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The UK Vaccination Acts of 1840, 1853 and 1898 reflect the continuing argument over vacination policy in the UK. They were followed by legislation in the USA and other countries. See Vaccination and Anti-vaccinationist Alfred Russel Wallace gave in 1895 an account of Smallpox and vaccination[http://www.wku.edu/~smithch/wallace/S374-509.htm in which he divided the period into encouragement, compulsion, and penal compulsion. "It is important to note, however, that he never believed--as has been commonly reported--vaccination to have been wholly hurtful historically." Charles H Smith, Western Kentucky University {Link without Title} . He made an argument similar to the one which toward the end of the 20th century been made for Polio vaccination, first in the USA and a little later in the UK, that as the prevalence of the disease changes, the approach to immunisation must change. UK The 1840 Act
In general, disadvantages, whether generally agreed or disagreed, of variolation are those of vaccination, but added to them is the generally agreement that variolation was always more dangerous than vaccination. Vaccination was first made compulsory in 1853; and the provisions were made more stringent in 1867, 1871, and 1874. The 1853 Act By the Act it was required—
The 1867 Act In 1867 an Act of Parliament was passed which made vaccination for the first time really compulsory, repeated penalties on account of default being now insisted on until the child should reach the age of fourteen years The 1871 Act In 1871 another Act was passed appointing a Vaccination Officer, also authorising a defendant to appear in a court of law by any member of his family, or any other person authorised by him. The 1873 Act Made vaccination compulsory. Records of the reasoning for this are not widely available. However it is apparent that soon after this there was considerable resistance to the compulsion, and this grew. The 1885 Royal Commission {Link without Title} Reported 7 years later, recommending the abolition of cumulative penalties. The 1898 Act Removed cumulative penalties and introduced a conscience clause, allowing parents who did not believe vaccination was efficacious or safe to obtain a certificate of exemption. And substituting calf lymph for humanised lymph. USA In the United States, the Supreme Court ruled in the 1905 case ''Jacobson v. Commonwealth of Massachusetts'' that the state could require individuals to be vaccinated for the common good. Common contemporary vaccination policies require, subject to exemptions, that children receive common vaccinations before entering school. |