The world's first immunization campaign: the Spanish Smallpox Vaccine Expedition, 1803-1813

Bull Hist Med. 2009 Spring;83(1):63-94. doi: 10.1353/bhm.0.0173.

Abstract

Smallpox produced the death of up to thirty percent of those infected, so Jenner's preventive method spread quickly. The Spanish government designed and supported a ten-year effort to carry smallpox vaccine to its American and Asian territories in a chain of arm-to-arm vaccination of children. An expedition directed by Doctor Francisco Xavier de Balmis sailed from Corunna in November 1803, stopping in the Canary Islands, Puerto Rico, and Venezuela. Balmis led a subexpedition to Cuba, Mexico, and the Philippines; his assistants returned to Mexico in 1807, while Balmis took vaccine to China and returned to Spain (and again to Mexico, 1810-13). Vice-director José Salvany and his staff took vaccine to present-day Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, and Chilean Patagonia. The Spanish Royal Philanthropic Vaccine Expedition shows the first attempts to solve questions still important for the introduction of new immunizations--professionalization in public health, technology transfer, protection of research subjects, and evaluation of vaccine efficacy, safety, and cost.

Publication types

  • Historical Article

MeSH terms

  • Americas
  • Asia
  • Expeditions / history*
  • Government Programs / history
  • History, 19th Century
  • Humans
  • Mass Vaccination / history*
  • Smallpox / history*
  • Smallpox / prevention & control
  • Smallpox Vaccine / history*
  • Spain

Substances

  • Smallpox Vaccine