Stuff You Should Know - How We Almost Got Rid of Polio
Episode Date: July 21, 2020For more than half of the 20th century parents in the industrialized world were freaked out by an unseen waster of youth, the poliovirus. It spread easily and could paralyze children for life or even ...kill them. Its effects were so horrible that humanity set about ridding if from the Earth. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
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but we are going to unpack and dive back
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know,
a production of iHeartRadios, How Stuff Works.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant over there,
and this is Stuff You Should Know, Polio Cast.
That's right, before we get going though,
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And why, because you get a special gift?
Not only that, you get a special gift for sure.
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Yep, so you can go pre-order that book everywhere, okay.
Wow, Chuck, we're getting really good at that.
Now let's talk polio, but we're not good at this,
it's transitioning.
No, we never have been.
So polio, when I was researching this,
I kept running across, whenever I typed in polio,
you know, that auto suggests in the search bar,
it would say things like, does polio still exist?
And it absolutely does, but it's one of those diseases
that we're really, really close to eradicating,
thanks to an extraordinarily robust vaccination campaign.
One of the first really big vaccination campaigns
in the history of the world,
and it was also one of the most successful too,
so much so that we're down to just three countries,
I believe Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Nigeria
are the only three countries where polio is still endemic,
where you can just walk around and catch polio,
and there are outbreaks in other countries,
and we'll talk about it exactly why,
but it went from this global worldwide problem
at the beginning of the 20th century,
down to three countries, and we're like that close
to getting rid of it forever from the planet, basically.
Yeah, so, and it's interesting to read about polio,
and it's vaccine during the middle of our own pandemic
with coronavirus and COVID-19,
because there's a lot of similarities and overlap,
it's interesting.
There's a pandemic on?
Yeah, that's why I haven't seen you in three months.
I know, are you getting used to it yet?
I mean, sure, just as anyone gets used
to something that stinks.
Oh, thank you.
I didn't mean not seeing you, I mean everything,
but sure, that's a part of that.
Oh, okay, gotcha.
It's for sure a part of that.
But it is weird talking about it for sure,
because there are some real similarities for sure.
Yeah, so polio is the disease,
but polio virus is the entero virus,
which is a virus of the intestinal tract,
which is an RNA virus like COVID-19,
but the disease itself, like COVID, is the sickness.
Polio is the disease as coronavirus is the polio virus.
I mixed that all up, but I think it's right.
So, coronavirus is to COVID,
what polio virus is to polio?
Yeah, that's the cleaner way to say it.
Right, and then apparently polio specifically,
if you say, oh, this person, my grandfather had polio,
you're not talking about just a polio infection,
there's a specific kind of disease
that you can get from the polio virus
where it attacks your central nervous system
and can cause all sorts of problems.
And that specifically is what somebody's saying
when they say they had polio,
which is in that case called poliomyelitis,
which is what people are talking about when they say,
when they're talking about polio, the disease.
Yeah, because a lot of people got the polio virus,
didn't know it, had no symptoms,
your body kicks into gear,
that immune system just fights it off,
you got those antibodies for life, and that's it.
That happened a lot.
But yeah, like you said, if you get polio,
that means that it hitchers your central nervous system,
and we'll get more into detail about all this.
But polio virus is where it colonizes
is in the throat and the digestive system.
And we're talking about your feces being contaminated,
or infectious and contaminated,
and your saliva, depending on how you get it.
So there's basically two ways to pass it along,
either with your poop or with your saliva.
And the fecal transmission is much more prevalent,
especially in the developing world,
because of poor sanitation.
And like if you look at just the natural history
of the virus, of the polio virus,
it's ideal is to just replicate, right?
That's the whole purpose of a virus,
is just make as many copies of itself as possible.
And so living in the water, the drinking water supply,
and then infecting people, infecting their gut,
replicating, being passed as feces,
back into the water supply to infect other people.
But without really developing symptoms in people,
that's ideal for the virus itself.
Every once in a while though,
I think in about one quarter of people who become infected,
the polio virus will enter the bloodstream,
it'll leave the gut and enter the bloodstream,
and will produce what's called viremia,
where it infects the blood,
it starts to infect other organs,
and those people will develop flu-like symptoms
for a couple of days.
That's still not that bad,
probably nothing we would have mounted
a global eradication campaign against.
It's just that in a very small proportion
of people who become infected,
the polio virus not only infects the bloodstream,
it actually travels to the central nervous system
and attacks that, and then that is the real problem
that comes from polio,
what we were talking about earlier, poliomyelitis.
Yeah, and no one knows why that happens.
No one knows, I mean basically,
they just think it's completely random.
I mean, that seems to be the case
of whether or not you get the paralytic version or not.
It is not many people,
but when you spread those numbers out,
it can be a lot of people.
So when you look at numbers like 0.5% of everyone infected
have paralysis, if you look at a human population,
that's a lot of people.
Right, yeah, just that very small percent of everybody
or a ton of people around the world in first centuries
have an infection, it does add up big time for sure.
Enough so, and so not just the number also, Chuck,
but just the devastating effects that polio can have,
poliomyelitis can have on a person.
It's a really bad jam because not only can it cause
what's called acute flaccid paralysis
where your motor neurons or your muscles are attacked
so that you can't use your muscle
and your limb starts to wither,
maybe you just become fully paralyzed.
It can also travel to your brain
and affect things like your swallowing reflex or breathing.
And so it can very easily kill you
when it starts to progress
to the central nervous system phase of poliomyelitis.
Yeah, and there's no treatment for polio,
and we'll talk about the vaccine here in a minute
to a great extent,
but it's just like any other virus,
you let it run its course,
your body will probably do the right thing
and step up and fight it back
and not let it get to your bloodstream,
but like you said, even if it gets to your bloodstream,
you might just get sick,
but that 0.5% chance that you actually have
the paralytic version, there is no cure for that.
No, which was weird.
I was like, so you're just a goner
if you get poliomyelitis or that's what the case was.
And apparently your body can still fight it off.
You can get poliomyelitis
and if you receive the proper care,
one of the better inventions to combat polio
is called the iron lung,
which would breathe for you
using a bellows and negative and positive pressure
to move your chest up and down, like that could keep you alive
long enough to give you a chance
for your body to fight off the infection
with your immune system,
but like that's not a cure,
that's just keeping you alive long enough
for your body to fight it off.
It was really surprising to me
that there's still to this day, no treatment for polio.
Yeah, I can't help but think of the Big Mabowski
when I think of iron lungs.
Who is in an iron lung in that?
Remember when they go to visit,
they think the kid stole the car
or they found the kid's schoolwork in the back of the car
and they go to his house
and it was this former TV writer who was inside
and he's in an iron lung.
I genuinely don't remember that part.
I'm sure I'm being shouted at by some of our listeners,
but sorry.
It was played for laughs.
The one I think of is Ralph Maccio in the outsiders
after he gets burned from running in that house
to save those people.
Was he in an iron lung?
That's what I thought.
And so I looked it up to verify
and there's no mention of it.
So I guess when I was a kid,
I just made up that Ralph Maccio is in an iron lung
in the outsiders.
If I'm not mistaken, he was just had a,
I guess what you would call a respirator today.
Okay, but wasn't he outside down?
Maybe they were called respirators back then.
Yeah, I think he was,
I think he was face down in traction
and suspended and on a respirator, if I'm not mistaken.
My tiny little impressionable brain
translated that into an iron lung.
Yeah, that's okay.
Stay gold.
My brain hasn't gotten much better, Chuck.
Sure it has.
So you can survive,
you can fend off a polio infection
even with poliomyelitis.
But the problem is very frequently
would not let you survive.
It would kill you.
So like we said, just mounting this campaign
became kind of paramount,
but polio is tough because they think it's such an old virus.
They think it's been around for a very, very long time.
And that's kind of evidenced by the fact that polio is,
it's only humans that it lives in and tries to replicate.
And there's, it's not like other viruses
where there's like reservoir animals
that it can hang out in
and just basically stay alive
until it can infect a human.
It's just humans basically.
Although there was a case in 1966
of some chimps becoming infected from humans with polio.
In that sense.
Oh really?
Yeah.
Wow.
And if we need to,
if you need to go over viruses again folks,
look no further than the recent stuff
you should know classic for March 20th virus talk
with Josh and Chuck.
That was from March 20th?
The re-release, what do we call those classics?
Gotcha.
Selects.
Specials, selects.
Aren't you like one half of this podcast?
I am, but I call them classics in my brain.
I don't know what the official branding is.
Selects.
Yeah.
Like we have hand selected this classic episode.
Yeah, classics.
I think if you, if you scramble the word selects,
classics is in there somewhere, but it's misspelled.
But yeah, that one just came out recently.
So that'll catch up on what a virus is,
but should we take a break and talk a little bit
about the ancient history perhaps of polio?
Yes.
All right.
We'll be right back everybody.
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Chuck.
And Josh.
This stuff you should know.
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Word up Jerry.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
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It's a podcast packed with interviews,
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old diseases have shoddy record keeping.
They just didn't keep up with stuff like they do now.
But we do, you know, if you looked at some of the mummies
in ancient Egypt, you might see some limb deformities
that could have been polio.
There are paintings on walls and things
that maybe could be polio, but this is us
extrapolating this from a modern lens.
Those limbs could have been smashed
in a heavy object accident as well.
You never know.
A combine accident.
Well, I was gonna say that, but they didn't have combines.
So a barge accident, how about that?
Okay.
So like over the years, people were studying polio.
And I mean, we kind of started to get
a pretty good handle on it.
We didn't understand what viruses were.
So we didn't know it was a virus
until the 19th or 20th century.
No, the 20th century.
I think 1908, our old friend Carl Landsteiner
who developed blood types was also one of the two people
who identified the polio virus in 1908.
But other people had contributed up to that point.
Like it was recognized as being an epidemic disease,
that there were outbreaks, that kind of stuff.
But everybody was kind of okay with polio existing.
Like it was not something that we were happy about,
but nothing that like there was this great urgency to cure
until about the beginning of the 20th century.
And they think that people living together
close in close quarters, urbanization
and better sanitation led to polio outbreaks
that hadn't been seen before
because the better sanitation produced a population
that had not been exposed to polio virus.
Yeah, that seems counterintuitive.
It does, but it makes sense
because if you've got a virgin population,
that thing can just hop from person to person to person.
Whereas if you have an endemic population
where any proportion of the population is already immune
from having been exposed to the virus before.
Cause don't forget, remember, we said a lot of people,
most people, I think 75% of people who are infected
never even show any signs or symptoms.
So if you don't have people like that anymore
because of improved sanitation,
but you also don't have a vaccine program,
you've got a virgin population
that a virus can just run rampant in.
And that's what it does.
That's what started happening in the early 20th century
and it started scaring the bejesus out of parents
because it was largely affecting kids.
Yeah, and it happened in clusters
because it was so easily transmitted.
And like you said, with the virgin population,
there would be these big outbreaks
and that causes panic with parents especially.
Yeah, in 1916 in the US,
6,000 people died from polio
in about 27,000 paralytic cases.
1952, 21,000 paralytic cases.
And also Chuck, we said in our book, you remember,
in the Mr. Potato Head chapter,
that polio outbreak is what made Mr. Potato Head
one of the big, the first big toys
because so many kids were stuck at home that summer
because of a polio outbreak.
That's right, and that's exactly what happened
because kind of mirroring what we're seeing now
is they would shut down parks and swimming pools
and schools and public events.
And America rallied behind it back then
and said, yeah, that's what we should do
for the good of the public.
It's not happening now, unfortunately,
but back then everyone got on board
between I think a quarter of a million
and 650,000 Americans were alive
at any given time in the 20th century
that had lifelong issues caused by polio.
Right, that's a lot of people.
I mean, that's a real problem, you know?
That's not over the 20th century.
That's at any given point in the 20th century, right?
Yeah, at any given point.
So you can kind of understand why around then,
especially when people were seeing
entire classrooms of children struck down with polio,
some of whom went on to have lifelong mobility issues,
some of whom died, that scared parents a lot,
and it scared everybody so much
so that it kind of laid the groundwork
for this big national and actually an international
push toward coming up with, if not a treatment,
which they tried at first and found that was not happening,
then a vaccine for polio,
and that's exactly what we did.
We be humans.
Yeah, and a big driver for this vaccine
was a little organization called the March of Dimes,
which was originally founded in 1938 by Franklin Roosevelt.
It was called the National Foundation
for Infantile Paralysis, and I never knew this,
but they had a march and people would send dimes
as donations to the organization,
and that's why it's called the March of Dimes.
Right.
It's amazing.
And because of that, because of all those individuals
sending in dimes to the March of Dimes
or to the Infantile Paralysis Foundation,
that laid the groundwork for the financial support
for all of this research that was going on,
specifically for the research of one of the guys
who came up with a vaccine for polio,
because we actually have more than one,
but the most famous of them all was Jonas Salk,
who came into the picture in about 1947,
and because of those dimes that were contributed
by average everyday people,
because that money directly funded his research,
he very famously refused to patent the vaccine
that he came up with for polio
and just said, this belongs to the world.
Yeah, just like a farmer bro.
Same.
Exactly.
Same morals, right?
Right.
So this is a good chance.
I'm glad when we get to do shows like this
because Jonas Salk gets so much credit and deservedly so
as a genuinely great human that walked the planet,
but a lot of people had chipped in over the years
to get this vaccine where it was,
and we get a chance to talk about those people now,
which is always fun.
In the 1940s, late 1940s,
John Franklin Enders, Thomas Huckle Weller,
and Frederick Chapman Robbins.
All three serial killers.
That's right.
They figured out how to grow the polio virus culture
in a lab, which if you want a vaccine,
that's the first big step is to grow that culture in a lab,
and they won in 1954 for those efforts.
They won the Nobel Prize in medicine, which is great.
Yeah, it was.
So that was a huge first step like you were saying.
The people had tried to create a vaccine
even before that first step though,
I guess the old fashioned way.
Brody and Colmer, John Colmer,
I don't know Brody's first name,
but when they were working together,
they created a vaccine that actually killed
five of their 10,000 test subjects,
which was not, it wasn't good,
and it actually kind of set the whole vaccine movement
back a hint, but astoundingly, it didn't kill it.
And rather than saying like,
no, we're not going to try this,
people looked at polio cases and said,
this is so bad,
we need to keep pushing forward despite that.
And so by the time salt came along
and started working on his vaccine,
you know, people were already a little jumpy about the idea,
and it was made all the more so
that he was trying an unproven form of vaccine,
whereas most vaccines used attenuated virus,
which is it's live,
but it's a weakened version of the virus,
and it's in a much smaller dose.
What Salk was suggesting,
what he wanted to use was an inactivated virus,
which it's dead in the sense
that it can't replicate any longer,
it's been treated with formaldehyde,
but it's a huge dose of it.
So if it's not dead, you're in big trouble.
Yeah, and it was a big deal at the time
because it was a new science,
and a lot of scientists said
that I don't think you could administer this much,
even killed a virus safely.
And so what you had was a couple of different things going on,
a couple of potential pathways to take
was give a little bit of that weakened virus
that's still alive to kids,
which we know is gonna infect them with a virus,
so it's gonna generate those antibodies,
but hopefully it's not gonna be strong enough
to get to that central nervous system point of infection,
or super dose them with this inactive virus,
and that's gonna cause antibodies in the blood,
so that will 100% prevent polio from happening.
That will keep it from going to the central nervous system.
They knew that, and that's great news,
but boy, you better be sure that that virus is perfect,
because if it's not, then you're in big trouble.
Right, and not only that, that's a big risk with it,
but if you do it right, the risk goes very close to zero.
The other problem with it is because it produces antibodies
in the bloodstream, that leaves out the gut,
which means that you could still be infected by polio,
and colonize your gut and replicate
and be passed in your feces,
but because you have those antibodies in your bloodstream,
it's going to protect you
from ever developing poliomyelitis.
Yeah, they were trying to stop the disease,
not stop the virus.
Right, well, it depends on the paradigm,
like the one that actually infects you with polio
is going to prevent any polio virus
from ever colonizing your gut ever again.
So it depends on which approach you're coming from,
and over the course of a couple of decades,
both came into use enough around the world
that we actually have come close to eradicating polio,
thanks to this combination of both of them.
Yeah, so Salk developed a two-part test
that he used on himself and volunteers,
and then in 1954, you had to, you know,
this was, you had to get a massive PR campaign behind this,
like in a big way,
because they had to vaccinate a million children.
They were called the polio pioneers,
and even though it was, even though it looked good,
it's still a big deal to vaccinate a million kids
with this new vaccine that you're not quite sure about yet,
but they figured just, that was their only choice.
They were like, we can't just let polio continue to thrive
and paralyze and kill our children.
We have to take a chance with these pioneers.
Right, so during this polio pioneer experiment,
it was actually from what I saw the first double blind
in a major public health study.
So no one knew whether they were getting the placebo
or not, or getting the vaccine.
But one segment of this group of polio pioneers,
200,000 of them were given a vaccine
that wasn't inactivated.
So it was a huge dose of still alive polio vaccine.
And 40,000 of those 200,000 people came down with polio.
200 of them were kids who developed paralysis and 10 died.
And this was huge, huge.
Like, can you imagine a setback like that?
Where 200,000 kids were given a vaccine
that hadn't been done properly.
Like that would just stop it in its tracks now.
But again, because polio was so bad,
America at the time was feeling very utilitarian
and said, 200 kids developing paralysis is horrible.
But without this vaccine, in 1952,
27,000 had developed paralysis.
So again, they still push forward,
even with the government temporarily suspending
vaccination programs, or this test, I believe,
American parents still move forward
and vaccinated their kids anyway with this Salk.
What came to be known, the IPV or inactive polio virus
that Salk developed.
That's right, the inactivated polio virus vaccine,
which is still around today.
And again, doesn't prevent the infection,
but it does prevent the bloodstream
from moving it on to the central nervous system.
Right, which is, that's polio myelitis.
That's again, what people mean when they say polio.
That's right.
Should we take another break
and talk about the other vaccine?
Yes.
All right, we'll be right back
to talk about the cheaper vaccine right after this.
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Word up, Jerry.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars,
friends and nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting frosted tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL instant messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
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All right, so there's another guy who is somewhat famous,
but not nearly as famous as Jonas Salk.
Salk, he announced his findings on CBS radio
and became like a household name overnight.
I think America was kind of smitten with him
because he had tested the vaccine on himself,
his wife, his three sons, sterilizing his syringes
in his own kitchen.
And he was very much derided by his main rival,
a guy named Albert Sabin, or Sabin.
I'm not sure which way you pronounce it.
I don't think it matters at this point.
Sabin?
Ooh, that's a good one.
Let's go with Sabin.
So Albert Sabin, he came up with what we were talking
about the other kind of vaccine, an attenuated virus
that had a lot of advantages over Salk's virus,
or Salk's vaccine.
But because Salk had kind of beaten him to the punch
in America, Sabin was forced to kind of go outside
of the United States to test his vaccine.
And he ended up testing his in the USSR, I believe.
Yeah, and like you said, his was attenuated,
so it was live.
And it was actually a really infectious strain,
but something about this strain,
it just seemed to not go to that central nervous system
and infect the central nervous system nearly as much.
So he went to the Soviet Union,
tested more than 10 million people there in the 1950s,
and they said, whatever Russian is for thumbs up,
way to go.
Gratsky.
Great job, Gratsky.
And it was widely used and came into the US in the 1960s.
So then all of a sudden we have two vaccines.
We got the IPV that you have to inject.
At first, they thought it had to be boosted
every few years, but it was, in fact, a forever injection.
The best kind.
Right.
It was very safe.
There were no systemic reactions.
The cost was high, which was kind of a problem at the time,
as opposed to the lower cost of the OPV,
which was oral, and you gave it on sugar cubes.
Right, so there's a lot of advantages with this OPV
over the IPV, and as a result, between the advantages,
I mean, just lower cost alone would make
public health officials be like, we should go with that.
But that whole, the cutter incident
where 200,000 kids were accidentally given active polio,
that really kind of shook people in Salk's vaccine enough
that his vaccine got supplanted by Sabine's OPV,
the oral polio virus vaccine, and that became the standard
in the United States from about the early 60s up to,
I guess, 2000, basically, right?
Yeah, and I think we failed to mention
there were three types, three serotypes,
type one, type two, and type three,
and the OPV, you could get all three of those types
onto that one sugar cube, which is great.
And if you're infected by one of those serotypes,
it doesn't give you antibodies against the other two,
and a vaccine for one doesn't protect against the other two.
So you have to get inoculated against all three.
And Sabine, remember, he found a strain of polio virus
that was very infectious, but didn't attack
the central nervous system very, very much.
And he actually identified strains for each one
of those types that kind of fell into that category.
But the thing is this, remember we said
that with an activated or an attenuated live virus,
you are actually being given polio virus
and you are being infected with polio virus.
And so that means that you can actually,
you are shedding polio virus in your feces.
So let's say you wanna start a vaccination campaign
in an area that has poor sanitation
and a lot of resistance to a vaccine campaign.
Well, if you can just get in there and vaccinate
a few people, they're going to go
and shed that polio virus in their feces.
And because it's this weakened strain,
that weakened strain will go on
and infect other people in the community
who drink this tain of drinking water.
And they will kind of become what's known
as passively vaccinated by this.
So it was another advantage in developing areas as well.
But there were some major problems with this vaccine
and still remain today,
mainly because this is a live virus
that you're being infected with on purpose.
Yeah, and because it's live, even though it's weak,
very, and I don't know about the word rare,
but in very few cases,
and they think immunodeficiency had a lot to do with it,
you could contract polio, you could get the paralysis
and you could possibly die.
That was known as VAP,
Vaccine Associated Paralytic Polio Myelitis.
And that's no good, even if there are very few cases,
that's not great for your PR campaign.
But not only that, because it was a live virus
that could still replicate,
they also found that when it entered your gut
and colonized there,
sometimes it could undergo a type of mutation
so that what came out the other end in your feces
was actually basically a new version
of the strain that you had been given.
And sometimes it was way more infectious,
sometimes it was way more deadly,
and that would be what you pooped out
into the local water supply.
And at first, again, compared to like the wild strains
of the three types of polio virus
that were out there in the world,
at first like it didn't matter.
Like that happened infrequently enough
that just keep going with this oral vaccine
because it's really, really working.
But as it became more and more effective
and fewer and fewer people had polio,
the idea that you were giving them a vaccine
that could actually produce a virulent strain
became a real problem.
And as a result, people said, well, wait a minute,
we need to figure out what to do about this vaccine
because we really need to start figuring out
how to phase this out.
That's right.
And is this where the Dutch entered the picture?
I believe so.
Yeah, and you might think,
what do they have to do with it?
They were studying SOC's IPV this whole time.
They were using it, they were researching it,
they were funded by their own government to do so.
And they made it more robust basically
against all three types, which is great.
And the big thing they did though
is they found out how to reduce the cost
because the cost was one of the big drawbacks
of SOC's version.
And one of the big parts of the cost,
very sadly is, is they had to import 5,000 rhesus monkeys
every year in the Netherlands alone.
5,000 monkeys in just the Netherlands.
So in the 70s, these two people named Paul van Hemert
and Anton van Viesel, they figured out
how to grow cultured monkey kidney cells,
which is a great record title, I think.
Oh, I think so too, I hadn't thought about that.
I don't know the band.
The band is the plastic beads.
Okay.
And their new album, cultured monkey kidney cell.
So they figured out how to grow these
on plastic beads and steel flasks
and then grow that polio virus on the kidney cells.
So all of a sudden, you didn't need 5,000 rhesus monkeys,
you just needed a few of them
and you didn't have to spend,
A, you didn't have to kill all those monkeys,
which is awesome.
And B, you didn't have to import all those monkeys
in that expense and that saved a ton of money
and they could all of a sudden pump out these IPV shots
at a really reduced rate.
All right, so now all of a sudden,
Salk's original or actually new improved version
of Salk's original vaccine is competitive to the OPV price-wise.
I think it's still way more expensive,
but much less way more expensive than it was before.
But then also like it prevents poliomyelitis from happening.
So what public health officials started to realize,
by the way, the US started to switch back
to the Salk vaccine, the IPV in 2000.
And what public health officials realized
is that this combination of the two
could actually wipe polio out of existence.
For one, you could prevent poliomyelitis
from ever happening in your population with the IPV.
But then also, if you could knock out polio in the wild
with the OPV and keep the population
that you're inoculating from developing
these vaccine-associated viruses, right?
The mutated viruses that can come out the other end,
you could actually wipe polio out of the wild.
As a matter of fact, one type of polio,
I believe it was type two, was eradicated.
They figured out sometime around 1999.
And then I believe in 2015,
they officially declared type two polio virus eradicated.
It's just gone, that it's just not in the wild anymore
because it died out because it couldn't find a host
to transmit and replicate.
And we killed it, we got rid of it.
From poop though.
That's right.
Like that's literally in 1999, the last polio dump happened.
Yeah, it is kind of crazy because you do,
at least in the United States,
you associate polio with like the early 20th century, you know?
Yeah, so the last polio poop came out,
didn't hook up with anyone that didn't have immunity.
And the good news about type two going away
was remember how we were talking about the VAP,
the VAPP situation with the OPV, it's confusing.
Type two was the part most likely to cause
that vaccine infection, that vaccine derived infection.
So with that out of the way,
you were just left with the OPV for types one and three,
which is way more safe and effective.
Right, and I saw that type three
had actually been declared eradicated as well.
I think that it's made some sort of weird comeback in Nigeria,
but that I believe it was declared eradicated in 2019.
I'm not sure if they double back on that or not.
But either way, there does seem to be this idea
that we could, and we're right there,
on the cusp of being able to eradicate polio.
And there's a difference between eradicate and eliminate.
Eradicate is whether zero cases
to where the only polio that exists is like in a lab
or in vaccinated form.
Eliminate is where it just doesn't exist on earth anymore.
And for all we know, type two polio virus
has been eliminated, but type three and type one, right,
has been close to being eradicated.
For example, for all types of polio,
in 1988, not very long ago,
in 1988 there were 350,000 cases worldwide still.
So there's still a lot of polio.
In 2017, it was down to 22, 22 worldwide.
So we're making like great headway.
But unfortunately, the CIA seems to have really gotten
in the way and set polio eradication back
by decades from what I've read.
Oh yeah?
Yes, did you see that scientific American article I sent?
I didn't get to that.
Okay. Tell us about it.
So when the US was hunting for Osama bin Laden,
one of the ways that they tried to find them
was through a fake vaccination campaign.
And it wasn't for polio, it was for hepatitis C,
but they basically got a public health official
to mount a fake vaccination campaign
to gain entry to the bin Laden compound
or suspected bin Laden compound
and basically take DNA samples of the children there
while they were vaccinating them.
And they, I guess they didn't happen.
It wasn't successful.
I don't remember how they found out he was in there or not.
But the fact that the word got out
that this fake vaccination campaign
had been used as a ruse by the CIA
completely undermined all other vaccination campaigns
around the world in places that were already wary
of the CIA, because remember polio is endemic
in three places, Nigeria, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
And none of those three places really have
a great impression of the CIA.
So legitimate public health vaccination campaigns
in those countries were totally delegitimized
in the eyes of local population and the local governments.
And in fact, some vaccination workers were murdered
and kicked out of countries directly
because of that ruse that the CIA had undertaken.
And from what I read, they say that it set
this eradication campaign for polio back literally decades
because it is built around public trust
that these scientists who are injecting them with stuff,
these American scientists are trustworthy
and that trust has been lost, sadly.
Wow. In that nuts that that can have
that kind of ripple effects like that.
And now we're gonna have to live with polio
at least another 20 years probably.
Sad. It is sad.
It's polio sad.
You got anything else?
I got nothing else.
Well, that's it for polio, everybody.
Soon that's it for polio.
And since I said that, it's time for listener mail,
I think, right?
Yeah, I'm gonna call this,
oh, just correcting us on some stuff.
How about that?
Okay.
Sorry guys, I'm a bit behind.
So this is somewhat old news,
but since it involves the Byzantine empire,
perhaps old is relative.
And the stuff you should know episode
how flamethrowers work,
Josh says in reference to the Greek fire,
something like the Byzantines who we know as Turks
were most notorious for using this stuff.
I didn't see that.
He said you said it at 531.
That sounds made up, that's a made up time state.
The Byzantines were not Turks
in the sense that white Africaners in South Africa
are not Zulus.
The Byzantines were Greek speaking colonists
from the Roman empire.
The capital of the Roman empire was moved
to Byzantium in 330 AD by Constantine the Great.
And the strategic port was duly christened
and Christianized for a while,
at least as Constantinople.
Yeah, not Istanbul.
The Byzantines were, much as the Africaners
were with the Zulus at odds with the indigenous Turks
for most of their history
until they were overthrown by the latter
in the mid 15th century.
The name Constantinople was changed officially
to Istanbul in 1930,
but had been in use by the non-Greek-speaking natives
there for centuries even before the city
fell to the Turks in 1453.
Why the heirs of the Roman empire spoke Greek
rather than Latin.
It's similar to why modern South Africans
speak English mostly rather than African.
It's probably a couple of whole shows you could do
about the convoluted colonial histories touched on above.
And that is from Conrad Berube.
Thanks Conrad, I appreciate it.
I still dispute that I said anything
as ridiculous as what you say I said,
but regardless, I'm glad it resulted in that top notch email.
If you want to be like Conrad
and send us a top notch email, you can do that.
Send it off to stuffpodcasts at iHeartRadio.com.
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to your favorite shows.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander
each week to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody
about my new podcast and make sure to listen,
so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts.