Democracy Dies in Darkness

For decades, fear and failure in the hunt for an RSV vaccine. Now, success.

October 10, 2022 at 12:30 p.m. EDT
Facility director Axel Brilot, left, and graduate student Elizabeth McFadden collect data at the University of Texas at Austin, where researchers are studying the submicroscopic terrain of viruses to develop vaccines. (Montinique Monroe for The Washington Post)
12 min

In the mid-1960s, researchers at D.C.’s top pediatric hospital set out to vanquish a diabolical virus that filled wards with wheezing infants each winter.

Their weapon: a vaccine designed to target respiratory syncytial virus, known as RSV. The virus had been identified only a decade earlier but was already known to be one of the most challenging illnesses to rattle the lungs of young children, surpassing influenza.