,
Charles Armstrong,
John R. Paul,
Thomas Francis Jr.,
Albert Sabin, Melnick,
Isabel Morgan,
Howard A. Howe,
David Bodian,
Jonas Salk,
Eleanor Roosevelt and
Basil O'Connor (1958). Melnick was chosen as the chief virologist at the division of biological standards at the
National Institutes of Health in 1957. He was hired by the
Baylor College of Medicine in 1958 as the first head of the school's department of virology and epidemiology. Research he published in 1960 showed that the form of the
attenuated vaccine used in the
oral polio vaccine developed by
Albert Sabin was less harmful to the nervous system than comparable vaccines. A study he performed found that polio vaccine could be stored for long periods by using
magnesium chloride as a preservative, eliminating the need for refrigeration. Melnick was named as dean of graduate sciences at Baylor in 1968, a position he held until 1991. Together with heart surgeon
Michael E. DeBakey, Melnick investigated the possible effects that
cytomegalovirus might have on
coronary artery diseases. A regimen for the treatment of a polio outbreak in the 1980s in the
Gaza Strip and
West Bank by a joint effort of Israeli and Palestinian health officials used a combination of live attenuated and inactivated forms of the polio vaccine as recommended by Melnick and Nathan Goldblum, as those receiving as many as four doses of the oral polio vaccine alone were still susceptible to polio. On January 2, 1958, Melnick was one of 17 people inducted into the
Polio Hall of Fame at
Warm Springs, Georgia together with 10 other European and American polio experts. An editor of multiple scientific journals, Melnick wrote and edited the section on virology in a standard text on
microbiology. Melnick died at age 86 on January 7, 2001, in
Houston, as a result of complications of
Alzheimer's disease. He was survived by his wife, Matilda Benyesh-Melnick, his daughter and granddaughter. ==See also==