Vaccination Proved Useless and Dangerous From Forty-Five Years of Registration Statistics
Vaccination Proved Useless and Dangerous From Forty-Five Years of Registration Statistics
Vaccination Proved Useless and Dangerous From Forty-Five Years of Registration Statistics
Forty-five years of
Registration Statistics,
proving Vaccination
to be both useless and
dangerous.
In Two Parts.
BY
ALFRED R. WALLACE, LL.D.
SECOND EDITION.
WITH CORRECTIONS, NOTES, AND AN APPENDIX.
By ALEXANDER WHEELER.
Condon i
1889.
;
Forty-five years of
Registration Statistics.
PART I.
due to vaccination.
(3.) That the severity of Small-pox as a
disease has not been mitigated by vaccination.
(4.) That several inoculable diseases have
increased to an alarming extent coincidently
with enforced vaccination.
The first, second, and fourth propositions will
be proved from the Registrar-General's Reports
from 1838 to 1882 and I shall make the
;
https://archive.org/details/b2136140x
DIAGRAM 1.
Deaths in London perMillion Living from Small Pox and from the Chief otherZymotic Diseases except Cholera.
Lont-rluie Sma// Pox. SotUd LineTypTui-s Upper Line ZyjnctzcDUcases.
<S-t>.
'
DIAGR;?fl 11.
Deaths m England and Wales per Million Living from Small Pox and from the Chief other Zymotic Diseases except
Chole
xfcDmdu LowrLiM S^rwU Pm IIMal. J.ine, OPtlcicd TaccwMioru Upprr Luj^. Zymallc. Viscoses.
Mil
WOO
7 'WOO
350C
3SOO
\
300P
7 - \
\
-4 30np
/\
1 /
\
/ 1
\ /
\
1 \
\ /
./rn
JSl'C
/'iPO
mac
wno
SCO
jOO
IN
\
>. to c
In >
NOTE, riu OPfi/:M Vaccination, line is per 100000 of tfie, livinyj Pci>,ir.a.iun
REGISTRATION STATISTICS, 5-
that vaccination
from there being any proof
Small-pox in London, the
has diminished
(and
tendency of the Registrar-General's facts,
trustworthy,)
there are no other facts which are
is to that some counteracting cause has
show
prevented general sanitation from acting on
Diagram which
We will now turn to II.,
Mr. Marson, the Siu-geon of the Small-pox Hospital, told the Select
Committee, 1871,
answer 4,190: "The public are pretty largely
vaccinated now, and will be more so every year, I should think as time
goes on. There is one point which has not been very cleaily brought
forward this morning, and that is the increase of Small-pox after vaccination
year after year. When I first went to the hospital, 35 years since, from
1835 the admission of patients into the Small-pox hospital was
REGISTRATION STATISTICS.
of this section.
Dr. Jurin (18,066 cases) and Dr. Lambert (72 cases) given in
for Small-pox and Inoculation, 75 die out of 400 patients having the
distemper in die natural way."
Total cases before Vaccination, 24,994.
Mr. Marson, Resident Surgeon to the Small-pox and Vaccination
Hospital, London, (5,652 cases) ; given in the Blue Book on The Histoiy
and Practice of Vaccination, 1857, p. 18.
FORTY-FIVE YEARS OF
The extracted figures and per-centages have been all cai'efuUy verified,
and the averages have been obtained by dividing the total number of deaths
multiplied by 100, by the total number of cases.
Ihave thought it best to leave these notes unaltered. They are not
affectedby more recent experience, excepting in this Vi'ay That the gi'eat :
extension of our hospital accommodation involves a much larger number of
mild cases being admitted. Objection has been taken to Jurin's figures.
JtJRiN, itmust be remembered, was trying to induce people to accept
artificial Small-pox by inoculation, and he gives his figures to show the
REGISTRATION STATISTICS. 15
Table 4, p. 78, of the same Census Report, gives the male population
for the middle of each of the 23 years included in the
Army and Navy
Retm-n. The mean of these numbers is 1 1 1 67, 500 ; and this sum, multiplied
,
by the factor -528, gives 5,896,500 for the average male population of the
ages 15 55 for those years.
have extracted the deaths from Small-pox of males aged 1555, the mean
annual value of which is 1,041 ; and this number, divided by the number of
millions in the corresponding population (5-8965), gives the death-rate per
million = 176.
The limit of age, 15 55, has been taken because the General Report of
the Census of 88 1, Table 40, gives, for the
1 Army and Navy, 7,530 men
over 45, and 28,834 under 20 years of age.
The Small-pox death-rate for same ages, England and Wales, for the
years 1850 to 1870, was only 109 per million. Supplement to 35th Report,
Table 2, p. 2. The enormous increase is due to the epidemics since
1870. Ed.
B
i8 FORTY-FIVE YEARS OF
only does not protect men from catching Small-pox, but allows them to
die of it quite as much as
and, allowing something for the superiority of
sanitation, even more thanthe adult civil population, only partially
vaccinated and hardly ever re-vaccinated !
REGISTRATION STATISTICS. 19
* The following ai-e a few of these assertions. The italics are to call
fnll security, that the operation should be repeated at a later period of life."
In the tract on "Small-pox and Vaccination " issued by the National
Health Society, and now being widely circulated at tlie expense of the
ratepayers, with the sanction of the Local Government Boai-d, we find
this statement :" Evei-y Soldier and Sailor is re-vaccinated; the result
is that Small-pox is almost tuiknown in the Army and Navy, even amid
smTounding epidemics."
The above statements are proved by the Official Returns now issued
to be absolutely untrue, and must have been ignorantly and recklessly
ipade without any adequate basis of fact,
20 FORTY-FIVE YEARS OF
Summaiy, 1882, (Table 7, p. xv.) gives the Small-pox deaths per 1,000,
for twenty great Towns, for the years 1872-82. The Parliamentaiy
Return, "Vaccination, Mortality," 1877, gives the Small-pox mortality and
population of a considerable number of towns for the years 1847-72.
From these two official papers the Small-pox mortality per million of the
whole male population from i860 to 1882, for such towns as occur in
both the tables, is easily obtained. The average Small-pox death-rate
for all England is found to be 211 7, wlrile that of the ages 1555 is
176. These numbers are in the proportion of I to -83 hence the total ;
Small-pox mortality of any town multiplied by the factor "83 will give,
approximately, the mortality at ages 1545- The proportion has been
obtained from males only, but that of the two sexes combined will not
be materially different,
REGISTRATION STATISTICS. 21
37 51 64 82 81 86 84
302 327 369 404 442 493 S16
265 261 272 316 299 330 371
20 18 24 23 29 39
12 IS 16 17 18 23 22
* This Table lias not been continued in later Reports ; but we find
that Cancer (tlie only disease of the five sepai-ately tabulated) goes on
steadily increasing, the mortality for the five years, 18S1-85, being given in
the 48th Report as follows : Syphilis, 92; Cancer, 544. Small-pox,
for the same period was 78. Ed.
REGISTRATION STATISTICS. 25
fatal.
by vaccination, 12,000 lives are annually saved by it. The basis of that
assertion is an esliinate which contradicts the official vaccination returns
at almost eveiy point. The estimate and assertion are false to the
facts which are obtainable.
The above noted estimate is taken to prove that 94 per cent, of London
children under ten years of age are vaccinated, and that 95 per cent, of the
population [p. 41] are vaccinated. This statement is further assumed to be
supported by an examination of " 53,185 children in various national,
charitable, and parochial schools and workhouses in London." Such is
the odious rigour of vaccine regulations in our "national, charitable, and
parochial workhouse schools," that I should not have been surprised if,
of these chikhen, not one was found uuvacciuated. The parents of these
26 REGISTRATION STATISTICS,
poor children have had no one to defend them by paying fines for neglect
of the vaccination. Yet this "inspection" showed 6 per cent, to have
" no vaccination scar," or to be doubtful as to vaccination.
It is on such bases, that tremendous statements, such as that noted
above, are founded ; and to shade off the impudence of this one it is further
declared that '
' tlie estimate of the number of the unvaccinated is probably
too high." Our responsible ministers have been appealed to respecting
such a base use of official reports, and have had the humour to refer the
objector to the veiy officials who have so degraded their department of
"the public service." These, in turn, when appealed to, refer to the
head of the department ; meanwhile the false statement is repeatedly
quoted, and stands as first used.
The Reports of the Local Government Board, show that only once
have there ever been more than 87 per cent, of the births of the countiy
vaccinated, and in London 3 or 4 per cent, fewer. The last year
reported, 1886, gives 30,000 fewer official vaccinations than 1877, when
it was over 86 per cent, of the births. The plan of the officials is
to get 94 per cent, vaccinated, by deducting the infants who died un-
vaccinated from the total births, and treating the rest as "surviving."
I know no more condemnable trick. Death is as busy with vaccinated
as with unvaccinated children. Ed.
PART II.
mortality is greatest.
REGISTRATION STATISTICS. 35
general mortality.
(2.) The Small-pox death-rate, among over
2,000 cases, was i7"85 per cent, of the cases,
proved as follows :
Taking, first, all the ages
above 2 years, the death-rates of the vaccinated
3 and of the unvaccinated 13" 15,
is 1 '76,
Vaccinated. Unvaccinated.
First year of life 60-46 45 '24
Second year of life 54*o5 38' 10
* It must be insisted upon, over and over again, that they are not good
where the class under trial the vaccinated are in gi-eat numbers
slatistics,
be adduced.
The Handbook, 1887, giving these particulars,
has no "doubtful" class until 1880. Before
that period the un-vaccinated absorbed them all.
As to this doubtful class ! Why are there
this is buried.
We see then that in the mild cases, error as to
classification is very unlikely ever to occur. In
these no deaths need be feared, except from
complications.
WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
THE MALAY ARCHIPELAGO The land of the Oiang
:
Prcsidetit.
WILLIAM TEBB, Esq., 7, Albert Road, Gloucester Gate, Regent's Park-, N.W.
Vice-rrcsi(ie7its.
THOMAS BURT, Esq., M.P., 26, Pal.ace Street, Buckingham Gate, S.W.
HENRY P. COBB, Esq., M.P., 53, Lincoln's-Inn Fields, W.C.
HANDEL COSSHAM, Esq., M.P., Weston Park, Bath.
IS.A..\C HOLDEN, Esq., M.P., O.akworth House, Keighley.
Executive Committee.
CH..\IRM.^N.WILLIAM TEBB.
R.ALFREY. GENERAL EARLE. JOHN LEWIS.
W. L. BEURLE. GLOVER.
Mrs. R. R. Mrs. LOWE.
JOHN BOTTOMLEY. J. F. HAINES. CORNELIUS PEARSON.
WILLIAM WHITE, Laurels, Cheshunt, Herts.
Hon. 7"rf<zj?/?-c;- CORNELIUS PEARSON, 15, Harpur Street, Red Lion Square, W.C.
Bankers "XViY. LONDON & COUNTY BANK (Westminster Branch), S.W.
Parliamentary AgentVf. L. BEURLE, Linden House, 331, Victoria Park Road, E.
SecretaryWlhLlPM. YOUNG, 77, Atlantic Road, Brixton, S.W.
In times when the laws of health and that of all prescriptions the last
were impeifectly understood, it was which requires extraneous assistance
believed that by poisoning the blood is Vaccination for its repute is
;
with the vims of small-pox, or cow- based on the fact that its subjects
pox, a future attack of small-pox are secure from small-pox, and in
might be escaped. While many that security may abide indifferent
kindred medical practices have been to those who choose to neglect its
discredited and forgotten. Vaccina- salvation. Even nurses in small-
tion, endowed by the State, has pox hospitals, it is said, when
survived, and has entered into efficiently vaccinated and re-vacci-
legislation, andis enforced with fine nated, live unaffected in the variolous
and imprisonment. It is in vain atmosphere. They consequently
for nonconformists to plead that they hold that to compare an unvaccinated
do not believe that Vaccination has person to a nuisance, as is frequently
any power to prevent or to mitigate done, is to make use of an epithet
small-pox, or that it is attended by that implicitly denies the virtues
the risk of communicating other asserted for Vaccination, a nuismce
diseases. They are told they may being a danger or annoyance which
believe what they like, but that another cannot conveniently avoid.
vaccinated they must be, for the The members of the London
benefit of the rite is settled beyond Society therefore appeal with
dispute, and that only fools and confidence to the sympathy and
fanatics venture to question what has support of their countrymen. They
been irrevocably determined. claim to enlist the energies not
Many too, whilst disinclined to only of those who are opposed to
discuss Vaccination as a medical Vaccination as useless and mis-
question, or to surrender confidence chievous, but of those who, time
in its prophylaxy, are opposed to its to their faith in liberty, would leave
compulsory infliction. They main- its acceptance to the discretion of