I didn't think the injectable got put to use until it was too obvious that the oral was causing all the polio in the industrialized world? At which point we stopped using the oral and instead shipped it to third-world countries as you are pointing out.
I have a relative who's almost quadriplegic from the oral; his mother faced a tribunal …
I didn't think the injectable got put to use until it was too obvious that the oral was causing all the polio in the industrialized world? At which point we stopped using the oral and instead shipped it to third-world countries as you are pointing out.
I have a relative who's almost quadriplegic from the oral; his mother faced a tribunal of 5 doctors who all said, Yes, the setback happened after the vax but it was a coincidence....
My baby son's symptoms from the injectable: About half a week afterwards he threw up like you'd never think a baby can throw up, followed by Flaccid Paralysis, but thankfully short-lived and not extreme. The following night he had fever spasms all night; I lied next to him and kept plying him with water the whole night, not sleeping much as you can imagine. I had a deep conviction that he was going to be OK, and I decided no more of this very bad medicine and I followed the book "How to Raise a Healthy Child in Spite of Your Doctor," written by a pediatrician.
This was followed by years of horrible night-time coughs bordering on asthma by the time I got him to a homeopathic MD, who cured him with one megadose! The turnaround was that evening.
The injectable came out first and was used in 1955 and the rest of the 50s, which was supplanted by the oral when they thought it was more effective and easier to give, and rolled out nationwide in the early 1960s--specifically, I think, in 1963 all schoolchildren received it. After several high-profile deaths, not to mention probably hundreds of thousands of unacknowledged cases of neurological damage, as in your relatives case, and my case also, they slowly stopped using it and the last use in the USA was in 2000, I believe.
I didn't think the injectable got put to use until it was too obvious that the oral was causing all the polio in the industrialized world? At which point we stopped using the oral and instead shipped it to third-world countries as you are pointing out.
I have a relative who's almost quadriplegic from the oral; his mother faced a tribunal of 5 doctors who all said, Yes, the setback happened after the vax but it was a coincidence....
My baby son's symptoms from the injectable: About half a week afterwards he threw up like you'd never think a baby can throw up, followed by Flaccid Paralysis, but thankfully short-lived and not extreme. The following night he had fever spasms all night; I lied next to him and kept plying him with water the whole night, not sleeping much as you can imagine. I had a deep conviction that he was going to be OK, and I decided no more of this very bad medicine and I followed the book "How to Raise a Healthy Child in Spite of Your Doctor," written by a pediatrician.
This was followed by years of horrible night-time coughs bordering on asthma by the time I got him to a homeopathic MD, who cured him with one megadose! The turnaround was that evening.
The injectable came out first and was used in 1955 and the rest of the 50s, which was supplanted by the oral when they thought it was more effective and easier to give, and rolled out nationwide in the early 1960s--specifically, I think, in 1963 all schoolchildren received it. After several high-profile deaths, not to mention probably hundreds of thousands of unacknowledged cases of neurological damage, as in your relatives case, and my case also, they slowly stopped using it and the last use in the USA was in 2000, I believe.