In Remembrance : Better Health Through PEZ


Warning to readers! This is a Tall Texas tale. Some of the folks are real, but most are not. Fort Worth, Texas, Pez Candy, and the polio epidemic of the 1950s are. i was there.

Pictured above is my late cousin, Beverly Hills, of Fort Worth, Texas. Let me tell you a legendary tall tale about her father, a renowned infectious disease doctor at JPS Hospital. He came up with a rather unconventional idea for administering the new Polio Vaccine. Instead of using a giant needle, he thought, “Why not load up a Pez pellet with the vaccine and shoot it into the kid’s mouth? No needle, no trauma, no chasing down running kids, just a minty Pez Candy shot down the throat with a cute little Flash Gordon Ray-Gun dispenser.” What could possibly go wrong?

The hospital installed a fancy display at Leonard Brothers Department Store, and Beverly, with no license to administer anything stronger than her cats kibbles, was designated to give the trusting kiddos their Polio Vaccine with the Ray-Gun Pez Gun. The word spread like wildfire, and soon, the line snaked around the block as moms and kids showed up to beat the dreaded Iron Lung by ingesting a tiny mint. Things got a little wild – police had to step in to control the crowd, and they even started serving hot dogs and cokes to calm down the hungry mob. It was quite the scene – July heat, a frenzied crowd, and the perfect conditions for the spread of Polio. The things people will do for a medical minty treat!

Beverly was overwhelmed, having shot Polio Pez mints down the throats of a thousand or more kids by noon, and supplies were exhausted. Her father’s duffus assistant, overwhelmed by the mob scene, retrieved what he thought were more vaccine pellets from a store room but instead picked refills of “Mother Little Helper Hormone and Hot Flash Lozenges.” They were packed in a similar non-descript box as the Pez Pellets and exactly the same size, a simple mistake made in the heat of battle. Beverly and a nurse vaccinated another thousand kids by afternoon and were done. When loading the car to head home, her father, Doctor Hill, discovered the real Pez vaccine in the trunk of his car. An inspection revealed the terrible mistake, but it was too late, and he had no way to contact the families of the children who had received the hormone therapy lozenges. Fearing fatal retribution, he decided to keep mum and let nature take its course. Better living through pharma did just that.

Two weeks went by, and freaked-out mothers were bringing their kids to hospitals all over town. Eight-year-old girls were growing boobies, wearing makeup, smoking cigarettes, and asking for a martini in the afternoon. Young boys were reading Hollywood Movie Star Magazines, dressing their dogs in doll clothing, painting their fingernails, shaving their still hairless legs, and began wearing their mother’s peddle pusher pants and mid-drift blouses. The town had gone street-rat crazy-town. Dr. Hill fessed up, suffered the consequences, and treated the affected kids with the appropriate drugs to reverse the changes. It seems that 1957 Fort Worth, Texas, was the forerunner for what is going on now. Who would have thought it was all because of a Pez Candy.


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12 Replies to “In Remembrance : Better Health Through PEZ”

  1. I was one of the 1.6 million “volunteer” second-graders tested for the poliomyelitis study. Let me explain how I volunteered. My parents threw me in the back of the car, took me over to the base dispensary, and held me down while nurses gave me the injection. I was not one for mildly accepting vaccines in those days. I remain convinced to this day that it was an effort by my parents to knock me off. Afterward, I never trusted either of them again — about anything. And I’m not kidding. You know how youngsters often make their own Mother’s Day and Father’s Day cards because they don’t have money and want to wish their parents a nice “special” day? Not me after 1954.

    My Post-Polio Inoculation Stress Syndrome (PPISS) got worse once I fully understood the possibilities. Of every 100 children who developed polio, 50 would have no residual issues; 25 might have mild residual paralysis of an arm or leg; 15 would be left with severe paralysis, and five would die. Of the 1.6 million who volunteered for the test, 80 to 90% would get through unscathed. Somewhere between 16,000 and 320,000 wouldn’t. I snuck through — no thanks to Mom & Dad.

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    1. Ha! lucky kiddo. I too got the injection and not the later suger cube or PEZ. I had a cousin that came down with Polio, but it was a mild case and he fully recovered. For two years, us kids couldn’t go to the public pool, swim in a lake or visit a theater for the Saturday serials. I guess we were lucky ones.

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      1. Oh, yeah. I have a small collection of them. They have ’em at Walmarts and grocery stores and if there are ant specialty candy shops they will have collector’s ones.

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