The Cutter Incident: How America's First Polio Vaccine Led to the Growing Vaccine Crisis

Front Cover
Yale University Press, Sep 18, 2007 - History - 238 pages

Vaccines have saved more lives than any other single medical advance. Yet today only four companies make vaccines, and there is a growing crisis in vaccine availability. Why has this happened? This remarkable book recounts for the first time a devastating episode in 1955 at Cutter Laboratories in Berkeley, California, thathas led many pharmaceutical companies to abandon vaccine manufacture.

Drawing on interviews with public health officials, pharmaceutical company executives, attorneys, Cutter employees, and victims of the vaccine, as well as on previously unavailable archives, Dr. Paul Offit offers a full account of the Cutter disaster. He describes the nation's relief when the polio vaccine was developed by Jonas Salk in 1955, the production of the vaccine at industrial facilities such as the one operated by Cutter, and the tragedy that occurred when 200,000 people were inadvertently injected with live virulent polio virus: 70,000 became ill, 200 were permanently paralyzed, and 10 died. Dr. Offit also explores how, as a consequence of the tragedy, one jury's verdict set in motion events that eventually suppressed the production of vaccines already licensed and deterred the development of new vaccines that hold the promise of preventing other fatal diseases.

From inside the book

Contents

Introduction
1
Little White Coffins
4
Back to the Drawing Board
19
The Grand Experiment
44
How Does It Feel to Be a Killer of Children?
58
A ManMade Polio Epidemic
83
What Went Wrong at Cutter Laboratories
105
Cutter in Court
132
Cigars Parasites and Human Toes
154
Death for the Lambs
178
Epilogue
192
Notes
195
Selected Bibliography
225
Acknowledgments
229
Index
231
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2007)

Paul Offit, M.D., is Chief of Infectious Diseases at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and a professor of pediatrics and Maurice R. Hilleman Professor of Vaccinology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.

Bibliographic information