Selling Science : Polio and the Promise of Gamma Globulin
Mawdsley, Stephen E. (2016) Selling Science : Polio and the Promise of Gamma Globulin. Critical Issues in Health and Medicine . Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, New Jersey. ISBN 978-0-8135-7439-4 (http://www.selling-science.org/)
Full text not available in this repository.Abstract
Today, when many parents seem reluctant to have their children vaccinated, even with long proven medications, the Salk vaccine trial, which enrolled millions of healthy children to test an unproven medical intervention, seems nothing short of astonishing. In Selling Science, medical historian Stephen E. Mawdsley recounts the untold story of the first large clinical trial to control polio using healthy children—55,000 healthy children—revealing how this long-forgotten incident cleared the path for Salk’s later trial. Mawdsley describes how, in the early 1950s, Dr. William Hammon and the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis launched a pioneering medical experiment on a previously untried scale. Conducted on over 55,000 healthy children in Texas, Utah, Iowa, and Nebraska, this landmark study assessed the safety and effectiveness of a blood component, gamma globulin, to prevent paralytic polio. The value of the proposed experiment was questioned by many prominent health professionals as it harbored potential health risks, but as Mawdsley points out, compromise and coercion moved it forward. And though the trial returned dubious results, it was presented to the public as a triumph and used to justify a federally sanctioned mass immunization study on thousands of families between 1953 and 1954. Indeed, the concept, conduct, and outcome of the GG study were sold to health professionals, medical researchers, and the public at each stage. At a time when most Americans trusted scientists, their mutual encounter under the auspices of conquering disease was shaped by politics, marketing, and at times, deception. Drawing on oral history interviews, medical journals, newspapers, meeting minutes, and private institutional records, Selling Science sheds light on the ethics of scientific conduct, and on the power of marketing to shape public opinion about medical experimentation.
ORCID iDs
Mawdsley, Stephen E. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5662-8513;-
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Item type: Book ID code: 56482 Dates: DateEvent1 August 2016Published16 May 2016AcceptedSubjects: Social Sciences > Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform Department: Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences (HaSS) Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 23 May 2016 15:26 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 15:46 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/56482