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Vaccination in America

Medical Science and Children’s Welfare

Richard J. Altenbaugh

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Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Regional- und Ländergeschichte

Beschreibung

The success of the polio vaccine was a remarkable breakthrough for medical science, effectively eradicating a dreaded childhood disease. It was also the largest medical experiment to use American schoolchildren. Richard J. Altenbaugh examines an uneasy conundrum in the history of vaccination: even as vaccines greatly mitigate the harm that infectious disease causes children, the process of developing these vaccines put children at great risk as research subjects. In the first half of the twentieth century, in the face of widespread resistance to vaccines, public health officials gradually medicalized American culture through mass media, public health campaigns, and the public education system. Schools supplied tens of thousands of young human subjects to researchers, school buildings became the main dispensaries of the polio antigen, and the mass immunization campaign that followed changed American public health policy in profound ways. Tapping links between bioethics, education, public health, and medical research, this book raises fundamental questions about child welfare and the tension between private and public responsibility that still fuel anxieties around vaccination today. 

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Richard J. Altenbaugh
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Schlagwörter

antivaccination movement, Progressive Era public health, Nuremberg Code, children in medical research studies, public suspicion toward governmental vaccination policy, smallpox inoculation, Salk vaccine trials, history of the polio vaccine, MMR vaccine policy in America, MMR and autism, federal policy childhood vaccination, history of vaccine policy, child welfare medical research, infantile paralysis, mass immunization, cowpox vaccine, poliomyelitis, us politics, history of public education