lymph vaccine which “rapidly loses its potency when exposed to the high temperatures encountered in the tropics”. “With such a vaccine available, eradication of the disease becomes possible by its systematic use.” This comes only 160 years after, no doubt, billions of arms have already been scarred by “vaccination” promising “immunity”. [1]
With this technical issue solved, the WHO stated “[s]uccess now depends on administration, training of personnel, sound technical application, and adequate financial support.” The world-wide smallpox eradication campaign officially begins in 1966, and smallpox was declared eradicated in 1980.
In 1955 WHO member states accepted the policy to replaced “routine malaria control” with “malaria eradication programmes”, they diligently promoted spraying and dusting [pg71] of children and communities with DDT to control mosquitoes. [2]