The Age of Cures
How American Scientists Saved Your Life
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Narrated by:
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By:
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Barry Werth
About this listen
In the early part of the twentieth century, patients routinely died from the flu, if they didn’t contract a more potent disease like rubella, mumps, or polio. Yet with advances in technology, the young talent at universities across the country, and the significant investment from a federal government eager to prepare for a second world war, medicine exploded in the 1930s to the 1960s to finally meet the needs of a sick populace. Finally, “miracle drugs” were available for the first time: penicillin and wide-spectrum antibiotics, cortisone, and a polio vaccine.
Werth convincingly shows us how this crucial investment in science made America modern, and a scientific powerhouse for decades to come.
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