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How we conquered the deadly smallpox virus - Simona Zompi

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    10,000 years ago,
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    a deadly virus arose in northeastern Africa.
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    The virus spread through the air,
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    attacking the skin cells,
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    bone marrow,
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    spleen,
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    and lymph nodes of its victims.
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    The unlucky infected developed fevers,
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    vomiting,
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    and rashes.
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    30% of infected people died
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    during the second week of infection.
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    Survivors bore scars and scabs
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    for the rest of their lives.
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    Smallpox had arrived.
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    In 1350 B.C., the first smallpox epidemics
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    hit during the Egypt-Hittite war.
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    Egyptian prisoners spread smallpox
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    to the Hittites,
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    which killed their king
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    and devastated his civilization.
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    Insidiously, smallpox made its way around the world
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    via Egyptian merchants,
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    then through the Arab world with the Crusades,
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    and all the way to the Americas
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    with the Spanish and Portuguese conquests.
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    Since then, it has killed billions of people
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    with an estimated 300 to 500 million people
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    killed in the 20th century alone.
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    But smallpox is not unbeatable.
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    In fact, the fall of smallpox started
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    long before modern medicine.
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    It began all the way back in 1022 A.D.
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    According to a small book, called
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    "The Correct Treatment of Small Pox,"
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    a Buddhist nun living in a famous mountain
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    named O Mei Shan
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    in the southern providence of Sichuan
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    would grind up smallpox scabs
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    and blow the powder into nostrils of healthy people.
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    She did this after noticing
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    that those who managed to survive smallpox
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    never got it again,
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    and her odd treatment worked.
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    The procedure, called variolation,
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    slowly evolved
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    and by the 1700's,
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    doctors were taking material from sores
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    and putting them into healthy people
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    through four or five scratches on the arm.
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    This worked pretty well
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    as inoculated people would not get reinfected,
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    but it wasn't foolproof.
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    Up to three percent of people
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    would still die after being exposed to the puss.
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    It wasn't until English physician Edward Jenner
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    noticed something interesting about dairy maids
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    that we got our modern solution.
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    At age 13, while Jenner was apprentice
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    to a country surgeon and apothecary
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    in Sodbury, near Bristol,
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    he heard a dairy maid say,
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    "I shall never have smallpox, for I have had cowpox.
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    I shall never have an ugly, pockmarked face."
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    Cowpox is a skin disease
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    that resembles smallpox and infects cows.
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    Later on, as a physician,
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    he realized that she was right,
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    women who got cowpox didn't develop
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    the deadly smallpox.
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    Smallpox and cowpox viruses are from the same family.
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    But when a virus infects an unfamiliar host,
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    in this case cowpox infecting a human,
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    it is less virulent,
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    so Jenner decided to test
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    whether the cowpox virus could be used
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    to protect against smallpox.
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    In May 1796, Jenner found a young dairy maid,
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    Sarah Nelmes,
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    who had fresh cowpox lesions on her hand and arm
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    caught from the utters of a cow named Blossom.
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    Using matter from her pustules,
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    he inoculated James Phipps,
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    the eight-year-old son of his gardener.
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    After a few days of fever and discomfort,
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    the boy seemed to recover.
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    Two months later, Jenner inoculated the boy again,
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    this time with matter from a fresh smallpox lesion.
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    No disease developed,
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    and Jenner concluded that protection was complete.
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    His plan had worked.
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    Jenner later used the cowpox virus
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    in several other people
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    and challenged them repeatedly with smallpox,
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    proving that they were immune to the disease.
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    With this procedure,
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    Jenner invented the smallpox vaccination.
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    Unlike variolation, which used actual smallpox virus
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    to try to protect people,
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    vaccination used the far less dangerous cowpox virus.
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    The medical establishment,
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    cautious then as now,
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    deliberated at length over his findings
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    before accepting them.
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    But eventually vaccination was gradually accepted
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    and variolation became prohibited
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    in England in 1840.
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    After large vaccination campaigns
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    throughout the 19th and 20th centuries,
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    the World Health Organization certified
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    smallpox's eradication in 1979.
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    Jenner is forever remembered
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    as the father of immunology,
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    but let's not forget the dairy maid Sarah Nelmes,
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    Blossom the cow,
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    and James Phipps,
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    all heroes in this great adventure of vaccination
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    who helped eradicate smallpox.
Title:
How we conquered the deadly smallpox virus - Simona Zompi
Description:

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-we-conquered-the-deadly-smallpox-virus-simona-zompi

For 10,000 years, humanity suffered from the scourge of smallpox. The virus killed almost a third of its victims within two weeks and left survivors horribly scarred. But Simona Zompi commends the brave souls -- a Buddhist nun, a boy, a cow, a dairymaid and physician Edward Jenner -- who first stopped the spread of this disastrous disease, to make us smallpox-free today.

Lesson by Simona Zompi, animation by Augenblick Studios.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:34

English subtitles

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