Edward Jenner and the prevention of disease
Smallpox
smallpoxSerious illness caused by a virus. Smallpox gets its name from the pus-filled blisters (or pocks) that form during the illness. was a disease that caused severe rashes all over the body. It had a mortality rateThe death rate as a result of a particular cause. of around 30 per cent. Even if people survived, they were often left with long-term effects, such as scarring, joint pain and even blindness.
Inoculation
In 1718, Lady Mary Montagu, who was married to the British ambassador in Turkey, had her son inoculated against smallpox. This involved giving someone a small amount of pus from a smallpox victim, which protected them against the disease. On her return to England, she promoted inoculationUsually a medical injection that introduces a weakened dose of harmful disease-causing organisms into a patient鈥檚 body. This induces the body to develop an immunity to the disease, which protects the patient from the full-blown sickness. and the procedure became widely used.
There were risks with inoculation. Someone might contract the full-blown disease when they were being inoculated, or they might not be given enough so they would not develop immunityWhen a person's body is not prone to a disease because they have a resistance to it.
Edward Jenner鈥檚 discovery
Edward Jenner was an English doctor who was born in 1749. He heard milkmaids claim that they would not catch smallpox as they had already been infected with a far less serious disease, cowpox. Jenner decided to test this theory.
In 1796, Jenner took cowpox pus from a milkmaid, Sarah Nelmes, and smeared it into a small cut in the arm of eight-year-old James Phipps. Phipps became mildly ill with cowpox. Next, Jenner gave Phipps pus from a smallpox victim and James did not become ill.
Jenner had proved that cowpox gave people protection against smallpox. He called this procedure 鈥榲accination鈥 after the Latin word for 鈥榗ow鈥, vacca.
Opposition to Jenner鈥檚 vaccine
Despite its effectiveness in protecting people against smallpox, there was significant opposition to Jenner鈥檚 vaccineA substance that stimulates the body to produce antibodies to provide immunity against a disease.:
- Some members of the Church believed that disease was sent by God, so the vaccine interfered with God鈥檚 will.
- The vaccine worked by giving people an animal disease. Some people felt that this was not safe and that vaccinated people would grow horns.
- Jenner did not know about germs. Because of this, he could not fully explain how his vaccine worked.
Why was Jenner significant?
Jenner鈥檚 vaccine meant people could be protected against a deadly disease. In 1853, a law was introduced making it compulsory for all newborn babies to be vaccinated against smallpox. In 1967, the World Health OrganisationA part of the United Nations that monitors health throughout the world. launched a plan to try to eradicate smallpox. In 1980, they announced that their goal had been achieved.
Jenner鈥檚 work also encouraged research to find other vaccines. This became possible after Louis Pasteur discovered germ theory in 1853.