Disease Eradication Progress
Smallpox is the only human disease ever eradicated — declared eliminated in 1980 after a 13-year intensive global campaign. Rinderpest (a cattle disease) followed in 2011. Polio cases have fallen from 350,000 in 1988 to under 100 wild-virus cases a year today. Guinea worm has dropped from 3.5 million to under 20 cases. The remaining eradication targets are now small in number but very hard to close.
Key insights
Smallpox was uniquely eradicable
Smallpox had several features that made eradication possible: only human reservoir, characteristic rash for easy detection, a single highly effective vaccine that provided lifetime immunity from a single dose, and no asymptomatic transmission. The 1967–80 Intensified Smallpox Eradication Programme cost roughly $300M (mostly bilateral aid) — a return on investment estimated at $2B+ per year in vaccination programmes alone.
Polio is at the threshold
Wild poliovirus type 2 was certified eradicated in 2015 and type 3 in 2019. Only type 1 remains, and only in two countries (Afghanistan and Pakistan). Vaccine-derived poliovirus (rare reversions of the live oral vaccine) has emerged as the larger remaining challenge — type 2 vaccine-derived outbreaks have occurred across multiple regions. Switch to safer novel oral polio vaccine (nOPV2) is underway.
Some efforts have stalled, others not started
Guinea worm (dracunculiasis) is the closest disease to eradication after smallpox — but the last few cases in dogs and conflict-affected areas have proven extremely stubborn. Measles elimination has reversed in many regions as coverage has slipped. Yaws elimination was nearly achieved in the 1950s and was then largely abandoned; it is now under WHO's 2030 roadmap again.
Polio cases 1988–2024
Wild poliovirus cases reported globally
Key Finding: From ~350,000 cases in 1988 to fewer than 100 today — a 99.99% reduction.
Guinea worm cases 1986–2024
Annual cases of dracunculiasis worldwide
Key Finding: From 3.5 million cases in 21 countries (1986) to under 20 cases today, mostly in Chad and South Sudan.
Methodology & caveats
Eradication vs elimination
Eradication = permanent global zero (no further intervention needed). Elimination = zero in a defined region, with ongoing intervention needed. Smallpox is eradicated globally. Measles is eliminated in some regions and re-establishing in others. Malaria is eliminated from many countries but global eradication remains a long-term goal.
Why some diseases resist eradication
Eradicable diseases need: humans-only reservoir (or controllable animal reservoir), accurate diagnostics, an effective intervention, and political/financial commitment to push through the long tail. Diseases with non-human reservoirs (malaria — mosquitoes; cholera — water; yellow fever — primates) are harder to eradicate. Diseases without effective vaccines (HIV — at least so far) cannot use the smallpox playbook directly.
Counting the last cases
Counting the final cases of a near-eradicated disease is harder than counting the first thousand. Surveillance must be everywhere; non-cases must be confirmed negative; political incentives to under-report or to declare 'eradication' before it's secure both bias the numbers. WHO requires three consecutive years of zero cases plus high-quality surveillance before certifying regional elimination.