FanDA&FOCUS The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 14, 1995 - 3 It i S safe, effective, and potent - The 1955 press release announcing the results of Dr Thomas Francis's field trials. CONQUERING Jonas Salk returned Wednesday to speak at Rackhant Audiorium, the location of perhaps the greatest medical announcement Of the century: The polio vaccine is y effective! STEPHANIE GRACE LIM/Daily 40 years ago, Salk's announcement eased fears throughout the world By Megan Schimpf Daily Staff Reporter * the buzz in Rackham Auditorium grew from a whisper to cheers of relief on April 12, 1955, the Michigan Daily's presses began whirring on the first floor of the StuSlent Publications Building. Louis Graff, the media liaison for Dr. Thomas Francis, rode the elevator to the media room on the fourth floor of the Rackham Building. The doors opened to a mob of 200 journalists waiting to see the first line of his press release, which said that the field trials of the polio vaccine had been successful. With that news, the world escaped from the threat of the disease that paralyzed millions of children with an unknown method of transmission. Scientists and reporters crammed Rackham Auditorium that day for the invitation-only announcement. Francis presented his results in a 164-page report titled: "Evaluation of 1954 Field Trial of Poliomyelitis Vaccine Sum- mary Report." The Daily printed an extra edition The Daily ran an extra edition ~the morning of April 12, 1955, which went on sale 10 minutes after the famous announcement at Rackham Auditorium. With two stories ready to run, a hand signal to a staff member at a phone booth sent the word to the editors, who put the appropriate plates on the press in the basement of the Student Publications Building, making the Daily the first newspaper to report the vaccine's success in the field trials. The text of the article appears in the box below. By LEE MARKS Foundation for Salk vaccine works. University of ~ After months of anticipation, an anx- Financed by ious world today heard Dr. Thomas Francis, in March of I Jr. report that the vaccine is between 80 and' report brought t ~90 per cent effective. ion and anxiet It is absolutely safe. 'I .Speaking at a meeting of more than 500 One fear voi scientists and physicians, Dr. Francis outtobeunfoun tclaimed the vaccine had produced "an ex- "incredibly saf~ tremely successful effect" among bulbar Reactions v patients in areas whiere vaccine and a harm- only .4 per cen less substituite had been sued interchange- suffering mino ably. small per cent ( There is no doubt that the fight against reactions. polio is nearing an end. Children can defi- A second c ~nitely be inoculated successfully against tection, also the crippling effects of paralytic polio, Dr. Francis' report Francis' report proved, maintained witl Dr. Francis delivered his historic 113 five months," w page report at a meeting at Rackham Lec- were obtained ture hall, sponsored jointly by the National 4 0. v 'All u ~r ~ I~~U~rf.: EF. ummT I ~~t 6i 1 do not want %ndue emphasis to be placed on my contribution. I was one of many. I happened to be in the right place at %he right time." -Jonas Salk April 12, 1995 that morning marking the event. The announce- ment came on the 10th anniversary of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's death. Roosevelt, who suffered from polio and was paralyzed from the waist down, founded the Foundation for Infantile Paralysis in 1938 to "lead, direct and unify" the march toward a vaccine. The foundation funded Infantile Paralysis and the Michigan. close to one million dollars Dimes funds, Dr. Francis' o an end months of specula- y. Incredibly Safe' ced by some scientists turned ded.The vaccine was termed Fe." were nearly negligible with t of the vaccinated children r reactions. An amazingly '0.004-0.006) suffered major oncern, persistence of pro- appeared unfounded. Dr. declared, "The -effect was h but moderate decline after hen good antibody responses from vaccination. Other Findings The report showed several significant auxiliary findings. The vaccine's effective- ness was more clearly seen when measured against the more severs cases of.the dis- ease. Findings in Canada and Finland sup- port the report, although data was limited. Only one out 233 inoculated children developed the disease while eight out of 244 children receiving placebo contracted the disease from family contact, showing that the vaccinations protected against fam- ily exposure. A total of 1013 cases of polio developed during the study out of.a test group of 1,829,916 children. Control Results Where vaccine was interchanged with an inert substance, in placebo control areas, 428 out of 749,236 children contracted the disease. In observed control areas where only pictures of children's hospital wards filled with iron lungs are relegated to museums and textbooks. Other viruses have come to the forefront, while the threat of polio in the United States is confined to the past. The vaccine has eradicated the virus in the United States, and there have been no reported outbreaks since 1979. Salk said at the anniversary ceremony Wednesday that international eradication is a realistic goal. "The eradication of the polio virus will undoubtedly occur sooner than 40 years from now," he said. The World Health Organization has set the year 2000 as its deadline for the worldwide elimination of polio. The virus still infects children in developing countries such as India and nations in West and Central Africa. second graders were inoculated, 585 out of 1,080,680 children developed polio. Only 33 inoculated children receiving the complete vaccination series became paralysed in placebo areas as opposed to 115 children who had not received inocu- lations. Statistics were similar in observed ar- eas where 38 cases of polio developed among inoculated children as against 330 cases of paralysis in uninoculated chil- dren. Only one child who had been inocu- lated with vaccine died of polio. The death followed a tonsillectomy two days after the second injection of the vaccine in an area where polio was already prevalent. Trial areas selected for testing vaccine turned out to be the best possible. It was found that there had been a 26 per cent increase per 100,000 in the polio rate in trial areas as against no-trial areas. Complacency about the severity of the virus has led to a lapse in the complete vaccination of all children. Because of this, doctors warn parents about the possibility of a recurrence of polio if children are not vaccinated. Salk said Wednesday it is "unwise" for anyone in 1995 not to be vaccinated. "It couldn't be more foolish, when there is a means of protection," the 80- year-old virologist said. Francis's announcement of the "safe, effective and potent" vaccine reduced a terrifying disease to one of history books, pictures and memories. As crowds packed Rackham Audito- rium on that 1955 morning, Salk and Francis said the words the world wanted to hear, and international relief accompanied the whirring of presses and the clamoring of journalists. the research leading to the vaccine. The 40th anniversary of what has been called this century's most important medical breakthrough was commemo- rated Wednesday with a ceremony honoring Jonas Salk, the developer of the vaccine. The ceremony took place at 10 a.m. at Rackham Auditorium - the exact time and location of the original announcement. In 1952 alone,, the most severe year of the epidemic, 57,600 people were stricken with polio. Most were children. In 1953, Salk announced his discovery of a vaccine against the dreaded virus. The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis chose Francis, chair of epidemiology at the University's School of Public Health and Salk's former teacher and col- league, to run field trials testing the vaccine's safety and effectiveness. Francis, a classical research scientist, ran the trials by his own guidelines, which included absolute secrecy from the media and public. Graff, a science writer for the Univer- sity News Service, was assigned to handle the media demands for informa- tion. If a journalist called the labora- tory, Francis gave the phone to Graff. "I was probably the only press agent who got paid for not getting press," Graff said earlier this week. Francis, who died in 1969, gave Graff the report on the trials the night before the announcement, essentially giving him 24 hours to write a press release that would be read internation- ally for years to come. "I believe I was actually the last person to get a copy after a year of working with him," Graff said. "The feeling I had was almost over-anxious - here I was supposed to write an accurate, factual report that the world would read and have it mimeographed and stapled within a matter of 24 hours." The first line of Graff's press release reads simply, "The vaccine works. It is safe, effective, and potent." Bob Considine, a well-known syndicated columnist at the time, told Graff he had written the best lead ever on a medical story. Graff said that made his stressful night with little sleep worth the trouble. "I would not do it again, yet I have of that report," Graff said. Graff planned on neatly setting the release and a summary of the report on tables in the media room on the fourth floor of Rackham, but saw his plans quickly change when the entourage met a crowd of reporters in the Rackham garage and then later on the fourth floor. "We were 14 minutes late getting up simply because of the crush," he said. "When the elevator doors opened, there was a mob of 200 reporters." As Salk and Francis discussed their results downstairs, Graff was left in the midst of the crowd and ended up standing on top of a table to distribute the copies of the release. "We had every intention and the best of plans to distribute them in an orderly way," Graff said. The demand to know the results of the trials was so intense that the crush to see the release ruined those plans. "If Dr. Francis was reading the report to himself in his bathroom, reporters would have broken in and taken it from him," Graff said. While Graff was still distributing the release to the national press, the Daily was already printing a special edition about the announcement. In anticipation of the event, Daily reporter Lee Marks wrote two articles the night before - one announcing the success of the trials and another in case the news was disappointing. K A.