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Polio Drives


In 1954, North Dakota and the rest of the nation were in the home stretch toward a safe and effective polio vaccine, but cases crept up that summer and fall, and polio fundraising drives sought money to help patients, who were mostly children. A survey found that Americans feared polio second only to the atomic bomb.
Polio drives took many forms. The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe sent a $500 check directly to the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, also known as the March of Dimes, which took a leading role in the fight against polio.
Businesses, Bismarck police, firefighters and civic organizations volunteered as fundraisers, soliciting $527 in dimes from shoppers for the “block of dimes” – a row of dimes that stretched for an entire city block. ....

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Worst Polio Outbreak


Last month we heard about the triumph of the Salk polio vaccine. Polio was a dreaded disease that could paralyze and even kill, and children were the most vulnerable. Before a vaccine, little could be done.
On this date in 1946, North Dakota’s worst polio outbreak was beginning. It struck dozens of towns, most prevalent among children younger than 10.
With the growing of number cases, North Dakota’s acting state health officer declared an emergency. He called for preventive measures that included isolating children awaiting diagnosis; adjusting the chlorine content in the water supply and swimming pools; and prompt reporting of cases. Hospitals banned visitors. Mothers kept their children away from movie theaters and public gatherings. Soda fountains and restaurants were viewed as major places to catch the virus. ....

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