ROTARIAN SPEAKS ABOUT EFFECTS OF POLIO ON HIS LIFE

The eradication of polio is not only a priority for the Albion Rotary Club, but it is also very personal for Albion Rotary member, Don Bishop.  In the photo, Bishop, a dentist, speaks about Rotary’s efforts to defeat polio during a recent meeting at Tillman’s Village Inn. 
 
Bishop shared his family’s difficult experiences with the disease.  When he was a child, his family was exposed to the poliovirus, resulting in two of his family members contracting the disease. Bishop's mother was severely afflicted with the disease, causing her to be completely paralyzed from the neck down and confined to an iron lung. 
 
Bishop talked about visiting his mother in a clinic in New York City where she was isolated with other polio victims in an effort to control the spread of the disease. They were eventually able to bring their mother home with her iron lung after they converted their living room into a hospital room for her, but she soon had to return to the hospital and succumbed to the disease in 1957.  He went on to say that at the age of 7, he and his sister, aged 4, were placed in a vaccine trial because of the unknown risk of them passing the disease on to others. They discovered that he did receive the vaccine, but his sister had received a placebo. Shortly after that, his sister began to exhibit symptoms of the disease.
 
Bishop's sister developed a much milder case and responded to various therapies over the years, including painting therapy. She earned an art scholarship to Nazareth College and went on to a career as an art teacher.

Bishop talked about seeing images of clinics with rows and rows of thousands of iron lungs and stated those images were not an exaggeration, as he witnessed similar scenes while visiting his mother. As further research and the success of the vaccine helped to reduce the numbers of people diagnosed with polio, the use of the iron lungs has also reduced.
 
Bishop shared that he recently read that in 1959 there were 1,200 people confined to an iron lung and in 2004 there were only 39 such people. Others in the group commented about knowing children here in our community during the 1950s and 1960s, who had polio and how terrifying it was during the height of the epidemic.
 
During the Albion Rotary Club's meeting two sets of Sabres hockey tickets were donated and auctioned off for the purpose of donating the funds raised to the Polio Plus Program. The Gates Foundation has teamed up with Rotary Club International and will do a two-to-one match of any funds raised for the Polio Plus Program. So, thanks to the Gates Foundation, the $120 raised in the auction will be tripled to make a $360 donation to the Polio Plus Program.
 
In addition to raising awareness and funds for the Polio Plus Program, it is Albion Rotary Club's practice to present a certificate to their guest speakers indicating a pledge to vaccinate 25 children in countries still reporting new polio cases in the name of the guest speaker.  Don Bishop was presented with a certificate for sharing his family's story at the Thursday meeting.
 
Excerpted/printed with permission of Orleans Hub.