Jonas Salk
Jonas Salk Jonas Salk From the beginning of mankind, man has looked for cures of illness. Jonas Salk found a cure for one of the worst illnesses in the history of man, polio. Jonas Salk's polio vaccine was a great discovery of his time, and it is still being used today to eradicate polio worldwide. Dr. Salk is also known for other medical discoveries. He was a quiet man who lived a rough childhood. He was not looking for fame, instead, it found him. During the time before the vaccine, many people, mostly parents with young children, were very scared. Dr. Salk's vaccine was a great relief to everyone. Yet, today polio is still affecting people, even after receiving the vaccine. Just as polio is still around today, so is the flu virus. Dr. Salk did invent a flu vaccine to help in keeping the flu virus at a low. At this time, Jonas Salk is working on a vaccine for the most feared disease of today, AIDS. Jonas Edward Salk was born to Polish-Jewish immigrants, Daniel B. and Dora Salk, on October 28, 1914. Dr. Salk was born in upper Manhattan, but then moved to the Bronx where he went to school. "His first spoken words were, 'Dirt, dirt,' instead of the conventional, uninspired 'No, no' or 'Momma.' He was a responsive child." Dr. Salk was "raised on the verge of poverty." Although his family was poor, he did do exceptionally well in all the levels of education. He graduated from Townsend Harris High School in 1929 and then went on to the College of the City of New York where he received his B.S. in 1934. He finally earned his M.D. degree in June of 1939 from the New York University College of Medicine. Jonas Salk was "a somewhat withdrawn and indistinct figure" but was always reading whatever he could lay his hands on. Dr. Salk went on to intern for two years at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. He then moved on to the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor as a research professor in the Department of Epidemology. It was here that he found a vaccine for influenza, commonly called the flu, while he worked with Dr. Thomas Francis Jr. In 1947, when the University of Pittsburgh expanded, he went to work there with a part in his contract that said he could go back to Ann Arbor if things didn't work out, no questions asked. At this school he became what he is known as today, a bacteriologist. It was here that he developed the polio vaccination. Dr. Salk then left his field of endeavor because of all the fame and ridicule from his colleagues. In 1963, Jonas Salk set up the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California. This facility was made possible through funds from the March of Dimes. At this time, he is eighty years old and working on a cure for AIDS. "Poliomyelitis, commonly known as polio, is an acute viral infection." Polio is the "inflammation of the gray anterior matter of the spinal cord." The inflammation would destroy the nerve cells. As a result of the lost nerve cells, the muscles that those nerve cells controlled would no longer be functional. Polio has long been a disease in this world. Mummies with one leg shorter than the other, and a memorial that shows a priest with one leg withered are two examples of ancient artifacts possibly proving the polio virus's existence as far back as 1500 B.C. The first written record of an outbreak of polio is in 1835. It occurred in Workshop, England with the record stating, "Four remarkable cases of suddenly induced paralysis, occurring in children..." Nevertheless, it was not until 1916 that the United States became well aware of the polio dilemma. In that year, there were 27,363 cases of polio with 7,179 resulting in death. Unfortunately, the problem didn't go away; in New York City there were 9,023 cases with 2,448 deaths. "The epidemics peaked in the United States from 1942 to 1943,...In 1950, there were more than 33,000 United States cases." The state of Florida was one of the many states that was hit hard with polio. The director of the Florida Department of Public Health, Dr. Wilson Sowder, said, "I have not ...This is ONLY a preview of the article. If you would like to view the entire document, you must subscribe to Electronic References. Please register below now! Get This Full Article After Registration
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