Did Wired and Wireless Telegraphy and Telephony cause the emergence of epidemic Poliomyelitis?

The Parallel Histories of Polio and DDT: A Global Comparison of Trends


I will examine two distinct narratives surrounding poliomyelitis (polio) and the insecticide DDT, based on provided source materials. I will compare the established medical view of polio eradication with an alternative hypothesis linking the disease to pesticides, and analyzes the parallel global trends of both polio incidence and DDT usage from the mid-20th century to the early 2000s.


Two Narratives on Polio

The first perspective comes from Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine. It presents a clear history: polio, which peaked in the United States in 1952, was ultimately controlled by vaccines. The inactivated vaccine (IPV) introduced in 1955 and the oral vaccine (OPV) introduced in 1961 led to the eradication of wild poliovirus in the Western Hemisphere. The last case in the United States was in 1979, and the last case in the hemisphere was in 1991. In 1988, the World Health Organization (WHO) began a global eradication campaign. By 2001, worldwide cases had decreased by 99%, with fewer than 1,000 reported that year. However, a setback occurred in 2002, with about 1,900 cases globally—roughly 1,500 in India alone. The established view attributes outbreaks to suboptimal vaccination rates, isolated unvaccinated pockets, poor sanitation, and issues with vaccine storage or response.

Table: Key Epidemiological Milestones and Facts on Polio Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine 16th Edition on poliomyelitis epidemiology, page 1147


AspectDetails / MilestoneYear / PeriodSignificance
U.S. Peak Incidence57,879 cases of poliomyelitis1952Marked the height of the polio epidemic in the United States before vaccine introduction.
Vaccine IntroductionInactivated polio vaccine (IPV) introduced1955First tool for widespread prevention.
Oral polio vaccine (OPV) introduced1961More easily administered, helped enable mass vaccination campaigns and gut immunity.
Eradication in the AmericasLast wild poliovirus case in the United States (in unvaccinated religious communities)1979Showed the risk of importation/local spread when immunity gaps exist.
Last wild poliovirus paralysis in the Western Hemisphere1991Marked interruption of indigenous wild virus transmission in the region.
Americas certified polio-free1994First WHO region to achieve eradication certification.
Global Eradication InitiativeWHO resolution to eradicate polio globally1988Launched the coordinated worldwide effort with a target year of 2000.
Global Case ReductionGlobal cases decreased by 99% from 1988 baseline1988–2001Demonstrated the massive impact of the eradication campaign.
Fewer than 1,000 confirmed cases worldwide2001Showed the goal was within reach, but also highlighted remaining fragile pockets.
Major SetbackResurgence to ~1,900 cases globally (approx. 1,500 in India alone)2002Highlighted the risk of backsliding due to suboptimal vaccination coverage and operational challenges.
Virus Type EradicationWild poliovirus type 2 (WPV2) last detected globally1999First of the three wild poliovirus types to be eradicated.
Regional CertificationWestern Pacific Region certified polio-free2000Included China and many Southeast Asian nations.
European Region certified polio-free2002Included all of Europe and former Soviet states.
Remaining Endemic Countries (as of 2002)8 countries with indigenous wild poliovirus transmission2002Identified the final reservoirs of the virus (including India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Afghanistan, etc.).
Key Risk Factors for OutbreaksSuboptimal vaccination rates, isolated unvaccinated pockets, poor sanitation, crowding, improper vaccine storage, reduced vaccine response to one serotype.OngoingExplains why virus persists in some areas and can spark outbreaks even in polio-free regions via importation.
Importation RiskOutbreaks in Europe/North America traced to the Indian subcontinent.Underlined that global eradication is necessary to protect all countries, as the virus is only a plane ride away.

An alternative view is summarized from an article analyzing a "Pesticide Composite." This perspective notes that in the United States, the peaks and valleys of polio incidence show a "direct one-to-one relationship" with the introduction and withdrawal of major persistent pesticides like lead, arsenic, DDT, and BHC. These substances are described as neurotoxins. The core finding is a correlation, but the article has a limitation: it does not discuss causal relationship between DDT and polio in the whole word. The included data only covers the US.

Pesticides and Polio


Global Timeline of DDT : Reduction and Restriction



The global usage of DDT presents a complex trajectory of rise, fall, and targeted resurgence. Its initial peak in the mid-20th century for agriculture and public health was followed by a sharp decline in the 1970s, particularly in the developed world, due to environmental and health concerns. However, this was not a simple story of elimination. Faced with a resurgence of malaria and the failure of alternative insecticides in the late 1990s, a pragmatic policy reversal occurred. The World Health Organization officially re-evaluated and re-endorsed DDT for Indoor Residual Spraying in 2000, leading to its measured reintroduction in countries like South Africa and Ethiopia. This resurgence was subsequently codified and regulated by the 2001 Stockholm Convention, which banned all uses of DDT except for disease vector control under strict exemption. See here for Roll Back Malaria (RBM) Launch in 1998.

EraKey Global ActionEffect on DDT UseReference / Landmark
Early 1970sFirst National Bans in Developed NationsSharp decline in agricultural and domestic use across North America, Europe, Japan, Australia. Public health use (for malaria) continues in developing nations.- US EPA ban (1972)
- Sweden (1970), UK (1984), EC restrictions (1980s)
1980s-1990sRise of Mosquito Resistance & Environmental PressureMany malaria control programs switch to alternative insecticides (malathion, pyrethroids) due to DDT resistance and international pressure. Agricultural use continues only in a few countries (e.g., India, Mexico until mid-1990s).- WHO expert committees document resistance (WHO, 1986, 1992 reports)
- "FAO/UNEP Prior Informed Consent" procedure lists DDT (1991)
Late 1990s - Early 2000sWHO Re-evaluation & Resurgence for Malaria ControlFacing malaria resurgence (e.g., South Africa), WHO and endemic countries reassess DDT. Official re-endorsement for Indoor Residual Spraying (IRS) leads to increased or resumed use in several countries. - WHO Expert Committee on Malaria, 20th Report (2000) – Key statement on DDT's renewed importance.
- South Africa resumes DDT use (2000).
2001-2004Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)Global legal instrument bans DDT for all uses except disease vector control. Requires reporting, promotes alternatives. Legally formalized the phase-out of all non-public-health uses worldwide, while protecting the public health use reaffirmed in the late 1990s.- Stockholm Convention, adopted 2001, entered into force 2004. Annex B, Part II specifics on DDT exemption.
Post-2004Restricted Use under Stockholm Convention ExemptionDDT use is legally restricted to Indoor Residual Spraying (IRS) for malaria control in specific countries that register exemptions. Annual reporting required. Global production and use drop dramatically but continue in a handful of nations.- WHO position statement (2006, updated 2011) supports IRS use of DDT where effective and safe.
- UNEP reports on DDT production/use (e.g., 2019).



Discussion : Global Trends for polio and DDT

Comparing the global timelines for polio and DDT reveals parallel patterns of reduction and resurgence.

Trend Comparison: Polio vs. DDT

Trend PhasePolio TrendDDT Trend
Initial Peak/UseHigh case numbers (e.g., 57,879 in US, 1952).Widespread, high-volume agricultural and public health use (1940s-1950s).
Primary ReductionSteep, sustained global case decline (e.g., >99% drop 1988-2001).Sharp decline and cessation in developed nations (1970s). Gradual global decline.
Low Point / Near-EliminationFewer than 1,000 global cases (2001). Regions certified polio-free (1994-2002).Public health use minimal in many countries by late 1990s.
Resurgence / ReuseCase increase to ~1,900 globally (2002). Outbreaks in polio-free regions.Use increase/reintroduction in multiple countries for malaria control (late 1990s/early 2000s).
Post-Resurgence StatusVirus cornered to fewer endemic countries. Outbreaks linked to specific immunity gaps.Use stabilized as a controlled, exempted public health tool in specific countries.
Geographic PatternGlobal reduction, then persistence/resurgence in specific countries (India, Nigeria, etc.).Global reduction, then resurgence/reuse concentrated in specific malaria-endemic regions.
Temporal PatternMajor reduction (1955-2001), sharp resurgence (2002), subsequent decline.Major reduction (1972-1995), measured resurgence (1998-2004), subsequent stabilization.
Current TrajectoryDeclining towards zero endemic countries.Static, low-level authorized use.

Looking at these trends, a relationship is visible not only in the reduction of DDT usage and decreased polio cases globally but also in a simultaneous increase in both trends in the late 1990s and early 2000s.


Conclusion

While this analysis does not constitute a formal epidemiological study, the observed parallel trends of global reduction and subsequent resurgence in both polio incidence and DDT usage are striking. The data strongly suggests these synchronous patterns warrant more detailed and rigorous investigation, particularly in India, which represented the global epicenter of polio cases in the early 2000s while maintaining a complex and significant history of DDT application. It is equally critical to extend this comparative analysis to other key nations, especially those where DDT use persisted or was revived, to test the consistency of any observed correlations. A limitation of the current discussion is the lack of examination of these trends in the most recent decades, a period marked by near-total global polio eradication efforts and a highly regulated, exemption-based framework for DDT.
A comprehensive, scientific inquiry across time and geography is essential to move beyond parallel observation toward a robust understanding of any potential relationship.
 

Great idea for a Stolen Medicine section.


ADHD would appear to be a catch-all term for symptoms of diverse origin. Autism seems similar but I'd highlight the non-physical side of this also, often ignored.

Hyperlipidemia ... and the statin scam. I know this area well, including the nefarious misinformation that's used by modern medicine to justify statins and the cholesterol theory.

Cholesterol is used to make brain & nerve tissue (myelin), digestive bile acids, vitamin D, all hormones and the cell membrane which ensures cellular integrity. Blocking cholesterol production is ill-advised and irresponsible (imo) yet statins do exactly that (and more), so it's not surprising that they cause much harm to people. With that in mind, here's some classic propaganda that claims statins are safe, article dated yesterday:
Looks like we do indeed need that subforum ( if only to keep this thread on topic 😅).
I'll pass on the suggestion, and let you know when he responds.
 

Great idea for a Stolen Medicine section.


ADHD would appear to be a catch-all term for symptoms of diverse origin. Autism seems similar but I'd highlight the non-physical side of this also, often ignored.

Hyperlipidemia ... and the statin scam. I know this area well, including the nefarious misinformation that's used by modern medicine to justify statins and the cholesterol theory.

Cholesterol is used to make brain & nerve tissue (myelin), digestive bile acids, vitamin D, all hormones and the cell membrane which ensures cellular integrity. Blocking cholesterol production is ill-advised and irresponsible (imo) yet statins do exactly that (and more), so it's not surprising that they cause much harm to people. With that in mind, here's some classic propaganda that claims statins are safe, article dated yesterday:
Looks like we do indeed need that subforum ( if only to keep this thread on topic 😅).
I'll pass on everyone's suggestions then, and let you know when he responds.
 
One of the questions is whether specific pathogenic Nano-entities actually exists.
See the substack by Proton Magic, Christine Massey, and others.

There's a great deal of knowledge and experience with poisons like snake venom, ergot, mushroom venom, and so on. Those things seem valid.
 
Actually I've read quite a few papers on this back in the day mostly at The Semantic Scholar .
I'm assuming they are still there if you do a search although possibly it's not open access like it used to be any more.
Over the last decade or so I looked up medical stuff only upon special occasions, to stay informed. Just a few years ago ('safe and effective', anyone ?) was such a period.
On a related note - John Enders' paper on the alleged discovery of the polio virus from 1954 is still behind a paywall.
Perhaps because it openly exposes the most glaring contradiction in so-called virology, which I prefer to call "fraud".
Enders followed the proper scientific method and infact did a control experiment without "virus-infected" material, and got identical results ("viruses"). And according to excerpts I read, he did not withold this fact in his paper. He got a Nobel prize, presumably to shut him up (think Obama and peace Nobel price).
And ever after, no approved researcher and MD ever did a control again when performing a so-called "virus isolation".
 
I asked a friend of mine, who has an MD and specializes in the study of nerve damage, whether he could identify any relationship between neurodegenerative disease and environmental toxins—specifically pesticides and herbicides such as DDT—as mentioned in medical textbooks.
But I would equally recommend everybody to research the natural "pesticides" inherent in plants, in other words, the toxins they form to protect themselves and their offspring from predators.
The content of those toxins in processed and "bio" plant foods is often orders of magnitude higher than the synthetic ones'.

As a starting point I would recommend oxalic acid, a "staple" for creating kidney stones (>90% are calcium oxalate).
Or the curious question why fruitarians (vegans consuming fruits only) are not exactly a paragon of health, to put it mildly.
 
For bypassing paywalls:
• sci-hub.hlgczx.com
www.sci-hub.red

Either of those should work.
Going to check this out, definitely.
But the interesting fact is that it's still behind a paywall, after 70 years. Which usually has one of two reasons. The first is to make money, the second is to hide something from "unwashed" eyes.
Demanding unreasonable prices is a proven way dissuade another party from obtain a thing.
As an example, a salesman of one of my former employer got a request from a customer to get the source code for an software application (specific industrial control). He did not tell them the internal policy was to not reveal any sources, but responded with a quotation of about 100k€ (and that was almost 20 years ago).

For some reasons I'm reminded of the Farmhall transcripts, which will not be disclosed for another 20 years, 100 years in total.
 
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