The history of vaccines

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Before vaccines became routine, they were risky experiments. In this episode, Jacob and Saloni travel back to the world of smallpox, cowpox, and cow-based “vaccine farms” to see how scientists stumbled toward the first vaccines against infectious diseases: smallpox, rabies, TB, polio, and more. Through the stories of milkmaids and aristocrats, secret lab notebooks, microscopes and cell culture, they explore how trial and error turned gruesome folk practices into the science of immunization, and how it all began with a single pustule.

Hard Drugs is a new podcast from Works in Progress and Coefficient Giving about medical innovation presented by Saloni Dattani and Jacob Trefethen.

You can watch or listen on YouTube, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts.

Saloni’s substack newsletter: https://www.scientificdiscovery.dev/


Books:
  • Gerald Geison (1995) The private science of Louis Pasteur
  • Thomas D. Brock (1998) Robert Koch: a life in medicine and bacteriology
  • Mervyn Susser and Zena Stein (2009) Eras in epidemiology : the evolution of ideas
  • Angela Leung (2011) Chapter: “Variolation” and vaccination in late Imperial China, ca. 1570–1911. History of vaccine development by Stanley Plotkin
  • Florian Horaud (2011) Chapter: Viral vaccines and cell substrate. History of vaccine development by Stanley Plotkin
  • Samuel Katz (2011) Chapter: The role of tissue culture in vaccine development. History of vaccine development by Stanley Plotkin
  • Hervé Bazin (2011) Chapter: Pasteur and the birth of vaccines made in the laboratory. History of vaccine development by Stanley Plotkin

Articles:
Acknowledgements:
  • Aria Babu, editor at Works in Progress
  • Graham Bessellieu, video editor
  • Abhishaike Mahajan, cover art
  • Atalanta Arden-Miller, art direction
  • David Hackett, composer
Works in Progress & Coefficient Giving
The history of vaccines