Science History - Daily
On June 28th, 1926, exactly one hundred years before today, something extraordinary happened at a medical conference in Toronto that would transform the lives of millions of people with diabetes. A young woman named Elizabeth Hughes stepped forward to share her remarkable story of survival, and in doing so, became one of the most powerful advocates for a revolutionary new treatment called insulin. Elizabeth's journey was nothing short of miraculous. The daughter of Charles Evans Hughes, who served as the Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, she had been diagnosed with diabetes at age eleven in 1918. Back then, this diagnosis was essentially a death sentence. The only treatment available was a brutal starvation diet designed by Dr. Frederick Allen, which kept patients barely alive by severely restricting their calorie intake. Elizabeth had wasted away to just forty-five pounds by the time she was fifteen years old, living on as few as four hundred calories per day. She was quite literally starving to death, as were thousands of other diabetics around the world. But in 1922, everything changed when Frederick Banting and Charles Best successfully extracted and purified insulin from animal pancreases at the University of Toronto. Elizabeth became one of the first patients to receive this miraculous substance. Within weeks of starting insulin therapy, she began gaining weight and regaining her strength. Her transformation was so dramatic that she became a living testament to the power of this new medicine. By June 28th, 1926, Elizabeth had been on insulin for four years and had completely transformed from a skeletal, dying teenager into a healthy young woman. At the medical conference that day, she spoke about her experience to an audience of physicians and researchers. She described what it felt like to come back from the brink of death, to be able to eat normally again, to have energy and hope for the future. Her testimony was deeply moving and helped convince any remaining skeptics about insulin's effectiveness. Elizabeth went on to live a full and productive life, marrying, raising three children, and surviving until 1981, nearly sixty years after she would have died without insulin. She received insulin injections multiple times daily for the rest of her life, eventually administering over forty-two thousand shots to herself. The development of insulin remains one of the most dramatic medical breakthroughs in human history. Before 1922, children diagnosed with diabetes could expect to live perhaps a year or two at most. After insulin became available, diabetes transformed from an immediate death sentence into a manageable chronic condition. Banting and his colleague John Macleod received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1923 for this discovery, though the recognition came with considerable controversy about who deserved credit. Elizabeth's appearance on this day in 1926 represented not just her personal triumph, but the triumph of medical science over a disease that had plagued humanity for millennia. Her story inspired countless other patients and motivated researchers to continue improving diabetes treatment. Today, over one hundred million people worldwide depend on insulin to stay alive, all thanks to that breakthrough in Toronto and advocates like Elizabeth who showed the world what was possible. Some great Deals https://amzn.to/49SJ3Qs For more check out http://www.quietplease.ai
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