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Success of Jonas Salk's polio vaccine...

Item # 727265
March 12, 1954
MINNEAPOLIS MORNING TRIBUNE., March 12, 1954 

* Jonas Salk changes medical history
* Polio vaccine success announced

The front page has a historic and early report on the success of the polio vaccine with a four column heading: "Polio Shots May Give Safety for Life" (see images) This was a very early report of clinical trial successes, and it would be 13 months later that a formal announcement would be made of a definitive polio vaccine being successful.
Complete with 28 pages, light toning and minor wear at the margins, tiny binding holes along the spine, generally nice.

Background: On March 11, 1954, a pivotal public announcement signaled that Dr. Jonas Salk’s experimental "killed-virus" polio vaccine was safe enough to move forward, laying the immediate groundwork for the largest public health experiment in American history. Published at a time when polio was the nation's most feared seasonal epidemic—paralyzing tens of thousands of children annually—news reports from this exact date carry immense historical rarity and significance, capturing a fleeting moment of cautious optimism just weeks before the massive 1.8 million-child "Polio Pioneers" field trials officially commenced in April 1954. The ultimate success of these trials, announced a year later, caused U.S. polio cases to plummet from tens of thousands to just a few hundred within a decade. Consequently, any original publication or artifact from March 11, 1954, serves as a scarce, real-time chronicle of a turning point in modern medicine, catching a terrified society on the absolute precipice of eradicating a devastating disease.