Polio is personal for me

This is my mother’s true story of living through polio, and the vaccine discovery that changed everything.

Betsy Boehm Bland
6 min readNov 20, 2021
My mother, before and after polio

On July 4th, 1948, my mother and her brother developed a fever, sore throat, and chills. A couple of days in, they fell while walking down the hall to the bathroom. She took them to the hospital. Her fears were confirmed — two of her three children were infected with polio, a disease that attacks the body’s nervous system and can cause paralysis and sometimes death.

They were in the throws of a 1940s polio outbreak. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics, polio disabled an average of 35,000 people a year in the U.S., most of them children. The disease outbreaks would peak during the summer months, driving families to isolate and avoid public gatherings like movie theaters and pools. People did whatever they could to protect their children.

The “Metal Croissant”

Iron Lung | Science Museum

My mother’s illness worsened to the point that she could no longer breathe on her own. So for several weeks, she fought for her life in an iron lung, a giant contraption that…

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Betsy Boehm Bland

Product Experience Team Lead and Designer | Mission Driven, User-Focused