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The role still played by polio support groups in assisting polio survivors today.
Polio Support Groups:
Still playing useful roles
The first polio support
group in the United States was probably started in 1921 by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt, who shared his Warm Springs, GA hydrotherapy
with children recuperating from the disease. Then for a short
time after the polio epidemics of the 1950's the "alumni"
of the various polio respiratory and rehabilitation centers created
support groups.
Eventually, these groups all disbanded - except two. Today, the
Los Angeles group exists as an advocate for local ventilator users.
The respiratory center group in Cleveland was continued by Gini
Laurie, a volunteer at the Toomey Pavilion (the contagious disease
ward of Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital) since 1949, whose
two sisters and brother had died from polio.
In 1958, Laurie started a publication called Rehabilitation Gazette,
designed to keep polio survivors from Toomey in touch. When Laurie
and her husband, Joe, moved to St. Louis in 1971, the Rehabilitation
Gazette moved along with them. Today, the Gazette is published
twice a year, reaching an estimated 50,000 readers in 87 countries
in five languages. The Gazette has always been written by people
with a disability, resulting from polio, multiple sclerosis, spinal
cord injury, or other conditions.
Laurie set to work with an enthusiasm that rivaled her efforts
as a volunteer. She helped establish Gazette International Networking
Institute (GINI), a nonprofit organization serving as an information
and resource base for the disabled community, and proceeded to
organize the first international polio and independent living
conference in 1981, held in Chicago. The fourth conference, held
in St. Louis in 1987, gathered 747 attendees. A fifth conference
is scheduled for May 31-June 4, 1989, in St. Louis.
Largely as a result of GINI and the efforts of Laurie herself,
more than 200 polio support groups and over 50 post-polio clinics
have been established to date. Membership to GINI is $25 and includes
a subscription to Rehabilitation Gazette. Those interested may
contact Gazette International Networking Institute, 4502 Maryland
Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63108: 314-361-0475.
Adapted with permission from Headly J: History of polio support groups. Polio
Network News, 1987.3(4) 1.3. St. Louis International Polio Network:
and Laurie G, Twenty years in the Gazette House. Rehabilitation
Gazette. 1978.21.2-9. St Louis. Gazette International Networking
Institue.
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