Essay on Polio

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    If I was a polio patient like Peg in the book “Small Steps”, I would fight the disease off. I would try to fight the sickness off, even if I had Tommy's type of Polio. Before anything, I would think of how many people that have fought Polio and how many unfortunately didn't make it. That would encourage me to try my hardest. The first reason why I would fight Polio off is because, I wouldn’t want to be known for “The girl with Polio” or something along those lines. I would want to be known as “The

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    Polio was deemed one of the most dreaded diseases in the twentieth century. This crippling diseases was mainly impacting children between the ages of six months to five years. Some theorist believe that it was more common for a infant that was passed the age of six months to develop poliomyelitis because Poliomyelitis is a contagious viral disease that is transmitted via person to person contact the mouth and than multiplies in the gastrointestinal tract. Some of the symptoms were either non

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    REVIEW POLIO AN AMERICAN STORY BY DAVID M.OCHINSKY PHAR 6605 Pharmaceutical Industry structure and government regulations PRESENTED BY: Asakiran Nadikatla PRESENTED TO: Gerard Cleaves Polio an American story is a scholarly readable and informative book which covers the lives of many American eminent scientists who struggled a lot to eradicate polio. This book mainly focuses on the mid twentieth century where the people are very eager to find a vaccine to eradicate polio .This book

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    In the late 1950s, several groups of researches and scientists were developing some vaccines against polio. At that time, polio was still an epidemic worldwide disease. One of these vaccines, made by Dr. Hilary Koprowski MD (1916-2013) was used to test it on millions of people in Africa, after first being trailed in the USA. The vaccine virus was grown in tissue cultures taken from macaque monkeys before being introduced to millions of people , who were largely living in Burundi, Rwanda, and Congo

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    outbreak of polio, a potentially life-threatening disease, in the United States affecting most of the population (“What is Polio”). The oliovirus invades the brain and spinal cord that causes that dysfunction within the muscles and can eventually cause paralysis. The virus enters through the mouth and reproduces in the throat and intestines. The virus can be transmitted through person-to-person contact such as coughing or sneezing or by feces. The most common way that children developed polio was through

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    What is Polio? Poliomyelitis, commonly referred to as Polio, is an incapacitating and potentially fatal, infectious virus. Although it is rare to see someone suffering from the disease, in some countries, such as Nigeria, Pakistan, and Afghanistan, the virus still exists. (Kids Health 1) Before the first vaccine was created, Polio was a threat to all Americans across the nation. The dangerous virus attacked people from all age ranges and left permanent damage on all of its victims. Luckily, at the

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    As recently at the 1950's, polio was a common disease in the United States.  It was first detected as early as 1789 when doctors recorded small outbreaks of an odd disease accompanied by fever, paralysis and a tendency to attack children.  It wasn't until the summer of 1916, however, that the public began to pay attention.  Twenty-seven thousand people were paralyzed that summer from polio, with most of the victims being children.  This is why the disease was called infantile

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    Polio or poliomyelitis is an infectious disease that is caused by the poliovirus. The poliovirus is a virus that only infects humans and it lives in a person’s throat, intestines and feces. The etiological factors that are associated with polio are feces containing the virus, food and water contaminated by fecal matter with the disease, and through the sneeze or cough of an infected individual. The primary form of contracting polio is through fecal-oral transmission. A person can have feces on their

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    Roosevelt”). Polio is a virus that is usually harmless and unnoticeable, but sometimes can be very severe and deadly. Polio was very common at one point in time but current day is becoming very rare. Franklin D. Roosevelt, otherwise known as FDR, was inspirational due to he never gave up and made himself believe that his paralysis in his legs was not permanent. Franklin D. Roosevelt had polio and was determined to get a cure to help himself and others who also had polio. (Draper 21) In fact polio can be

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    Salk was an American medical researcher, physician, and virologist who developed the first safe and effective polio vaccine. Before this vaccine was created, polio vaccines usually contained live, weakened forms of the virus, but Salk developed a vaccine that contained an inactivated, dead form of polio, the first of its kind. Until the Salk vaccine was introduced on April 12, 1955, polio was considered the most frightening health problem in the United Sates. Just 3 years before the vaccine was released

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