(Author's Note: I'm trying out the Google auto-link insertion Blogger "beta feature" to make for a "more engaging reading experience." I wasn't impressed by the first paragraph, and have not used it below the fold. You decide whether it has added engagement. However, I left Youtube on play after posting the clip that I intended as some kind of ironic comment about being out of touch with the medical world, and for the millionth time in my life, "the algorithm" tried to make me listen to Celtic Women. How many times do I have to hit the back button when I hear the opening bars of "Tir na Og"? The answer is "forever," because the algorithm isn't set up to gather that data. We can talk about technical feasibility, but infeasibility leads to more views of Celtic Women, and you have to be a saint not to dip into the conspiratorial line of thinking at this point. Technology and culture means resistance!)
I'm diffident about the medical side of technological history because I don't feel as sure-footed there as I do with the hard sciences [insert reader eyeroll here], but the Salk vaccine is a pretty darn important science story, and the Salk vaccine contamination at the Cutter Laboratory is comfortably the biggest science story of June 1955 unless you want to try to make the British election/rail strike or the Le Mans crash into science/technology stories. (I've done the second and am tempted by the first, but it would just be me harping on about declinism again.)
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As we know, being a bit closer to the story, Hobby was on her way out, anyway. |
The safety story of the polio vaccine is actually pretty hair-raising when you pursue the story. Live virii were found present in Eli Lilly, Parke-Davis, and Pitman-Moore-produced vaccines as well, but only Cutter was found liable in court. The Wiki on polio vaccines reproduces a hair-raising prehistory of polio vaccines in the United States involving the distribution of patently unsafe and unsupervised vaccines by two medical entrepreneurs of the Thirties, John Kolmer and Maurice Brodie.
anti-inoculation campaign in Boston in 1721 that drove the Mathers out of their previously dominant place in public life, clearing the way for the dominance of the "Boston Brahmins," your Cabots and Lodges. Smallpox inoculation could be dangerous, and the conversation about who was to be treated, and why, was heated in many, many cycles of controversy over many centuries leading up to the argument within the American medical community about whether what Kolmer and Brodie were doing was safe, and whether a "killed virus" vaccine could work at all.
The story is also tied to larger questions of medical ethics. Modern doctors (okay, my brother the pediatrician, but he's a modern doctor!) are probably more concerned about test subject consent and experiments on the mentally ill and disabled than anything else, and here we go with Hilary Koprowski's early attenuated live-virus vaccine, which was tested on "physical and mentally disabled people located in New York. Kolmer and Brodie, in contrast, tested it on themselves and their own children.
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You try buying watercress. (Salmonella.) |
Because the Sabin vaccine prevented oral-intestinal polio, the main vector of transmission of a disease that emerged as paralytic polio in only a small number of cases, which is a confusion we still get in demographic history with respect to Yersinia pestis. I suspect that there's some kind of social, cultural or even racial subtext to polio's transmission by the "oral-fecal route." That doesn't happen in middle-class families! Well, okay, maybe in swimming pools. So let's close all the swimming pools if it's the only way to stop desegregation!
So it turns out that actual people are talking about this!
In the end, the Free World had to embrace the Commie vaccine because public health is something that only Government can do, no matter how hard the March of Dimes tries, and and no matter how many times you fire Ovetta Culp Hobby. It's not going to change, no matter how many times you publicly endorse Cutter Labs while cleaning out the NIH! Because epidemics don't stop for politics, you see.
Getting rid of swimming pools, on the other hand, that you can do.
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