Charles Creighton (physician)

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Charles Creighton
germ theory
Medical career
InstitutionsUniversity of Aberdeen
Sub-specialtiesAnatomy, medical historian
Notable worksA History of Epidemics in Britain

Charles Creighton (22 November 1847 – 18 July 1927) was a British physician and medical author. He was highly regarded for his scholarly writings on medical history but was widely denounced for disputing the germ theory of infectious diseases.

Biography

Creighton was born in

Karl von Rokitansky in Vienna and Rudolf Virchow in Berlin. He was awarded his M.D. in 1878.[1]

After returning from Berlin in 1872, Creighton worked in London as a hospital registrar until his appointment in 1876 as demonstrator of anatomy at University of Cambridge. Over the next five years he wrote his first book, Bovine Tuberculosis in Man (1881), and published several articles on anatomy in the Journal of Anatomy and Physiology. He became co-editor of the journal in 1879.[2]

Then, for unknown reasons, Creighton quit a promising career at Cambridge and returned to London in 1881. For the remainder of his life he worked independently on his studies and lived alone. Between 1881 and 1883 he published a three-volume translation from German of August Hirsch's Handbook of Geographical and Historical Pathology. His most significant work, A History of Epidemics in Britain, took several years to complete and the two volumes were published in 1891 and 1894.[2]

In 1918 Creighton moved to Northamptonshire, England where he lived until his death in 1927.[2]

Anti-vaccination

Creighton was an anti-vaccinationist. He has been described by historian Roy Porter as the anti-vaccination movement's "most ardent and distinguished spokesmen."[3] Creighton argued that vaccination was poisoning of the blood with contaminated material, which could provide no protection from disease.[3]

Two articles he wrote for the Encyclopædia Britannica on pathology (1885) and vaccinations (1888) cast doubt on the existence of germs and the efficacy of vaccines. He was widely condemned for these views by leading medical journals. He continued to express his unorthodox and unpopular anti-vaccination views in The Natural History of Cowpox and Vaccinal Syphilis (1887) and Jenner and Vaccination (1889).

Creighton was an active member of the

London Society for the Abolition of Compulsory Vaccination.[3]

Publications

References

  1. ^ Cook, G. C. (2000). Charles Creighton (1847–1927): Eminent Medical Historian but Vehement Anti-Jennerian. Journal of Medical Biography 8 (2): 83-88.
  2. ^ a b c Dolman, Claude E. (1981) "Creighton, Charles" Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Charles Scribner's Sons
  3. ^ a b c Porter, Dorothy; Porter Roy. (1988). The Politics of Prevention Anti-Vaccinationism and Public Health in Nineteenth-Century England. Medical History 32: 231-252.

External links