Edward Jenner & Vaccinations

Cards (6)

  • Inoculation
    • dates from 18th century, has been used widely in Far East
    • Lady Mary Montague brought it to England in 1721
    • involved a mild form of smallpox being introduced, so the body develops a mild form of the disease, but become immune to the stronger form
  • Edward Jenner
    • a country doctor, heard the gossip that milkmaids who had cowpox didn't get smallpox
    • injected 9 year old James Phipps with pus of cowpox. once he recovered from cowpox, he gave him a small dose of smallpox, but he was immune
    • submitted a paper to the Royal Society in 1797 but was told he needed more proof
  • Edward Jenner
    • he experimented more, keeping detailed notes and records
    • in 1798, he published 'An Inquiry into the Causes and Effects of the Varioae Vaccine'
    • continued to work on vaccination and in 1802 was awarded £10,000 by the government, and a further £20,000 in 1807 after the Royal College of Physicians confirmed the effectiveness of vaccination
  • What were the negative reactions to Jenner's work?
    • some members of the Church believed disease was sent by God, so vaccination interfered with God's will
    • some people felt unsafe about being injected with an animal's disease
    • he didn't know about germs, so couldn't fully explain his theory until Pasteur and Koch
  • When did vaccination become free to infants?

    in 1840 after a dreadful smallpox epidemic
  • Government Involvement
    • in 1853, vaccination was made compulsory but not enforced
    • the laissez-faire government had a fear of this disease
    • in 1866 an antivaccine league was set up against compulsory vaccination
    • in 1871 parents could be fined for not vaccinating their kids
    • in 1887, once death rate had fallen dramatically, parents could refuse it for their children
    • in 1980, smallpox was completely eradicated