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The Controversy Of Edward Jenner's Vaccine

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The history of vaccinations begin with Edward Jenner, the country doctor from Gloucestershire who found, growing on cows, a nearly harmless virus the protected people from smallpox. Jenner’s vaccine was safer, more reliable, and more durable than variolation, and it is still the only vaccine to have eliminated its reason for being-in 1980, when the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the disease extinct. For nearly a century and a half, smallpox was the only vaccine routinely administered, and it saved millions of lives . But the controversy that marked the return of the vaccine, amid bioterrorism hysteria in 2002, was only the latest twist in the remarkable, mysterious life of vaccines. One of the first nations to get access to …show more content…

The more fake or failed lymph failed to protect people against smallpox, the more cowpox fell into ill repute. “While the deluded patient vainly supposed himself secured from the attacks of the smallpox, his imaginary safety leads him into situations where his life is endangered,” Waterhouse wrote, leaving vaccination open to doubt or “contempt”. The worst failure occurred at Marblehead, Massachusetts, which suffered a disastrous smallpox outbreak during a vaccination campaign. Using “virus” that his seafaring son had taken from a pustule on the arm of a sailor vaccinated in London, Dr. Elisha Story vaccinated his daughter on October 2, 1800. Two weeks later she broke out with what Story believed was cowpox but was actually smallpox. Waterhouse was meanwhile supplying Story with vaccine that was either contaminated or inactive. The epidemic eventually sickened 1,000 people, killing 68 of …show more content…

In March 1812, in the middle of a smallpox epidemic, Dr. James Smith, who had run a Baltimore vaccination clinic since 1802, wrote to congress and the Maryland legislature seeking help to deliver Vaccine Agent and awarding him a franking privilege that allowed his vaccine to be mailed for free. Maryland promised a lottery to raise money for Smith’s vaccination program, but the fund was diverted to the construction of the Washington Monument that stands atop Charles Street in downtown Baltimore. In 1822, such regulation of vaccine that existed was returned to the states, where it would remain until

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