Controversies and lessons from the history of smallpox: the case of massive vaccination in British Corfu (1852)

Infez Med. 2021 Jun 1;29(2):284-291.ABSTRACTThe study presents an anti-vaccination action in the 19th century involving both scientific and political motivation. The research is based on an unpublished archive, namely the registries of the British Executive Police during the massive vaccination campaign in Corfu, the capital of the British possession in the Ionian Islands-Greece (1815-1864), after the smallpox outbreak of 1852. The archival material provides information about the number of vaccinated people, namely their sex, age, nationality, the year of the previous vaccination, along with the last year when a citizen "had smallpox". The records indicated 40,858 citizens and of these, a total 21,845 (53.46%) were vaccinated. Despite the impressive organization, the vaccination project caused a great controversy at both the scientific and political level between the British authorities and the Greek Ionian Assembly. The archival material gives a diachronic message in the fields of public health, infectious disease control, and health crisis management. The lack of control by a State or local authority, combined with political instability and the public's ignorance or distrust of scientific matters, are the main factors behind the failure to prevent, restrict or eradicate infectious diseases even nowadays.PMID:34061797
Source: Infezioni in Medicina - Category: Infectious Diseases Authors: Source Type: research