The Vaccination Procedure
Vaccination against smallpox was a time-sensitive, sequential procedure that crossed the boundary between animals and humans. The goal was to immunize the human body against smallpox by implanting another virus, Variolae vaccinae, which belonged to the same family as the smallpox virus but resulted in a much milder case of illness. Although Variolae vaccinae was long identified with the cowpox virus, recent genome sequencing has shown that it was in fact a form of horsepox capable of infecting both cows and humans [Damaso 2017; Hirokawa 2017]. However, this module uses the term "cowpox vaccine" for Variolae vaccinae because the smallpox vaccine was frequently referred to as "cowpox" (gyūtō) in Japan and strongly associated with cows in the popular imagination.
In the late eighteenth century, several physicians across Europe proved the protective properties of Variolae vaccinae, and British doctor Edward Jenner pioneered a method that involved extracting lymph from a liquid-filled pock on the arm of a cowpox patient and transferring it to the arm of an uninfected person. Because Variolae vaccinae was not contagious among humans, physicians needed to intervene. The vaccinator typically made several incisions with a lancet on the upper arm of the receiving child to imbed the vaccine into the skin. The number of incisions depended on the age of the child. Before the procedure, physicians had to confirm that the child was not currently suffering from any other illness such as scabies that might interact with the vaccine and interfere with immunization.
Next, vaccinators had to monitor the child's reaction. After three or four days, they checked whether pocks had appeared at the incision site. Between six and eight days after transfer, the pocks were considered ripe for extraction, and vaccinators could decide to use the child as a supplier for vaccinating other children. In Japan, physicians used the term tōbo ("pox base;" literally: "pox mother") for children who provided lymph for further vaccinations. The amount of lymph that could be extracted from one "pox base" was small and only sufficed to vaccinate ... further children. This limitation posed another restriction on the work of vaccinators.
Part of the vaccinator's job was to detect so-called "false pocks" (or "spurious pocks"). In some cases, vaccinated children developed pocks that superficially resembled genuine cowpox but in fact constituted reactions to other infections such as syphilis or bacterial contamination. Proper classification of "false pocks" was crucial because the children who developed them remained unprotected from the smallpox virus and might spread diseases to others if used as "pox bases." If a child was found to display false pocks, vaccinators usually decided to revaccinate and repeat all the necessary steps. The need for a follow-up visit also made it easier for vaccinators to recruit some children as "pox bases" for the perpetuation of the vaccine.
In the 1870s, the new Meiji government promoted a project to harvest vaccines directly from cows by injecting cows with Variolae vaccinae (i.e. horsepox) [Soekawa, p. 83]. Until that point, the smallpox vaccine in Japan was reproduced exclusively through person-to-person transmission.