Salk Polio vaccine licensed in USA, at the same time the diagnostic criteria for polio was altered
On April 12, 1955, Jonas Salk’s inactivated polio vaccine (IPV) was licensed in the US the same day "researchers announced the vaccine was safe and effective". It was hailed as "an historic victory over a dread disease...ushering in a new medical age". Between 1948 and 1955 several Polio (known officially as poliomyelitis) epidemics had occurred and people were fearful of the "disease". [1, 4] US physician Jonas Salk tested his experimental killed-virus vaccine on himself and his family in 1953. Then on "April 26, 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." [2, 3] Within days of Salk's "inactivated" polio vaccine rolled out, cases began emerging across America of children who had become paralyzed in the limb that were injected with the new technology vaccine which had known live virus issues, and who's mass produced formulations had not been tested in humans - The Cutter Incident. Later forumulation problems also with Wyeth manufacturing (now Pfizer) but CDC covered this up. [7] The polio case definition..> READ MORE