Then came the Hoover 
Hugh Pennington
- Allergy: The History of a Modern Malady by Mark Jackson Buy this book
The term ‘allergy’ was coined in 1906 by the Viennese paediatrician Clemens von Pirquet to denote any kind of biological reactivity, including asthma, hay fever, reactions to insect bites and stings, and the immunological effects of vaccines and natural infections. Some influential contemporary specialists thought the new term to be both wrong and unnecessary. Wrong, because the evidence linking the different manifestations of the condition was weak; and unnecessary, because there were other neologisms with much the same meaning: ‘hypersensitivity’, introduced by Emil von Behring in 1894, and ‘anaphylaxis’, invented by Charles Richet and Paul Portier in 1902. Von Pirquet won. The linking evidence has turned out to be very strong. And although Nobel Prizes were awarded to Behring (in 1901) and Richet (in 1913) for their immunological researches, their terms, unlike ‘allergy’, remained scientific and technical.
Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.
Hugh Pennington is chair of the public inquiry into the 2005 South Wales E.coli outbreak. He lives in Aberdeen.
Other articles by this contributor:
Too much fuss? · the Sars virus
Don’t pick your nose · Staphylococcus aureus
Myrtle Street · the Royal Liverpool Children’s Inquiry
Smallpox Scares · Bioterrorism
Why can’t doctors be more scientific? · The Great MMR Disaster
Disasters and Disease · The Dangerous Dead
The English Disease · Who’s to blame for BSE?
Wash Your Hands · Bugs