
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


What can we learn from the centuries-long quest to eradicate smallpox, once the scourge of humanity? And how did it set the stage for all vaccines to come? First we meet Edward Jenner, a doctor in 18th century Britain who learned about the folk practice of “variolation” and found a safer way to inoculate people against smallpox. Then, Donald Hopkins of the Carter Center takes us back to the 1960s in Sierra Leone, where he discovered that successfully eradicating smallpox could be a feasible goal worldwide.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
By Pushkin Industries4.7
128128 ratings
What can we learn from the centuries-long quest to eradicate smallpox, once the scourge of humanity? And how did it set the stage for all vaccines to come? First we meet Edward Jenner, a doctor in 18th century Britain who learned about the folk practice of “variolation” and found a safer way to inoculate people against smallpox. Then, Donald Hopkins of the Carter Center takes us back to the 1960s in Sierra Leone, where he discovered that successfully eradicating smallpox could be a feasible goal worldwide.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

90,762 Listeners

44,007 Listeners

32,164 Listeners

43,696 Listeners

27,168 Listeners

6,417 Listeners

112,482 Listeners

56,742 Listeners

5,808 Listeners

2,073 Listeners

29,223 Listeners

2,313 Listeners

10,391 Listeners

261 Listeners

1,584 Listeners