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What if smallpox was a mild disease?
Smallpox. In the history books, smallpox is painted as a deadly menace, spreading fear wherever it went. It hung like a dark cloud over communities for centuries, leaving a trail of sorrow in its wake. Smallpox is reputed to have claimed the lives of up to 20% of its victims, leaving a legacy of pain and grief.
But what if smallpox wasn’t the formidable killer it’s reputed to be? What if it was mostly a mild disease?
On the surface, that sounds like a completely ridiculous idea. However, throughout history, some doctors documented that smallpox was a mild ailment when appropriately managed and not mishandled.
References:
R. G. Latham, MD, The Works of Thomas Sydenham, MD, vol. I, 1848, London, pp. lxxii–lxxiii.
John Pechey, MD, The Whole Works of that Excellent Practical Physician Dr. Thomas Sydenham, MD, 1696, London, pp. 100, 404.
Isaac Massey, apothecary to Christ’s Hospital, A Short and Plain Account of Inoculation, 1722.
Isaac Massey, Remarks on Dr. Jurin’s Last Yearly Account of the Success of Inoculation, 1727, London, p. 5.
The Gentleman’s Magazine, July 1814, p. 24.
The Public, Chicago, Saturday, August 27, 1898, no. 21, p. 5.
The Parliamentary Debates, 1907, vol. CLXIX, p. 408.
Abraham Rees, The Cyclopaedia; Or, Universal Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and Literature, vol. 29, 1819.
John Mason Good, MD, The Study of medicine: Empyesis Variola Smallpox, vol 1, 1864, New York, Harper & Brothers, Publishers, pp. 639–640.
Charles Perry, MD, An Essay on the Smallpox, 1747, London. pp. 17–20.
Lydia Kang, Nate Pedersen, “The ‘Murderous’ Medical Practice of the 18th Century,” March 1, 2018.
Russell Thacher Trall, MD, Water-cure for the Million, 1860, New York, p. 7.
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Henry G. Hanchett, M.D., “An Inquiry in Prophylaxis,” The New York Medical Times, vol. XVI, no. 10, January 1889, p. 306.
Charles V. Chapin, “Variation in Type of Infectious Disease as Shown by the History of Smallpox in the United States,” The Journal of Infectious Diseases, vol. 13, no. 2, September 1913, p. 173.
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