It's part of
American folk lore: The man who saves the day and rides off
into the sunset without anybody knowing his name. Sometimes
he doesn't even leave a silver bullet.
Dr. Alexander Langmuir, the father of infectious disease
epidemiology, was such a man.
" He had an absolutely profound impact on saving lives," said
Alan Summer, Dean of the Johns Hopkins University School of
Hygiene and Public Health and a former student of Langmuir's. "If
one wants to include important roles he played, the people
he trained and what they've gone on to do, a figure in the
millions (of lives saved) would certainly be true."
Epidemiology is the science of trying to connect disease
or injury with a cause. By doing so, it is often possible
to eliminate
that cause.
In 1949, Langmuir created the epidemiology section at what
is now known as the Federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention in Atlanta. He had been called upon to combat
a perceived epidemic of malaria but discovered that there
wasn't
one.
" These guys (state health officials) were reporting every fever coming in
as malaria, so he set about to establish reporting of cases and to verify that
these were cases," said Dr. David Henderson, deputy of the assistant secretary
of health at the Department of Health and Human Services. Henderson was also
a Langmuir student. "Indeed, what he found was almost no malaria
at that time, which was a great blow to those running this malaria eradication
program."
But Langmuir took advantage of the situation by using the money to set up
an organization to fight real epidemics. This became the Epidemic Intelligence
Service.
" Langmuir had a broader idea of what this should be," said Henderson. It
should be "a backup to the states, a resource that should be drawn
on from whatever problems would emerge."
" By creating this concept of surveillance and disease reporting, of having
a whole group of physicians on call as we were 24 hours a day, and if there was
an epidemic
you would drop everything to go immediately and help states," he added.
After the Korean War broke out in 1950, Langmuir again sensed opportunity
and tapped into the supply of medical personnel being recalled to duty.
He kept
them stateside, teaching them the principles of what would later be called
shoe-leather
epidemiology.
This comprised accurate, comprehensive surveillance combined
with sending doctors out into the field to interview victims,
their families, local
officials, and
anyone who could provide information concerning local outbreaks.
The rolls of the EIS now read like a Who's Who of the medical profession,
including surgeon generals, CDC heads, the last head of the Public Health
Service, the
current director of the World Health Organization's AIDS program, and
many deans of the country's 20 schools of public health.
" Almost like a professor in a university," said Henderson, "he
worked with each of the EIS officers, challenging them,
ensuring the integrity of
their studies, querying them. All of these things resulted in a great
many people ending
up in public health who would never have done so."
One example is Henderson himself, who headed up the world's
most successful attempt to control a disease – the World Health Organization's program
to eradicate smallpox.
Prior to the campaign, the disease was killing two and a
half million people a year, and disfigured many more. Henderson
says the real credit
for the
eradication should go to Langmuir.
" He emphasized surveillance with regard to disease wherever it occurred,
analyzing it and looking at it, and acting if appropriate," Henderson said. "That's
what we did with smallpox eradication. It was basically Langmuirian
principles."
He says those same principles are now being applied in the attempt
to eliminate other dread diseases, including the polio eradication
effort
that has so
far succeeded in wiping out the disease in Western countries.
" In my own area, I discovered that mild Vitamin A deficiency is probably
responsible for one to three million children dying or going blind each year," Summers
said. "It is now the big international activity that UNICEF
and other organizations have identified as a critical issue and
have resolved to control
by the year
2000."
The emergency investigative service Langmuir established
at the CDC also continues to fly to disease outbreaks at
a moment's notice.
When attendees at an American Legion conference suddenly
began dying, it was the CDC that found the cause. Likewise,
when young
homosexual
men in
New York,
Los Angeles and San Francisco began succumbing to a strange new
illness, it was the CDC that interviewed thousands and discovered
the means
of transmitting what
would become known as AIDS.
While Langmuir set up the apparatus to deal with real epidemics,
he also exposed those that have been exaggerated.
After the introduction of the Salk polio vaccine in the mid-1950s,
reports of persons developing the disease from the inoculation
sent the nation
into a panic
and threatened the program.
Langmuir had the CDC investigate each case and found that
primarily one company was involved.
" He predicted that there would eventually be 120 cases and there turned
out to be 122," Henderson said. "The process was corrected
and we went ahead with vaccinations."
In recent years, Langmuir became critical of the CDC's handling
of AIDS. He believed that the organization was overstating
both the
overall numbers
of
infected
individuals and especially the risk to non-drug-abusing heterosexuals
of contracting the
disease.
Langmuir was also quite critical of what has been described
as America's "risk
of the week" syndrome. Commenting on the cellular phone brain tumor scare
earlier this year, he told Investor's Business Daily, "It's
perfectly god awful. It's totally irrational."
Langmuir was the CDC's chief epidemiologist from 1949 to
1970. He spent the rest of his life teaching at Harvard
Medical School
and
at Johns
Hopkins, from which
he had earned his degree in public health.
" As a teacher he was incredible. He could really capture an audience in
ways that was difficult to describe," said Dr. Jonathan Freeman, a professor
of epidemiology who taught with Langmuir at Harvard. Earlier this year, Langmuir
received an
award from his students at Johns Hopkins for being an outstanding instructor.
" You could always see in this man tremendous vision," said Henderson. "When
you look back, you see this is one of those people who has very
profoundly affected an entire field and a generation through
sheer personality, and his
ability to
teach and inspire."
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