To Catch a Virus. John Booss

To Catch a Virus - John Booss


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Thus, whole populations were devastated by smallpox in the New World, and leadership as well as the common people was destroyed in the Old World.

      When the opportunity presented itself to offer protection against smallpox by inoculation with smallpox material, a practice known as variolation, it was accepted in some European nations more successfully than in others. The procedure had been known elsewhere, including nasal insufflation, in which scabs from a mild case of smallpox were blown into the nostril. It had been practiced in ancient China as “planting of flowers,” and inoculation had been known in India “since before the Christian era” (19). The campaign to bring inoculation against smallpox to England was waged by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (Fig. 1), who first encountered it while in Turkey with her husband, the British ambassador. Lady Montagu was an English aristocrat, beauty, and intellectual who jousted with no less a figure than Alexander Pope, the 18th-century poet. In 1717 she wrote to a friend that “the smallpox, so fatal, and so general amongst us, is here entirely harmless, by the invention of ingrafting which is the name they give it.” Lady Montagu described the procedure and quoted the French ambassador as saying that it is taken “by way of diversion.” She went on to say in part that “I am patriot enough to take pains to bring this useful invention into fashion in England . . . (19).” Strong willed and intelligent, Lady Montagu was highly motivated with respect to smallpox. She had lost her brother to smallpox, and her own attack of smallpox had taken her beauty, leaving her with a pockmarked face. She had her own children inoculated, and on her return to England the royal family took note. The successful inoculation of the two daughters of the Prince of Wales in 1722 “began the firm establishment of inoculation as acceptable medical practice in England” (19). However, there was early resistance to the practice in France, for example, where it was officially accepted finally in 1769.

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       doi:10.1128/9781555818586.ch3.f1

      The danger in variolation was the use of infectious “pus” taken directly from an individual with infected pustules or the use of ground, infected scabs. These materials were scratched into the skin of a healthy person in hopes of conferring resistance to disfiguring disease. Despite the marked reduction in mortality, there were several disadvantages attendant to inoculation. While less severe than natural smallpox, many experienced illness of various degrees of intensity, with some mortality. In addition, there was a costly preparation period of mercury and antimony administration. Even Edward Jenner experienced an arduous preparation period. Hence, the poor could not afford protection until 1764, when inoculation was first provided by the government (5). Most distressingly, inoculated persons were a source of virulent infection to their contacts. As a result, inoculation hospitals were necessary for supervision of administration. Blake notes that the experience of the American Revolutionary War resulted in greater acceptance of the practice. By tabulating deaths and cases from natural versus inoculated smallpox, Blake demonstrated a progressive acceptance of smallpox inoculation.

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       doi:10.1128/9781555818586.ch3.f2


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