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From Early Vaccination to Modern Immunisation

historical development of an idea or invention

1
A

These early attempts were known as variolation, in which material from smallpox sores was deliberately introduced to healthy people. This practice often reduced death rates, but it also sometimes caused severe disease and new outbreaks. Such risks created pressure to find a safer alternative method.

2
B

In response to those dangers, Edward Jenner tested an alternative in 1796 by using cowpox to protect against smallpox. This experiment suggested that exposure to a related, milder virus could confer immunity without the same level of risk. Later researchers sought to generalise this principle beyond smallpox.

3
C

Ultimately, the shift from risky variolation to controlled, regulated vaccines transformed public health. In conclusion, the historical pathway shows a clear pattern: empirical observation led to safer scientific techniques, which then enabled large-scale policy action. This combination has made widespread disease prevention possible in many societies.

4
D

Subsequently, this principle was extended by scientists such as Louis Pasteur, who developed weakened forms of microbes to prevent diseases including rabies and anthrax. These laboratory methods made vaccination more systematic and reproducible than earlier practices. As a result, governments began organising mass immunisation programmes and regulation.

5
E

Vaccination is a medical method that trains the immune system to resist infectious disease before exposure. Its historical development shows how observation, experimentation, and public policy gradually combined into a reliable technology. The story begins with early attempts to prevent smallpox, a major killer for centuries.

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