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variolation

Variolation, also known as inoculation, is the historical practice of inducing immunity to smallpox by deliberately exposing a healthy person to material from smallpox lesions. The aim is to trigger a controlled, milder infection that grants protection against future disease. Techniques varied: material was introduced to the skin via a small scratch or incision, or sometimes inhaled as powdered crusts from a smallpox pustule. While variolation reduced the risk of death compared with natural smallpox, it was not risk-free and could result in serious illness or transmission to contacts.

Evidence of variolation appears in East Asia and the Ottoman world before it reached Europe. The practice

In Britain and parts of continental Europe, variolation gradually gained acceptance after observations by physicians and

Variolation remained common through the 18th and early 19th centuries, but it carried risks of complications

is
often
traced
to
China
in
the
centuries
before
the
18th
century,
and
similar
methods
were
used
in
India
and
the
Middle
East.
From
there,
travelers
and
scholars
brought
accounts
to
Europe
in
the
18th
century.
diplomats
who
had
encountered
it
in
the
Ottoman
Empire.
The
most
famous
advocate
was
Lady
Mary
Wortley
Montagu,
who
had
her
children
variolated
in
1721.
Support
grew
despite
concerns
about
safety
and
the
contagiousness
of
variolating
material,
and
some
outbreaks
prompted
resistance.
and
transmission.
The
development
of
vaccination
by
Edward
Jenner
in
1796,
using
cowpox
material
to
confer
immunity,
offered
a
safer
alternative.
Vaccination
gradually
supplanted
variolation
in
most
countries,
contributing
to
the
eventual
eradication
of
smallpox
in
the
late
20th
century.
Today
variolation
is
mostly
discussed
as
a
historical
precursor
to
modern
vaccination
and
immunology.