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Am. J. Trop. Med., s1-18(5), 1938, pp. 437-468
Copyright © 1938 by American Journal of Tropical Medicine

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Yellow Fever Vaccination with Cultured Virus (17D) without Immune Serum1

H. H. Smith, H. A. Penna AND A. Paoliello

A year's experience in the production and application of a cultured yellow fever vaccine virus (17D), during which time more than 59,000 persons were inoculated, shows that there is now available a practicable, safe method of large-scale immunization. Any reaction to the vaccine is mild, generally consisting of headache, low-grade fever, and grippe-like pains, on the sixth or seventh day. No instances of delayed reaction to the vaccination have been encountered. Studies in the laboratory demonstrate that antibodies appear in the blood after the seventh and before the twenty-first days and persist for at least one year. Results of postvaccination protection tests indicate that approximately 95 per cent of those vaccinated under field conditions acquire immunity.


1 The studies and observations on which this paper is based were conducted as part of the program of the Cooperative Yellow Fever Service maintained by the Ministry of Education and Health of Brazil and the International Health Division of The Rockefeller Foundation.







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Copyright © 1938 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.