We all have some form of understanding of what a vaccine is and how it is administered. It is typically given through a syringe, usually injected into a muscle, whether that be the arm, thigh, or gluteus. There are some exceptions, as there are oral vaccinations as well. But, there was a time when there was a different kind of vaccination for an epidemic that was affecting children all across the United States, and that illness was polio.
Approximately 60 years ago, polio was sweeping the nation. It was generally contracted through exposure to water that had fecal matter in it, and if ingested, they were at risk for polio, if they were not vaccinated. Children that were affected were even sometimes taken to isolation hospitals, away from their families, where they were treated for the illness. It wasn’t until the mid-1950’s that a vaccine for the disease.
In 1955, Dr. Jonas Salk, from the University of Pittsburgh had created the very first polio vaccine. It was an inactive poliovirus that was administered by injection. In 1954, Salk inoculated 137 students from Arsenal Elementary School in Pittsburgh. Results showed a year later that the vaccine was effective. Parents everywhere wanted to get their children inoculated against polio.
Dr. Albert Sabin, of the Children’s Hospital Research Foundation in Cincinnati, Ohio found a brand-new way to vaccinate children against polio – and it involved a sugar cube. Using a weakened version of the live virus, this new vaccine was able to be taken orally. It only took a small drop of the vaccine, dropped onto a sugar cube. Then, it was administered to the children. It was quick and easy.
When parents got word of this new vaccine, they flocked to local schools, churches, fire stations and other public meeting places, where the vaccines were being administered. Sabin’s vaccine quickly became the vaccine of choice, as it cost less money to make and was easier to produce. Lines snaked around buildings offering the vaccine as families lined up to make sure their children were protected.
Since both vaccines were released, polio has been virtually eradicated across the globe. However, there is still no cure for polio if one contracts it. But many will never forget their polio vaccination with a simple little sugar cube. The contributions of Dr. Salk and Dr. Sabin will forever be remembered in the world of medicine and the eradication of polio.
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Dennis burke says
I still remember when I was a child of getting the sugar cube with the pink color dose in school.
Bob M says
I too remember getting the sugar cube polio vaccine. I’m just glad our parents didn’t think it was an abuse of personal freedoms.
Msc says
Hahaha so true.
Lynette says
I remember as a military Army brat. I liked that the best! Lol!
Anonymous says
So true. Glad I got it.
Anonymous says
I remember it also but can’t remember the year?
Paul Bogart says
I remember when I was a kid in the early sixties in Philadelphia they drove around in the neighborhood administering sugar cubes to all the kids
Anonymous says
I remember that vaccination! My mom and I stood in a long line along with a lot of other children that snaked into my school gymnasium. I was not looking forward to getting a shot and was so relieved to find out it was going to be by eating a pretty pink sugar cube. I remember hoping all my shots could be replaced with an everyday common sugar cube.
Linda P says
That is the way I got it also.
Kahy Casso says
I remember as a child getting the vaccine I just couldn’t remember what it was
Vicki-Van Dallas says
I remember getting the Salk vaccine from our local doctor in Oakdale Ca., I was in 4th grade & got a terrible reaction which caused me to have flu like symptoms & a rash on my arms for about 10 days which repeated itself 2or 3 times before it was gone. Then in the summer of 1955 I got the sugar cube vaccine in Aptos, Ca. at Carrillo Junior College with no reaction .
freya fluharty says
And the sugar cube tasted disgusting!
Tessa says
Yes, I remember the disgusting taste 🤢
Anonymous says
Yep! I threw up 5 min.
after I got mine. Probably shouldn’t count that one! Lol
Linda P says
I don’t remember that, at all. I was just grateful that I didn’t have to deal with the injection. Saved my life, small price to pay. My brother had polio, a terrible time, for him & my parents!
Anita B. says
Amen!!!
Wilfredo Rodriguez says
I remember vaguely taking the polio sugar cube back in the early 60s in public school. I can only remember how sweet it was and it wasn’t distasteful.
Albert Fardella says
Remember it like it was yesterday. I would take anything that was sweet. Don’t remember the bad taste but remember being in line in our school auditorium. Our lady of Loretta in Brooklyn.
Anonymous says
Oh that thing was salty from the drops on it . Decades later and i remember it vividly
JoAnn says
St patricks school in long island ny..sugar cube given to me along with other children. No questions asked the nuns were in charge!
Michael says
Amazing how vivid I remember in the school auditorium getting the sugar cube with the reddish color in the middle. Wasn’t distasteful
Susan Cawley says
I had the sugar cubes around 1974. We also got florid tablets because everyone had well-water. Yuck. The best thing was the red tables that showed how well you brushed your teeth. Teachers must have hated those since the kids just wanted to leave their seats to show off their gross teeth to their classmates!
Vickie Knoff says
Hahaha!!! How well I remember that!!!!
Anonymous says
I got the sugar cube in 1964. They were being distributed several places around town. I got mine at Sibley Hospital. Been wondering if it is still effective more than 50 years later.
D says
I also received it in 1964, in first grade at a small rural school in Alabama that no longer exists. Don’t remember the taste, though.
Hans says
I remember going to our neighborhood elementary school with my parents in Des Moines, Iowa. Standing in line and then thinking “this is the best medicine ever!” We were never allowed to eat sugar at home. And here was this sugar cube with the pink dot on it. Tasted great!
Alan says
Wow, watching a show “Through the Decades “ about the Polio vaccine. I can remember my older sister along with my younger sister and me walking into our school gymnasium in Northeast Philadelphia and receiving a pink sugar cube. Sweet!
Gmiller says
I remember getting something in Texas that tasted like chicken feathers to me in school. Thought they put on my tongue with a dropper and it made me gag. Could it have been a sugar cube and I remember it wrong?
Kathy S. Micor says
I lost my father to Polio in 1951. He was in an iron lung . He was completely paralyzed except for his Left Arm. He just purchased materials to build a house. His friends and co workers built out house. I was only 5 months old. I am a firm believer in vaccines.