Polio Wars (118 page)

Read Polio Wars Online

Authors: Naomi Rogers

118.
Nudelman and Willingham
Healing the Blues
(1997) quoted in Wilson
Living with Polio
, 56–57.

119.
Pohl and Kenny,
The Kenny Concept of Infantile Paralysis
, 87–94.

120.
Hall
Through the Storm
, 8.

121.
Bruno
The Polio Paradox
; Wilson
Living with Polio
. On sexual abuse by doctors and by orderlies, see Bruno
The Polio Paradox
, 76–77.

122.
Bruno
The Polio Paradox
, 74. Bruno argued that “Kenny's preeminence and her own dogmatism blotted out at least equally effective and more humane treatments for polio, such
as the procedures developed by the Kendalls a decade earlier,” a view that probably came from his reading of Kendall “Sister Elizabeth Kenny Revisited,” 361–365.

123.
Pohl and Kenny
The Kenny Concept of Infantile Paralysis
, 175.

124.
Suzane Fabian and Morag Loh “Elizabeth Kenny 1880–1952: Nurse, Pioneer Therapist, Inventor” in
The Change[-]makers: Ten Significant Australian Women
(Milton, Queensland: Jacaranda Press, 1983), 131–142. See also George Blaikie “Sister Elizabeth Kenny: A Bold Crusader Against Polio”
Australian Women's Weekly
(November 1984) 52: 346–347; Jim Bowditch “Bush Nurse's Magnificent Obsession: Sister Kenny a Polio Angel”
Sunday Sun [Magazine]
October 16 1988, 2, Kenny Collection, Box 18, Fryer Library; George Blaikie “Sister Elizabeth Kenny: Controversial Crusader Against Polio” in
Great Women of History
(Broadway, New South Wales: John Fairfax Marketing, 1984), 117–118. For examples of the lack of attention to Kenny see Helen Gregory
A Tradition of Care: A History of Nursing at the Royal Brisbane Hospital
(Brisbane: Boolarong Publication, 1988); it has no discussion of Kenny in the text but does include a photograph of her; Elizabeth Burchill
Australian Nurses since Nightingale 1860–1990
(Richmond: Spectrum Publications, 1992) has no mention of Kenny.

125.
Alan Alda in
Woman's Day
March 13 1980, quoted in Fabian and Loh “Elizabeth Kenny 1880–1952: Nurse, Pioneer Therapist, Inventor,” 131–142; see for example Alan Alda
Never Have Your Dog Stuffed: And Other Things I've Learned
(New York: Random House, 2005), 19–20.

126.
John R. Wilson
Through Kenny's Eyes: An Exploration of Sister Elizabeth Kenny's Views about Nursing
(Townsville: Royal College of Nursing Australia, 1995).

127.
Rewind ABC-TV “Sister Kenny: Saint or Charlatan?” August 29 2004;
abc.net.au/tv/rewind/txt/s1184925.htm
, accessed 9/29/2005.

128.
“Memorial to Sister Kenny”
Melbourne Age
September 20 1961;
http://www.post-polionetwork.org.au/particles/part13.pdf
, accessed 1/10/2013; Toowoomba Sundial
http://jhwagner.com.au/sister-kenny-memorial.php
, accessed 1/10/2013.

129.
http://www.post-polionetwork.org.au/particles/part13.pdf
, accessed 1/10/2013.

130.
“Sister Kenny Recalled on ‘100
th
' Birthday—and Again Famous Founder Has Upper Hand”
Minneapolis Star
September 20 1986.

131.
Leonard G. Wilson
Medical Revolution in Minnesota: A History of the University of Minnesota
(St. Paul: Midewiwin Press, 1989), 357–365.

132.
Emily Crofford
Healing Warrior: A Story about Sister Elizabeth Kenny
(Minneapolis: Carolrhoda Books, 1989), 50.

133.
Nancy Rehkamp to Dear Friend of Sister Kenny Institute, February 18 1992, Chris Sharpe Collection, in author's possession; “Major 1992 PR Activities in Conjunction with 50
th
Anniversary,” Chris Sharpe Collection, in author's possession. On the Institute's merger with Abbott-Northwestern Hospital and then the Allina hospital system see
http://www.allina.com/ahs/ski.nsf/page/aboutus
, accessed 1/10/2013; B. Lee Ligon “Sister Elizabeth Kenny: A Controversial Participant in the War against Polio”
Seminars in Pediatric Infectious Diseases
(October 2000) 11: 287–291, 290. It is now the Sister Kenny Rehabilitative Institute.

134.
Henry W. Haverstock, letter to editor, “Russia and Sister Kenny” [Minneapolis newspaper], August 10 1993, Cohn Papers, MHS-K.

135.
Mary and Stuart McCracken, interviews with Rogers, November 1992, Caloundra, Queensland.

136.
“Fighting Polio with ‘Gentle Hands' ” by Dan Olson, Minnesota Public Radio, August 22, 2002;
http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/200208/22_olsond_sisterkinney/part4.shtml
, accessed 9/22/2011.

137.
Kate Roberts
Minnesota 150: The People, Places, and Things That Shape Our State
(St: Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2007), 96–97.

138.
Annette Atkins “Facing Minnesota”
Daedalus: Minnesota: A Different America?
(2000) 129: 45–46.

139.
Minnesota History Theatre “Sister Kenny's Children,”
http://www.historytheatre.com/shows/2009-2010/sister_kenny.asp
, accessed 9/22/11; see also Bev Wolfe “Claudia Wilkens Gives a Commanding Performance in ‘Sister Kenny's Children' ”
Twin Cities Daily Planet
January 28 2010. The Play Guide listed Cohn's biography, the ABC and the MPR broadcasts, Kenny's 2 autobiographies, and one of her textbooks.

140.
Kenny
My Battle and Victory: History of the Discovery of Poliomyelitis as a Systemic Disease
(London: Robert Hale, 1955), 10. The correct quotation is “He that of greatest works is finisher/Oft does them by the weakest minister”; William Shakespeare
All's Well That Ends Well
, Act 2, Scene i.

141.
A. L. Baron
Man Against Germs
(London: Scientific Book Club, 1958), 126–129.

142.
For one effort at addressing some aspects of this issue see Rogers “The Debate Considered”
Australian Historical Studies
(2000) 31: 163–166.

143.
One major exception to this is the history of drugs; see Elizabeth Siegel Watkins and Andrea Tone eds.
Medicating Modern America: Prescription Drugs in History
(New York: New York University Press, 2007); Jeremy A. Greene
Prescribing By Numbers: Drugs and the Definition of Disease
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007); Robert Bud
Penicillin: Triumph and Tragedy
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007); John E. Lesch
The First Miracle Drugs: How the Sulfa Drugs Transformed Medicine
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).

144.
Charles A. Wolverton in
Health Inquiry (Poliomyelitis)
[Part 3 October 6 1953], 608.

145.
Gaylord Anderson in
Health Inquiry (Poliomyelitis)
[Part 3 October 6 1953], 611–621.

FURTHER READING

For polio after 1945 see Richard L. Bruno
The Polio Paradox: Understanding and Treating ‘Post-Polio Syndrome' and Chronic Fatigue
(New York: Warner Books, 2002); Nancy Baldwin Carter
Snapshots: Polio Survivors Remember
(Omaha: NPSA Press, 2002); Thomas M. Daniel and Frederick C. Robbins eds.
Polio
(Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 1997); Jacqueline Foertsch
Bracing Accounts: The Literature and Culture of Polio in Postwar America
(Madison, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2008); Lauro Halstead
Managing Post Polio: A Guide to Living And Aging Well with Post-Polio Syndrome
(Washington, DC: National Rehabilitation Hospital Press, 2006); Lauro Halstead and Gunnar Grimby
Post-Polio Syndrome
(Philadelphia: Hanley and Belfus, 1995); Edmund J. Sass ed.
Polio's Legacy: An Oral History
(New York: University Press of America, Inc., 1996); Richard K. Scotch
From Good Will to Civil Rights: Transforming Disability Policy
(Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1984); Richard K. Scotch “Politics and Policy in the History of the Disability Rights Movement”
Milbank Quarterly
(1989) (supplement part 2) 67: 380–400; Nina Gilden Seavey, Jane S. Smith, and Paul Wagner
A Paralyzing Fear: The Triumph Over Polio in America
(New York: TV Books, 1998); Marc Shell
Polio and Its Aftermath: The Paralysis of Culture
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2005); Julie K. Silver
Post-Polio: A Guide for Polio Survivors and Their Families
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 2011); Daniel J. Wilson “Braces, Wheelchairs, and Iron Lungs: The Paralyzed Body and
the Machinery of Rehabilitation in the Polio Epidemics”
Journal of Medical Humanities
(2005) 26: 188–190; Daniel J. Wilson
Living with Polio: The Epidemic and Its Survivors
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005).

On history and remembering and forgetting see Pascal Boyer and James V. Wertsch eds.
Memory in Mind and Culture
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009); Maria G. Cattell, Jacob J. Climo, and Maria G. Cattell eds.
Social Memory and History: Anthropological Perspectives
(Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira Press, 2002); Mark Crinson ed.
Urban Memory: History and Amnesia in the Modern City
(London: Routledge, 2005); Katharine Hodgkin and Susannah Radstone eds.
Contesting Pasts: The Politics of Memory
(London: Routledge, 2003); Andreas Kitzmann, Conny Mithander, and John Sundholm eds.
Memory Work: The Theory and Practice of Memory
(Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2005); Norman M. Klein
The History of Forgetting: Los Angeles and the Erasure of Memory
(London: Verso, 1997); Seth Koven “Remembering and Dismemberment: Crippled Children, Wounded Soldiers, and the Great War in Great Britain”
American Historical Review
(1994) 99: 1167–1202; Selma Leydesdorff, Luisa Passerini, and Paul Thompson eds.
Gender and Memory: International Yearbook of Oral History and Life Stories,
Vol. IV (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996); Susan R. Suleiman
Crises of Memory and the Second World War
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2006); David Thelan ed.
Memory and American History
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989); Jay Winter
Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning: The Great War in European Cultural History
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995); Barbie Zelizer
Remembering To Forget: Holocaust Memory through the Camera's Eye
(Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1998).

INDEX

Note: Page numbers followed by
f
indicate material found in Figures; page numbers followed by
n
indicate material found in Notes

Aaron, Harold,
324

Ackerknecht, Erwin,
xi

Adams, Frederick,
195

Addiction, braces/crutches as,
174

Africa, polio outbreaks in,
342

African Americans

as celebrity supporters,
360
–
361

as patients/health care providers,
208
–
209
,
360

Aftereffects Committee (NFIP),
39

Aikens, Tom,
375

Alda, Alan,
421

Alienation (Kenny's term),
xv
–
xvii
,
11
,
47
,
51
,
55
,
67
,
71
–
72
,
96
,
101
–
102
,
104
–
105
,
114
–
116
,
118
,
152
,
197
,
199
,
201
,
262
,
266
,
344
,
362
,
405
,
420

“All American Christian Auxiliary,”
215

Allen, Marjory,
405

Alternative treatments,
169
–
170
.
See also
Berry School; Chiropractic; Naturopathy; Osteopathy

America, at war.
See
World War I; World War II

American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation,
17

American Board of Orthopaedic Surgery,
17

American Cancer Society,
307
,
315

American Congress of Physical Therapy,
15
,
103
,
120
–
121
,
197
,
362

American Heart Association,
307
,
315

American Journal of Clinical Pathology
,
123

American Journal of Nursing
,
88
,
119

American Medical Association (AMA)

antitrust suit against,
57
,
186
,
307

Other books

The Memory Box by Eva Lesko Natiello
Bastian by Elizabeth Amber
Entertaining Angels by Judy Duarte
Pleasure Horse by Bonnie Bryant
Easter Blessings by Lenora Worth
Phantom by Kay, Susan
The Purrfect Plan by Angela Castle
What Isabella Desires by Anne Mallory
Smart Mouth Waitress by Moon, Dalya