Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio

¡Supera tus tareas y exámenes ahora con Quizwiz!

What kind of home did Dorothy have with her parents?

A farm

What is the CDC (Center for Disease Control)?

A government agency responsible for preventing infectious and chronic diseases

What kind of car did Peg's parents drive?

A green Oldsmobile

What does a stone carving made around 1500 BCE show?

A man named Ruma, a gatekeeper, at an Egyptian temple, leaning on a staff. He has dropfoot.

What stuffed animal did Patricia of Schenectady, New York have when she was a freshman in college?

A monkey named Jojo

What did the Usems get?

A new car

What kind of hospital was Sheltering Arms?

A rehabilitation center for polio patients who are trying to regain the use of their muscles

How much money did they raise during the first national Mother's March on Polio?

$45,000

How was Peg able to find Dr. Bevis years later?

A school librarian who read her book gave birth to a premature baby and he was her doctor. She told Peg where the hospital was and she found his phone number

What was Peg's temperature when her mom took it?

102

In what year was the first clinical description written about polio?

1789 by a British physician

What was the worst year for polio, with 57,879 cases?

1952

When was Dr. Sabin's live-virus oral vaccine ready to test?

1959, five years after Dr. Salk's successful trial

When was the last case of naturally occuring poio in the United States?

1979

What was Peg's official diagnosis the first day at Sheltering Arms

Acute anterior poliomyelitis

When did President Franklin Delano Roosevelt die?

4/12/1945

When was the Salk vaccine pronounced safe and effective?

4/12/1955

How many cases of polio were reported in the US in 1949?

42,033

What time did the Homecoming Parade start?

4:00 PM

What stamps were issued in 2006?

63 cent stamps honoring Dr. Salk and Dr. Sabin

What did they capture and kill in New York City in 1916?

72 thousand stray cats

What grade was Peg in when she got polio?

7th

Within two years of Salk's polio vaccine, polio cases in the United States droppped by what percent?

80%

What stamp did the US Postal Service issue in 1957?

A 3 cent stamp honoring those who helped fight polio

What stamp was issued in 1999?

A 33 cent stamp entitled, "Polio Vaccine Developed"

Who was the youngest actor in the Christmas play?

A 4 month old boy playing Jesus

What is a hula?

A Hawaiian dance where dancers in grass skirts sway their hips to music

What did a group of women in Phoenix Arizona organize in 1950?

A Mother's March on Polio

What PBS special about polio was shown in 1998?

A Paralyzing Fear

What did Alice give to Peg on her birthday?

A card she had made

Who stayed at Sheltering Arms during Christmas?

Alice and Shirley

What was Miss Ballard's first name?

Althea

Who was Sister Kenny?

An Australian nurse who started the treatments of hot packs and then stretching exercises to stretch muscles back to normal

What kind of necklace does Peg Kehret own?

An award necklace with a charm for every one of the 25 states where she's won the Young Reader Award.

How did Miss Ballard describe Peg to Dr. Bevis?

An exemplary patient and very brave

What did they put Peg inside of so she could breathe easier?

An oxygen tent

What were Peg and Carl's kids' names?

Anne and Bob

Who gave Dorothy a bag of licorice?

Art

How was Peg able to get upstairs to her room when she visited home during Christmas?

Art and her dad made a chair out of their hands to carry her up and down

Where did Peg live when she got polio?

Austin, Minnesota

What kind of songs made Peg feel lonely?

Christmas carols

What did Jo Auchterlonie, a 5th grade teacher in Wichita Kansas, do with her students after they read Small Steps?

Had them spend half a day in a wheelchair so they could feel what it would be like

Why didn't Peg's dad use sheet music when he played piano?

He played by ear

How did Peg's dad learn to play Beer Barrel Polka on the accordion so well so fast?

He rented one from the music store and practiced til midnight every night

How did Dr. Bevis convince Peg to do the exercises?

He said if she did them, she would walk again, but if she didn't, she probably wouldn't

What happened when Alice's brother visited her?

He saw how ugly she was and never came back

What did Warm Springs Foundation do to raise money?

Held Birthday Balls in eight cities on Roosevelts birthday, January 30, 1934

Who did Shirley miss?

Her Grandma who used to sing her to sleep when she was little

Which sibling did Alice reconnect with and visit with until she died of cancer in 1993?

Her brother

Why did Sister Kenny know so much about muscles?

Her brother's muscles were weak when he was a child

Why is it hard to distribute and admininster the polio vaccine around the world?

It has to be kept cold and some areas of the world don't have refrigeration

Why was using walking sticks helpful?

It helped strengthen leg muscles

What did Peg know about polio before she got it?

It killed or crippled thousands of people, mainly children, each year.

Why was Salk's injected killed virus vaccine replaced with Sabin's oral, live-virus vaccine in 1962?

It was cheaper and easier to administer

After two days, what other symptoms did Peg have, in addition to being paralyzed?

It was harder to breathe or swallow

Why did Peg hate the accordion?

It was heavy and awkward, and pushing it in and out made her arms ache

Why didn't Peg visit Tommy when she went to University Hospital to see Dr. Bevis?

It wasn't visiting hours, and they were strictly envorded

What was the name of the occupational therapist?

Jeanette

What did Tommy call Peg?

Kemo Sabe

Who played Joseph in the Christmas play?

Kenny

To avoid contracting polio, what did parents do with their children?

Kept them out of swimming pools and crowded public places

What did Peg tell Dr. Bevis was the worst thing about being paralyzed?

Not being able to paint her toenails

Where did Peg sleep when she visited home?

On a cot in the living room

How often did Dorothy's parents try to come visit?

Once a month

What did Mrs. Meany do?

Opened an antiques shop

What did Dr. Bevis do to Peg's toes?

Painted them bright red

What embarrassed Peg when she visited home?

Needing help to get out of her wheelchair and onto the toilet

What part of the body does the poliovirus attack?

Nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord

What city was hardest hit in 1916 when the first major US polio epidemic occured?

New York City

Where were 90% of the polio cases reported in 2005?

Nigeria, India, and Pakistan

Who is the author of 'Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio"?

Peg Kehret

Who was BJ?

Peg's dog

Who are Brett, Chelsea, Eric, and Mark?

Peg's grandchildren

Why didn't Roosevelt lik photographs of him in his wheelchair?

People thought disabled people were weak and unable to contribute to society

What did Peg's parents ask for in December?

Permission to take Peg home for an overnight visit

What were the children called who first tested the Salk polio vaccine?

Polio Pioneers

What United States president got polio in 1921 and had to use a wheelchair?

President Franklin D. Roosevelt

What did Peg's dad want to do with BJ because he kept wanting to jump on Peg?

Put him in the basement

What did they do with polio patients before Sister Kenny's treatments?

Put them in splints and casts to keep their arms and legs straight

What is Peg Kehret's hobbies?

READING, pumping her player piano, browsing in antique shops

What were Peg's two favorite dolls?

Raggedy Ann and Marilyn

What did Franklin Roosevelt do in 1928?

Ran for governor of New York

What did Peg start doing every day once she was able to get from the bed to the wheelchair by herself?

Read to the little kids

What do many form polio patients have to do when they get old?

Return to walking sticks, braces, and wheelchairs

What room at Sheltering Arms did Peg move into?

Room 202

Who starred in the movie, Sister Kenny, in 1946?

Rosalind Russel

Where was Sabin's vaccine trial held?

Russia

What vaccine replaced the Salk polio vaccine in 1962?

Sabin's live-virus vaccine.

Why couldn't Dorothy go home for Christmas?

She got pneumonia

Why couldn't Shirley sit up for more than an hour at a time?

She had a weak back

What did Peg's mother do?

She was a homemaker

Why hadn't Peg seen all of Snow White?

She was afraid of the witch and they had to leave

When Peg woke up on her first morning at Sheltering Arms, what did she discover?

She was paralyzed from the neck down.

What was the promise Peg made to Dr. Bevis?

She would come back and walk for him

What was the name of the special hospital in Minneapolis?

Sheltering Arms Hospital

What did Peg name her wheelchair?

Silver

What was the name of the Lone Ranger's horse?

Silver

What did Peg give up after two weeks of using the walking sticks?

Silver -- her wheelchair

What were the medical treatments that first helped polio patients?

Sister Kenny treatments

Why was Sister Kenny called 'sister' if she wasn't a Catholic Nun?

Sister is an Australian military term, equivalent to first lieutenant in the US Army

Why did Shirley have a double problem?

She had been born with arms that only straightened halfway

How did Alice know so many songs?

She listened to the radio a lot for entertainment

What exciting thing happened to Peg on October 1st?

She scratched an itch

What did Peg's father do for a living?

Sold meat for the Hormel Company

What other symptoms did Peg have?

Sore throat, headache, hurting back, tired

What did Peg do right before Thanksgiving?

Stood up by herself

What did Peg not want to miss on the the day she started having symptoms?

The Homecoming Parade

What adult books did Peg read that the librarian at the Minneapolis Public Library brought?

The Hunchback of Notre Dame, War and Peace, the Scarlet Letter

What organization raised money each year to help polio patients and fund research?

The March of Dimes

Who funded Dr. Jonas Salk's research?

The March of Dimes

What foundation did President Roosevelt establish in 1938?

The National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis

What two groups came to Sheltering Arms during Christmas time with clowns, music, treats, and magicians?

The Shriners and the Aqua Jesters

What happened to Sister Kenny in December, 1942?

The Sister Kenny Institute, a place where they taught her theories and methods, was dedicated in Minneapolis

Where was Dr. Jonas Salk's laboratory where he developed the polio vaccine?

The University of Pittsburgh, in Pennsylvania

Who was Ruthie Bi?

The daugher of Hilltop Cottage's caretakers.

What is Hilltop Cottage?

The home President Roosevelt built in Hyde Park, New York for his retirement

What was 'Clutch'?

The hospital newspaper

What did Peg want to do in Hawaii?

The hula

What song was Peg's chorus practicing for the Homecoming parade?

The lyrics on the inscription on the Statue of Liberty

What was the only fashion show Peg had ever attended?

The mother daughter event at the Methodist church

What happens to muscles if a nerve center is destroyed?

The muscles controlled by that center are paralyzed forever

What is 'intercostal expansion'?

The muscles that expand the ribcage when you breath

Why weren't Renee and Shirley able to start Kenny Treatments as quickly as Peg?

They had to be in an iron lung

Why did it take so long for the walking sticks to arrive?

They had to be specially made to the right height for each patient

Why didn't Alice get Kenny treatments?

They hadn't been used at all yet

What was Peg disappointed about when she got home?

They redecorated her room--it didn't feel familiar and comfortable to her

Why did some people only let their children play outside at night, in the dark?

They thought sunshine made children more vulnerable to polio

Why did children get polio more once sanitation improved?

They were exposed when they were older, so they didn't have their mother's antibodies

What did Peg's want to hear about when they visited her?

What it was like to have polio

What did Peg's grandpa do for a living?

Worked in a print shop, setting type

In what war was Elizabeth Kenny commissioned 'sister'?

World War I

What is supposed to happen when a doctor hits your knee with a rubber mallet?

You leg is supposed to jerk (reflexes)

What did Shirley ask Peg's parents to bring for her?

a bag of marshmallows

What did Dorothy and Renee give to Peg for her birthday?

a bead bracelet they had made in occupational therapy class

What was the only think Peg could eat or drink and that finally made her temperature drop?

a chocolate milkshake

What did Peg make in OT?

a coin purse

What did Peg love at school at Sheltering Arms that helped her write?

a desk that attached to the arms of the wheelchair

What did Peg want to get, but couldn't reach for, on the first morning at Sheltering Arms?

a glass of ice water

What kind of polio vaccine was Salk's?

a killed-virus polio vaccine

What kind of polio vaccine did Dr. Albert Sabin develop?

a live-virus vaccine

What kind of running race was polio compared to?

a marathon

What bit Peg on the cheek because she couldn't swat it?

a mosquito

How did BJ sign his get well card to Peg?

a muddly paw print

What kind of doctor did Dr. Bevis become after he worked with polio patients at the Sister Kenny Institute in Minneapolis?

a pediatrician

What did Peg call the place under her bed?

a supermarket

What present did Art buy for Peg?

a teddy bear

What kind of instrument did Peg have to learn to play in Occupational Therapy?

an accordion

What did Dorothy play int he Christmas play?

an angel

What does Peg still care a lot about and include in her books a lot?

animal welfare

Where was Dr. Albert Sabin's laboratory?

at the Univesrity of Cinncinnati

What did they do with all Peg's possessions she had in her first hospital room?

burned them so the virus wouldn't spread

What does Peg's cane that she uses to walk have on it?

cat faces

What is the name of the cramp people sometimes get in their legs?

charley horse

What was Peg's last class before lunch?

chorus

What kind of voice did Alice have?

clear, strong, soprano

What did Peg do every morning once she moved back home?

exercised

What does Kemo Sabe mean?

faithful friend

How many terms did Roosevelt serve as President of the United States?

four

How many children and grandchildren did Art have?

four children, seven grandchildren

How many roommates did Peg have at Sheltering Arms?

four girls

How old were Dorothy and Shirley?

fourteen

Which books was Peg unwilling to donate?

her Raggedy Ann books

Which dolls was Peg unwilling to donate to the hospital?

her Raggedy dolls, Marilyn, and her Story Book dolls

Why did Peg want to be turned so bad?

her legs hurt

What did Roosevelt use when he gave speeches?

high-high leg braces and a can

What did Miss Ballard switch Peg to instead of hot packs?

hot baths

What were bulbar polio patients not supposed to eat?

ice cream

Where does Peg Kehret live now?

in a log house on 10 acres of forest near Mount Ranier National Park in Washington state.

What was polio originally called?

infantile paralysis

What was another name for the respirators people with polio were put into to help them breathe?

iron lung

What did Dorothy ask for Peg's parents to bring for her?

licorice

What did Peg's mom make for dinner on the night she came home to visit?

macaroni and cheese, green beans, Waldorf salad, and cream puffs for dessert

What liquid was NOT allowed for bulbar polio patients to drink?

milk

What did they test the polio vaccine on first, before people?

monkeys

What is spinal polio?

most common--paralysis in arms and legs

What is bulbar polio?

most serious, most rare--impairs ability to talk or swallow

How far was the special hospital from Peg's home?

one hundred miles

How long did it take after she got home for Peg to be able to walk without sticks?

one year

What is it called when patients do exercises?

physical therapy

What musical instrument did Peg play?

piano

What activity did Peg continue to do order to strengthen her feet and leg muscles?

pick up marbles with her toes

What task did Jeanette give Peg to do?

pick up marbles with her toes

What did Peg's parents bring for Alice?

pink lipstick

What was Peg's favorite thing to do in her wheelchair?

pop wheelies

What snack did Peg's parents bring on their first visit that made all the girls excited?

potato chips

What could Peg do now that she was able to have her bed cranked up to sitting position?

read books

How many cases of polio were reported in the United States in 1916?

twenty seven thousand

How often were visitors allowed at Sheltering Arms?

twice a week

How many times had Shirley's parents come to visit her?

twice in seven months

What pets did Peg and Carl take with them around the US in a motor home?

two cats (Pete and Molly) and a dog (Daisy)

How long did it take to drive from Austin to Sheltering Arms in Minneapolis?

two hours

How many in Russia were vaccinated with Sabin's vaccine?

10 million

What does Peg's daugther, Anne, do for a career?

Gymnastics coach and Girl Scout leader

How old was Tommy?

eight

How old was Art?

eighteen

What time did The Lone Ranger come on TV?

six-thirty

How many blocks did Peg have to walk home?

twelve

How old was Peg Schulze when she got polio?

twelve

How old was Renee?

twelve

What did Jonas Salk say when people asked him who owned the patent on his vaccine?

"There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?"

What four organizations now work together to eradicate polio?

1) Rotary International, 2) World Health Organization 3) United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund 4) Centers for Disease Control

What present did Peg's mom buy for Dr. Bevis?

A tie

What did all the Polio Pioneer kids get after they tested the vaccine?

A tin button

What was the first symptom Peg felt of polio?

A twitching muscle in her left thigh

What is polio caused by?

A virus

What did Dorothy get for Christmas?

A watch and a dress from her great aunt in Montana

What did Renee write after she graduated high school?

A weekly column in the local newspaper and a history of her church

What were the only movies Peg had ever seen by the time she was twelve?

Bambi and half of Snow White

Why doesn't Peg give school talks any more?

Because of fatique and muscle pain

What had all Peg's roommates experienced that she never had to?

Been in an iron lung

What did Peg's dad learn to play on the accordion?

Beer Barrel Polka

How does an iron lung work?

Bellows pump air in and out of patient's lungs

What does Peg Kehret like writing best?

Books for young people

What did Franlklin Roosevelt and his partner, Basil O'Connor do in 1926?

Bought WArm Springs spa and made it into a nonprofit foundation for polio survivors

Who made a decree that all the world should be taxed?

Caesar Augustus

What had a sorority group elected Art?

Campus Dreamboat

Where were the walking sticks made?

Canada

Who did Peg marry?

Carl Kehret

Where did Art go to college?

Carleton College

Where did Peg's brother, Art, graduate from college?

Carleton College, and Harvard Business School

What did Peg's friend Karen want to do at school?

Change the rules so girls could wear pants to school

What did they do with Jojo so Patricia could keep him?

Cut his head off and washed it with alcohol to steralize it. They burned his blue and yellow body.

What did Peg's mom want to do with her toys and books?

Donate them to the kids in the hospital

What book did Peg see a boy reading that she wanted to grab from him?

Donkey, Donkey

Who else got Christmas passes to visit home?

Dorothy and Renee

Who was Peg's favorite doctor at the University Hospital?

Dr. Bevis

Who invented the first polio vaccine?

Dr. Jonas Salk

Who was Ethel Bailey?

Dr. Jonas Salk's research assistant

Who continued work on polio vaccines and developed an oral one?

Dr. Sabin

Who led the trials of the first polio vaccine?

Dr. Thomas Francis, Jr. of the University of Michigan

What was Peg's family doctor's name--the one who ordered a spinal tap on her?

Dr. Wright

Who coined the phrase, March of Dimes?

Eddie Cantor, an entertainer

What did Peg want to be when she grew up?

Either a veterinarian or a writer

What was Peg's first period class?

English

How often did the nurse tell Peg she could be turned in her bed?

Every 30 minutes

Why did Peg feel safe and comfortable with her friends at Sheltering Arms, and sometimes want to go back?

Everyone there understood what it was like to have polio

What was President Roosevelt's dog's name?

Fala

Where did Art work as executive vice president?

General Mills

What did Peg get to do in February?

Go home for good

What did Peg beg to do for Christmas?

Go home for two days - Christmas Eve and Christmas Day

What was Peg embarrassed to do with a boy in the room?

Go to the bathroom in a bedpan

What did three scientists in Boston discover how to do with the poliovirus?

Grow it in test tubes instead of live monkeys so they could make enough vaccine

How was Dorothy able to move back home even thought she wasn't able to use braces?

Her brothers built her a ramp so she could get in and out of the house with her wheelchair

What did Peg discover when she tried to play piano when she visited hom?

Her foot could not long work the sustain pedal

Who watched Peg when they needed a babysitter at home?

Her grandpa

How did Peg stay up with her classmates at her regular school?

Her mom brought textbooks and weekly assignments for her to do

What did the girls in room 202 tell Peg they would miss when she went home?

Her parents and her food

How did Peg get the chocolate milkshake?

Her parents brought it into the hospital

What did Peg leave for Tommy when she left for Sheltering Arms?

Her radio

What exciting news did Alice have about her Christmas?

Her uncle came to visit her

How did Peg sing differently in chorus when she came back from Sheltering Arms?

Her voice had improved, but she used her stomach muscles rather than her diaphragm

What was the call the Lone Ranger made to his horse?

Hi-yo Silver! Awaay!

What does Peg's son, Bob, do for a career?

High school teacher and volleyball and trackk coach

Why hadn't anyone visited Tommy?

His family lived hundreds of miles away

How did Sister Kenny develop her treatments?

In 1903 she put hot pieces of wet fabric on a sick child to relieve her muscle spasms

Why did the US start using Salk's injected inactivated virus vaccine again in 2000?

In 1998 a group of parents whose children contracted poilo by GETTING the vaccine and not being strong enough to produce antibodies petitioned the Centers for Disease Control to stop the use of the live virus

Where did they vaccinate 150 million children in one day in 2001?

India

What is the principal of immunization?

Inject a small amount of a disease to stimulate the body's immune system to produce antibodies to fight it. Create enough antibodies without creating a severe form of the disease.

What did Dr. Jonas Salk do with this polio vaccine that showed how confident he was of its safety and effectiveness?

Injected himself, his wife, and his three sons before he gave it to the public

What great things did Roosevelt do as president?

Led the United States to victory in World War II and out of the Great Depression

What did Sister Kenny do in 1940?

Left Australia and moved to Minnesota in the United States

What magazine had Peg seen with pictures of polio patients?

Life Magazine

What comic books did Renee ask for Peg's parents to bring her?

Little Lulu or Archie and Veronica

What was Peg's favorite TV program?

Lone Ranger

What did Rotary International, a service organization, do in 1985?

Made worldwide eradication of polio its top goal and raised millions of dollars to buy vaccine and distribute it all over the world

What is Peg most proud of in regard to her book, Small Steps?

Many children say they appreciate their own good health and loving families more than they used to

How did Peg get polio when she never knew anyone with polio?

Many people had polio with very mild symptoms, so they never knew they had it.

What did Peg Kehret and her mom do, a year after she came home from the hospital?

Marched in the Mother's March to collect money for polio research

What part did Peg play in the Christmas play?

Mary

Why weren't bulbar polio patients supposed to drink milk?

Milk creates phlegm (mucus) in the throat and could make them choke

Where was the special hospital for polio patients?

Minneapolis

Who was Peg's physical therapist at Sheltering Arms?

Miss Ballard

What was the big difference between Mrs. Crab and Miss Ballard?

Miss Ballard was careful not to cause real pain during physical therapy

What game did Peg play with Richard?

Monopoly

What did Alice do after she graduated from high school?

Moved to a home for adults with disabilities and was secretary for the United Handicapped Federation in St. Paul, Minnesota. She also sang in a church choire

What did Mrs. Crab call Peg's first physical therapist?

Mrs. Crab

Who was the teacher at Sheltering Arms?

Mrs. West

What started happening to Peg 40 years after she first had polio symptoms?

Muscle aches, foot cramps, back pain, fatigue, and weakness in her arms and legs returned----Post Polio Syndrome

What happens to polio patients' muscles in the acute stage of polio, when they have a fever?

Muscle spasms tighten the muscles

What did Alice do in the Christmas play?

Sang a solo of Silent Night

Where was the first recorded polio epidemic in the late 1800's?

Scandinavia

What was Peg's maiden name?

Schulze

Why couldn't Peg stay upright in the back seat of the car?

Seatbelts hadn't been used yet in passenger cars

What did Eddie Cantor encourage people to do?

Send bags of dimes to the White House

What did Dorothy do until she retired?

Senior receptionist at the Courage Center in Minneapolis - a rehab center for people with physical disabilities

In what month did Peg start having symptoms of polio?

September

What happened to Alice when her parents abandoned her?

She became a ward of the state and lived permanently at Sheltering Arms

What happened when Peg walked toward her locker?

She collapsed--her legs gave out.

Why did Peg work so hard to teach herself history and math?

She didn't want to be a grade behind her friends

Why did Peg's mom destroy all the pohots of her in her wheelchair or with walking sticks?

She didn't want to remember that part of her life.

What happened to Shirley?

She died in 1955, five years after Peg left Sheltering Arms

What was Steve Gentle doing?

Taking piano lessons

What report did the Australian medical officials publish in 1938 about Sister Kenny's methods?

That they were mistaken and unnecessary

What book did Miss Ballard put on Peg's head?

The Birds of North America bird identification book

Who were John F. Enders, Frederick C. Robbins, and Thomas H. Weller?

The scientists who invented growing poliovirus in test tubes, and the winners of the 1954 Nobel Prize in Medicine

What happened to people's muscles after they were in casts for a long time?

Their muscles withered (got weak) from not being used

Why was it harder to walk with sticks at home than at the hospital?

There was furniture and less room to maneuver

Why did Peg need to try to walk on stage as Mary without her sticks?

There wasn't room to walk with them

Why was it difficult for Peg to get into her house through the front door?

There were two steps in front

How were Peg and Tommy able to listen to the Lone Ranger?

They brought in a small portable radio

Why were no visitors allowed in to see Peg?

They couldn't risk spreading the disease

What did both Salk and Sabin NOT do which showed how good they were?

They didn't patent their vaccine. They made it available for the public good.

Why didn't Alice's parents want her?

They didn't want to take care of a crippled child

How are walking sticks different from crutches?

They end below the elbow and have rings of metal circles at the top

How were babies protected even when they were infected?

They were still protected by their mother's antibodies and their immune systems were stimulated, so their symptoms were mild and they developed lifelong protection against polio

How long was Dorothy sick before her parents could get her to the doctor when she started having polio symptoms?

Three days

How does the poliovirus get into a person's body?

Through the mouth, into the digestive system, then to the bloodstream, and finally to the nervous system

Why did Peg have to keep her feet flat against a board at the foot of her bed?

To keep them from drooping forward permanently (dropfoot)

Why did Miss Ballard put a book on Peg's head?

To teach her to stand straight by balancing it

What was Peg's one birthday wish?

To walk again

Why did Peg have to go to University Hospital before she went home for good?

To walk for him

Who was Peg's first roommate in the hospital?

Tommy

Who was the Lone Ranger's companion?

Tonto

Why did Peg stop listening to the Lone Ranger when she returned home?

Tonto and Silver belonged to a different part of her life

What did 1.8 million children do in 1984?

Took part in trials of the Salk vaccine

What did Peg call physical therapy time?

Torture Time

What did some communities do when families with children fled New York City?

Tried to keep them out because they feared their own children would get sick

What did they tell people to do if they wanted to contribute money to fight polio during the Mother's March in Phoenix?

Turn on their porch light at 7 o'clock

Why did Peg have to leave University Hospital and go back to Sheltering Arms?

University Hospital only treated acute cases

What was the other hospital called--the one with the iron lungs?

University of Minnesota Hospital

Where were 44 cases of polio reported in the United States in 1894?

Vermont

Why did a German doctor call polio 'infantile paralysis' in 1840?

Victims were often children

Where did President Roosevelt go for rehabilitation?

Warm Springs, a spa in Georgia

When were visiting hours at Sheltering Arms?

Wednesday evenings and Sundays from noon until four

What knock knock joke did Peg make up with the name 'Wendy'?`

Wendy toenails are painted, de patient gets well

What were the names of the nurses at Sheltering Arms?

Willie and Terry

How was Peg able to reach and pull out cookie containers from under her bed?

With the back scratcher Grandpa had given her

What did Peg do after graduating from Austin High School?

Wnet to the University of Minnesota

What color hair did Dr. Bevis have?

blonde

What did they do in OT (occupational therapy) room?

crafts and projects to strengthen their muscles

What did Peg always ask for on birthdays or special occasions to eat for dessert?

cream puffs

What did Peg's grandpa do when she left for the hospital that she had never seen him do?

cry

What did they use for gifts the wise men brought for Jesus in the Christmas play?

decorated jewelry boxes

What kinds of animals live on Peg's wildlife sanctuary?

deer, elk, rabbits, and birds

What is respiratory polio?

difficulty breathing

What diseases got more attention than polio until the big epidemic?

diphtheria and smallpox

Because of her fever, it was very important for Peg to do what?

drink lots of liquid

What condition did Alice have with her feet?

dropfoot -- her toes pointed permanently down

How tall was Peg at the age of twelve?

five foot eight

When Carl, Peg's husband, died in 2004, how many years had they been married?

forty-eight

How many grandchildren does Peg have?

four

What kind of shoes did Peg have to wear to support her feet?

saddle shoes

What prize did the 7th grade float win?

second prize

How many months had Peg been gone from home?

seven

How many children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren did Dorothy end up with?

seven children, 18 grandchildren, 8 great-grandchildren

How much older was Peg's brother, Art, than she was?

six

How many deaths were reported in 1916 from polio?

six thousand

By how many years did Peg miss the polio vaccine?

six years

When did they do the field trial for the polio vaccine?

spring and summer of 1954

What did they do with the beds after polio patients moved?

sterilized them

What are antibodies?

substanced produced by the body's immune system that destroy bacteria and viruses.

What exercise made President Roosevelt stronger?

swimming

What was Peg's cue word to come out on the stage during in the Christmas play?

taxed

How many steps did Peg take on the first day of learning to use the walking sticks?

ten

How old was Alice?

thirteen

How old was Franklin Delano Roosevelt when he was diagnosed with polio in 1921?

thirty-nine

How many kinds of polio did Peg have?

three

How old was Alice when she first came to Sheltering Arms?

three

How tall was Peg's school in Austin?

three stories

How long had Peg been paralyzed before she was able to move a little?

three weeks

When did polio epidemics usually happen during the year?

warm weather

When was the only other time Peg had been away from her parents overnight?

when she got her tonsils out


Conjuntos de estudio relacionados

INFUZNÍ ROZTOKY PRO DODÁNÍ ENERGETICKÝCH POTŘEB ORGANISMU - CUKRY

View Set

Chapter 17: Motor Speech Disorders in Adults

View Set

Essentials of Strength Training and Conditioning Ch. 15

View Set

AP World Chapter 4 (1000-30 BCE) Greece and Iran

View Set

Concepts Module 4: Operating Systems and File

View Set

MAN 3025 Test 2 Guide (Ch. 5 ,7, 10, 11, 14)

View Set