born March 9, 1676, Muddy River Hamlet [now Brookline], Mass. died March 1, 1766, Brookline physician who introduced smallpox inoculation into the American colonies. During the Boston smallpox epidemic of 1721, Boylston was urged to begin inoculations of the virus by the minister Cotton Mather, who had heard reports from Europe of their use in Turkey. Boylston responded enthusiastically, beginning with his own family and eventually inoculating about 250 people. The practice was so bitterly opposed by other physicians, the clergy, and much of the populace that Boylston's life was threatened and he was forced to perform his work in great secrecy. Of those inoculated by Boylston, only six died of smallpoxa much lower mortality rate than expected during an epidemic. Boylston's success was all the more striking in light of his having used a virus taken from human cases of smallpox, which produced a mild, but contagious, form of the disease. Boylston traveled to London in 1724 and was elected to the Royal Society in 1726.
BOYLSTON, ZABDIEL
Meaning of BOYLSTON, ZABDIEL in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012