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Historical
Vignettes of Clinical Trials
| A study conducted in 1721 involved six inmates from
London's Newgate Prison (pictured, right). The inmates were inoculated by
implanting smallpox matter from infected patients on both arms and legs
of inmates. This proved to support the theory of inoculation. |

Courtesy of www.umich.edu
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© Edinburgh at the
University Press
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In 1747, while at sea, James Lind conducted one of the
first experiments using a control group. The experiment involved seamen
aboard the SS Salisbury (pictured left) affected by scurvy. It
was this experiment that first introduced the idea of using a
simultaneously treated control group.
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Courtesy of Jill Meinert
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| In 1798, Edward
Jenner (pictured, right) conducted a series of experiments
involving inoculation of people with cowpox as a protection against
smallpox. It was these early experiments that led to the discovery of a
vaccination for smallpox. |

Courtesy of
www.jennermuseum.com |
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The University Group Diabetes Program (UGDP) was one of the first multicenter
trials to focus on the treatment of a chronic non-infectious disease.
The UGDP began in 1960 and was completed in 1974. |
| Donald Fredrickson (1924-2002), director of the National Institutes
of Health (pictured, right). A moving force in the development of
clinical trials as the "indispensable ordeal." |

©NIH/NY Times |
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