1. [From the struggle for freedom to the denial of evidence: history of the anti-vaccination movements in Europe].
- Author
-
Tafuri S, Martinelli D, Prato R, and Germinario C
- Subjects
- Autistic Disorder etiology, Autistic Disorder history, Denial, Psychological, Europe, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Mandatory Programs history, Mass Media history, Mass Vaccination legislation & jurisprudence, Measles-Mumps-Rubella Vaccine history, Personal Autonomy, Preservatives, Pharmaceutical history, Public Health history, United Kingdom, Vaccination adverse effects, Vaccination legislation & jurisprudence, Evidence-Based Medicine, Mass Vaccination history, Vaccination history
- Abstract
The 1853 Vaccination Act, adopted in England during XIX century, was the first law about compulsory vaccination in Europe. The Act caused a violent movement of opposition with the birth of Victorian anti-vaccination. The modern anti-vaccination movement was born in 1998 following a paper of Andrew Wakefield published in the Lancet. In this paper Wakefield illustrated a study of twenty patients and concluded that the administration of the MMR vaccine caused autism and some forms of colitis. The publication was later disowned by almost all authors. However the study of Wakefield caused a reduction of compliance to the anti-MMR vaccination in the United Kingdom, resulting in lower coverage and new outbreaks. The theorethical principles of anti-vaccinationists of 19th and 20th century were: the hypothesis that vaccines cause illnesses; the presence of toxic substances in the vaccine; the violation of freedom Personal and People's; the ineffectiveness of vaccinations. Moreover, anti-vaccinationists always refused the scientific methods and the peer-review of their scientific studies.
- Published
- 2011