Variolation
In
Asia, practitioners developed the technique of variolation—the deliberate
infection with smallpox. Dried smallpox scabs were blown into the nose
of an individual who then contracted a mild form of the disease. Upon
recovery, the individual was immune to smallpox. Between 1% to 2% of those
variolated died as compared to 30% who died when they contracted the disease
naturally.
By
1700, variolation had spread to Africa, India and the Ottoman Empire.
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In
contrast to Asians and Africans who inoculated by blowing dried
smallpox scabs up the nose, Europeans and their American cousins
tended to innoculate through a puncture in the skin.
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In
1717, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, the wife of the British ambassador, learned
about variolation in Constantinople. In 1721, at the urging of Montagu
and the Princess of Wales, several prisoners and abandoned children were
inoculated by having smallpox inserted under the skin. Several months
later, the children and prisoners were deliberately exposed to smallpox.
When none contracted the disease, the procedure was deemed safe and members
of the royal family were inoculated. The procedure then became fashionable
in Europe.
African slaves introduced variolation into America. In Massachusetts,
Cotton Mather learned about the practice from his slave, Onesimus. Mather
publicized the technique and the procedure was first tried during a smallpox
epidemic in Boston in 1721.
Variolation was never risk-free. Not only could the patient die from the
procedure but the mild form of the disease which the patient contracted
could spread, causing an epidemic. Victims of variolation could be found
at all levels of society; King George III lost a son to the procedure
as did many others.
The
Threat
Variolation
Next
Topic: Vaccination
Resistance
to Vaccination
The 20th Century Threat
Campaign to Eradicate
Obstacles and Stuggles
Success
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“Every
year, thousands undergo this operation, and the French ambassador says
pleasantly that they take the smallpox here by way of diversion as they
do the waters in other countries.”
— Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, 1774.
Colonial
Manuscript.
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