IPMAT Question Paper 2023 | IPM Indore Verbal

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IPMAT 2023 Question Paper IPM Indore Verbal Ability. Solve questions from IPMAT 2023 Question Paper from IPM Indore and check the solutions to get adequate practice. The best way to ace IPMAT is by solving IPMAT Question Paper. To solve other IPMAT Sample papers, go here: IPM Sample Paper

Read the following passage and choose the answer that is closest to each of the questions that are based on the passage.

On the 14th of May 1796, vaccine matter was taken from the hand of a dairy maid, Sarah Nelmes, and inserted by two superficial incisions in the arms of James Phipps, a healthy boy of about eight years of age. The boy went through an attack of cowpox as expected. After this, however, it was necessary to determine whether he was protected from smallpox. After waiting two months Jenner inoculated him with material from a smallpox patient. He was delighted to note that the boy was not affected by smallpox.

By 1798, Jenner had succeeded in demonstrating the protective quality of the cowpox virus against smallpox, by putting on record details of 23 cases, contracted either casually or by direct inoculation. Sixteen of these had occurred accidentally among dairy workers in the course of occupations connected with cows and horses; the rest were done under Jenner's direction. Among the persons inoculated was Jenner's own little second son, Robert Harding Jenner, an infant eleven months old. Jenner demonstrated conclusively that the cowpox protects the human constitution from the infection of smallpox.

After Dr. Jenner had made his tests, he prepared a pamphlet for publication. He also went to London, so that he might have the opportunity to introduce the subject personally to friends and demonstrate the truth of his assertion to them. He remained in London for nearly three months without being able to find anyone who would submit to vaccination. Jenner went back to Gloucestershire, disappointed. It happened, however, that soon after his return home, a distinguished London surgeon named Cline resolved to make a trial of the vaccine material which Jenner had left with his friends.

The patient was a child suffering from a form of chronic hip-joint disease. The vaccine material was inoculated, and the vaccine vehicle ran rather a normal course and healed fully. The little patient was afterward inoculated with smallpox virus and found to be incapable of acquiring that disease. This case attracted considerable attention. The child was in a run-down condition, and the vaccine material might very well have provoked a rather serious local reaction. In a way, the fate of vaccination hung in the balance and good luck was in its favour. Mr. Cline, however, after this, became a strong advocate of vaccination, and brought it very decidedly before the London physicians.

It was not long before the opposition to the practice of vaccination took definite form. One of the best-known London physicians of the time, Dr. Ingenhouz, became the leader of a strong faction of the medical profession of London, who not only would have nothing to do with vaccination, but proclaimed openly that it was a dangerous innovation, absolutely unjustifiable, and communicated a disease without protecting against any other. Dr. Watt from Glasgow blamed the vaccine for the increase in severe cases of measles and measles-related deaths among children.

Fortunately, only a few colleagues were so illogical, and an excellent idea of how much Jenner's discovery was appreciated by his contemporaries may be obtained from the number of honours, diplomas, addresses and communications from public bodies and distinguished individuals which he received. Most of the prominent medical and scientific societies of Europe elected him a member or sent him some special token of recognition.

Question 12 : By calling the vaccine unjustifiable, Dr. Ingenhouz meant that vaccination

  1. made people sick and failed to provide general immunity.
  2. was an injustice against those on whom it was tested.
  3. was being carried out without any legal basis.
  4. actually spread the disease to a large population.

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Explanatory Answer

Option 1: This is accurate. The passage states that opponents like Dr. Ingenhouz claimed vaccination "communicated a disease without protecting against any other." The term "unjustifiable" here refers to their belief that vaccination caused illness (e.g., introducing cowpox) while failing to provide immunity to smallpox or other diseases.
Option 2: This is incorrect. Dr. Ingenhouz’s critique focused on the vaccine’s dangers and inefficacy, not moral wrongdoing or exploitation of participants.
Option 3: This misinterprets "unjustifiable." The criticism was not about legality or lack of regulatory approval but about the vaccine’s supposed medical irrationality.
Option 4: This is partially misleading. The passage clarifies that Jenner’s trials proved cowpox protected against smallpox, contradicting the idea that vaccination spread the latter.

Hence, the answer is 'made people sick and failed to provide general immunity.'

Choice A is the correct answer.

 

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