Edward Jenner
Impacts of Edward Jenner
His idea of vaccination is now the foundation of modern prevention of disease In 1852/3 the British government began to make vaccinations compulsory Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were keen supporters
What were Edward Jenner's influences
His own experience of inoculation The influence of the Enlightenment and Scientific revolution which promoted new ideas Observations of milkmaids Scientific and medical training
Overall impact on British Medicine
In the short term vaccinations grew steadily in popularity but had many critics In the long term Jenner's discoveries saved more lives than almost anyone
Areas of research and major contributions
Prevention of smallpox Used scientific apporach- observable and repeatable phenomenon to confirm that milk maids who contracted cowpox were then immune to smallpox Developed the use of cowpox as a vaccination against smallpox
Limitations of Edward Jenner
The Church questioned the legitimacy of vaccinations and thought it was wrong to use animal infections in humans Inoculated campaigned against vaccinations The Royal Society refuses to publish his idea Jenner observed the vaccinations effect but could not explain how it worked When done clumsily the vaccination didn't work The government were slow to make it compulsory as it was expensive
Ideas that Edward Jenner developed
The connection between milkmaids catching cowpox and never catching smallpox. He then infected a small boy (James Philips) with cowpox and then smallpox to test this theory. He wrote a report to prove this wasn't a fluke and called the process vaccination
Ideas that Edward Jenner rejected
The idea that inoculation was the best way to prevent smallpox
Edward Jenner (1749-1823)
A country doctor who first practised medicine in St George's hospital He was raised in and returned to Gloucestershire and developed a vaccination for smallpox in 1796