Medicine: WHO WILL GET THE VACCINE

  • Share

THE heartening report from Ann Arbor last week raised an urgent question for every U.S. parent: "Can my children get shots this year to keep them safe from polio?" For about 30 million (more than half the U.S. population under 18), the answer will be yes. Among them, a vast majority of children up to ten years of age will get the shots in one way or another. Originally, the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis had intended to offer the vaccine in a series of three closely spaced shots within five weeks of each other, as was done in last year's nationwide test. On that basis, the foundation ordered 27 million cc. of vaccine last winter (TIME, Nov.1). This amount was to be given free to some 9,000,000 (children and pregnant women) most threatened by polio. At the same time, the manufacturing companies also decided to make an identical amount of vaccine on their own account, to be sold commercially. But last week, Dr. Salk upset everybody's calculations by reporting that it is better not to give all three shots within five weeks. More effective to build up immunity, Dr. Salk has found, will be two shots this spring, within a month, and a third after at least seven months. As a result, with only two rather than three shots needed for the first big inoculation, there is a surplus left from the amount originally ordered by the foundation—a surplus that can be used to inoculate half again as many subjects as originally planned. The foundation has decided to let the manufacturing companies sell this surplus commercially. (The foundation is thus actually buying one-third less vaccine, will use the savings of $3,000,000 to help pay for the care of victims still crippled from last year's and previous years' polio epidemics.) Who Gets It Free? The foundation will distribute the vaccine free to these groups: ¶Children (7,000,000) in the first and second grades. ¶ 210,000 "polio pioneers" of 1954 in eleven states who got a useless salt solution as a placebo instead of real vaccine in last year's test. ¶1,180,000 pioneers in 33 states, in the first and third grades last year, who were "observed controls" but got no injection. ¶440,000 pioneers who received vaccine last year but on a less effective, condensed schedule (they will get one shot as a booster). These groups will get their shots from volunteer doctors and nurses at inoculation centers now being set up across the nation in schools and other public buildings. As soon as each batch of vaccine is checked by federal health authorities, it is being shipped to the centers—first to Southern states, where the polio season starts earliest. In many states the vaccinations began this week. Parents' permission is needed for all shots. Who Can Buy It? The surplus turned back to the manufacturers, plus the companies' own supplies, forms a probable pool of 42 million cc. for commercial distribution, or enough for two-ishot inoculations for 21 million individuals. How this pool is to be distributed is at present left to state and local officials. Priorities are being drawn up and the order suggested in most states is something like this: Kindergarten pupils. Children in the third through eighth grades. Pregnant women. Children aged one to five. Youths from 14 to 20. Theoretically, these groups will have to pay for the vaccine and have it administered by private physicians ($2 a

Time.com on Digg

POWERED BY digg

Quotes of the Day »

EXCERPT FROM DOCUMENTS given by the CIA to British intelligence officials about Ethiopian-born British resident Binyam Mohamed, who alleges he was tortured at the behest of U.S. authorities after his 2002 arrest in Pakistan
For use in rail of Articles page or Section Fronts pages. Duplicate and change name as necesssary to distinguish.