Wednesday, August 19, 2020

VACCINES--HOW A MILLENNIA-OLD LIFESAVER WAS, AND STILL IS, CONTROVERSIAL--Part 1

Wednesday--Kwei

In the era of Covid-19, we've heard a lot about vaccines and the international race to produce one. However, even if a successful vaccine emerges relatively quickly in the US, studies suggest that only 30-40% of Americans will accept the vaccine. In other words, hurry up and wait. The joint NIH-Moderna Phase 3 trial, which shows a lot of promise, has just hit a snag because they haven't enrolled enough African Americans and Latinx subjects. Because of a long and shocking history of unethical experimentation on black people by white doctors, e.g. the Tuskegee Syphilis Study of 1932-1972, black people's response to the suggestion of taking part in anything remotely experimental has been mostly, hell, no.

Terminology

Vaccination, inoculation and immunization are often used interchangeably, but there are distinctions:

  • Inoculation is the introduction of an infectious agent or toxin designed to produce an immune response without overt illness.
  • Vaccination is a specific type of inoculation named by Edward Jenner in reference to vaccinia, which is cowpox. Vacca is Latin for cow.
  • Immunization is development of immunity by any means, whether artificial or natural.
  • Variolation: the deliberate inoculation of an uninfected person with pustular matter containing the smallpox virus.

Famous Infection Fighters

When I was a nerdy teenager, I loved to read murder mysteries, but my other interests ranged from philosophy to science. I recall being riveted to a paperback that chronicled the history of how scientists discovered bacteria and viruses, and the luminaries who marked the milestones along a fascinating journey that included the development of vaccines. We're talking about Louis Pasteur, Robert KochAlexander Fleming, and so on.

My vivid imagination took me back to those bygone centuries when people ignored or misunderstood clues that science freely thrust under their noses. In May 1796, Edward Jenner, in an experiment that would have been deemed unethical in modern times, inoculated an 8-year-old boy, James Phipps, with fluid from a fresh cowpox lesion on the skin of a milkmaid. For years, Jenner had heard milkmaids say, “I shall never have smallpox for I have had cowpox. I shall never have an ugly pockmarked face.” Now Jenner wanted to see if that was true.

 

HOW VACCINES BECAME POLITICAL: Edward Jenner vaccinating James Phipps, 1796 (Image: Everett Historical/Shutterstock)
Edward Jenner vaccinating James Phipps, 1796 (Image: Everett Historical/Shutterstock

Over the next 2 weeks, Phipps had mild flu-like symptoms, but when exposed to the highly infectious smallpox, Phipps was protected from contracting the disease.  Jenner then did a little promotion of his vaccine, basing the word on vacca, Latin for "cow." The 30% lethality rate and horrendous optics of smallpox drove the urgency of finding a cure or prevention. If a person survives, smallpox leaves the most appalling scarring--enough to make one suicidal.

HOW VACCINES BECAME POLITICAL: Child with smallpox (Image:CDC/James Hicks)
Child with active smallpox (Image:CDC/James Hicks)


Nothing Really New Under The Sun

However, Jenner wasn't the first person to use the inoculation technique against smallpox. Variolation, introducing a person to smallpox material from a patient in the hope that a mild, but protective, infection would result, was practiced in China and India as far back as 1000 or before.  

In 1648, there was a situation that will sound rather familiar to our modern ears: because of an outbreak of yellow fever in Barbados, Cuba, and the Yucatan, strict quarantine was imposed in Boston for all ships returning from the West Indies. Apparently, viruses weren't done with Boston, because in 1657, there was a measles outbreak. In 1694, Queen Mary II died of hemorrhagic smallpox (variola hemorrhagica).


The African Pioneer Very Few Know About

As a child in Ghana, I learned about Jenner, Pasteur, Koch et al., but no one told me nor did I read about a West African slave who brought the practice of inoculation to New England. In 1706, a prominent Puritan minister called Cotton Mather purchased an enslaved West African whom he named Onesimus (Greek for "useful") after the Biblical slave of the same name. This appears in the Epistle of Paul to Philemon, in which Paul says, "I beseech thee for my son Onesimus, whom I have begotten in my bonds: Which in time past was to thee unprofitable, but now profitable to thee and to me . . ."

Onesimus was one of about a thousand Africans in Massachusetts who were servant or slave. Mather hoped Onesimus would repent of "some Actions of a thievish aspect." Apparently the irony of Mather's slave ownership was lost on himself. Onesimus was clearly a smart cookie, because later on, he was able to buy his way out of bondage by paying Mather to purchase another youth, Obadiah, to serve in Onesimus's stead. Slick move, although I feel sorry for Obadiah.

Onesimus, who brought inoculation to Boston
(Photo: Face2faceAfrica.com) 


In 1721, yet another outbreak of smallpox ripped through Boston. At that time, Mather advocated  a technique of "ye Method of Inoculation," remarking that six years before, he had learned about it from "my Negro-Man Onesimus, who is a pretty Intelligent Fellow." Mather had informed the Royal Society of London that Onesimus "had undergone an Operation, which had given him something of ye Small-Pox, and would forever preserve him from it, adding, That it was often used among [Africans] and whoever had ye Courage to use it, was forever free from ye Fear of the Contagion. He described ye Operation to me, and showed me in his Arm ye Scar.” Accounts of smallpox variolation appear from scattered areas of ancient Africa, including Sudan, Ethiopia, and Southern Africa.

Hearing that this technique was also practiced in Turkey, Mather mounted a public campaign in favor of inoculation, but the large majority of white doctors in town were unwilling to try something suggested by an African, except for one physician by name of Zabdiel Boylston, who was the first American doctor to perform gallstone and breast removal surgery. In that same spirit, Boylston went ahead and performed variolation on 282 Boston inhabitants, keeping records on them and 5,759 non-inoculated residents who contracted smallpox. At the time, most people considered variolation ran counter to the will of God, and both Boylston and Mather met with strong opposition and even threats of violence. If this all sounds vaguely familiar, it's because it is. Anti-vaxxers existed in the 1700s just as they do now, and the irony is that 300 years later, the rhetoric is almost identical. Eventually, Boylston was arrested and released only on condition that he would not inoculate anyone else without government approval.

But Boylston was eventually triumphant. Of the 282 inoculated patients, only 2% died from smallpox. Of the nearly 6000 non-inoculated, 15% died. Boylston presented his findings in 1726 to the Royal Society chaired by the Royal Society.

Image of the paper presented to the Royal Society in July 1726 by Zabdiel Boylston of Boston

Lessons & Summary

The history of vaccination and inoculation goes back millennia. Many people do not understand that large populations have given their lives through outbreaks of smallpox and other hideous and lethal diseases in order for us to reach modern times in which lifesaving vaccination is available. Smallpox has been largely eradicated in the world as a result, and countless deaths are prevented from diseases like rabies, meningococcus, polio, diphtheria, and yellow fever. Anti-vaxxers should carefully consider whether we really want to return to the 17th and 18th century.

The inoculation story has been largely told from the Eurocentric standpoint, but variolation, a procedure of the same principle, was practiced elsewhere, including in Africa, long before Jenner unveiled vaccination. Yet one would be hard pressed to cite Onesimus's contributions to a medical practice that has been a bedrock of public health and the eradication of disease.

For a detailed history of vaccines, I highly recommend you spend a few minutes looking at this timeline, and next post, I'll talk about the modern age of vaccines.


7 comments:

  1. Fascinating! Eurocentricity strikes again.

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  2. This issue makes my blood boild, as I have neighbors who blame vaccines for everything. They are in their 30s and 40s, so they benefitted from vaccinations and didn't have the diseases. And they have children!
    I, alas, had nearly all of them, except polio.
    But I was so sick with measles at 5 and chicken pox left me with scars. And one can get seriously ill from shingles from the chicken pox virus. And measles still kills children and can give one longterm health problems. So it's personally infuriating. It's ignorance about science and medical advances. And it's selfishness, not caring about other children's health.

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    1. Yes, Kathy. What people don't understand is how horrendous these diseases are. As a physician, I've seen one pediatric measles case and the toddler was very, very sick. Because of his moribund condition, we admitted him to hospital immediately. It broke my heart.

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  3. Stay tuned, folks. On Monday, I will tell you about the woman responsible for the first smallpox inoculation of an English person. What the world is still suffering from is not only EuroCentrism, but EuroMALEcentrism. I know you won’t be offended if I say this, Stan.

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  4. Ah, yes! An interesting story! We await.

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  5. Facinating, Kwei. Thanks, and I look forward to part II. I participated as a schoolboy in the original Jonas Salk polio vaccine trials in Pittsburgh. Our lives as children changed as a result of that, for once the vaccine was declared effective, parents felt it safe to allow us back in the water--literally, because until then public swimming pools were considered verboten. I still carry visions of the "iron lung" that warned parents of the risks of polio.

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