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By the 18th century, [[smallpox]] {{wiki|inoculation|inoculations}} were still dangerous and of limited efficiency. Jenner hypothesized that infection with {{wiki|cowpox}}, a disease non-lethal to [[humans]], granted immunity to smallpox. His theory was confirmed when in 1796, he experimented by infecting a young boy with cowpox and then smallpox. Despite the success of his test, with no undue harm inflicted on the boy, the medical establishment disapproved of his method as he had risked the life of the boy without his consent. Thus, cowpox-based vaccination only saw widespread use sometime after 1800.<ref name="Database Smallpox Inoculation" />
By the 18th century, [[smallpox]] {{wiki|inoculation|inoculations}} were still dangerous and of limited efficiency. Jenner hypothesized that infection with {{wiki|cowpox}}, a disease non-lethal to [[humans]], granted immunity to smallpox. His theory was confirmed when in 1796, he experimented by infecting a young boy with cowpox and then smallpox. Despite the success of his test, with no undue harm inflicted on the boy, the medical establishment disapproved of his method as he had risked the life of the boy without his consent. Thus, cowpox-based vaccination only saw widespread use sometime after 1800.<ref name="Database Smallpox Inoculation" />


==Appearance==
==Appearances==
*''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' {{Mo}}
*''[[Assassin's Creed III]]'' {{Mo}}



Revision as of 15:47, 12 February 2019


Edward Jenner (17 May 1749 – 26 January 1823) was an English physician and scientist, known for inventing the smallpox vaccine.[1]

By the 18th century, smallpox inoculations were still dangerous and of limited efficiency. Jenner hypothesized that infection with cowpox, a disease non-lethal to humans, granted immunity to smallpox. His theory was confirmed when in 1796, he experimented by infecting a young boy with cowpox and then smallpox. Despite the success of his test, with no undue harm inflicted on the boy, the medical establishment disapproved of his method as he had risked the life of the boy without his consent. Thus, cowpox-based vaccination only saw widespread use sometime after 1800.[1]

Appearances

References