![]() ![]() But all in all, this is an edifying description of one of the most significant public health successes in U.S. Tying in the role polio victim FDR played in making the effort a national priority, the precursory scientific developments that aided Salk and Sabin's work, and the ethical dilemmas surrounding human testing, Oshinsky sometimes bogs down in details. , etc.) looks at social context, too, such as the impact of the March of Dimes campaign on public consciousness-and fear-of polio. Oshinsky ( A Conspiracy So Immense: The World of Joe McCarthy ![]() As revered as these men are in popular culture, Oshinsky records their contemporaries' less complimentary opinions (even Sabin's friends, for instance, describe him as "arrogant, egotistical and occasionally cruel"). of Texas, Austin) account of the bruising scientific race to create a vaccine are Jonas Salk, a proponent of a "killed-virus" vaccine, and Albert Sabin, who championed the "live-virus" vaccine. The key protagonists in historian Oshinsky's (Univ. Gave a starred review to Jeffrey Kluger's Splendid Solution: Jonas Salk and the Conquest of Polio ![]() This is the year the World Health Organization has targeted for the elimination of polio worldwide, and 2005 is the 50th anniversary of the polio vaccine-which publishers are celebrating, perhaps prematurely. It isat the same timea hospital rooted in tradition. The hospital with the first ambulance corps, first in-hospital medical school, first pathology lab. ![]() A case of polio in Mecca during this year's hajj and the threat of the disease spreading received major attention in the New York Times. In Oshinsky’s telling, Bellevue is a hospital of firsts. ![]()
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