| LOUIS | and 16dn, 19th-century French chemist and microbiologist who created vaccines for rabies and anthrax (5,7) |
| PASTEUR | Louis ___, 19th-century French chemist and microbiologist who created vaccines for rabies and anthrax (7) |
| LOUISPASTEUR | French chemist and microbiologist who developed vaccines against anthrax and rabies (5,7) |
| LAVOISIER | Antoine, eighteenth century French chemist and physicist |
| HONEYMOON | Antoine Laurent -, eighteenth-century French chemist who discredited the phlogiston theory (9) |
| NIEPCE | Nicephore ___, French chemist and photographic pioneer who died in 1833 (6) |
| ANTOINE | ___ Lavoisier, 18th-century French chemist (7) |
| LUMIERE | Surname of Louis and Auguste, French chemists and cinema pioneers (7) |
| BEARISH | Rough and rude treatment for rabies at hospital (7) |
| BETH | ____ Webster, microbiologist who has been an Egghead on the TV quiz show since 2016 (4) |
| ROBERTKOCH | German bacteriologist who discovered the causative agents of diseases including tuberculosis, cholera and anthrax (6,4) |
| HYDROPHOBIA | Old term for rabies |
| SALK | American microbiologist who developed the standard vaccine against polio (4) |
| PETRI | German microbiologist who invented a culture dish |
| VET | Doctor dealing with rabies and distemper for short |
| HEPATITISA | Merck and GlaxoSmithKline produce vaccines for it (2 wds.) |
| KOCH | Robert ___, bacteriologist who isolated the organisms causing anthrax, tuberculosis, and cholera; Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1905) |
| POLIO | The first vaccine for this disease, now mostly eradicated, was created by Jonas Salk |
| ZOONOSIS | Disease, such as rabies, anthrax etc. that can be transmitted from vertebrate animals to humans (8) |
| RNA | Basis of some vaccines, for short |