- David Semple
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David Semple Born 6 April 1856
Northern IrelandDied 7 January 1937 (aged 80)Allegiance United Kingdom Service/branch Royal Army Medical Corps Years of service 1883- Rank Lieutenant-Colonel Other work Bacteriologist Lieutenant-Colonel Sir David Semple MD (1856 – 1937) was a British Army officer who founded the Pasteur Institute at Kasauli in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh. The institute later came to be known as the Central Research Institute (CRI).
In 1911 he developed a nerve-tissue based rabies vaccine from the brains of sheep first made rabid and then killed. The `Semple' vaccine however is known to have side-effects such as paralysis with high risk of other diseases, being just a crude form of churned brain-tissue. It needs administration around the stomach in a series of very painful injections administered over a period of seven to 14 days, a course that many do not complete. Moreover, it is not reliable and the World Health Organization (WHO) has been advocating its total disuse since 1993. (WHO literature )
He was given a knighthood in 1911,[1] and is buried in Hanwell Cemetery.
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Categories:- 1856 births
- 1937 deaths
- British immunologists
- Royal Army Medical Corps officers
- Recipients of the Kaisar-i-Hind Medal
- Knights Bachelor
- Recipients of the Order of the Nile
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