Estrategias, actores, promesas y temores en las campañas de vacunación antivariolosa en México: Del Porfiriato a la Posrevolución (1880-1940)

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Abstract

The article examines some of the strategies employed by the Mexican health authorities that led to the organization of massive and obligatory smallpox vaccination campaigns from the late 1880s to the 1940s, a period of Mexican history that corresponds to the Porfirio Díaz regime (1877-1911), to the armed phase of the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920), and to the first two decades of the Post-revolutionary governments (1920-1940). Attention will be placed of the vaccination programs in the main urban settings, notably in Mexico City, as well as the gradual but decisive organization and regulation of vaccination campaigns in the heterogeneous rural milieu. Furthermore, the importance that hygienic education acquired will be explored, as well as the divergent and contested responses that emerged due to the obligatory vaccination campaigns, responses that included resistance, fear, uncertainty and widespread acceptance.

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APA

Agostoni, C. (2011). Estrategias, actores, promesas y temores en las campañas de vacunación antivariolosa en México: Del Porfiriato a la Posrevolución (1880-1940). Ciencia e Saude Coletiva, 16(2), 459–470. https://doi.org/10.1590/S1413-81232011000200009

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