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References
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The origins of inoculation - PMC - PubMed Central - NIHEarly in the 18th century, variolation (referred to then as 'inoculation') was introduced to Britain and New England to protect people likely to be at risk ...Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
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Vaccine Timeline### Summary of Key Historical Events on Inoculation and Vaccination
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Edward Jenner and the history of smallpox and vaccination - NIHThe word is derived from the Latin inoculare, meaning “to graft.” Inoculation referred to the subcutaneous instillation of smallpox virus into nonimmune ...
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Smallpox, Inoculation, and the Revolutionary WarJan 16, 2025 · Smallpox inoculation was a simple procedure: a doctor removed pus from an active pustule of an infected person, and then inserted that pus into ...Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
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The Inoculation Method Could Impact the Outcome of ...Feb 14, 2018 · When cells are inoculated into fresh culture medium, they initially enter the lag phase. During the lag phase, cells adjust to the fresh medium ...
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Psychological inoculation improves resilience against ... - ScienceAug 24, 2022 · Inoculation theory follows a medical immunization analogy and posits that it is possible to build psychological resistance against unwanted ...Introduction · Results · Materials And Methods
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History of Smallpox - CDCOct 23, 2024 · Vaccination became widely accepted and gradually replaced the practice of variolation. At some point in the 1800s, the virus used to make ...
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Variolation vs. Vaccination: 18th Century Developments in Smallpox ...May 12, 2020 · Adams used an earlier method of inoculation called “variolation,” rather than Jenner's “vaccination.” Inoculation is the process of introducing a small amount ...Missing: definition | Show results with:definition
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Washington's War Against Smallpox: The Revolutionary Inoculation ...Apr 7, 2025 · In February 1777, Washington ordered the mandatory inoculation of Continental Army troops against smallpox, implementing what historians consider the first ...Missing: definition | Show results with:definition<|control11|><|separator|>
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Variolation - an overview | ScienceDirect TopicsVariolation is defined as a historical method of immunization against smallpox involving the deliberate introduction of infectious material, such as scabs ...Missing: distinction | Show results with:distinction<|control11|><|separator|>
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The History of Variolation - HistoryOfVaccines.orgJun 5, 2021 · The exact origins of variolation (also known as “inoculation”) are not well known. However, it is agreed that the practice started somewhere in Asia, in either ...
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Development of variolation and its introduction to Joseon-era KoreaOct 26, 2022 · The Turkish inoculation method she implemented was a method of injecting pus collected from smallpox patients into small wounds made on the skin ...
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Variolation to Vaccine: Smallpox Inoculation Travels East to West ...The history of the inoculation process itself might help shed light on the roots of controversies we are facing today. In the spring of 1721, ...
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[PDF] Smallpox Inoculation in Africa1790), 484-5. Page 11. 548. EUGENIA W. HERBERT custom of 'buying the smallpox' which was also known in many rural communities in Europe and Arabia, where a ...
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Innovations from the Levant: smallpox inoculation and perceptions ...Nov 11, 2022 · The procedure she described became known across Western Europe and the Americas as inoculation against smallpox ... Non-Western Cultures, Berlin: ...
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Inoculation - Etymology, Origin & MeaningOriginating mid-15c. from Latin inoculatio meaning "an engrafting," inoculation means grafting buds in horticulture and virus insertion in pathology to ...
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inoculation, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English ...OED's earliest evidence for inoculation is from around 1440, in Palladius' De Re Rustica. inoculation is a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin inoculātiō. See ...
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How Ayurveda Pioneered Smallpox Inoculation - SwarajyaNov 25, 2017 · The idea of inoculation derived from both agada-tantra, one of the eight branches of traditional Ayurveda (Indian medicine) that deals with poisons and toxins ...Missing: 16th 17th Jesuit missionaries
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West Africans and the history of smallpox inoculation: Q&A with Elise ...Oct 19, 2020 · In one, Mather uses the term 'Guaramantese' to refer to Onesimus and the other enslaved Africans who informed him about smallpox inoculation.<|separator|>
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How Far Back Were Africans Inoculating Against Smallpox? Really ...Sep 4, 2023 · Free and enslaved West Africans on both sides of the Atlantic were inoculating against disease before the early 18 th century.
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The Medical Activities in Eighteenth Century Ethiopia of James ...1 James Bruce, Travels to discover the source of the Nile (Edinburgh, 1790) ... practice of inoculation.4 He supplied Bruce, the latter records, "with what.
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Travels to Discover the Source of the nile, Volume III., by James Bruce.The inhabitants of Masuah were dying of the small-pox, so that there was fear the living would not be sufficient to bury the dead. The whole island was filled ...
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Variolation - Smallpox - National Library of Medicine - NIHIn 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 ...
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'A thankless enterprise': Lady Mary Wortley Montagu's campaign to ...Feb 16, 2022 · This article argues that whilst Montagu can take the credit for popularizing the notion of inoculating against smallpox, it was not the method she personally ...
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Elise Mitchell - Smallpox Inoculation in the Era of Atlantic SlaveryIn the early eighteenth century, European medical practitioners and slave owners appropriated inoculation to control the spread of smallpox along Atlantic slave ...
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How an Enslaved African Man in Boston Helped Save Generations ...Feb 1, 2019 · Smallpox also entered the colonies on slave ships, transmitted by enslaved people who, in packed and unsanitary quarters, passed the disease ...
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Smallpox inoculation: translation, transference and transformationMar 24, 2020 · The present article investigates four texts that introduced the new practice to readers in northern Europe, all published in London in the period 1714−1722.
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Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and smallpox - Hektoen InternationalJul 13, 2020 · In Turkey she discovered that inoculation (with live smallpox virus) was a common procedure in folk medicine, administered by old Greek women ...
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Cure or Protection? The meaning of smallpox inoculation, ca 1750 ...The idea that smallpox could be eradicated was not necessarily the ultimate aim when inoculation was introduced in Europe in the 1720s.
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One in fifty | Royal SocietyMay 15, 2023 · It is therefore not surprising that most of the inoculations reported to the Royal Society's secretary James Jurin between 1721 and 1727 were ...Missing: outbreak | Show results with:outbreak
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James Jurin and the avoidance of bias in collecting and assessing ...He used his position to solicit information from across Britain about individuals who had been inoculated with smallpox. Jurin specified the details that he ...Missing: trials outbreak
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The 1721 Boston Inoculation Controversy, and Uncovering African ...Mather wrote that he first learned of inoculation around 1706, from his African slave, whom the minister had renamed Onesimus, and who had been inoculated in ...
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The Boston Smallpox Epidemic, 1721 | ContagionBetween April and December 1721, 5,889 Bostonians had smallpox, and 844 died of it. October was the worst month, with 411 deaths. Smallpox caused more than ...
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Onesimus Mather and the Origins of Inoculation in BostonAug 22, 2020 · Onesimus Mather, enslaved by Cotton Mather, provided the evidence needed to successfully perform the first American inoculation campaign.Missing: 1706-1721 | Show results with:1706-1721
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The Smallpox Epidemics in America in the 1700s and the Role ... - NIHJul 4, 2020 · Historians have calculated that the case death rate was reduced from 15 to 2% during the 1721 epidemic and from 18% to less than one percent ...
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Smallpox in the 18th Century | Colonial Williamsburg Digital LibraryIn the middle and southern colonies, the disease had become more prevalent as the 18th century advanced, and inoculation was permitted at all times. An ...
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Disease and Inoculation in the 18th CenturyJun 1, 2020 · Early Americans were terrified of smallpox. Europeans brought the disease to the Americas through exploration and colonization. It ravaged ...
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Washington Inoculates an Army | American Battlefield TrustAmong the affluent Patriots who secured inoculation were Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, and Martha Washington. Many states and cities forbade inoculation ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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Smallpox vaccination: an early start of modern medicine in AmericaIn 1777 Washington ordered the inoculation of all men in the Continental Army against smallpox. He feared that 'no precaution can prevent [smallpox] from ...
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Benjamin Franklin's son dies of smallpox in 1736 - PMC - NIHBenjamin Franklin in his autobiography said: “In 1736 I lost one of my sons, a fine boy of four years old, by the smallpox taken in the common way.
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On the Death of His Son, 30 December 1736 - Founders Online20, 1732, died of smallpox Nov. 21, 1736. BF regretted to the end of his life, he wrote in his autobiography, that he had not had the boy inoculated.<|control11|><|separator|>
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The History of Variolation### Summary of Historical Methods of Variolation
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Smallpox: Background, Etiology, Epidemiology - Medscape ReferenceMar 21, 2024 · Cellular immunity and humoral immunity are elicited in response to variola infection. Neutralizing antibodies can be detected during the first ...Background · Characteristics Of Variola... · Etiology<|separator|>
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The immunology of smallpox vaccines - PMC - NIHSmallpox vaccines induce robust T and B cell responses that target a wide array of viral proteins and provide cross-protective immunity against important human ...Missing: IgM seroconversion
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Manipulating the immune response to fight infection - ImmunobiologyThis was the principle of variolation, in which the inoculation of a small amount of dried material from a smallpox pustule would cause a mild infection ...
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Smallpox in the Post-Eradication Era - PMC - PubMed CentralJan 24, 2020 · This led to an early immunization procedure that became known as variolation: immunologically naïve persons were infected via cutaneous ...Smallpox In The... · 6. Vaccines Against Smallpox · 7. Anti-Smallpox...
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Smallpox vaccines: targets of protective immunity - PMCThis review outlines the biology of poxviruses with particular relevance to vaccine development, describes protein targets of humoral and cellular immunity.
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None### Summary of Effectiveness and Risks of Variolation
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Snorting Things to Survive Smallpox? | Office for Science and SocietyMar 20, 2017 · The death rate from smallpox was usually somewhere between twenty and forty percent, but the death rate from variolation was only about one ...Missing: fatality | Show results with:fatality
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Variolation | Description, History, Smallpox, & Facts - BritannicaOct 24, 2025 · Tina Tan of Northwestern University why adult vaccination against various types ... Smallpox vaccinationEdward Jenner vaccinating his child ...Missing: term | Show results with:term
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What is Variolation? - WebMDprobably when different communities were faced with the outbreak of extreme smallpox ...
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Smallpox: Vaccination - National Library of Medicine - NIHRecognizing that dairymaids infected with cowpox were immune to small-pox, Jenner deliberately infected James Phipps, an eight year old boy, with cowpox in 1796 ...
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Edward Jenner's 1798 report of challenge experiments ...Case XVII was an 8-year old boy, James Phipps, whom Jenner selected to receive an inoculum of cowpox from a pustule on the hand of Sarah Nelmes on 14 May.
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History of smallpox vaccination - World Health Organization (WHO)The ancient practice of variolation (named for smallpox, also known as variola or 'la variole') was widely used in Asia and some parts of Africa. This ...
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A Brief History of Vaccination - World Health Organization (WHO)In 1721, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu brought smallpox inoculation to Europe, by asking that her two daughters be inoculated against smallpox as she had observed ...Missing: distinction | Show results with:distinction
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The origins of vaccination: no inoculation ... - The James Lind LibrarySince inoculation was a well-established and largely safe procedure that was widely used in England, there was no ethical issue with that part of the experiment ...
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Victorian Health Reform - The National Archives... British government outlawed the practice of variolation with the first Vaccination Act of 1840. The Act of 1840 also provided free vaccinations for the poor ...
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Smallpox and the story of vaccination - Science MuseumApr 25, 2019 · Smallpox vaccination is based on a thousand-year old technique called inoculation ... old practice of inoculation. Vaccination has saved millions, ...
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Eradicating Smallpox | Smithsonian InstitutionIn Africa and Asia, smallpox was traditionally contained through variolation—deliberately infecting an individual with a controllable case of smallpox to ...