This book leapfrogged to the top of my TBR pile as it was the only book I had shelved that was sufficiently opportune to read when the coronavirus pandemic struck.
The history of the global eradication of epidemic diseases is surely a gripping one. Bartlett offers an engaging bird's-eye overview of eradication campaigns from smallpox to polio and touches on other epidemic diseases on the radar of the international health community such as yellow fever, measles, Ebola, malaria, meningitis and Guinea worm disease. Learning about the specifics of the unmistakably Sisyphean efforts of a global army of health workers and vaccinators, who often operate in the background of and in between political forces and violent conflicts, was definitely informative. Combining that human story with just the right dose of the medical science behind vaccine development and virology made it very good popular science read. And, oh yeah, why hadn't I ever heard of Jonas Salk??
What I hoped I would get out of this book was perhaps a brief look behind the scenes of global health initiatives coming out of the World Health Organization and the influence of 'Big Philanthropy' on the globally coordinated efforts. Although both aspects were there, the focus remained on the specific challenges they faced in global eradication campaigns, which were of course very interesting, but perhaps left out some crucial footnotes on the accountability of such large and powerful philanthropic organisations.