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Jonas Salk

Dr. Jonas Salk developed the first polio vaccine in 1955, just before Albert Sabin developed his oral polio vaccine in 1961.

Approval of Salk’s vaccine followed national testing of the Polio Pioneers, one million children between the ages of six to nine years. Salk also gave his experimental vaccine to his children, his wife, and of course, to himself.

Jonas Salk made headlines when his polio vaccine was approved.

In 1955, he appeared on See It Now and told Edward R. Murrow:

Who owns the patent on this vaccine?
Well, the people, I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?

Although he could not have patented his vaccine if he had wanted to, he was right that “there is no patent.” The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, which he was working for, didn’t patent the vaccine either.

In 1961, Sabin’s live, attenuated polio vaccine replaced Jonas Salk’s inactivated polio vaccine that had been in use since 1955. The United States switched back to IPV in 2000 because of concerns over VAPP.

In addition to his vaccine, his Salk Institute for Biological Studies continues to do research on aging and regenerative medicine, cancer biology, immune system biology, metabolism and diabetes, neuroscience and neurological disorders and plant biology.

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Last Updated on January 23, 2020

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