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Inoculation, originally '''Variolation''', is a method of purposefully Infecting a person with Smallpox (Variola) in a controlled manner so as to minimise the severity of the infection and also to induce Immunity against further infection. It preceded Vaccination and is separate from it, though today the terms ''inoculation'', ''vaccination'' and Immunisation are used more or less interchangeably and popularly refer to the process of Artificially Inducing Immunity against various infectious Disease s. The microorganism used in an inoculation is called the inoculant or inoculum. Inoculation in the East was historically performed by blowing smallpox crusts into the nostril, but in Britain, Europe and the American Colonies the preferred method was rubbing material from a smallpox pustule from a selected mild case - Variola Minor - into a scratch between the thumb and forefinger. {Link without Title} This would generally be performed when an individual was in normal good health, and thus at his peak resistance. The recipient would develop smallpox; however, due to being introduced through the skin rather than the lungs, and possibly because of the inoculated individual's preexisting state of good health, the small inoculum, and the single point of initial infection, the resulting case of smallpox was generally milder than the naturally-occurring form, produced far less facial scarring, and had a far lower Mortality Rate . As with survivors of the natural disease, the inoculated individual was subsequently immune to re-infection. __TOC__ ORIGINS AND IMPORTATION TO CHRISTENDOM , after 1716.]] ''' she had the embassy surgeon, Charles Maitland, inoculate her five-year-old son. In 1721 , after returning to England, she had her four-year-old daughter inoculated. She invited friends to see her daughter, including Sir Hans Sloane , the King 's physician. Sufficient interest arose that Maitland gained permission to test inoculation on six prisoners due to be hanged at Newgate Prison in exchange for their freedom, an experiment which was witnessed by a number of notable doctors. The experiment succeeded, and in 1722 The Prince Of Wales' daughters received inoculations. The practice of inoculation slowly spread amongst the royal families of Europe, usually followed by more general adoption amongst the people. The practice is documented in America as early as 1721 . Cotton Mather in Boston had a description of the African practice of inoculation from his slave Onesimus and encouraged its application, with considerable controversy and strife. Fearing the outbreak of an epidemic, the editor of the '' South Carolina Gazette '' published a detailed description of the innoculation process in the April 22 issue. In Boston, there was opposition from churchmen regarding the practice who regarded it as "bidding defiance to Heaven itself, even to the will of God", though one historian also notes that "...within a year or two after the first experiment nearly three hundred persons had been inoculated ... in Boston and neighbouring towns, and out of these only six had died; whereas, during the same period, out of nearly six thousand persons who had taken smallpox naturally, and had received only the usual medical treatment, nearly one thousand had died." (from A History Of The Warfare Of Science With Theology In Christendom by Andrew Dickson White.)
(The 14% figure rather than 17% comes from "Edward Jenner and Vaccination." Harris {Link without Title} ) |