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Ann  Wilson Rounds's avatar

I wrote a letter to NYTimes before I read this. Yes, how can we equate the ravages of polio with autism, which isn't terrible. My father wrote in 1932 after watching children suffer from polio. He said, "

"Of all the experiences that the physician must undergo, none can be more distressing than to watch respiratory paralysis in a child ill with poliomyelitis — to watch him as he becomes more and more dyspneic, using with increasing vigor every available accessory muscle of neck, shoulder and chin, silent wasting no breath for speech, wide-eyed and frightened, conscious almost to the last breath.”

Please, never again!

Jlouise's avatar

I was a little kid when my cousin was diagnosed with polio, but I can still remember the horror in my grandmother's eyes as she told us. When the vaccine first became available, my mother hurried my sister and me in for the"shot". Since early on there was no long history of reactions, she opted to have us vaccinated on our legs and not our arms. She figured that if something went wrong at the injection site, we could lived our lives better without a leg than without an arm. Thankfully, my cousin had only a mild case of polio, and he went on to play college football. My sister and I are both still walking on two legs. My mother correctly decided that the risks of the disease were worse than the risks, IF ANY, of the vaccination.

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