One Tough Nurse from the Outback!

Published: Fri, 09/08/17


Author Mary Cronk Farrell 
                                                                                   September 8, 2016
Hello ,

May you be safe from water, wind, smoke and fire. Nature bats last, as they say, and looking outside my window, it's not difficult to imagine we might be in the late innings.

Sometimes I wonder if my focus on history is misplaced, if my energy could be better spent writing about today's issues.

Here's my town the last few days, photo courtesy KREM.com. It's clearing a little today. See my photos further below.  
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This week's feature story comes thanks to Susan Latta, an author I was pleased to meet in my travels to Minneapolis, Minnesota, last spring. Susan has a new book out this month: Bold Women of Medicine.

She's agreed to share the story of one trailblazing nurse who made her mark in Minneapolis, one of 21 women featured in her new book.

Take it away, Susan!
One Tough Nurse From the Outback
​​​​​​​No one knows whether Elizabeth Kenny had any formal medical training or learned on-the-job, but that didn’t stop her. 

She had a red cape and nurse’s jumper made and traveled through Australia’s wild bush land to serve anyone who needed help.​​​​​​​ ​​​​​​​

Born in Australia in 1880, at a time when girls were not to be brassy, stubborn, or opinionated. Elizabeth had no intention of following those rules.

Below: Susan Latta, Author of Bold Women of Medicine: 21 Stories of Astounding Discoveries, Daring Surgeries, and Healing Breakthroughs

I first heard about Elizabeth Kenny when my father had a stroke and was transferred to the Elizabeth Kenny Institute in Minneapolis for recovery. Prior to that, I knew of her in name only.

I remember standing in a long line in the school gym waiting to receive my vaccination in the early 1960s, and had no idea how many people suffered after being stricken by polio.

Decades earlier Elizabeth Kenny had become famous for her treatment for polio, a dreadful virus that caused paralysis and death.

Below: Elisabeth Kenny demonstrating polio treatment to doctors and nurses at the Elizabeth Kenny Institute in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1943. Library of Congress photo

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She didn’t know it at the time but discovered her polio treatment one day in 1911. A frantic farmer called for help for his two-year-old daughter. Amy's 
arms and legs were twisted tight with unbearable pain.

Elizabeth Kenny galloped away to send a telegram to her trusted doctor, Aeneas McDonnell. When he replied that it was polio, he said there was nothing to be done, and to do “the best with symptoms presenting themselves.”

"I knew the relaxing power of heat," Elizabeth said. "I filled a frying pan with salt, placed it over the fire, then poured it into a bag and applied it to the leg that was giving the most pain. After an anxious wait, I saw no relief followed the application. I then prepared a linseed meal poultice, but the weight of this seemed only to increase the pain.

"At last I tore a blanket made from soft Australian wool into suitable strips and wrung them out in boiling water. These I wrapped gently about the poor tortured muscles. The whimpering of the child ceased almost immediately, and after a few more applications her eyes closed slowly and she fell asleep.”

Amy recovered. But men in the medical field refused to accept Elizabeth's methods. 
In 1914, Elizabeth Kenny traveled to England to serve in WWI. The Australian Army Nursing Service gave her the title of “sister,” which had nothing to do with religion, instead meaning “senior nurse.” She became known as Sister Kenny.

After the war, she presented her methods to control the muscle spasms and re-educate the paralyzed limbs to packed rooms of medical men in Australia. Over and over they called her a quack nurse from the bush, and finally she had had enough. She sailed to America to prove her treatment.

After being turned away by doctors in New York and Chicago, she landed in Minnesota where a few doctors said her treatment did work.
Iron Lung
As word spread she gained nationwide support, even landing on a list of most admired women in America nine years running. ​​​​​​​The Elizabeth Kenny Institute opened in 1942, and still exists today as Courage Kenny, a facility for stroke and accident victims.

At left:  A patient is treated in an Iron Lung circa 1960s. Photo courtesy U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Polio was eradicated in America when Albert Sabin’s live polio virus vaccine guaranteed immunity, just a few short years after Sister Kenny died in 1952.​​​​​​​

Thank you, Susan! I'm excited to learn about the other ground-breaking medical women featured in your book, Bold Women of Medicine: 21 Stories of Astounding Discoveries, Daring Surgeries, and Healing Breakthroughs.

News and Links 
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I'm listening to an interesting audio book this week, The Women in the Castle. 

It's the story of three women and their children, who take refuge in the ruins of a Bavarian castle at the end of World War II. The women are war widows whose husbands paid with their lives for the July 1944 plot against Adolf Hitler.

The book was an instant bestseller when it came out last spring. I waited six weeks to get it on audio from the library. 





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I took a few photos this afternoon while out running errands.
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​Until next week...

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My best,

Mary


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