Timeline of vaccines
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
This is a timeline of the development of prophylactic human vaccines. Early vaccines may be listed by the first year of development or testing, but later entries usually show the year the vaccine finished trials and became available on the market. Although vaccines exist for the diseases listed below, only smallpox has been eliminated worldwide. The other vaccine-preventable illnesses continue to cause millions of deaths each year.[1] Currently, polio and measles are the targets of active worldwide eradication campaigns.
18th century
19th century
- 1879 First vaccine for cholera
- 1885 First vaccine for rabies by Louis Pasteur and Émile Roux
- 1890 First vaccine for tetanus
- 1896 First vaccine for typhoid fever
- 1897 First vaccine for bubonic plague
20th century
- 1921 First vaccine for diphtheria
- 1925 First vaccine for tuberculosis
- 1926 First vaccine for scarlet fever
- 1927 First vaccine for pertussis (whooping cough)
- 1932 First vaccine for yellow fever
- 1937 First vaccine for typhus
- 1945 First vaccine for influenza
- 1952 First vaccine for polio by Jonas Salk
- 1954 First vaccine for Japanese encephalitis
- 1954 First vaccine for anthrax
- 1957 First vaccine for adenovirus-4 and 7
- 1962 First oral polio vaccine
- 1963 First vaccine for measles
- 1967 First vaccine for mumps
- 1970 First vaccine for rubella
- 1974 First vaccine for chicken pox
- 1977 First vaccine for pneumonia (Streptococcus pneumoniae)
- 1978 First vaccine for meningitis (Neisseria meningitidis)
- 1981 First vaccine for hepatitis B (first vaccine to target a cause of cancer)
- 1985 First vaccine for Haemophilus influenzae type b (HiB)
- 1992 First vaccine for hepatitis A
- 1998 First vaccine for Lyme disease
- 1998 First vaccine for rotavirus
21st century
- 2003 First nasal influenza vaccine approved in U.S. (FluMist)
- 2006 First vaccine for human papillomavirus (which is a cause of cervical cancer)
- 2012 First quadrivalent (4-strain) influenza vaccine
- 2013 First vaccine for enterovirus 71, one cause of hand foot mouth disease[2]
- 2015 First vaccine for malaria[3]
- 2015 First vaccine for ebola[4]
- 2015 First vaccine for dengue fever.[5]
Sources
- ↑ Vaccine Preventable Deaths and the Global Immunization Vision and Strategy, 2006--2015, MMWR, CDC, 12 May 2006
- ↑ Hand, foot and mouth disease: First vaccine, BBC News, James Gallagher, 28 May 2013
- ↑ Malaria vaccine approval first marred by efficacy question mark, Chemistry World, Maria Burke, 29 July 2015
- ↑ Ebola vaccine is 'potential game-changer', BBC News, James Gallagher, July 31, 2015
- ↑ Sanofi's Dengue Vaccine Dengvaxia Gains Brazilian Approval, Zacks Equity Research, Zacks.com, December 29, 2015
- keepkidshealthy claims "References: the CDC and Mandell: Principles and Practice of Infectious Diseases, 5th ed.," as its source.