Literature DB >> 25459347

Managing the future: the Special Virus Leukemia Program and the acceleration of biomedical research.

Robin Wolfe Scheffler1.   

Abstract

After the end of the Second World War, cancer virus research experienced a remarkable revival, culminating in the creation in 1964 of the United States National Cancer Institute's Special Virus Leukemia Program (SVLP), an ambitious program of directed biomedical research to accelerate the development of a leukemia vaccine. Studies of cancer viruses soon became the second most highly funded area of research at the Institute, and by far the most generously funded area of biological research. Remarkably, this vast infrastructure for cancer vaccine production came into being before a human leukemia virus was shown to exist. The origins of the SVLP were rooted in as much as shifts in American society as laboratory science. The revival of cancer virus studies was a function of the success advocates and administrators achieved in associating cancer viruses with campaigns against childhood diseases such as polio and leukemia. To address the urgency borne of this new association, the SVLP's architects sought to lessen the power of peer review in favor of centralized Cold War management methods, fashioning viruses as "administrative objects" in order to accelerate the tempo of biomedical research and discovery.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25459347     DOI: 10.1016/j.shpsc.2014.09.005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci        ISSN: 1369-8486


  2 in total

1.  How to produce 'marketable and profitable results for the company': from viral interference to Roferon A.

Authors:  Carsten Timmermann
Journal:  Hist Philos Life Sci       Date:  2019-07-30       Impact factor: 1.205

2.  Tinkering with genes and embryos: the multiple invention of transgenic mice c. 1980.

Authors:  Dmitriy Myelnikov
Journal:  Hist Technol       Date:  2020-01-27
  2 in total

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