"And whooping cough can cool ya". The Coasters (circa 1956) sang this line in "Poisen Ivy". People whine that drug research has lost interest in antibiotics and frustrated with antivirals. In first grade our school lined up dor small pox inoculation. Most older kids got off when the teltale scar left confirmed a previous inoculation, the line shortened quickly. The production stopped about ten kids ahead of me when the cotton wrapped amyl nitrate capsule failed a fainting violet. A wheeled office chair whisked a bluish 6 year old boy intothe nurse's office. With hightened anxiety we continued and though many reacted with wailing and tears, I was more surprised how over rated the experience was.
In 2008 my wife and I found ourselves guardians of our 10yr old Niece. As soon as possible we began eye doctor to dental appointments. We were horrified at what she had NOT been inoculated or vaccinated for. The doctor said a lot of preventative measures, common to my childhood were being refused based on statistics, nut case commentaries, gossip and ignorance in general. The kid that turned blue was back in school the next day. We got our Niece's disease preventatives up to date. I was surprised again when the same doctor, a moment before, railing against preventative ignorance was now flipping sides, advising against this or that innoculation/vaccination. I finally took the list of prevenatives and marked a fairly comprehensive list and over a year, we got her up to date. When the nurse was preparing to give her a small pox inoculation she quipped "when was the last time you saw someone with small pox"? I quickly answered 1990 in Islamabad. She looked unbelieving at me and back at my Niece who was affirmatively nodding. From 1972 until 2000, I spent a total of 11 accumulative years traveling outside the U.S.. It terrifies me to know nearly a million globe trotters walk through pop up villages next to shoe factories or import manufacturing operations purposely placed as far from infrastructure as possible. Pockets of "extinct" diseases are in full glory and educated business and technical (Western culture) don't have the sense or inclination to take measures to leave third and forth world diseases behind.
The point is we no longer enjoy the past where everybody, by laws with Public Health Department teeth eliminated preventable, untreatable diseases like polio. Because of my travels I had shots even our military don't normally get. Our world is abuzz with world interlopers arriving home, rife with mold and pathogens greeting your childrens' school mates with germ infested hands, clothes and lips. A little something unexpected for show and tell to go along with a mounted scorpion from Indonesia.
So many "old" preventative medications at hand need a revival. Then again, what do I know?