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Life After Brown
This Day in History......
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<blockquote data-quote="moreluck" data-source="post: 2164297" data-attributes="member: 1246"><p>April 26, 1954</p><p> On this day in 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, whereby neither the patient nor attending doctor knew if the inoculation was the vaccine or a placebo. On April 12, 1955, researchers announced the vaccine was safe and effective and it quickly became a standard part of childhood immunizations in America. In the ensuing decades, polio vaccines would all but wipe out the highly contagious disease in the Western Hemisphere.</p><p></p><p>(I remember going thru a drive-in bank lane and receiving the vaccine in a sugar cube in a little paper cup.)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="moreluck, post: 2164297, member: 1246"] April 26, 1954 On this day in 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, whereby neither the patient nor attending doctor knew if the inoculation was the vaccine or a placebo. On April 12, 1955, researchers announced the vaccine was safe and effective and it quickly became a standard part of childhood immunizations in America. In the ensuing decades, polio vaccines would all but wipe out the highly contagious disease in the Western Hemisphere. (I remember going thru a drive-in bank lane and receiving the vaccine in a sugar cube in a little paper cup.) [/QUOTE]
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