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¡La Historia y las Ciencias Naturales se encuentran! Enfermedades durante la intervención francesa
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Salvación global: de Fordlandia a la polio
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Only science can help us triumph over Covid-19 May 3, 2021, 11:27 AM IST
In the year 1858, Charles Darwin published his path-breaking book, ‘
Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.’ The long title,
summed up his revolutionizing theory, which has even more relevance for us. Darwin asserted that humans like all other living beings are constantly evolving and mutations that favored natural selection have enabled our survival on this planet.
But humans did not have the genetics to survive the ravages of pandemics like the Bubonic Plague, syphilis, cholera, scarlet fever, leprosy, smallpox, polio, meningitis, AIDS and the many marauding pandemics. We triumphed because we developed science that enabled us to overcome our genetic incapacities in fighting diseases.
Elvis Presley got his polio vaccination from Dr. Harold Fuerst and Dr. Leona Baumgartner at CBS Studio 50 in New York City on Oct. 28, 1956. The chart-topping singer took part in a March of Dimes campaign to convince teens to get vaccinated. Seymour Wally / NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images
The mass inoculation of millions of American children against polio in 1955, like the vaccinations of millions of American adults against COVID-19 in 2021, was a triumph of science.
But the polio vaccine had overwhelming public acceptance, while stubborn pockets of vaccine hesitancy persist across the U.S. for the COVID-19 vaccine. Why the difference? One reason, historians say, is that in 1955, many Americans had an especially deep respect for science.
Elvis Presley got his polio vaccination from Dr. Harold Fuerst and Dr. Leona Baumgartner at CBS Studio 50 in New York City on Oct. 28, 1956. The chart-topping singer took part in a March of Dimes campaign to convince teens to get vaccinated. Credit: NY Daily News Archive via Getty Images
Can t Help Falling In Love With A Vaccine: How Polio Campaign Beat Vaccine Hesitancy By
at 6:00 am NPR
The mass inoculation of millions of American children against polio in 1955, like the vaccinations of millions of American adults against COVID-19 in 2021, was a triumph of science.
But the polio vaccine had overwhelming public acceptance, while stubborn pockets of vaccine hesitancy persist across the U.S. for the COVID-19 vaccine. Why the difference? One reason, historians say, is that in 1955, many Americans had an especially deep respect for science.
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