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Polio in the United
States: Fear and then Victory
By LISA A. SWENARSKI
DE HERRERA
American summers are known to most kids as carefree days splashing in
swimming pools or making castles in sand boxes. But in the 1950s, these
places of innocence were forbidden by parents fearful of the polio virus
that was striking young children and adults suddenly and without mercy.
Dr. Jeffrey Koplan, former director of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, remembers looking out the window and seeing his neighbor, a
young mother of two, being carried to a car, her legs limp. She was back
in two weeks, this time in a wheelchair. This was every family's
nightmare. And it was a reality for 20,000 polio victims in the United
States every year.
Because some of the first symptoms are fatigue and fever, parents could
not tell if their child suffered from flu or polio. As a precaution, many
rushed to the hospital.
Children and adults experienced long lines at some hospitals trying to
gain access to emergency rooms. Doctors fanned out to examine patients
waiting in their cars. Once in the hospital, they were subjected to spinal
taps, orthopedic surgeries and braces. They were kept in isolation wards
where even their parents couldn't visit them. Some were so paralyzed that
they couldn't breathe and had to spend months and sometimes years confined
to mechanical ventilators known as iron lungs, which allowed only the head
to protrude. In February 2007, an American woman who was struck by polio
in 1950 celebrated her 60th birthday, still in an iron lung.
While the public panicked, they also mobilized. President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, who contracted polio as a child and lead the country for 12
years using a wheelchair or a cane, had already founded The March of Dimes
(www.marchofdimes.com), a national foundation to raise money for polio
research. The March of Dimes still works on behalf of children with
disabilities. In the 1950s, its volunteers went door to door asking for
donations. Mothers marched in the streets. And scientists raced to
discover a vaccine.
One of them was Dr. Jonas Salk at the University of Pittsburgh in
Pennsylvania. Thanks to Nobel Prize winners John F. Enders, Thomas H.
Weller and Frederick C. Robbins for their discovery of the ability of
poliomyelitis viruses to grow in various types of tissue cultures, Salk
and his colleagues developed a potentially safe, injectable vaccine
against polio. But before they could give it to the public, they had to
test its safety and effectiveness. The vaccine was given to nearly 15,000
Pittsburgh residents, mostly children, in pilot trials from 1952 to 1954.
Then, Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr. at the University of Michigan, and the March
of Dimes, conducted the largest field trials in U.S. history, involving
1.8 million children, called "Polio Pioneers." The trials used the now
standard double-blind process for the first time, where neither patients
nor administering physicians knew whether an inoculation was a vaccine or
a placebo.
In April 1955, the Salk vaccine was declared a success. The following
month, first and second grade children lined up for mass inoculations.
Salk's discovery opened the eyes of the world to the power of scientific
research. Both in the United States and around the world, it showed how
scientific solutions developed in basic research laboratories could lead
to practical applications for complex problems at the core of human
health.
But national relief turned into national heartbreak when a bad batch of
vaccines caused 260 cases of polio and 10 deaths. Vaccinations were
suspended for three weeks, resulting in one of the largest outbreaks of
polio in U.S. history.
Dr. Neal Nathanson, who worked for the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, vividly recalls the time. "People began to question that if
this product was unsafe, how do we know that every other vaccine is safe?
The credibility of the Public Health Service was also on the line."
Overnight, the center's chief epidemiologist, Dr. Alexander D. Langmuir,
set up the Polio Surveillance Unit to investigate the outbreak. The unit
gathered data from state health departments around the country, which
received reports from local health departments on every case of polio.
The center issued daily reports on its investigation. The New York Times
printed the reports on its front page for a month, underscoring the
national attention that the outbreak received.
"Investigation revealed that the source was from two lots of vaccine from
a single manufacturer-the Cutter lab," Nathanson recalls.
With the cause of the outbreak isolated by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, a moratorium on the vaccine from the other manufacturers
was lifted.
The quick work helped allay fears, rescue the vaccine program, and restore
public confidence in the vaccine and the U.S. Public Health Service. In
1960, just 2,525 polio cases were reported. In 1965, just 61 cases. By
1979, zero cases. But even today, American children are vaccinated against
polio. As long as the virus exists somewhere in the world, everyone is
vulnerable.
The event led the federal government to establish more stringent standards
for manufacturing vaccines and for testing the safety of products in
general. Before a vaccine is licensed, manufacturers must provide a full
production history and a consistent positive outcome on product safety
testing.
Why was polio a new problem? Ironically, it was because of the advances in
hygiene and the growth of the American middle class. Previously, infants
contracted the polio virus but produced no or few symptoms because they
were protected by the antibodies in their mothers' milk. So instead of
becoming sick, they became immune. With advancements in sewage systems,
American homes and communities became cleaner, and infants did not have
contact with the virus and therefore did not acquire immunity. So if they
encountered the virus after they were no longer nursing, they were
vulnerable.
Fortunately, only one percent of those who contract polio actually become
paralyzed. But even for the survivors, polio does not end with childhood
symptoms. Today, some 70 percent of polio survivors in the United States
are experiencing post polio syndrome, a weakness in muscles that were not
affected when they had polio as a child. As these survivors age, they can
experience fatigue, pain, and difficulty swallowing and breathing.
Fortunately, they will be the last Americans to deal with this disease.
Courtesy: SPAN
Magazine
Please share your views on this article. Write to
editorspan@state.gov
Disclaimer: The views
expressed in this health article are strictly those of the writer and
123oye does not take any responsibility for them. Kindly consult a Doctor
before following any advice.
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