Lucknow came so early in the work of inoculation, that weak vaccines were used in small doses. The cholera, when it broke out, was "of a most malignant type, senior medical officers of long experience in the country stating that such a virulent cholera had not been seen by them for very many years past." More than a year had elapsed between the inoculations and the outbreak of the cholera. It is no wonder that the regiment was not well protected:—
"The small amount of protection which the inoculations afforded in this case may have depended on the mild effects which the injections produced on the men at the time of the operation in 1893, in comparison with the severity of the epidemic which attacked the regiment. It is recorded in the Lucknow Inoculation Registers that only in two men, out of the 185 inoculated in 1893, a marked febrile reaction was obtained; in 77 individuals the vaccinal fever was only slight, while in 66 there was no reaction: an effect which was due to the weakness of the vaccines procurable at that period of work, and to the small doses used. The influence of the vaccines was possibly further reduced, at the time of the epidemic, by a lapse of fourteen to fifteen months." (Haffkine, 1895 Report.)
3. Gaya Jail
On 9th July 1894, an outbreak of cholera occurred in the Gaya jail, and by 18th June there had been 6 cases and 5 deaths. On that day and the next day, 215 prisoners were inoculated. The average number of the prisoners during the outbreak was 207 inoculated, and 202 not inoculated. Surgeon-Major Macrae, superintendent of the jail, reports:—
"The inoculations being purely voluntary, no selection of prisoners was possible, but all classes of the jail were represented—male and female, old and young, habituals and less frequent offenders, strong and weakly, convalescent and even hospital patients sent their representatives; no difference of any kind was made between inoculated and non-inoculated; they were under absolutely identical conditions as regards food, water, accommodation, etc., in fact in every possible respect."
Of course, the best results could hardly be obtained, because the cholera was already at work: it took about ten days for the 1894 vaccine to produce its full effect; and two inoculations were generally made, one five days after the other. This gradual action of the vaccine is well shown in Dr. Simpson's table:—
| Non-Inoculated, 202 | Inoculated, 207 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cases. | Deaths. | Cases. | Deaths. | |
| During 5 days after 1st | 7 | 5 | 5 | 4 |
| inoculation | ||||
| During 3 days after 2nd | 5 | 3 | 3 | 1 |
| inoculation | ||||
| After 3 days after 2nd | 8 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| inoculation | ||||
Haffkine's comment on these figures must be noted here:—
"In the Gaya jail, the inoculations were for the first time applied in a prevalent epidemic, and very weak doses of a relatively weak vaccine were used.... Far higher results have been obtained by an application of stronger doses. In the bustees situated round the tanks in Calcutta, where cholera exists in a permanent state, the disease occurred in 36 houses with inoculated people. In each of these houses there was one part of the family inoculated and another not. The observations were continued for 459 days, with the following results:—
During the first period of 5 days, subsequent to the inoculation with first vaccine, cholera occurred in 8 houses.