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History of Technology 5: Smallpox and Polio Vaccines 10 Views


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We hope you're not immune to awesome videos, because we've got a great one all about vaccines, just for you.

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Transcript

00:02

While getting our shots isn't a lot of fun, it definitely beats what they

00:07

had to do in the old days. [kid snorts smallbox scabs... ew] There's nothing cool about snorting smallpox scabs,

00:12

that's a fact. Our modern techniques come to us partially from a man named Edward Jenner, [Jenner pictured]

00:17

an English doctor born in 1749. Well Jenner put together two pieces of common

00:23

knowledge: first that the principles behind

00:25

inoculation were sound, although inoculation might sometimes kill you, and

00:30

second, that English milkmaids were generally immune to smallpox. [Jenner theorizes] Hmm... well

00:36

Jenner's big realization was about why dairy workers didn't get smallpox. [Milkmade throws milk on Jenner] Most

00:42

dairy workers had at some point contracted cowpox, which was a mild

00:46

virus that gave them a few scabs on their hands and then it just went away. [woman with cowpox is not amused]

00:50

Well, this was one of the few times in history that having scabby hands was a

00:55

good thing. [Jenner revels in scabby hands] Jenner realized that cowpox was related to smallpox, and it might

01:00

give people immunity to its nastier cousin... You know, that cousin who sleeps [gross smallpox cousin camps out]

01:05

on the couch eats all the food all day and, well, then erupts into pustules and

01:09

tries to, you know, kill somebody. Well, in 1796, Jenner conducted an incredibly

01:15

unsafe experiment to prove his theory. He infected a young boy with cow pox from a [boy gets shot]

01:20

milkmaid, then Jenner deliberately gave the same young boy smallpox Wow [Jenner gives boy smallpox]

01:27

Wow, and we thought sharing a straw at the movie theater was unhealthy. But still,

01:30

Jenner's sketchy experiment worked. The boy did not get smallpox, and he also did [boy doesn't get smallpox]

01:36

not die a slow and painful death through inoculation. Awesome... kind of. Well, it took

01:43

another 20 years before the world was aware of the new vaccine, but soon [vaccine normalized]

01:47

governments were experimenting with mandatory vaccination. The days of

01:51

smallpox were numbered. In fact the World Health Organization declared smallpox

01:55

eradicated in 1977. That's a big team win for no team human. Over the next century, [smallpox dies]

02:02

the epic battle between man and microbe continued with heavy losses on both

02:06

sides. [video game] In 1928, penicillin, the first effective

02:09

antibiotic was discovered. This seemed like a miracle cure for everything [penicillin destroys infections]

02:13

from syphilis to eye infections. Well, the public was pretty convinced that modern

02:18

medicine was on the brink of ending sickness forever. [sickness flies overhead] Not to give away the

02:22

ending, but humans still get sick... like, all the time. Just when things were [sick humans fall]

02:27

looking good, a new disease called polio appeared on the horizon. [polio appears] It was like in

02:32

video games when we think we've killed the boss and he comes back meaner and

02:35

uglier than before. [polio is hard to defeat] Well, polio is a virus that can get into

02:38

our spines or brains and caused partial or complete paralysis. For the first half of [paralyzed people]

02:47

the 20th century, it was the American public's greatest fear. If we were

02:50

Superman, polio was our scary contagious kryptonite. Well, 1952 the U.S. had its [Superman falls]

02:55

worst outbreak of polio ever. It left over 21,000 people disabled and killed [polio strikes]

03:02

another 3,000. Worst of all, most of the victims were kids. A great race began to [race begins]

03:08

find the cure for polio, fueled by public fears and fundraising.

03:13

Well, Jonas Salk, a young medical researcher from New York City, was the

03:17

winner of the Great Race. Wow did Salk do it? [Salk wins race]

03:20

Well, first, he discovered a way to grow the polio virus in tissue culture from

03:24

a monkey. [Salk experiments with polio] He then killed the virus before injecting it into a patient's

03:29

bloodstream. [vaccine tested] Well, after a massive trial involving 1.8 million children, Salk's

03:35

vaccine was proven effective. In 1955, the vaccine went to the market, in 1961 there

03:41

were less than 200 cases of polio reported. [people are happy] And that's how doing medical

03:45

experiments on children saved the day... [Salk helps children] Yeah, there's more than a little moral

03:50

ambiguity with that.

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