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Edward Jenner, founder of measles vaccination, has died.

This is due to Gina, a tribute to the heroes of the people!

by Edward Jenner.

Today, when humanity has finally eradicated the terrible infectious disease, we must not forget the founder of the measles vaccination method, the great British doctor Jenner.

Edward Ginnear was born on May 17, 1749, in a pastor’s family in the Glosterhire Berkeley pastoral district of England. At the age of 5, when the pastor’s father died, he lived with the pastor’s brother Stephen Ginnear. Ginnear was strong, robust, moderate, interested in nature, especially in nature. At school he was excellent and also collected specimens of many species of plants. During Ginnear’s adolescence, this terrible plague was spreading throughout Europe, and was also spread by explorers, explorers and colonists to the Americas. In Britain, almost everyone would be infected with this disease, leaving scars that would be difficult to see on the face or on the face of adults. Thousands of people became seriously blind or mad because of their illness, and more people died every year

With the help of his brother, Jenner studied medicine for seven years with the surgeon Ludlow. At the age of 20, he was already a skilled assistant surgeon. In medical practice, Jenner was inspired by the discovery that after she was infected with a vaccine on a cow with a vaccine, she was infected with a vaccine on her farm. After more than 20 years of exploration and research, in the morning of May 1796, he broke several lines in the arms of an eight-year-old boy named Jamie with a clean leaf knife and vaccinated it. It turned out that this was the correct and effective way to prevent the birth of a vaccine.

The success of measles vaccination opened up a wide field for immunology, and internationally, Jenner won great praise. In the summer of 1799, people praised him as the great scientist who invented the life-saving family. Napoleon once called Jenner the great man. All modern vaccination methods actually came from Jenner's first great discovery.

In the 18th century, the epidemic became the main cause of death in Europe.

In 1555, the Mexican pandemic, which killed two million of the country's 15 million people, estimated that 1.5 million people died from the plague in the 18th century. George Washington suffered from the plague in the year 1751, but did not die because of it, but since then became a marrow. In 1774, King Louis XV of France died from the plague. The ten great emperors, whose success and co-government died directly from the plague, Kangxi and Alphong, although managed to save their lives from the palm of the plague, left an eternal marble on their faces.

As early as Edward Jenner’s apprenticeship, Jenner noticed from his ill population accounts that people who had been infected with herpes would never get herpes again.

In 1796, he obtained measles from the fingers of the milking worker Sarah Nems, who suffered from measles, and vaccinated it to the upper arm of an eight-year-old boy named James Phillip, then attacked it with measles, Phillip.

The following year he vaccinated three others, all of which were successful, and submitted the manuscript to the Royal Society.

In 1798, he published a paper entitled "Studies on the Causes and Effects of Vaccine".

During the vaccine trial, colleagues and the church joined forces in the siege of Chennai. The Royal Society of England did not believe that an ordinary rural doctor from a poor remote country could dominate the chennai, and they regarded him as a notorious, haunted “fraud” and refused to accept his thesis. The colleagues of the Gloster Medical Society attacked him and violated Hippocrates’ Doctor’s Oath to remove him from membership.

Because of the simplicity, safety and efficiency of Chennai’s measles vaccination, it spread rapidly across Europe and the Americas over the decade. The British government finally acknowledged that Chennai’s discovery was of great value and established a research institution in London, the Royal Chennai Society, which was chaired by Chennai until his death.

On January 26, 1823, the great doctor Jenner stopped his heartbeat at Berkeley for 73 years.

In 1980, in Nairobi, the United Nations solemnly declared that “the plague is extinct in the world.”

The significance of the measles vaccination that Gina invented was not only that it eradicated a serious disease that threatened mankind, but also that it broke a new path in scientific research in the field of immunology. Gina was known as the great scientific inventor and savior of human lives. His reputation and achievements were so glorious that even the immortal Napoleon called him the “great man.”

Edward Jenner's flower cells

Today, as humanity faces the threat of serious viral diseases such as AIDS, SARS, influenza A, and so on, we look forward to the emergence of a second and a third Kinna in the world, providing new tools for humanity to eventually defeat viral demons.

Keywords: January 26, 1823, Chennai, Edward, Aries


News raw data sources → https://today.help.bj.cn/show/?id=1834

17WorldNews[2025.09.28-08:00] 访问:87
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