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Selling Science Stephen E. Mawdsley

Selling Science By Stephen E. Mawdsley

Selling Science by Stephen E. Mawdsley


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Summary

Drawing on oral history interviews, medical journals, newspapers, meeting minutes, and private institutional records, Selling Science sheds light on the ethics of scientific conduct, and on the power of marketing to shape public opinion about medical experimentation.

Selling Science Summary

Selling Science: Polio and the Promise of Gamma Globulin by Stephen E. Mawdsley

Today, when many parents seem reluctant to have their children vaccinated, even with long proven medications, the Salk vaccine trial, which enrolled millions of healthy children to test an unproven medical intervention, seems nothing short of astonishing. In Selling Science, medical historian Stephen E. Mawdsley recounts the untold story of the first large clinical trial to control polio using healthy children55,000 healthy childrenrevealing how this long-forgotten incident cleared the path for Salks later trial.Mawdsley describes how, in the early 1950s, Dr. William Hammon and the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis launched a pioneering medical experiment on a previously untried scale. Conducted on over 55,000 healthy children in Texas, Utah, Iowa, and Nebraska, this landmark study assessed the safety and effectiveness of a blood component, gamma globulin, to prevent paralytic polio. The value of the proposed experiment was questioned by many prominent health professionals as it harbored potential health risks, but as Mawdsley points out, compromise and coercion moved it forward. And though the trial returned dubious results, it was presented to the public as a triumph and used to justify a federally sanctioned mass immunization study on thousands of families between 1953 and 1954. Indeed, the concept, conduct, and outcome of the GG study were sold to health professionals, medical researchers, and the public at each stage. At a time when most Americans trusted scientists, their mutual encounter under the auspices of conquering disease was shaped by politics, marketing, and at times, deception.
Drawing on oral history interviews, medical journals, newspapers, meeting minutes, and private institutional records, Selling Science sheds light on the ethics of scientific conduct, and on the power of marketing to shape public opinion about medical experimentation.

Selling Science Reviews

"Drawing on oral history interviews, medical journals, newspapers, meeting minutes, and private institutional records, Mawdsley reveals the intertwined social, political, ideological, and institutional actors involved in the construction of public consent for experimental medical research in the Cold War era... Mawdsley's presentation of the untold case study of GG trials in the 1950s is an important contribution to scholarship focused on the sociological and political constructions of public consent and scientific success." * Canadian Bulletin of Medical History *
"Historians of science, scholars of science and technology studies and historians of medicine and public health will benefit greatly from this new addition to the polio story."
* Social History of Medicine *
"Mawdsley's book is a cautionary tale and leaves readers to consider the provocative assertion that 'the appearance of progress mattered.'" * Choice *
"Mawdsley uses the enthusiasm for Gamma Globulin and the ultimate clinical trial as a vehicle to explore more broadly mid-twentieth-century attitudes towards risk, scientific transparency, double-blind clinical trials, and the power of fundraising and marketing over science.Selling Scienceis well-written, clearly argued, and extensively researched." -- Daniel J. Wilson * author of Living with Polio: The Epidemic and Its Survivors *
"Mawdsley tells the riveting and forgotten history of a massive human experiment, conducted in the hopes of preventing polio. It provides a sober reminder of the limits of research ethics and scientific precaution in the face of a dread disease." -- Angela Creager * author of Life Atomic: A History of Radioisotopes in Science and Medicine *
"An excellent new book." * Bulletin of the History of Medicine *
"InSelling ScienceStephen Mawdsley approaches polio from a different angle, following the history of the purified blood fraction gamma globulin, an antibody. As Mawdsley compellingly shows, the gamma globulin field trials marked the opening of a new chapter in the social history of biomedicine, one in which the methods of persuasion joined the methods of medicine in the structuring of clinical trials." * The Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences *

About Stephen E. Mawdsley

STEPHEN E. MAWDSLEY is the Isaac NewtonAnn Johnston Research Fellow at Clare Hall at the University of Cambridge in England.

Table of Contents

List of IllustrationsAcknowledgmentsList of AbbreviationsIntroduction1 Forging Momentum2 Building Consent for a Clinical Trial3 Marketing and Mobilization4 The Pilot Study5 Operation Marbles and Lollipops6 The National ExperimentNotesBibliographyIndex

Additional information

NPB9780813574394
9780813574394
0813574390
Selling Science: Polio and the Promise of Gamma Globulin by Stephen E. Mawdsley
New
Hardback
Rutgers University Press
2016-08-01
232
N/A
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