: It was widely called alastrim (from the Portuguese alastrar , meaning "to scatter" or "to spread"). In the Caribbean : It was known as West Indian smallpox . In Africa : It was often called amaas or Kaffir pox . 🛡️ The Path to Eradication
Alastrim was first identified in the late 1800s in Africa and the Americas. Unlike variola major, which killed roughly 30% of those it infected, alastrim had a . This lower lethality created a unique challenge: alastrim
: Because it was less severe, many people initially mistook it for chickenpox or other minor rashes. : It was widely called alastrim (from the
: Since patients weren't always bedridden, they continued to move through their communities, unwittingly spreading the virus further than the more debilitating "classic" smallpox. 🌍 A Global Journey The disease gained various names as it traveled: 🛡️ The Path to Eradication Alastrim was first
Alastrim, also known as , is the less famous but equally significant "younger sibling" of the deadly smallpox virus (variola major). While classic smallpox devastated civilizations for millennia, alastrim emerged in the late 19th century as a milder, though still dangerous, global threat. 🦠 The "Milder" Killer