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Opinion: What my polio-stricken mother would tell parents today about the importance of immunization

My mother survived polio in 1949, but it paralyzed both her legs and one arm and she later died from its complications. No wonder she was such an advocate for…
A group of mothers with their children wait outside a clinic for polio vaccinations to begin in May 1956.

I was 1 year old in 1949 when polio struck my mother. As I got older and could understand why she was in a wheelchair, she told me about her time in the hospital — more than a year — most of it an iron lung. Late at night she would lie awake, listening to the rhythmic pumping of the iron lungs on her polio ward and to the whooping cries of babies with pertussis that echoed down the hospital’s corridors.

That scene of polio patients in iron lungs and babies with pertussis struggling to breathe was played out in hospitals across the country. In 1949, were reported in since most measles cases were never reported to health departments.

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