will be solved when a vaccine is finally found,
and lets hope it goes a tad better that the fiasco of the 1976 ‘swine flu affair’, above President Gerald
Ford receives a swine flu inoculation from White House physician William Lukash
in 1976. (David Hume Kennerly/Gerald R. Ford Library), in early
1976, several soldiers at Fort Dix came down with an illness that was
identified as a novel swine flu. Testing showed 200 recruits carried the virus.
The US government swung into action, and President Gerald Ford announced that a
vaccine would be developed by fall. And it was. But the program became mired in
controversy, scaring Americans away from the needle. When the vaccine was made
available in Pittsburgh, three people who got it died of heart attacks, from
the article,
‘The deaths
in Pittsburgh would be the start. While there was no causal evidence linking
these deaths to the vaccine, they triggered many people to come forward
claiming evidence of ill health, falsely blaming the inoculation. Nine states
shut down their programs, with such a high-profile roll-out, closely attached
to the White House, many journalists unused to covering science reported only
what they saw and heard from the public, without interrogating whether it was
linked. Tabloid journalists gave few column inches to epidemiological nuance.
What they should have looked for was “excess mortality” – deaths that would not
have happened otherwise – but the daily emerging tales of unexplained heart
attacks, distraught nurses, and political failure won more attention’
to read the story of the 1976 swine flu vaccine program at BBC Future, click onto the blue link, and hope that if and when a vaccine is developed all goes well.
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