Infectious Dose
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S2E29 A Shot in the Dark: The Science That Outsmarted Smallpox

Dela

For most of human history, epidemics were something people endured—not prevented. Smallpox alone killed hundreds of millions of people, leaving survivors scarred, blinded, or forever changed. But hidden within that devastation was a remarkable observation: those who survived rarely became sick again.

In this episode, we explore the centuries-long journey from variolation to vaccination, following the observations of physicians, the experiences of milkmaids, the bold experiment of Edward Jenner, and the scientific breakthroughs that transformed an idea into one of medicine's greatest achievements. We'll also trace how Jenner's work inspired generations of scientists, eventually leading to vaccines against countless other diseases and the global eradication of smallpox.

This episode is part of our July series, Turning Points in Infectious Disease, exploring the discoveries that fundamentally changed humanity's relationship with disease. This week, we examine the moment prevention became possible.

For the full list of annotated citations, historical images, and additional resources, visit the companion blog post at InfectiousDose.com. And while you're there, subscribe to Field Notes, our free weekly newsletter featuring an expanded conversation about the episode, outbreak updates, infectious disease signals I'm keeping an eye on, and behind-the-scenes notes from Infectious Dose.

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