<p>Wariness and outright hostility to vaccines did not start with Covid-19, they date back to the 18th century when the first shots were given.</p>.<p>From real fears sparked by side effects, to fake studies and conspiracy theories, we take a look at anti-vax sentiment over the ages:</p>.<p>Smallpox killed or disfigured countless millions for centuries before it was eradicated in 1980 through vaccination.</p>.<p>In 1796 the English physician Edward Jenner came up with the idea of using the milder cowpox virus on a child to stimulate immune response after he noticed milkmaids rarely got smallpox.</p>.<p>The process — coined "vaccinus" by Jenner (from cow in Latin) — was successful, but from the outset, it provoked scepticism and fear.</p>.<p>Before Jenner, a riskier method of inoculation known as "variolation" existed for smallpox, introduced to Europe from Ottoman Turkey by the English writer and wit Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/how-to-approach-covid-19-vaccine-hesitancy-998788.html" target="_blank">How to approach Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy?</a></strong></p>.<p>In Britain the smallpox vaccine became compulsory for children in 1853, making it the first-ever mandatory jab and triggering strong resistance.</p>.<p>Opponents objected on religious grounds, raised concerns over the dangers of injecting animal products, and claimed individual freedoms were being infringed.</p>.<p>A "conscience clause" was introduced in 1898 allowing sceptics to avoid vaccination.</p>.<p>At the end of the 19th century, the French biologist Louis Pasteur developed a vaccine against rabies by infecting rabbits with a weakened form of the virus.</p>.<p>But again the process sparked mistrust and Pasteur was accused of seeking to profit from his discovery.</p>.<p>Vaccines flourished in the 1920s — shots were rolled out against tuberculosis with the BCG in 1921, diphtheria in 1923, tetanus in 1926 and whooping cough in 1926.</p>.<p>It was also the decade that aluminium salts began to be used to increase the effectiveness of vaccines.</p>.<p>But more than half a century later these salts became the source of suspicion, with a condition causing lesions and fatigue called macrophagic myofasciitis thought to be caused by them.</p>.<p>A study published in the top medical journal <em>The Lancet</em> in 1998 suggested there was a link between autism and the measles, mumps and rubella shot known as the MMR vaccine.</p>.<p>The paper by Andrew Wakefield and colleagues was revealed years later to be a fraud and retracted by the journal, with Wakefield struck off the medical register.</p>.<p>Despite subsequent studies demonstrating the absence of any such link, the bogus paper is still a reference for anti-vaxxers and it left its mark.</p>.<p>Measles killed 2,07,500 people in 2019, a jump of 50 per cent since 2016 with the World Health Organization warning that vaccine coverage is falling globally.</p>.<p>The discovery in 2009 of "Swine flu", or H1N1, caused by a virus of the same family as the deadly Spanish flu, caused great alarm.</p>.<p>But H1N1 was not as deadly as first feared and millions of vaccine doses produced to fight it were destroyed, fuelling mistrust towards vaccination campaigns.</p>.<p>Matters were made worse by the discovery that one of the vaccines, Pandemrix, raised the risk of narcolepsy.</p>.<p>Of 5.5 million people given the vaccine in Sweden, 440 had to be compensated after developing the sleep disorder.</p>.<p>Eradicated in Africa since August 2020 thanks to vaccines, polio is still a scourge in Pakistan and Afghanistan where the disease, which causes paralysis in young children, remains endemic.</p>.<p>Anti-vaccine conspiracy theories have allowed it to continue to destroy lives.</p>.<p>In Afghanistan, the Taliban banned vaccine campaigns, calling them a Western plot to sterilise Muslim children.</p>
<p>Wariness and outright hostility to vaccines did not start with Covid-19, they date back to the 18th century when the first shots were given.</p>.<p>From real fears sparked by side effects, to fake studies and conspiracy theories, we take a look at anti-vax sentiment over the ages:</p>.<p>Smallpox killed or disfigured countless millions for centuries before it was eradicated in 1980 through vaccination.</p>.<p>In 1796 the English physician Edward Jenner came up with the idea of using the milder cowpox virus on a child to stimulate immune response after he noticed milkmaids rarely got smallpox.</p>.<p>The process — coined "vaccinus" by Jenner (from cow in Latin) — was successful, but from the outset, it provoked scepticism and fear.</p>.<p>Before Jenner, a riskier method of inoculation known as "variolation" existed for smallpox, introduced to Europe from Ottoman Turkey by the English writer and wit Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/opinion/how-to-approach-covid-19-vaccine-hesitancy-998788.html" target="_blank">How to approach Covid-19 vaccine hesitancy?</a></strong></p>.<p>In Britain the smallpox vaccine became compulsory for children in 1853, making it the first-ever mandatory jab and triggering strong resistance.</p>.<p>Opponents objected on religious grounds, raised concerns over the dangers of injecting animal products, and claimed individual freedoms were being infringed.</p>.<p>A "conscience clause" was introduced in 1898 allowing sceptics to avoid vaccination.</p>.<p>At the end of the 19th century, the French biologist Louis Pasteur developed a vaccine against rabies by infecting rabbits with a weakened form of the virus.</p>.<p>But again the process sparked mistrust and Pasteur was accused of seeking to profit from his discovery.</p>.<p>Vaccines flourished in the 1920s — shots were rolled out against tuberculosis with the BCG in 1921, diphtheria in 1923, tetanus in 1926 and whooping cough in 1926.</p>.<p>It was also the decade that aluminium salts began to be used to increase the effectiveness of vaccines.</p>.<p>But more than half a century later these salts became the source of suspicion, with a condition causing lesions and fatigue called macrophagic myofasciitis thought to be caused by them.</p>.<p>A study published in the top medical journal <em>The Lancet</em> in 1998 suggested there was a link between autism and the measles, mumps and rubella shot known as the MMR vaccine.</p>.<p>The paper by Andrew Wakefield and colleagues was revealed years later to be a fraud and retracted by the journal, with Wakefield struck off the medical register.</p>.<p>Despite subsequent studies demonstrating the absence of any such link, the bogus paper is still a reference for anti-vaxxers and it left its mark.</p>.<p>Measles killed 2,07,500 people in 2019, a jump of 50 per cent since 2016 with the World Health Organization warning that vaccine coverage is falling globally.</p>.<p>The discovery in 2009 of "Swine flu", or H1N1, caused by a virus of the same family as the deadly Spanish flu, caused great alarm.</p>.<p>But H1N1 was not as deadly as first feared and millions of vaccine doses produced to fight it were destroyed, fuelling mistrust towards vaccination campaigns.</p>.<p>Matters were made worse by the discovery that one of the vaccines, Pandemrix, raised the risk of narcolepsy.</p>.<p>Of 5.5 million people given the vaccine in Sweden, 440 had to be compensated after developing the sleep disorder.</p>.<p>Eradicated in Africa since August 2020 thanks to vaccines, polio is still a scourge in Pakistan and Afghanistan where the disease, which causes paralysis in young children, remains endemic.</p>.<p>Anti-vaccine conspiracy theories have allowed it to continue to destroy lives.</p>.<p>In Afghanistan, the Taliban banned vaccine campaigns, calling them a Western plot to sterilise Muslim children.</p>