The Jenny McCarthys of their day heaped scorn on Dr. Jenner and his cow pox vaccine. |
On May 14, 1794 British physician Dr. Edward Jenner inoculated James
Phipps, the six year old son of his gardener, with a dose of cow pox.
Later, he exposed the boy to dreaded small pox and the boy seemed immune. He repeated the experiment on other members
of his community, including his own son Edward
and reported his findings to the Royal
Medical Society.
Within two years his sensational
findings were reported all over Europe and
vaccination (from the Latin vacca for cow) was becoming common.
Prior to this discovery up to 40% of those exposed to small pox
died. Vaccination was nearly 100%
effective against the disease and resulted in virtually no deaths.
Soon in areas where vaccination
was standard the illness was eliminated.
By 1974, after a world-wide vaccination campaign by the United Nations, small pox was declared
eradicated. Since then an isolated
outbreak in Africa was brought under
control by an emergency inoculation program.
Jenner was not the first to use
exposure from pox to build immunity from the disease latter. There are reports of inoculation, or
“infusion” with mild forms of small pox as far back as 1000 years ago in India.
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, wife of the British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, described the custom in
Turkey, where fatal epidemics of the
disease were rare. Material made from
the scabs of small pox victims was introduced into the blood by several small
cuts over the body. The inoculated came
down with a mild form of the illness, generally running fevers for two or three
days with a few of the characteristic small pox lesions mild enough not to
leave scaring, and completely recovering in eight days. This method still had about 1.5% fatality
rate and made the patients quite ill for a few days, but compared to the huge
number of deaths ordinarily associated with small pox, the severity of the
illness even among survivors, and the life-long scarring from multiple deep
lesions it was preferable.
In 1821, shortly after receiving Lady Motagu’s report, a new small pox
epidemic broke out in Britain, interesting the Royal Family. They ordered
tests on prisoners confirming her observations and soon allowed their own children
to be inoculated. The custom spread,
especially among the wealthy.
Even earlier In 1706 Massachusetts
Puritan minister Cotton Mather independently observed
that his slave, and other bonded Africans
seemed immune to small pox and discovered that they had undergone some form
of inoculation in their native lands before being captured by slave
traders. A trial of the inoculation
procedure revealed 4 deaths out of 244 (about 2.5%) as opposed to 844 deaths
among 5980 who contracted small pox unprotected. Inoculation became common first in Boston and then across the Colonies
despite some vigorous opposition.
In 1777, after initial reluctance, General
George Washington ordered the inoculation of all of his troops who had not
previously come down with the illness.
He may have been encouraged by Dr.
Benjamin Rush.
Jenner was not even the first person to note that exposure to cow pox
immunized against small pox. Many people
had noted that those who worked with cows, including dairy maids, seldom
contracted the deadly disease. In fact
the storied associations of milk maids with beauty may have been because they
seldom bore the horrible scars of small pox that afflicted so many.
As early as 1727 James Jura produced
statistical studies that showed that those who had been exposed to cow pox were
immune from small pox. A Dr. Fewster published an article in the
journal of the London Medical Society entitled
Cow
pox and its ability to prevent smallpox in 1765. In 1774 Benjamin
Jesty, a Dorset farmer
inoculated his family with cow pox. Two
or three others in Germany and Britain performed similar studies and
experiments with vaccination before Jenner.
But it was Jenner’s studies that broke out to a wide audience and
introduced vaccination on a wide scale which is why today he is regarded as the
Father of Immunization.
And Jenny McCarthy and assorted
anti-science faddists are still mad at him.
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