Conquering Polio
Fifty years ago, a scientific panel declared Jonas Salk's polio vaccine a smashing success. A new book takes readers behind the headlines
- By Jeffrey Kluger
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2005, Subscribe
(Page 7 of 9)
“Now,” said Hatcher, “I have the pleasure of presenting Dr. Thomas Francis Jr., director of the PoliomyelitisVaccineEvaluationCenter of the University of Michigan.”
Francis wore a black suit, his mustache was neatly trimmed, his glasses glinted. He positioned himself behind the lectern. For Salk, low in his front-row seat in the auditorium, Francis was not easy to see. Francis shuffled the thick sheaf of papers he carried and settled himself. At 10:20, he began to speak.
“During the spring of 1954,” he read, “an extensive field trial of the effectiveness of a formalin-inactivated poliomyelitis vaccine, as developed by Dr. Jonas Salk and his associates, was initiated by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis.”
Francis spoke with little inflection, reading the text cold from the page. This, of course, was the way protocol demanded it be done at a scientific conference. And for all the sensation here today, that’s what this was. Within the auditorium, the audience listened silently. Beyond the walls of the big room, the press waited invisibly. In cities around the country, 54,000 doctors stared at closed-circuit television screens. Francis talked on until finally, well into the patient presentation, he came to three exquisite bits of information, held fast in the thick amber of what he had come here to say.
“In placebo-controlled areas,” he read, “the poliomyelitis vaccination was 68 percent effective against polio Type I, 100 percent effective against Type II, and 92 percent effective against Type III.”
Then, for those who didn’t understand the enormousness of those numbers, he said it another way. “The vaccine works. It is safe, effective, and potent.”
An absolute silence continued to fill the hall, but there is silence and there is silence, and this one was filled with a noisy uncoiling. It was the uncoiling of a spring that had been wound tight since the epidemic year of 1916. It was a spring that had been tightened in the summer of 1921, when a tall man with presidential ambitions contracted a children’s disease, losing the ability even to rise back up to his full height, never mind—so it appeared—to lead the nation. It was a spring that it had seemed would never uncoil, and now it did with a sudden whip crack that made no sound at all.
In the audience, Donna Salk’s cheeks ran with tears, as did the faces of uncounted scientists. There was, to be sure, a lot of Francis’ presentation yet to go. He spoke for an hour and 38 minutes, explaining all of the nuances of the numbers. But the three numbers he kept coming back to—68 percent, 100 percent and 92 percent—held the listeners fast. This was far better than even some of the optimists had expected. And the 68 percent, the least impressive of the three findings, was almost certainly a result of a preservative that had been added to the Type I vaccine against Salk’s wishes and that could easily be removed in later manufacturing.
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Comments (4)
I was needing info on polio to do a science project on some disease and their development on the vaccine for it. I think this an excellent source.
Posted by Crymsun on February 13,2013 | 08:29 AM
I am needing information on polio, the vaccine, and more. If anyone has any advice of where to get the information (needs to be 3 different sources)please let me know. Thank you.
Posted by Shaun on April 13,2011 | 01:37 PM
I am currently writing a thesis paper on Jonas Salk. This is a great source and I am impressed by the accuracy of Mr. Kluger's writing.
Posted by Esther on February 28,2010 | 02:04 PM
My husband lived in Missouri in 1952. A doctor gave a vacinne to several children that year including his own daugther. His daugther and my husband then got polio. They only talk about the vaccine coming out in 1954. Why is that? Where they considered part of the "test".
Posted by Denise on February 5,2009 | 09:30 AM