Professor George Dick Immunologist who argued that smallpox
vaccinations killed more than the disease
PROFESSOR GEORGE DICK, the immunologist who has died aged 82, waged a long war against
the vaccination of children for smallpox, which he blamed for killing more victims than
the disease.
By the 1950s smallpox was so rare in Britain that mass vaccination, even with its small
risk of mortality, was killing more children than would have died without it. In 1962 Dick
spoke out at the British Medical Association annual meeting against the smallpox
vaccination programme enjoined by the Minister of Health, Mr Enoch Powell. "He is
asking for a sacrifice of at least 20 babies a year," Dick said.
Dick's conclusion was that, for smallpox, "we should now give up routine infant
vaccination and depend on epidemiological control". To cheers from his fellow
doctors, Dick advised Mr Powell to spend "more effort on devising a plan to reduce
the risk of importation of smallpox into Britain."
But it was not until 1971 that Sir Keith Joseph, as Secretary of State for Social
Services, announced in a letter to all GPs that the government-backed programme
encouraging vaccination for children was to be dropped. Dick had made known his opposition
to childhood smallpox immunisation to the committee that advised Joseph to drop the
programme.
Since then the disease has become extinct, not only in Britain but also, according to
the World Health Organisation, throughout the world.
The other disease with which Dick's name is linked is poliomyelitis. There was a wide
and justified fear of the disease in the 1950s, despite the success of vaccines developed
by Jonas Salk in 1954. These vaccines were of the "dead" type, but there were
hopes that a "live" vaccine could be produced which could be taken by mouth
instead of by injection. But the danger with early oral vaccines was that the viruses
might mutate and infect other people with a virulent disease that could lead to death or
paralysis.
In 1956 Dick tried out a new kind of live vaccine on his four-year-old daughter, a
decision which was reported soberly in the British Medical Journal but which caused
a flutter of excitement in the tabloid press. But by 1958, after experiments on 200
volunteers, Dick came to the conclusion that the live poliomyelitis vaccines then
available were not suitable for use on a large scale, because of the risk of spreading
infection.
In 1962 Dick attacked (on the grounds that the live vaccine could spread the disease)
government backing for a change to an oral Sabin live vaccine in place of the Salk
vaccine. "We were the first country to dribble oral vaccine into the community,"
he complained.
Dick had more comforting opinions on another scare in the late 1950s. There was a fear
that budgerigars might spread polio to their owners, after a boy died following a bite
from a budgie on his lip. Dick tried to inoculate four budgies with polio germs. In each
case they failed to contract the disease. Dick concluded that "the natural infection
of these birds may prove to be a rare event", which turned out to be the case.
Dick also worked successfully on a combined vaccination that could give immunity for
children to diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus and poliomyelitis through two injections,
one before the age of 12 months and the next at 18 months.
George Williamson Auchinvole Dick, a son of the manse, was born on Aug 14 1914, in
Fife. He was educated at the Royal High School, Edinburgh, and Edinburgh University, where
he read medicine.
He acted as assistant pathologist at the Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh, from 1939 to 1940.
During the Second World War he served with the Royal Army Medical Corps in East Africa and
Italian Somaliland. He ended the war as a lieutenant-colonel.
After the war Dick became a Foundation Fellow at the Rockefeller Institute, New York.
He also became a Fellow at the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore. In 1951 he returned
from America to work for the Medical Research Council.
It was in the decade from 1955, when he was appointed Professor of Microbiology at the
Queen's University, Belfast, that Dick did his most innovative work. He worked assiduously
on poliomyelitis vaccines with a dedicated team at the Royal Victoria Hospital.
From 1965 to 1973 he was Professor of Pathology at the Middlesex Hospital Medical
School (part of London University). In 1973 he moved to the Chair of Pathology at the
Institute of Child Health - with connections to the Great Ormond Street Hospital -
remaining there until his retirement in 1981.
He was popular and approachable, and, though more than 6 ft tall, was never aloof.
Dick's pre-eminence in his field was recognised internationally by a string of awards,
including that of Hero of Public Health, given by the Johns Hopkins University.
A practical and down-to-earth man, Dick also wrote for the layman. His Health on
Holiday (1982) prepared tourists for the Mediterranean sun.
Dick's learned papers covered a fine clutch of infectious diseases: yellow fever,
Marburg's virus, hepatitis, rabies, whooping cough and subacute sclerosing
panencephalitis.
He married, in 1941, Brenda Cook; they had two sons and two daughters. |