HEALTH Polio patient who used iron lung has died

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Paul Alexander thrived while using an iron lung for decades after contracting polio as a child​


DALLAS -- Confined to an iron lung after contracting polio as a child, Paul Alexander managed to train himself to breathe on his own for part of the day, earned a law degree, wrote a book about his life, built a big following on social media and inspired people around the globe with his positive outlook.

Alexander died Monday at the age of 78 at a Dallas hospital, said Daniel Spinks, a longtime friend. He said Alexander had recently been hospitalized after being diagnosed with COVID-19 but he did not know the cause of death.

Alexander contracted polio in 1952, when he was 6. He became paralyzed from the neck down and he began using an iron lung, a cylinder that encased his body as the air pressure in the chamber forced air into and out of his lungs. He had millions of views on his TikTok account.

“He loved to laugh,” Spinks said. “He was just one of the bright stars of this world.”

In one of his “Conversations With Paul" posts on TikTok, Alexander tells viewers that “being positive is a way of life for me” as his head rests on a pillow and the iron lung can be heard whirring in the background.

Spinks said Alexander’s positivity had a profound effect on those around him. “Being around Paul was an enlightenment in so many ways,” Spinks said.

Spinks said that Alexander had learned how to “gulp air down his lungs” in order to be out of the iron lung for part of the day. Using a stick in his mouth, Alexander could type on a computer and use the phone, Spinks said.

“As he got older he had more difficulties in breathing outside the lung for periods of time so he really just retired back to the lung,” Spinks said.

Gary Cox, who has been friends with Alexander since college, said his friend was always smiling. “He was so friendly," Cox said. “He was always happy.”

A book Alexander wrote about his life, “Three Minutes for a Dog: My Life in an Iron Lung,” was published in 2020. Cox said that the title comes from a promise Alexander’s nurse made him when he was a young boy: He’d get a dog if he could teach himself to breathe on his own for three minutes.

“That took a good maybe two years, three years before he was able to stay out for three minutes and then five minutes and then 10 minutes and then eventually he got the strength to learn to stay out all day,” said Cox. And, indeed, Alexander did get that puppy.

Alexander, who earned a bachelor’s degree in economics in 1978 from the University of Texas and a law degree from the school in 1984, was a driven man who had a strong faith in God, said Spinks. They became friends in 2000, when Cox took a job as his driver and helper.

He said he would drive Alexander to the courthouse, and then push him to his court proceedings in his wheelchair. At the time, he said, Alexander could spend about four to six hours outside of an iron lung, and would be in an iron lung when he was at his office or home.

Spinks only worked for Alexander for about a year though they remained friends, and Spinks said he was among the friends who helped maintain and repair Alexander's iron lungs.

“There were a couple of close calls when his lung would break and I would rush out there and we would have to do some repairs on it," Spinks said.

Cox said that at one point, he and his brother got an iron lung off eBay and drove to Chicago to pick it up, bringing it back to Dallas and refurbishing it.

“They quit making them," Cox said. “They quit supplying the parts for them. You can’t even get a collar for them anymore.”

Polio was once one of the nation’s most feared diseases, with annual outbreaks causing thousands of cases of paralysis. The disease primarily affects children.

Vaccines became available starting in 1955. According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a national vaccination campaign cut the annual number of U.S. cases to less than 100 in the 1960s and fewer than 10 in the 1970s. In 1979, polio was declared eliminated in the U.S., meaning it was no longer routinely spread.

Spinks said that Alexander loved being interviewed, and had a passion to show that disabled people had a place in society.

Chris Ulmer, founder of Special Books By Special Kids, a social media platform that gives disabled people a way to share their stories, interviewed Alexander in 2022.

“Paul himself really loved inspiring people and letting them know that they are capable of great things,” Ulmer said.

“He just had such a vibrant and joyful energy around him that was contagious,” he said.

Cox said that over the years, people around the globe sought Alexander out to hear his inspirational story.

“If he set his mind to it, he could do it,” Cox said.

 

anna43

Veteran Member
It was a scary time for a child. Friends would disappear and come back with braces and crutches or not come back at all. During polio season we did not go anywhere other than local small-town activities. If there was a case of polio in town, we stayed in our yard and didn't get to go to Sunday School. Most victims were children, but many adults also contracted polio. I recall lists in the Des Moines paper of those who had been admitted to hospitals and of those who died. Pictures of long lines of children in iron lungs at Blank Hospital and parents standing outside of the hospital hoping for a look at their child.

Those that recovered went on to live a fairly normal life with crutches, wheelchairs etc. Then suddenly had the disease or at least its complications come back in later life.
 

AlfaMan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
For a late baby boomer, it is almost unfathomable to understand the terror polio had over society. What a horrible disease!
And to find out even to this day a few people are still living with the effects of it. Living in an iron lung in 2024!

The man that died-what a brave soul. To be taken down by polio, yet he goes to college, becomes a practicing lawyer. I hope he rests in peace.
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
As a young child in Odessa, Texas, I went to the hospital with my mother for an x-ray and walking down the corridor I saw a boy in a lung machine. Still remember this after nearly 70 years.

Polio was a devastating ailment.

Texican....
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
I had several cousins a bit older than me that my dad used to re-work the leather on their braces for them.

I'm a kinda early boomer so it ain't hard to understand. I was either 1 or 2 for the "Silent Summer"...

By the time I was 5, 10, 17 yo we had a vax for this. NOBODY I KNEW turned down the sugar cube.......
 

Wildwood

Veteran Member
I had several cousins a bit older than me that my dad used to re-work the leather on their braces for them.

I'm a kinda early boomer so it ain't hard to understand. I was either 1 or 2 for the "Silent Summer"...

By the time I was 5, 10, 17 yo we had a vax for this. NOBODY I KNEW turned down the sugar cube.......
I remember the sugar cube and the needle. I preferred the cube.
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
The cube was live ( "weakened") virus, IIRC, the shot
was the first vaccine offered and was killed virus.
I never took, or wanted, the cube!
 
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33dInd

Veteran Member
Had an adult friend. Back in 1970 who wore braces His wasn’t bad but braces
He died in 1985. Family said it was from long term side affects from polio
I don’t know
 

CaryC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
As a young child in Odessa, Texas, I went to the hospital with my mother for an x-ray and walking down the corridor I saw a boy in a lung machine. Still remember this after nearly 70 years.

Polio was a devastating ailment.

Texican....
It was/is.

Had an aunt to die from it. She wasn't young or old, birthed a son who lives about a mile from me. But while still on the farm, my granddad, made her a pair of crutches.
 
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anna43

Veteran Member
A bit off topic but, with the outbreak of measles at a shelter for illegals (Chicago I think) I thought to add this.

A few years ago, a woman was on a forum raving about how "her children were NOT going to be vaccinated" for anything. I commented to her that her children would be safe as long as they stayed around people who were vaccinated, and they did not travel overseas. That statement is no longer true due to the number of parents who did not vaccinate their children and more importantly the fact that "overseas" has now come across our southern border by the millions.

After 911 there was talk about smallpox being weaponized and someone was bemoaning how all the "old" people would not survive. I pointed out all the "old" people (born before the mid 1960's) were vaccinated against smallpox.

My late dh lost a cousin aged 5 and an aunt aged 18 to polio. My family was fortunate not to lose anyone in the family, but lost friends and acquaintances to both death and ongoing crippling and other side effects.
 

AlfaMan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I had several cousins a bit older than me that my dad used to re-work the leather on their braces for them.

I'm a kinda early boomer so it ain't hard to understand. I was either 1 or 2 for the "Silent Summer"...

By the time I was 5, 10, 17 yo we had a vax for this. NOBODY I KNEW turned down the sugar cube.......
I actually remember getting the sugar cube vaccine in school in probably second grade. That would put the date around 1972. The teachers took us all into the school lunch room as a class; nurses (replete with the white uniforms and the white hats with red stripe) would ask us our names and check them off on a list. They put us lined up around the edge of the lunchroom and handed us a little white cup with a sugar cube in it. Had us gobble it up and show them.
 
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