๐ฅ THEY TOLD HER TO STOP. SHE SAVED CHILDREN INSTEAD. ๐ฅ
๐ฅ THEY TOLD HER TO STOP. SHE SAVED CHILDREN INSTEAD. ๐ฅ Her name was Elizabeth Kenny, and in 1880s Australia, she had no medical degree, no fancy credentials—just compassion and the audacity to question men who claimed to know better. When polio ravaged children worldwide, doctors prescribed immobilization: plaster casts, rigid braces, months of forced stillness. Muscles wasted. Pain never stopped. Kids never walked again. Elizabeth watched and thought: "This is torture, not treatment." So she did the unthinkable. She applied HEAT. She encouraged MOVEMENT. She touched children everyone said shouldn't be touched. And they got better. Children who were written off as permanently paralyzed? They walked. They ran. They reclaimed their lives. The medical establishment—dominated by men who couldn't fathom that an "uneducated" woman from the bush might understand the human body better than they...