Emerging Diseases Lecture 8: Polio 8.1: Overview

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unit 1 Learning goal: I can describe how a narrative’s plot unfolds, as well as how the characters respond or change as the plot moves toward a resolution.
Advertisements

A Devastating Disease: Polio
Plate 86 Viral Diseases of the Nervous System. Nervous System Central nervous system: – The meninges – The brain – The spinal cord Peripheral nervous.
By: Tabi Destinie Savannah. What is Poliomyelitis  Poliomyelitis, often called polio or infantile paralysis, is an acute viral infectious disease spread.
The Polio Crusade Alan Colburn Department of Science Education California State University, Long Beach.
1954 Salk polio vaccine trials ► Biggest public health experiment ever ► Polio epidemics hit U.S. in 20 th century ► Struck hardest at children ► Responsible.
17-1 Topics Principals of immunization Vaccines Immunizations.
By Archana Bhasin. Poliomyelitis is a viral disease that can affect nerves and can lead to partial or full paralysis.
JONAS SALK. Developer of Polio Vaccine “ LIFE IS AN ERROR-MAKING AND AN ERROR- CORRECTING PROCESS, AND NATURE IN MARKING MAN’S PAPERS WILL GRADE HIM.
Poliovirus By: Ben Strozyk. Poliovirus  Causes poliomyelitis (aka polio) or infantile paralysis.
Emerging Diseases Lecture 8: Polio 8.1: Overview
Polio By: Hannah Jabusch 3/6/12 Honors Psychology/ 3rd Period.
TM OPV Stockpiling in the United States Trudy V. Murphy, M.D. National Immunization Program Centers for Disease Control and Prevention February 5, 2003.
Alex Goldberg 8th Grade Science - Emerald
EPIDEMIOLOGY&CONTROL OF POLIOMYELITIS BY DR. AWATIF ALAM.
Waterborne Pathogens: Viruses February 16 th -18 th, 2010.
Kojo Koranteng & Meenal Viz
Note Sheet 16 - Viruses Swine (H1N1) Flu Viruses.
Polio. Poliomyelitis, often called polio or infantile paralysis, is an acute viral infectious disease which is spread from person-to-person via the.
BCG Vaccine Usual reactions induration: 2 – 4 wks pustule formation: 5 – 7 wks scar formation: 2 – 3 months Accelerated Reactions: induration: 2-3 days.
YESHA PATEL. GENERAL What is it? Highly contagious viral infection that can lead to paralysis What causes it? poliomyelitis virus that targets motor.
Born Franklin Delano Roosevelt in Hyde Park, New York on January 30, Graduate Harvard with a BA in History in 3 years. Attended Columbia Law and.
Definition of disease A disease is an abnormal condition of an organism that impairs bodily functions, associated with specific symptoms and signs. It.
Group no: 5 Muhammad Hussain Hafiz Maqsood Alam Sara Mehboob.
Ch39: Effect of Disease Higher Human Biology. Disease Disease = an impairment of the normal functioning of part (or all) of the body. Caused by: Pathogenic.
WHO JANUARY 2016-Q&A ZIKA VIRUS Courtesy- The Pharmaceutical Society of Trinidad and Tobago- 02/10/2016.
Poliomyelitis. Instructional Objectives: At the end of the lecture the student would be able to: 1-Demonstrate the main clinical characteristics of poliomyelitis.
Polio By: Kayla Greene March 6, 2013 Psychology fourth period.
END POLIO FOREVER NOW 3,145 เสียชีวิต 21,269 ทุพพลภาพ.
Epidemiology of Hepatitis A in Ireland Last updated March 2017
Poliomyelitis Dr. Asif Rehman.
IMMUNITY © 2016 Paul Billiet ODWS.
The Changing Epidemiology of Acute Hepatitis A in Texas
Created by: Alexandrea, Erika, Menna and Tia
Outline Immunity Artificial active immunization (vaccination)
Emerging Diseases Lecture 3: Important Theories 3.1: Overview
Introduction to the polio endgame rationale and IPV vaccine
Vaccines stimulate immunity
Poliomyelitis.
Dengue Fever Amy Whitesell March 22, 2016.
Poliomyelitis Chris Berry.
Performance of AFP surveillance, 2014
Zika virus vlp Creative Biostructure develops a safe, effective and straightforward strategy to rapidly produce a Zika vaccine. Our Zika Virus VLPs are.
Legionnaire’s Disease
Dr .Ghazi F.Haji Cardiologist AL-Kindy Medical collage
Vaccine-Derived Poliovirus Outbreak Minnesota, 2005
Maham Wisal Latifa Alizadeh
The next phase of polio eradication and the vaccines used
Influenza Immunization:
VACCINES - Before Humans truly understood how our immune system worked. They recognized that individuals that were exposed to a particular disease and.
Influenza Vaccines MedCh 401 Lecture 5 19May06 KL Vadheim Lecture 4.
POLIOPLUS FACT SHEET Feb 2018
Immunization Systems Management Group (IMG)
Cholera.
Immunization Systems Management Group (IMG)
Aim: B & T cells.
Effect of disease Chapter 39.
Emerging Diseases Lecture 3: Important Theories 3.1: Overview
Human- Environment Interaction
The next phase of polio eradication and the vaccines used
Legionnaire’s Disease
Effect of disease Chapter 39.
Polio.
Epidemiology of hepatitis A in Ireland
2.2 Viruses, Viroids, Prions
Teacher: Madam Nele Presented by:V.Lakshika Course:05 Group:18a 2015
Judy Monroe, MD Indiana State Health Commissioner ASTHO President
Nili Karako Eyal, School of Law, College of Management, Israel
The next phase of polio eradication and the vaccines used
Presentation transcript:

Emerging Diseases Lecture 8: Polio 8.1: Overview 8.2: Incidence and Timeline 8.3: The Vaccine Race Salk Vaccine Sabin Vaccine 8.4: “Defeat” of Polio and the Age of Optimism

8.1: Overview: Polio is an Ancient Disease Poliomyelitis= polio Caused by a virus- named poliovirus Well-adapted to humans; Usually causes very mild disease Less than 1/1000 paralytic No other known hosts in nature

8.2: Disease Incidence Polio has been present since the days of ancient Egyptians but was not a serious problem until recently. As North America and Western Europe clean up their act in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries, incidence of most infectious diseases goes down. But the incidence of polio goes up!????????

8.2: Polio Timeline in US 1894: First US epidemic , in Vermont: 132 cases 1916: Major outbreak nationwide: 9000 cases in NYC alone 1934: 2500 cases in Los Angeles 1945-1949: at least 25,000 cases each year 1952: 58,000 cases 1953: 35,000 cases: “polio hysteria”-parents and children terrified of polio

8.2: Why So Many Cases? Disease very prevalent in human populations for many centuries. Historically-age of exposure to contaminated water was very young-usually led to a mild childhood disease only. Sanitation produces cleaner water. Delays age of first exposure. Severe symptoms more frequent in older individuals.

Vaccine for Polio? No cure for afflicted individuals May lead to permanent paralysis-total or partial Early attempts at vaccine in the 1930s went terribly wrong Scientists did not realize there were 3 strains of the virus in circulation By late 1930s National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis/March of Dimes led the vaccine campaign

March of Dimes 1940s-50s an effective ad campaign

Salk Vaccine 1948: Laboratory growth of poliovirus-use of cultured cells 1950’s: Vaccine “race” 1954: Large scale field trials of Salk (inactivated) vaccine-small scale tests on Pittsburgh schoolchildren 1955: April 12-successful vaccine announced 1955: The Cutter Incident-Cutter Laboratories produce contaminated Salk vaccine 1961: only 161 cases in US

Sabin Vaccine 1962: Sabin (attenuated) vaccine approved aka oral polio vaccine = OPV 1964: 121 cases in US

8.4: The “Defeat” of Polio A folk memory in US today Begins the “Age of Optimism”