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Louis Pasteur

Louis Pasteur (1822-1895) is probably best known for his discovery of pasteurization.

Few know that he also:

He also set up the Pasteur Institute, where two of his former assistants, including Emile Roux, discovered the diphtheria toxin (1888), which led to anti-serum treatments, among many other historic discoveries.

Louis Pasteur is truly the father of microbiology.

Tragically, but common for the time, he lost two of his daughters to typhoid, a now vaccine-preventable disease.

And just as there are some people who are so against vaccines that they might skip a rabies vaccines, even if they touch a bat that might be rabid or are bitten by a strange dog that can’t be quarantined, there are those that deny that germ theory is true.

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