Balmis Expedition
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Date | November 30, 1803 – 1806 |
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Location | Spanish Empire |
Type | Scientific expedition |
Cause | High mortality rate in the viceroyalties of the Spanish Empire due to smallpox |
Motive | Vaccinate the inhabitants of the viceroyalties of the Spanish Empire against smallpox |
The Royal Philanthropic Vaccine Expedition (Spanish: Real Expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna), commonly referred to as the Balmis Expedition, was a Spanish healthcare mission that lasted from 1803 to 1806, led by Dr Francisco Javier de Balmis, which vaccinated millions[dubious – discuss] of inhabitants of Spanish America and Asia against smallpox. The vaccine was transported through children: orphaned boys who sailed with the expedition.
Background
[edit]Smallpox, a devastating disease that was endemic throughout much of the Old World, decimated the populations of the Americas after it was introduced by the Spanish conquistadors in the 1500s.[1] By the late 16th century, smallpox had become endemic throughout Spain's holdings in the Americas and epidemics occurred periodically over the next 300 years.[2]
In the 18th century there were scattered attempts in the colonies to use variolation, an older, less-effective method of inoculation using smallpox material. These efforts did little to mitigate the epidemics and sometimes actually increased the spread of the contagion.[3]
In 1798, English physician Edward Jenner pioneered the use of a vaccine to immunize persons with an inoculation of cowpox material. The new vaccine was a much safer and more effective way to prevent smallpox. At the time, about 400,000 Europeans died each year from the disease which was also responsible for one-third of all cases of blindness in Europe. The use of Jenner's new vaccine spread rapidly through Europe and had a significant positive impact on the severity and frequency of smallpox epidemics.[1][4]
The vaccine first reached Spain in late 1800 and by the end of 1801, several thousand persons had been vaccinated across the country. The efforts were well publicised in Spain and by 1804, dozens of papers, treatises, newspaper articles, and editorials had been published on the smallpox vaccine.[5]
Francisco Javier de Balmis was a military physician.[6]
Expedition
[edit]In November 1794 the daughter of King Charles IV of Spain, Infanta Maria Teresa, had died from smallpox. He had heard of the vaccine discovery. Colombia and Ecuador experienced a smallpox epidemic and called on the king for supplies.[6]
On 30 November 1803, the expedition set off from A Coruña in northwest Spain sailing on Maria Pita. It carried 22 orphan boys (aged 3 to 10) to act as carriers of the cowpox virus. The boys were necessary because the vaccine consisted of infecting patients with cowpox, which is a virus closely related to smallpox but produces a much milder disease that confers immunity to both. However, only an active infection could be transferred to successive patients, so two boys were infected with cowpox at the beginning of the voyage, with two more infected at a time as it progressed across the Atlantic and beyond.[7] The medical staff and caretakers for the boys consisted of Balmis, a deputy surgeon, two assistants, two first-aid practitioners, three nurses, and Isabel Zendal Gómez, the rectoress of Casa de Expósitos, an A Coruña orphanage.[8]
The mission took the vaccine to the Canary Islands, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Mexico, the Philippines and China.[9] The ship carried also scientific instruments and translations of the Historical and Practical Treatise on the Vaccine by Moreau de Sarthe to be distributed to the local vaccine commissions to be founded.[10]
In Puerto Rico, the local population had already been inoculated from the Danish colony of Saint Thomas. In Venezuela, the expedition divided at La Guaira. Balmis went to Caracas and later to Havana.[citation needed]
At Balmis' request Cuba sent three enslaved girls to Campeche, Mexico, as additional carriers of the vaccine; following Mexican independence and emancipation, Mexico continued to bring in slaves from Cuba as vaccine carriers.[6]
The Venezuelan poet Andrés Bello wrote an ode to Balmis. José Salvany, the deputy surgeon, went toward today's Colombia and the Viceroyalty of Peru (Ecuador, Peru, Chile, and Bolivia). The voyage took seven years and cost Salvany his life, as he died in 1810 in Cochabamba. In New Spain, Balmis took on 25 more orphans to maintain the infection during the crossing of the Pacific. In the Philippines, they received help from the Catholic church, which was initially reluctant until Governor-General Rafael Aguilar made an example by vaccinating his five children. Balmis sent most of the expedition back to New Spain while he went on to China, where he visited Macau and Canton.[11] On his way back to Spain in 1806, Balmis offered the vaccine to the British authorities in Saint Helena, despite the Anglo-Spanish War (1796–1808).[10]
Legacy
[edit]Balmis expedition may be considered the first international healthcare expedition in history.[10][12] Jenner himself wrote, "I don't imagine the annals of history furnish an example of philanthropy so noble, so extensive as this."[1]
In 2006, Julia Alvarez wrote Saving the World, a fictional account of the expedition from the perspective of its only female member.[13]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Tarrago, Rafael E. (2001). "The Balmis-Salvany Smallpox Expedition: The First Public Health Vaccination Campaign in South America". Perspectives in Health. Vol. 6, no. 1. Pan-American Health Organization.
- ^ Fenner 1988, p. 237.
- ^ Fenner 1988, pp. 237, 256.
- ^ Fenner 1988, p. 231.
- ^ Mark & Rigau-Perez 2009.
- ^ a b c Tenorio, Rich (16 February 2021). "An 1800s vaccine campaign in Mexico offers lessons in beating Covid". Mexico News daily. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
- ^ Tucker JB (2001). Scourge: The Once and Future Threat of Smallpox. New York: Atlantic Monthly Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-87113-830-9.
- ^ McIntyre JWR, Stuart HC (1999). "Medicine in Canada: Smallpox and its control in Canada". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 161 (12): 1543–1547. PMC 1230874. PMID 10624414.
- ^ de Romo, Ana Cecilia Rodríguez (1997). Inoculation in the 1799 smallpox epidemic in Mexico: Myth or real solution?. Antilia:Spanish Journal of History of Natural Sciences and Technology.
- ^ a b c Franco-Paredes, Carlos; Lammoglia, Lorena; Santos-Preciado, José Ignacio (2005). "The Spanish Royal Philanthropic Expedition to Bring Smallpox Vaccination to the New World and Asia in the 19th Century". Clinical Infectious Diseases. 41 (9): 1285–1289. doi:10.1086/496930. JSTOR 4463512. PMID 16206103.
- ^ Ocampo, Ambeth R. (6 December 2017). "Vaccine expedition in early 1800s". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 7 December 2017.
- ^ La Coruña: A progressive city Archived 2004-12-09 at the Wayback Machine, historical information as part the official web site for the city of La Coruña. Verified availability 2005-03-03.
- ^ "Saving the World". Kirkus Review. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
Further reading
[edit]- Fenner, Frank (1988). "Smallpox and Its Eradication". History of International Public Health. World Health Organization. hdl:10665/39485. ISBN 978-92-4-156110-5.
- Mark, Catherine; Rigau-Perez, Jose G. (2009). "The World's First Immunization Campaign: The Spanish Smallpox Vaccine Expedition, 1803–1813". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 83 (1): 63–94. ISSN 0007-5140. JSTOR 44448715.
External links
[edit]- En el nombre de los Niños. Real expedición Filantrópica de la Vacuna 1803-1806. Spanish language PDF book by the Spanish Pediatry Association.
- History of A Coruña
- History of the Philippines (1565–1898)
- Spanish colonization of the Americas
- Science and technology in Spain
- Smallpox
- Explorers of South America
- South American expeditions
- Pacific expeditions
- 1803 in science
- Expeditions from Spain
- Vaccination
- 1800s in Spain
- 1800s in New Spain
- 1800s in Peru
- 1800s in Venezuela
- 1805 in China
- 1800s in Cuba
- 1800s in Ecuador
- Science and technology in Galicia (Spain)
- History of medicine