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Abstract

The ancient technique of variolation (inoculation of the smallpox) which was introduced in the United States in 1721 was replaced by vaccination (inoculation of the cowpox) soon after the procedure was published by Edward Jenner in 1798. Benjamin Waterhouse is recognized as the introducer of smallpox vaccination in the United States having conducted the first vaccination in Boston on 8 July 1800, although other American physicians also played an important role in extending vaccination in the East Coast of the United States. A different route of introduction brought the smallpox vaccine from Mexico to New Mexico (March 1805) and Texas (April 1806) which at that time where part of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. The vaccine was brought to California in 1817 by Russian merchants who obtained it in Peru, where the vaccine had arrived in 1806 with the Spanish Philanthropic Expedition of the Vaccine. It took almost 150 years of vaccination efforts before the last natural outbreak of smallpox occurred in the United States in 1949.

Details

Title
Three different paths to introduce the smallpox vaccine in early 19th century United States
Author
Esparza, José
Pages
2741-2745
Publication year
2020
Publication date
Mar 10, 2020
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
0264410X
e-ISSN
18732518
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2425692900
Copyright
©2020. Elsevier Ltd