Anti-vaccinationists past and present
Top Cited Papers
- 24 August 2002
- Vol. 325 (7361), 430-432
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.325.7361.430
Abstract
The British Vaccination Act of 1840 was the first incursion of the state, in the name of public health, into traditional civil liberties. The activities of today9s propagandists against immunisations are directly descended from, indeed little changed from, those of the anti-vaccinationists of the late nineteenth century, say Robert Wolfe and Lisa SharpKeywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- ‘An attempt to swindle nature’: press anti-immunisation reportage 1993-1997Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, 1998
- Smallpox: The Triumph over the Most Terrible of the Ministers of DeathAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1997
- Myths in medicineBMJ, 1995
- The Right to Die? Anti-vaccination Activity and the 1874 Smallpox Epidemic in StockholmSocial History of Medicine, 1992
- The Leicester anti-vaccination movementThe Lancet, 1992
- 'NOTHING IN NATURE THAT IS NOT USEFUL' THE ANTI-VACCINATION CRUSADE AND THE IDEA OF HARMONIA NATURAE IN ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE *Nuncius, 1992
- The politics of prevention: Anti-vaccinationism and public health in nineteenth-century EnglandMedical History, 1988
- Anti-vaccination leagues.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1984
- The American anti-vaccinationists and their arguments.1967