A TRUE HERO

I tend to post quite a bit of negative material around here. I simply can’t believe, nor can I stomach what is happening in this country. It’s easy to forget people that are my personal heroes. Jonas Salk is one of those people.

When I was a kid, I met people that had polio. It rendered their arms or legs completely non-functional. Some people were in an “iron lung”; it was a truly frightening disease.

Lucky for me, and everyone else in this world, Jonas Salk was alive, and found a vaccine.

Our healthcare system used to be “not for profit”, people could afford healthcare, and thanks to religious-based hospitals, nobody was turned away, and nobody went bankrupt trying to stay alive. Then the third-party payer system was invented, and government got involved in healthcare. Greed took over, and everybody and anybody tried to get in on the action.

Health insurance companies, instead of assisting in healthcare, have siphoned tens of billions out in profits every year while denying life-saving care. Pharmaceutical companies make billions, as do hospital chains with their massive administrative staffs. 600,000 people declare bankruptcy every year because of healthcare bills, all of which had health insurance. And now we have Obamacare, written by bureaucrats and health insurance companies that will siphon off billions more to inept government agencies and HMO’s.

Greed has absolutely ruined healthcare. Yet, one of the greatest medical pioneers, Jonas Salk, gave away his discovery virtually “free of charge”. There’s many good videos on Jonas Salk, like the one below. He wasn’t interested in profit or patenting his vaccine, it was a gift from his brilliant mind to all of humanity.

Some day, we’ll look back and see there were people that made a difference in this world. People like Ron Paul, and people like Jonas Salk, that had everyone’s best interests at heart, and not how much money they could make or how the could chisel the common man. There might still be some hope left when men like this are one-day revered again.

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About Jonas Salk

When Dr. Jonas Salk envisioned the idea of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, it was with the idea of creating a vibrant, intellectual community, dedicated to pursuing the kinds of scientific achievements that had made him an international figure only five years before.
Jonas Salk

Salk came to La Jolla following a career in clinical medicine and virology research. After obtaining his M.D. degree at the New York University School of Medicine in 1939, he was a staff physician at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City.

He then joined his mentor, Dr. Thomas Francis, as a research fellow at the University of Michigan. There, he worked to develop an influenza vaccine at the behest of the U.S. Army. In 1947, he was appointed director of the Virus Research Laboratory at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

It was in Pittsburgh that Salk began to put together the techniques that would lead to his polio vaccine. He was already struck by the principle of vaccination: that if the body is artificially exposed to a harmless form of a disease virus, the body will produce antibodies that resist or kill the dangerous form of the virus if later exposed. In contrast to the Pasteurian dogma of the times, Salk believed that protective immunity could be induced without infection by a living virus such as those used in the vaccines against smallpox and rabies. In developing the influenza vaccine, he had observed that protection could be established using noninfectious, inactivated (killed) viruses.

Salk’s research caught the attention of Basil O’Connor, president of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis (now known as the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation). The organization decided to fund Salk’s efforts to develop a killed virus vaccine against the most frightening scourge of the time: paralytic poliomyelitis.

Using formaldehyde, Salk killed the poliovirus, but kept it intact enough to trigger the necessary immune response. His work was enabled by a key achievement made by Harvard researcher John Enders. Enders and his team had figured out how to grow poliovirus in test tubes. This step was necessary to obtain the quantities of pure virus needed to develop and manufacture a vaccine.

The resulting injectable vaccine was tested first in monkeys and then in patients at the D.T. Watson Home for Crippled Children (now The Watson Institute), who already had polio.

Next, vaccine was given to volunteers who had not had polio, including Salk, his laboratory staff, his wife and their children. The volunteers developed anti-polio antibodies and none had bad reactions to the vaccine. Finally, in 1954, national testing began on one million children, ages six to nine, who became known as the Polio Pioneers: half received the vaccine, and half received a placebo. One-third of the children, who lived in areas where vaccine was not available, were observed to evaluate the background level of polio in this age group. On April 12, 1955, the results were announced: the vaccine was safe and effective. In the two years before vaccine was widely available, the average number of polio cases in the U.S. was more than 45,000. By 1962, that number had dropped to 910. Salk never patented the vaccine, nor did he earn any money from his discovery, preferring to see it distributed as widely as possible.

Given the fear and anxiety that polio caused during the first half of the century, the vaccine’s success in 1955 made Salk an international hero, and he spent the late 1950s refining the vaccine and establishing the scientific principles behind it. By 1960, however, Salk was ready to move on. Salk’s dream was to create an independent research center where a community of scholars interested in different aspects of biology – the study of life – could come together to follow their curiosity.

For more than a year, Salk toured the country in search of the right location for his research center. For San Diego mayor Charles Dail, a polio survivor, bringing the Salk Institute to San Diego was a personal quest. Dail showed Salk 27 acres on a mesa in La Jolla, just west of the proposed site for the new University of California campus then planned for San Diego. In June 1960, in a special referendum, the citizens of San Diego voted overwhelmingly to give the land for Salk’s dream. With initial financial support from the National Foundation/March of Dimes, Salk and Kahn were able to proceed. To bring his concept of free-flowing labs and quiet studies to life, Salk recruited architect Louis Kahn. The resulting collaboration is a series of elegant concrete structures that overlook the Pacific Ocean.

Under Salk’s direction, the Institute began research activities in 1963 and gradually expanded its faculty and the areas of their research interests. Salk’s personal research activities included multiple sclerosis and autoimmune diseases, cancer immunology, improved manufacture and standardization of killed poliovirus vaccine, and the development of an AIDS vaccine. He published several philosophical books and advocated cooperative rather than confrontational approaches to addressing human needs.

Completed in 1967, the original Institute buildings were declared an historic landmark in 1991. During Salk’s tenure as Founding Director, a major building addition consistent with his and Louis Kahn’s original architectural vision was designed and constructed. The Institute now has 61 faculty members and a scientific of staff of more than 850, with labs that house research on everything from cancer, diabetes and birth defects to Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, AIDS and plant biology.

The Salk Institute truly reflects the broad, humanistic interests of its namesake.

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20 Comments
bluestem
bluestem
November 20, 2013 9:34 pm

Nice article AWD, Very few like Salk today John

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
November 20, 2013 10:34 pm

A Jew who gave proprietary information away? I find that hard to believe.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
November 20, 2013 10:52 pm

You will recall it was Reagan who gave into Kaiser to allow the development of HMO’s. It’s been all downhill from there with the middleman firmly in place when we really need Single-payer, “Medicare for all”. Allow people under 65 to “opt-in” on a graduated scale according to age/income. Eliminate the “no-negotiation” provision on Medicare drugs and allow importation from other countries. That’ll show ’em!

Hollow man
Hollow man
November 20, 2013 11:01 pm

Thanks. I love reading such stuff. It is the gift of hope. They are out there still most choose Madonna to follow.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
November 20, 2013 11:31 pm

Yanno, AWD, I fling and you return.

Thats okay. Its that middleman between us, who isnt trained, nor knows my pain, that only sees dollars from both of us, that I really dislike.

Llpoh
Llpoh
November 20, 2013 11:57 pm

Damn those worthless Jews.

Kill Bill
Kill Bill
November 21, 2013 12:23 am

Damn those worthless Jews. -llpoh

Not sure where you are going here llpoh.

Llpoh
Llpoh
November 21, 2013 2:53 am

Sarcasm off.

Welshman
Welshman
November 21, 2013 6:08 am

Z,

Deal with it.

AWD,

Thanks, enjoyed the article.

flash
flash
November 21, 2013 7:07 am

Great article AWD, and now I must ask ( no snark intended) when will the MD’s step up and say enough of this bullshit and force deregulation of the bureaucratic bombast or will they just peacefully go down with the collapse as willful participants?

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
November 21, 2013 7:33 am

I know this will earn me about a billion thumbs down but I view disease and illness as efficient and indiscriminate forms of population control. Just like everything else man does, vaccinations and a fair bit of health care enables man to continually live beyond his means. Is that any better than spending our grandchildren into debt.

I love life as much as the next guy but what exactly is the point of extending lifespans to 70, 80, 100 or even 120 years as I keep reading about? I’m not discounting Salk’s talent or generosity but where do you draw the line and who do you trust to draw it?

Thanks AWD. A positive article out of you is a rarity and appreciated. I’m burnt out on doom which is why I appreciated the Orlov piece mentioning Carolyn Baker book, Collapsing Consciously. I’m no pacifist but we need to find a peaceful way to endure this Great Regression or we’re simply fucked.
I_S

flash
flash
November 21, 2013 7:50 am

The good and bad of the smart..

comment image

flash
flash
November 21, 2013 11:46 am

Thanks for the reply confirming my suspicion, AWD.

But FWIW, the medical industry is like any other.Those inside would rather see their industry thus their livelihood destroyed rather than take stand against the dim-witted collectivist fools that control Federal bureaucracy .Stick a fork in this bitch, It’s done.

Billy
Billy
November 21, 2013 6:06 pm

AWD

“I’ve never met two doctors that can agree on anything. Five in a room is anarchy. We are utterly unable to band together…”

See, this is where a doctor like Greg House would come in handy.

SSS
SSS
November 21, 2013 6:50 pm

“A Jew who gave proprietary information away? I find that hard to believe.”
—-Zara

Funny, and I think it was intended to be just that. Zara can correct me if I’m wrong.

Informative, AWD. Thanks. Salk WAS a hero. Still is.

He was a little late in saving the crush I had on my elementary school sweetheart. It was 1953. Her name was Jeannie, and she had brilliant emerald green eyes. We were both in third grade. Polio took her in less than a week.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
November 21, 2013 7:00 pm

SSS, of course it was meant to be funny! Anyone who thought otherwise is an idiot.

a cruel accountant
a cruel accountant
November 22, 2013 11:48 am

AWD

I heard that many doctors are going to a cash only practice and charging significantly less than doctors that take insurance. Can you comment?