New England Aboriginal New England Aboriginal people first felt the influence of smallpox and other diseases in the first decade of the 16th century. Just after John Cabot explored the coast in 1498. By 1504, French and Portuguese continued fishing trips and began spreading the disease. However, in 1616 and 1617, numerous people of indigenous peoples were murdered. Diseases such as varicella, cholera, plague, tuberculosis, etc. were first introduced to New England.
In the UK, in the late 1790s, physician Edward Jenner discovered how to vaccinate people with smallpox vaccine. About 190 years later in 1980, it was declared that smallpox was eradicated (Edward Jenner). Today, humans keep track of Jenner's footprints and continue working to treat and eradicate diseases threatening people around the world. Unfortunately, vaccines and antibiotics are not necessarily effective, and scientists need to find new ways to treat diseases that have not yet cured, such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, diabetes.
On May 14, 1796, Edward Jenner inoculated a general fatal illness smallpox vaccine at Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England. The vaccine is made from vaccinia, a lighter illness. Jenner did not initially recognize the association between vaccinia and smallpox and it was not even the first physician to use the vaccinia vaccine for patients who received vaccinia smallpox. However, Jenner used scientific methods to carefully document all the stages of his experiment: when the patient recovered he used general anti-fluctuation techniques. Mutation refers to the process by which a patient deliberately infects a natural strain taken from a recently recovered or altered smallpox victim. This is a very dangerous procedure, but it can cause a more mild form of the disease. (Variation is not as dangerous as shrinking smallpox.) Culture from China to Turkey has utilized centuries of variation to protect patients from smallpox
The arrival time of smallpox in Europe and Southwest Asia is not clear. Smallpox is not explicitly stated in the Old Testament, the New Testament, or in Greek and Roman literature. Although some people have discovered that the plague of Athens said to be derived from "Ethiopia" and Egypt, or that Cartago surrounded the sacred city of Syracuse in 396 BC, many scholars believe that this disease is like smallpox Pocladi once existed in the Mediterranean in his life, and he will not be explained by these people. In the ninth century, Persian physician Rhazes provided one of the most descriptive explanations of smallpox, and in his Kitab fi al-jadari wa-al-hasbah (smallpox and measles book) It was the first person to distinguish between measles and varicella. Man. Smallpox occurred in most parts of Europe in the 16th century.