Article ID: CBB001214225

“Saving the lives of our dogs”: The Development of Canine Distemper Vaccine in Interwar Britain (2014)

unapi

This paper examines the successful campaign in Britain to develop canine distemper vaccine between 1922 and 1933. The campaign mobilized disparate groups around the common cause of using modern science to save the nation's dogs from a deadly disease. Spearheaded by landed patricians associated with the country journal The Field, and funded by dog owners and associations, it relied on collaborations with veterinary professionals, government scientists, the Medical Research Council (MRC) and the commercial pharmaceutical house the Burroughs Wellcome Company (BWC). The social organization of the campaign reveals a number of important, yet previously unexplored, features of interwar science and medicine in Britain. It depended on a patronage system that drew upon a large base of influential benefactors and public subscriptions. Coordinated by the Field Distemper Fund, this system was characterized by close relationships between landed elites and their social networks with senior science administrators and researchers. Relations between experts and non-experts were crucial, with high levels of public engagement in all aspects of research and vaccine development. At the same time, experimental and commercial research supported under the campaign saw dynamic interactions between animal and human medicine, which shaped the organization of the MRC's research programme and demonstrated the value of close collaboration between veterinary and medical science, with the dog as a shared object and resource. Finally, the campaign made possible the translation of `laboratory' findings into field conditions and commercial products. Rather than a unidirectional process, translation involved negotiations over the very boundaries of the `laboratory' and the `field', and what constituted a viable vaccine. This paper suggests that historians reconsider standard historical accounts of the nature of patronage, the role of animals, and the interests of landed elites in interwar British science and medicine.

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Authors & Contributors
Woods, Abigail
Campanile, Benedetta
Myung-Sun Chun
Rahaman, Maidul
Dwyer, Michael
Skipper, Alison
Journals
Social History of Medicine
Atti e Memorie, Rivista di Storia della Farmacia
Tarikh-e Elm (The Iranian Journal for the History of Science)
Revue d'Histoire Moderne et Contemporaine
Public Understanding of Science
Osmanli Bilimi Arastirmalari: Studies in Ottoman Science
Publishers
Palgrave Macmillan
Liverpool University Press
CSIRO Publishing
Taylor & Francis
Concepts
Veterinary medicine
Animal diseases
Disease and diseases
Vaccines; vaccination
Agriculture
Medicine
People
Wallace, Alfred Russel
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century, late
20th century
18th century
Places
Great Britain
England
South Africa
France
Australia
London (England)
Institutions
Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946)
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