Vaccine: The Controversial Story of Medicine's Greatest Lifesaver by Arthur Allen

Vaccine: The Controversial Story of Medicine's Greatest Lifesaver

Arthur Allen
512 pages
W. W. Norton; 1 edition
Jan 2007
Hardcover
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A fascinating account of vaccination's miraculous, inflammatory past and its uncertain future.In 1796, as smallpox ravaged Europe, Edward Jenner injected a child with a benign version of the disease, then exposed the child to the deadly virus itself. The boy proved resistant to smallpox, and Jenner's risky experiment produced the earliest vaccination. In this deftly written account, journalist Arthur Allen reveals a history of vaccination that is both illuminated with hope and shrouded by controversy—from Jenner's discovery to Pasteur's vaccines for rabies and cholera, to those that safeguarded the children of the twentieth century, and finally to the tumult currently surrounding vaccination.Faced with threats from anthrax to AIDS, we are a vulnerable population and can no longer depend on vaccines; numerous studies have linked childhood vaccination with various neurological disorders, and our pharmaceutical companies are more attracted to the profits of treatment than to the prevention of disease.
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About this book
Pages 512
Publisher W. W. Norton; 1 edit...
Published 2007
Readers 0