Thesis ID: CBB001561290

“A Hot-Bed of the Anti-Vaccine Heresy”: Opposition to Compulsory Vaccination in Boston and Cambridge, 1890--1905 (2007)

unapi

Walloch, Karen L. (Author)


University of Wisconsin at Madison
Leavitt, Judith Walzer


Publication Date: 2007
Edition Details: Advisor: Leavitt, Judith Walzer
Physical Details: 467 pp.
Language: English

My dissertation explores the historical context of controversy about vaccination behind Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905), a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding state police power to compel vaccination. Despite enthusiastic support for vaccination among leading physicians and public health officers, the persistence of smallpox epidemics during the nineteenth century indicates that Americans did not vaccinate sufficiently. Data from Massachusetts show that many people viewed vaccination with suspicion and only reluctantly accepted it as a necessary evil forced upon them by their employers or the law. Parents waited until their children reached school age and rarely sought second vaccinations for them at adolescence. Even during epidemics, a significant portion of the population avoided vaccination. Many Americans feared vaccination for good reasons. It induced mild to severe discomfort and occasionally led to severe, even fatal infections. Lymph came from a variety of sources, with no assurance as to either quality or safety. Bovine lymph, adopted in the 1870s to obviate the possibility of syphilis transmission through vaccination, was easily contaminated with disease-causing organisms if producers and distributors got careless. Controversy over vaccination created public anxiety during the 1901-02 smallpox epidemic in Boston and Cambridge that formed the context for Jacobson. Although most residents submitted to vaccination, many did so grudgingly and enough avoided it to force both cities to order compulsory vaccination for everyone. A few individuals defied the order and antivaccinationists organized to support their resistance and oppose the law. Neither anti-scientific nor anti- government cranks, these antivaccinationists, like their nineteenth-century predecessors, pointed out inconsistencies in the medical science behind vaccination and questioned evidence used to promote it. They believed vaccination too dangerous to compel upon the unwilling. Even though they lost their case, their arguments dampened public acceptance of vaccination so much that few states passed similar compulsory vaccination laws in the wake of Jacobson.

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Description Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 68/12 (2008). Pub. no. AAT 3294105.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001561290/

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Authors & Contributors
Junaidi
Lee, Hyon Ju
Sarah Rafferty
Jeongeun Jo
Moon, Mira
Thomas Hurford, Christianna Elrene
Journals
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Korean Journal of Medical History
História, Ciências, Saúde---Manguinhos
Medicina Historica
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Journal of Historical Geography
Publishers
Open University (United Kingdom)
University of Massachusetts Press
Penguin
International Specialized Book Services
New York, City University of
Ohio State University
Concepts
Public health
Smallpox
Vaccines; vaccination
Epidemics
Disease and diseases
Medicine
People
Wilde, Robert Willis
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
18th century
20th century
Meiji period (Japan, 1868-1910)
17th century
Places
England
Canada
Massachusetts (U.S.)
Brazil
Honolulu (Hawaii)
Myanmar (Burma)
Institutions
World Health Organization (WHO)
Catholic University of Ireland (Dublin)
Royal Belfast Academical Institution
Hudson's Bay Company
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