It was one of the deadliest and most contagious diseases known to humankind.
Smallpox killed over half a billion people in the 20th century alone — three times the number of deaths from all of the century’s wars combined.
It began with flu-like symptoms, progressing to an horrendous rash consisting of deep sores, filled with fluid that would blister, ooze, crust and scab over, leaving permanent scars on those lucky enough to survive.
Just one teaspoon of smallpox virus is enough to infect every man, woman and child on earth.
But then a miracle — British doctor Edward Jenner created a vaccine after noticing that the milk maids (the women who milked the cows) who had been infected with “cow pox” never contracted smallpox.
This month marks the 270th birthday of Dr Jenner, known as the pioneer of vaccination who arguably saved more lives than anyone else in history. And yet, despite saving countless lives, he still had to deal with the early “anti-vaxx” movement where in 1796 as well as 2019, the boundaries between opinion and fact are often blurred.
Many people are too young to have ever seen smallpox in their lifetime, or have simply forgotten the sheer horror of the disease.
With a mortality rate of up to 30 per cent, many survivors of smallpox were left with significant scarring and even blindness. Smallpox has no cure, but that didn’t stop people from trying, with treatments including being bled, purged, starved, and wrapped tightly in red cloth.
For the Anti-Vaxxers *WARNING graphic photos*
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It's such a fine line between stupid and clever. Random guest posting.
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- Black Orchid
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For the Anti-Vaxxers *WARNING graphic photos*
- Black Orchid
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Re: For the Anti-Vaxxers *WARNING graphic photos*
According to Gower, we need to look at what was happening in the 1500s when people were manipulating the body’s immune system to try and protect themselves from smallpox because they realised those who’d contracted the disease were unlikely to catch it again.
Many people set about deliberately infecting themselves with what was, hopefully, a small dose of smallpox.
This was done by either scratching fluid from a smallpox blister into their own skin or by inhaling ground up blister scabs.
“The technique was introduced to England in 1721 by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and she called it inoculation, or engrafting which is how she had heard it described in Turkey. Later it came to be known as variolation and was widely practised in Britain until replaced by Jenner’s vaccine inoculation,” Gower said.
In rural parts of Britain, there was a tradition that those who had contracted cowpox would also be safe from smallpox. Cowpox is a disease usually affecting cattle, but it could also be passed to people in close contact with animals, causing mild symptoms.
Jenner decided to apply scientific tests to the country legend and began collecting evidence of people who had contracted cowpox and then been exposed to smallpox without becoming infected.
“Jenner waited until he met someone with a cowpox infection so he could carry out a controlled experiment.
“In 1796, Jenner was approached by Sarah Nelmes, a dairymaid, who had caught cowpox from a cow named Blossom. Jenner scratched pus from the blister on her hand onto the arm of James Phipps, an eight-year-old boy who had never contracted cowpox or smallpox,” Gower said.
“Phipps became slightly ill with cowpox, but soon made a full recovery. Jenner then attempted to variolate Phipps, to expose him to smallpox, in order to test whether or not he was now immune.
“As Jenner had expected, and to everyone’s relief, Phipps did not contract smallpox. Over the next two years, Jenner carried out the experiment on different subjects before writing up and publishing his work.”
Jenner named the new technique “vaccine inoculation”, later shortened to “vaccination,” after the Latin “vacca” for cow.
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- Black Orchid
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Re: For the Anti-Vaxxers *WARNING graphic photos*
https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/healt ... 724efdeb21Medical historian and best-selling author of The Butchering Art, Dr Lindsey Fitzharris told news.com.au she is frequently blocked on social media by anti-vaxxers who refuse to acknowledge the facts.
Dr Fitzharris said vaccination is not a freedom of choice issue, it’s a public health issue.
“In its most pernicious form, smallpox caused explosive haemorrhaging — death occurred within 48 hours. Those who survived had extensive scarring. Some went blind. It did not just make you “look ugly” for a few days. (Note: Dr Fitzharris has been contacted by anti-vaxxers who play down the impact of small pox by telling her that small pox only made people “look ugly”).
“Anyone trivialising smallpox is doing so from a place of privilege, since they are unlikely to have had contact with it because it was eradicated in 1980.
“This was an unprecedented event in history, signalling the first and only annihilation of a human disease. It has since been hailed the single greatest humanitarian achievement of all time. The victory saved tens of millions of lives.
“All you need to do is look at photos of this disease from the early 20th century to realise its horrendous power,” Dr Fitzharris said.
Dr Fitzharris said there are many misconceptions about the smallpox vaccine, one of them being that Jenner killed his son by vaccinating him.
“There is no historical evidence to back up this claim. In 1810, Jenner’s eldest son died from tuberculosis, which he contracted from a tutor employed for his education. Crucially, he had never been vaccinated by Jenner for smallpox; and even if he had, there is no evidence to suggest being vaccinated for smallpox made one vulnerable to tuberculosis.”
According to Dr Fitzharris, other misconceptions confuse inoculation and vaccination. The former is an ancient practice which used the smallpox virus to confer immunity onto a patient. This was dangerous because the person would become temporarily contagious, and thus could trigger an outbreak of the virus in the general population.
“Vaccination, on the other hand, used cowpox to confer immunity. Indeed, the word “vaccination,” coined by Jenner in 1796, is derived from the Latin root vaccinus, meaning “of or from the cow.” This practice, pioneered by Jenner, was far safer than inoculation.”
One argument anti-vaxxers use is to say, “Smallpox would have just gone away anyway without vaccination.”
Gower said this is absolutely not true.
“People often list improved hygiene or even just the natural death of disease as the reasons for the eradication of smallpox. The truth is that no other human disease has just gone away,” Gower said.
“Smallpox was eradicated after a targeted vaccination campaign. It will not come back. Cases of other diseases have dramatically reduced with the introduction of vaccination and, conversely, increased when vaccine take-up has been low.”
A recent example of this is measles where in the US, 971 cases have been reported in 2019 — the greatest number since 1992. US officials blame anti-vaccine groups for spreading misinformation about vaccine safety and the danger of measles.
So how would Dr Jenner feel about modern day anti-vaxxers? Gower believes he would be mortified.
“I think Jenner would be very upset that, whilst science and medicine have moved on so much and we now understand so much more about how disease is spread and how vaccines and the immune system work, historical misinformation is still being used in an attempt to discourage people from being vaccinated,” Gower said.
According to Gower, two samples of smallpox are kept in very secure storage: one by USA and the other by Russia. Some argue they need to be kept for vaccine research, improved diagnostics (just in case) and maybe even research into treatment. Others disagree and think they should be destroyed.
More reports of measles, mumps, whooping cough and tuberculosis outbreaks in Sydney. Whilst immigrants and refugees are advised to have themselves vaccinated there is no enforcement.
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