Jonas Salk Essays

  • Jonas Salk

    551 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jonas Salk was born in New York City. His parents were Russian-Jewish immigrants who, although they themselves lacked formal education, were determined to see their children succeed, and encouraged them to study hard. Jonas Salk was the first member of his family to go to college. He entered the City College of New York intending to study law, but soon became intrigued by medical science. While attending medical school at New York University, Salk was invited to spend a year researching influenza

  • Jonas Salk And The Polio Vaccine

    2035 Words  | 5 Pages

    interview with the American Academy of Achievement, Jonas Salk stated “Risks, I like to say, always pay off. You learn what to do, or what not to do.” As a man of science, Salk truly believes and lives these words every day. In his career he has surely taken many risks, chasing down new theories and ideas, only to lead to a dead end road. But one day, he stumbled upon an idea, and took a risk that left an impact on humanity forever. Not only has Jonas Salk left his stamp on the medical world with the development

  • Dr. Jonas Salk and the Polio Vaccine

    1003 Words  | 3 Pages

    Dr. Jonas Salk was an American medical researcher, physician, and virologist who developed the first safe and effective inactivated polio vaccine. Before this vaccine was created, polio vaccines usually contained live, weakened forms of the virus, but Salk developed a vaccine that contained an inactivated, dead form of polio, the first of its kind. Until the Salk vaccine was introduced on April 12, 1955, polio was considered the most frightening health problem in the United Sates. Just 3 years before

  • A Summary Of The Jonas Salk: The World Cured

    1057 Words  | 3 Pages

    The World Cured Salk once said, “Hope lies in dreams, in imagination and in the courage of those who dare to make dreams into reality” (About Jonas Salk). Jonas Salk went to college to get his medical degree, but never dreamed of becoming famous. After that, he got a job at a hospital where he then took an interest in diseases and on how they work. He was a great epidemiologist and later got invited to study these illnesses at the University of Michigan. This is where Salk’s dreams first became real

  • Jonas Salk

    527 Words  | 2 Pages

    integrity. I believe that American scientist Jonas Salk was a man of honor. Salk exhibited all of the virtues of my definition as well as the dictionary definition of honor. Salk was honest, fair, and integral through his life accomplishments as a medical scientist. Dr. Jonas Salk was born on October 28, 1914 in New York, NY to a family of Russian-Jewish immigrants (American Academy of Achievement). While Salk wasn’t athletic, he excelled at academics. Salk graduated from the Townsend Harris High School

  • The Polio Vaccine

    1070 Words  | 3 Pages

    improved the virus spread differently. It was spread more through playmates and family members, the contamination came from the nose and throat. By the early 1950s, twenty-five percent of paralytic cases occurred in people 21 years old or older. Jonas Salk M.D. developed the polio vaccine. Salk's vaccine was composed of a "killed" polio virus. This virus kept the ability to immunize while preventing the infection of the patient. Later a "live" vaccine was developed from the live polio virus. This

  • The Giver Salk Analysis

    1054 Words  | 3 Pages

    Polio: Jonas Salk and the Spread of the Disease Its 1955 Jonas Salk just came back from the store. He came back with anything he could find. Right Know Jonas is in the middle of an apocalypse of zombies that spread around the world fast. Salk is in San Diego, California and right now he is the only survivor that he knows about that is still alive. When Salk came back from the store a group of zombies were chasing him and followed him to his house but as Salk was on his way home he attempted to lose

  • The Pros And Cons Of The Polio Vaccine

    691 Words  | 2 Pages

    “There is hope in dreams, imagination and in courage of these who wish to make dreams a reality.” Jonas Salk the creator of the Polio Vaccine once said. His imagination led to this pioneer in medical science to reducing 350,000 inevitable cases of the Polio virus in 1952 to just 223 cases in 2012. This Extraordinary feat of immense proportion cannot go unnoticed by medical science. This form of distributing medicine may damage the epidermis but it revolutionized and contributed so much to modern

  • Summary Of Polio

    1562 Words  | 4 Pages

    Polio: An American Story describes a struggle to find a vaccine on polio through several researchers’ lives, and over the course of many years. The second thesis is the struggle between Salk and Sabin, two bitter rivals who had their own vaccine that they believed would cure polio. The author David M. Oshinsky, is describing how difficult it was to find the cure to a horrifying disease, which lasted from the Great Depression until the 1960’s. Oshinsky then writes about how foundations formed as

  • Fear of Polio in the 1950s

    4025 Words  | 9 Pages

    "Some Recent Advances in the Study of Poliomyelitis, 1954". Medicine. Sept. 1992: 316-20. (reprinted) Horstmann, Dorothy. "Three Landmark Articles about Poliomyelitis". Medicine. Sept. 1992: 320-25. Smith, Jane S. Patenting the Sun: Polio and the Salk Vaccine. New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1990.

  • The Good, The Bad, And The Hela

    1683 Words  | 4 Pages

    infectious disease caused by a virus that spreads from person to person invading the brain and spinal cord and causing paralysis" (Freeman). Jonas Salk, who was a virologist at the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis (NFIP), used inactivated viruses (virus particles grown in culture and then killed by a form of heat) to create a polio vaccine. Salk drew blood from about two million children, which the NFIP checked for immunization.Through the collection of many HeLa cells and trial and error

  • Paralysis Epidemic of the 1950s: Poliomyelitis

    970 Words  | 2 Pages

    Poliomyelitis was declared an epidemic in the early 1950s in the United States. It caused primarily children and young adults to develop paralysis, led to social stigma around being crippled. To this day there is still no cure for this disease, poliomyelitis can only be prevented with vaccination. Poliomyelitis is a virus that infects the nerves of the spinal cord, and brain which leads to paralysis and or death (Piddock, 2004). Poliomyelitis is best known today as Polio, and Infantile Paralysis

  • Analysis of The Inmortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot

    765 Words  | 2 Pages

    The novel, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot is divided into 3 sections: life, which tells the reader about Henrietta’s life and the birth of HeLa; death, which consists of times after Henrietta’s death, and lastly; immortality, which discusses how Henrietta’s cells have become immortal. Overall, the book is based on Henrietta and the lives of her children and how they cope with the way medical science has treated their mother. Though the book is not written in chronological

  • Vaccinations In The American History Of The 1950s

    1175 Words  | 3 Pages

    paralyzed. This disease was feared greatly at the time, until Dr. Jonas Salk created a vaccination for the disease in 1952. Within six years, the vaccine brought the disease under control. Everybody was really excited for this new vaccination. There are many pictures from the 50s with Dr. Salk himself giving the vaccination to kids. The March of Dimes foundation took many photos; one of the many is of a young boy with his mother, Salk, and a nurse giving the vaccine. This picture is actually his wif

  • Environmental Protection Must Be Our Top Priority

    2874 Words  | 6 Pages

    a depressed look cloaking his face. Dr. Sigmund Freud, seated in a chair near the couch, pen and pad in hand, is leaning in toward Einstein, excitedly waiting to perform some bit of psychoanalysis on the saddened scientist. A framed picture of Jonas Salk rests on the side table; a portrait of John Maynard Keynes hangs from a nail in the wall. In the background, resting atop a bookshelf, is a stone bust of Rachel Carson, author of Silent Spring. She finds herself in quite excellent company not

  • Shot At Life Case Study

    1121 Words  | 3 Pages

    Janice Flood will never forget what polio did to her twin brother Frankie on October 30, 1953. Just days after the twins were picking out their Halloween costumes and fantasizing about the amount of candy they would receive, Frankie’s life was taken by an organism 500 times smaller than the width of a human hair. When he began experiencing trouble breathing, his parents immediately rushed him to the hospital where he was tested for polio and put into an iron lung, a 500 pound machine designed to

  • The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis

    1147 Words  | 3 Pages

    Could you imagine being stricken by a deadly virus, that if you survived, you would not be able to walk without any assistance? In 1938, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s personal struggle with infantile paralysis led him to create the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis (NFIP) which would help find a treatment for infantile paralysis, which is better known as polio. This virus was usually contracted during childhood, and attacked the central nervous system, which if the victim did survive

  • polio vaccine

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    there is still no cure, but at the peak of its devastation in the United States, Dr. Jonas Salk introduced a way to prevent it. Polio attacks the nerve cells and sometimes the central nervous system, causing muscle wasting, paralysis, and even death. The disease, whose symptoms are flu like, stuck mostly children, and in the first half of the 20th century the epidemics of polio were becoming more devastating. Salk, while working at the Virus Research Lab at the University of Pittsburgh, developed

  • The Salk Institute

    948 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Salk Institute Dr. Jonas Salk commissioned Louis Kahn to design the Salk Institute of Biological Research near La Jolla, California. Salk believes that medical research should not be confined to science alone. In response to Salk's view, Kahn saw the possibility of uniting art and architecture with the functional aspect of the design. He agrees with Salk that someone with a mind in art, like himself, could contribute in creating a mental environment of scientific research. Kahn's pursue

  • Medical Research

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    Since polio vaccinations outbreaks declined from 57,879 to just a few each year B. In addition, the American virologist Albert Sabin developed the oral vaccine 1. The trivalent oral polio vaccine (TOPV) was licensed in 1960 2. (TOPV) replaced the Salk injectable vaccine as the standard immunizing agent      in the United States. C. Furthermore, viruses like yellow fever have almost been wiped out 1. Walter Reed found that yellow fever is transmitted through mosquitoes 2. Through sanitation yellow