This Day in History
On this day in 1954, the Salk polio vaccine field trials,
involving 1.8 million children, begin at the Franklin Sherman Elementary School
in McLean, Virginia. Children in the United States, Canada and Finland
participated in the trials, which used for the first time the now-standard
double-blind method, whereby neither the patient nor attending doctor knew if
the inoculation was the vaccine or a placebo. On April 12, 1955, researchers
announced the vaccine was safe and effective and it quickly became a standard
part of childhood immunizations in America. In the ensuing decades, polio
vaccines would all but wipe out the highly contagious disease in the Western
Hemisphere.
Polio, known officially as poliomyelitis, is an infectious
disease that has existed since ancient times and is caused by a virus. It
occurs most commonly in children and can result in paralysis. The disease
reached epidemic proportions throughout the first half of the 20th century.
During the 1940s and 1950s, polio was associated with the iron lung, a large
metal tank designed to help polio victims suffering from respiratory paralysis
breathe.
President Franklin Roosevelt was diagnosed with polio in
1921 at the age of 39 and was left paralyzed from the waist down and forced to
use leg braces and a wheelchair for the rest of his life. In 1938, Roosevelt
helped found the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, later renamed the
March of Dimes. The organization was responsible for funding much of the
research concerning the disease, including the Salk vaccine trials.
The man behind the original vaccine was New York-born
physician and epidemiologist Jonas Salk (1914-95). Salk’s work on an
anti-influenza vaccine in the 1940s, while at the University of Michigan School
of Public Health, led him, in 1952 at the University of Pittsburgh, to develop
the inactivated polio vaccine (IPV), based on a killed-virus strain of the
disease. The 1954 field trials that followed, the largest in U.S. history at
the time, were led by Salk’s former University of Michigan colleague, Dr.
Thomas Francis, Jr.
In the late 1950s, Polish-born physician and virologist
Albert Sabin (1906-1993) tested an oral polio vaccine (OPV) he had created from
a weakened live virus. The vaccine, easier to administer and cheaper to produce
than Salk’s, became available for use in America in the early 1960s and
eventually replaced Salk’s as the vaccine of choice in most countries.
Today, polio has been eliminated throughout much of the
world due to the vaccine; however, there is still no cure for the disease and
it persists in a small number of countries in Africa and Asia.
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