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The History Of Vaccines And Immunization: Familiar Patterns, New Challenges
Alexandra Minna Stern and
Howard Markel
Human beings have benefited from vaccines for more than two centuries. Yet the pathway to effective vaccines has been neither neat nor direct. This paper explores the history of vaccines and immunization, beginning with Edward Jenners creation of the worlds first vaccine for smallpox in the 1790s. We then demonstrate that many of the issues salient in Jenners erasuch as the need for secure funding mechanisms, streamlined manufacturing and safety concerns, and deep-seated public fears of inoculating agentshave frequently reappeared and have often dominated vaccine policies. We suggest that historical awareness can help inform viable long-term solutions to contemporary problems with vaccine research, production, and supply.

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