| The Truth About the Polio Vaccines 
 Chicago Tribune - March 5, 1961
 
 Do Salk Shots Really Prevent Polio? Should We Keep Using Salk Inoculations? How Good Are the New Oral Vaccines?
 
 everlyreport.com
 
 Read the whole article, but these excerpt are especially important:
 
  Discussing the “very misleading way” in which the Salk vaccine data  has  been handled, was Bernard G. Greenberg, Ph. D., head of the  department  of bio-statistics of the University of North Carolina, school  of  public health, and former chairman of the committee on evaluation  and  standards of the American Public Health association.
 “There  has been a rise during the last two years in the incidence  rates of  paralytic poliomyelitis in the United States,” stressed Dr.  Greenberg.  “The rate in 1958 was about 50 per cent higher than that for  1957, and  in 1959 about 80 per cent higher than that in 1958. If 1959 is  compared  with the low year of 1957, the increase is about 170 per cent.
 
 “As a result of this trend in paralytic poliomyelitis, various   officials in the public health service, official health agencies, and   one large voluntary health organization have been utilizing the press,   radio, and television and other media to sound an alarm bell in an   heroic effort to persuade more Americans to take advantage of the   vaccination procedures available to them,” said Dr. Greenberg.
 
 “Altho such a program might be desirable until live virus vaccines   are available to us on more than an experimental basis, the   misinformation and unjustified conclusions about the cause of this rise   in incidence give concern to those interested in a sound program based   on logic and fact rather than personal opinion and prejudice.
 
 “One of the most obvious pieces of misinformation being delivered to   the American public is that the 50 per cent rise in paralytic   poliomyelitis in 1958 and the real accelerated increase in 1959 have   been caused by persons failing to be vaccinated. This represents a   certain amount of double talk and an unwillingness to face facts and to   evaluate the true effectiveness of the Salk vaccine,” said Dr.   Greenberg.
 
 The number of persons over 2 years of age in 1960  who have not been  vaccinated cannot be more and must be considerably  less than the number  who had no vaccination in 1957, Dr. Greenberg  pointed out. Then how can  it be claimed that it is the large number of  unvaccinated persons who  are causing the increase in polio, when there  were a larger number of  unvaccinated individuals in 1957 when the  vaccine was given credit for  reducing rates of the disease.
 
 “A scientific examination of the data and the manner in which the  data  was manipulated will reveal that the true effectiveness of the  present  Salk vaccine is unknown and greatly overrated,” Dr. Greenberg  stressed.
 
 Why was there such a tremendous reduction in reported rates of   paralytic polio in 1955, 1956, and 1957? Much of this highly publicized   decrease was a statistical illusion, said Dr. Greenberg.
 
 Prior to 1954, any physician who reported a case of paralytic   poliomyelitis was doing his patient a favor because funds were available   to help pay his medical expenses. At that time, most health  departments  used a definition of paralytic poliomyelitis which  specified ” partial  or complete paralysis of one or more muscle groups,  detected on two  examinations at least 24 hours apart.” Laboratory  confirmation and the  presence of residual paralysis were not required.
 
 In 1955, these criteria were changed. Now, unless there is paralysis   lasting at least 60 days after the onset of the disease, it is not   diagnosed as paralytic polio.
 
 During this period, too,  “Coxsackie virus infections and aseptic  meningitis have been  distinguished from paralytic poliomyelitis,”  explained Dr. Greenberg.  “Prior to 1954, large numbers of these cases  undoubtedly were  mislabeled as paralytic polio.”
 
 Thus, because the definition  of the disease was changed and two  similar diseases virtually ruled  out, the number of cases of polio  reported was sure to decrease in the  1955-57 period, vaccine or not.  Then, too, physicians are reluctant  today to diagnose paralytic  poliomyelitis in a vaccinated child without  thoro laboratory tests, thus  eliminating most of the false positive  cases commonly reported in the  pre-1954 period.
 
 “As a result  of these changes in both diagnosis, and diagnostic  methods, the rates  of paralytic poliomyelitis plummeted from the early  1950s to a low in  1957,” said Dr. Greenberg. The recent increase in the  disease, despite  improved diagnostic methods, he believes, is due to a  long term,  increasing trend in the occurrence of polio.
 
 “Without doubt,  the increasing trend has been reduced to some extent  by the Salk  vaccine,” explained Dr. Greenberg. ” Nevertheless, the Salk  vaccine has  ‘ limited effectiveness in its ability further to reduce  this trend. .  . . Any future substantial reduction in this trend will  require a more  potent vaccine, not simply vaccinating more people.
 
 “Today  it may be a serious mistake to be ultra-conservative in  accepting the  various new live vaccines under the impression that there  is no hurry  because an almost equivalent immunizer exists in the Salk  vaccine. A  delay in accepting and promoting better vaccines will be a  costly one.  There must be immediate pressure applied to determine  whether or not  the new vaccines are more effective, so that we do not  cling, for  sentimental or personal reasons, to an older vaccine whose  true  effectiveness is today unknown.”
  The most accurate way we  have of determining the effectiveness of   vaccine (except by direct  exposure to the disease) is to measure the   levels of neutralizing  antibodies in the blood, explained Herald R.  Cox,  Sc. D., director of  virus research at Lederle Laboratories and   president elect of the  Society of American Bacteriologists. We do not   know, he said, the exact  level of antibodies necessary to protect   against paralytic polio.Tom
 Herman Kleinman, M. D., an  epidemiologist from the Minnesota   department of health, pointed out  that in antibody studies on children   who have received three or more  doses of Salk vaccine, he has found more   than half do not have  antibodies to two of the three types of polio   strains used in the Salk  vaccine. Twenty per cent lack antibodies to a   third type.
 
 “This is a very disturbing fact,” said Dr.  Kleinman. “If polio   antibodies mean anything in respect to protection,  then I am forced to   conclude that much of the Salk vaccine we have been  using is useless.”
 
 Dr. Kleinman also commented on the  “changing concept of polio” and   said physicians were reluctant to  diagnose the disease without   overwhelming evidence. He called the  insistence on a 60 day duration of   paralysis in defining paralytic  polio ” silly.”
 
 Dr. Cox,  who has worked in the virus field  since 1929 and was the  first person  to prove that a killed vaccine  could be made, commented on  some of the  problems of producing a potent,  killed-virus vaccine.
 
 “We  are now learning, not only in the  United States, but in Israel,   England, and Denmark, that the killed  product does a fairly good job of   producing antibodies against Type II  poliovirus,” said Dr. Cox. “But   Type II represents only about 3 per  cent of paralytic cases thruout  the  world. The killed vaccine does a  poor job against Type I, however,   which, causes 85 per cent of  paralytic cases, and against Type III,   which causes about 12 per cent.
 
 “In  other words, the killed  vaccine is doing its best job against the   least important type. It  took time to find this out. It was proven in   Israel in 1958, when it  had its big Type I epidemic. They did not see   any difference in  protection between the vaccinated and the   unvaccinated. Last year in  Massachusetts during a Type III outbreak,   there were more paralytic  cases in the triple vaccinates than in the   unvaccinated.”
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