The Locator -- [(subject = "Vaccines")]

713 records matched your query       


Record 15 | Previous Record | Long Display | Next Record
03226aam a2200361   4500
001 6F8509F8E1C811EE94D662C22BECA4DB
003 SILO
005 20240314010222
008 230525s2023||||||||||||||||||||||||eng|u
010    $a 2023020864
020    $a 0593443179
020    $a 9780593443170
040    $d TxAuBib $d SILO
100 1  $a Karikó, Katalin,.
245 1  $a Breaking through / $c by Dr. Katalin Karik.
250    $a First edition.
264  1 $a New York :  $b Crown,  $c [2023]
300    $a 1 online resource.
520    $a "A story of perseverance and the power of convictions from the groundbreaking immigrant scientist whose decades-long research led to the COVID-19 vaccines. Katalin Karikó had an unlikely journey. The daughter of a butcher in postwar communist Hungary, Karikó grew up in a one-room home that lacked running water, and her family grew their own vegetables. She saw the wonders of nature all around her and was determined to become a scientist. That determination eventually brought her to the United States, where she arrived as a postdoctoral fellow in 1985 with $1,200 sewn into her toddler's teddy bear and a dream to remake medicine. Karikó worked in obscurity, battled cockroaches in a windowless lab, and faced outright derision and even deportation threats from her bosses and colleagues. She balked as prestigious research institutions increasingly conflated science and money. Despite setbacks, she never wavered in her belief that an ephemeral and underappreciated molecule called messenger RNA could change the world. Karikó believed that someday mRNA would transform ordinary cells into tiny factories capable of producing their own medicines on demand. She sacrificed nearly everything for this dream, but the obstacles she faced only motivated her, and eventually she succeeded. Karikó's three-decades-long investigation into mRNA would lead to a staggering achievement: vaccines that protected millions of people from the most dire consequences of COVID-19. These vaccines are just the beginning of mRNA's potential. Today, the medical community eagerly awaits more mRNA vaccines-for the flu, HIV, and other emerging infectious diseases. Breaking Through isn't just the story of an extraordinary woman-it's an indictment of closed-minded thinking and a testament to one woman's commitment to laboring intensely in obscurity-knowing she might never be recognized in a culture that is more driven by prestige, power, and privilege-because she believed her work would save lives"-- $c Provided by publisher.
541    $d 20240111.
600 1  $a Karikó, Katalin.
650    $a Women biochemists $z United States $v Biography.
650    $a Biochemists $z United States $v Biography.
650    $a Women immigrants $z United States $v Biography.
650    $a Immigrants $z United States $v Biography.
650    $a Hungarian Americans $v Biography.
650    $a Hungarians $z United States $v Biography.
650    $a mRNA vaccines $x Development.
650    $a COVID-19 vaccines $x Development.
710    $a Karikó, Katalin., $d First edition.
941    $a 1
952    $l JYPB641 $d 20240314011542.0
956    $a http://locator.silo.lib.ia.us/search.cgi?index_0=id&term_0=6F8509F8E1C811EE94D662C22BECA4DB

Initiate Another SILO Locator Search

This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.