The CDC Made These Two Radical Changes and 30,000 Diagnoses of Polio Instantly Disappeared
The polio vaccine was licensed in the U.S. in 1954. From ‘50 thru ‘55,
the striped and clear portions of the bars represent about 85% of the
reported cases, or 30,000 per year, on average. Those cases were
automatically eliminated by two radical changes the CDC made to the
diagnostic parameters and labeling protocol of the disease as soon as
the vaccine was licensed – 30,000 cases a year we were subsequently told were eliminated by the vaccine.
That success, held aloft as a banner of the industry, is an illusion.
The CDC has an awesome power of control over public perception,
sculpting it from behind closed doors in Atlanta, with the point of a
pen.
Over the last sixty years in the U.S., more than a million
cases of what would have been diagnosed as polio pre-vaccine – same
symptoms - were given different labels.
The graph is from the Ratner report (1), the transcript of a 1960
panel sponsored by the Illinois Medical Society, on which sat three PhD
statisticians and an MD, met to discuss the problems with the ongoing
polio vaccination campaign.