Oklahoma’s Martha Lillard, Last U.S. Iron Lung Patient, Dies at Age 78

Martha Ann Lillard, thought to be the final individual in the US who depended upon

an iron lung for her survival from polio infection, died aged 78, marking the end of an

era in the history of medicine. Martha died on June 26 at her residence in Shawnee,

Oklahoma, due to complications arising from long COVID, chronic pulmonary failure,

and post-polio syndrome, stated by her family members.

Martha Ann Lillard got infected with polio in 1953, just two years before the

availability of the first polio vaccine following her fifth birthday. Polio caused severe

paralysis and rendered her incapable of breathing on her own; hence she had to

depend on an iron lung, which is a type of negative pressure ventilator once widely

employed during polio epidemics. Modern ventilators eventually replaced the

instrument; however, Lillard continued using the aging ventilator throughout her

lifetime because it worked best for her.

Although her physicians had predicted that Lillard might never live past early

adulthood, she managed to defy all odds by having a productive and independent

existence. She enrolled into school using the intercom, regained partial function of

one of her arms via therapy sessions, mastered cooking skills, drove cars for a while,

wrote poems and songs, painted and also worked on voluntary basis for local animal

welfare associations.

An inspiring part of Lillard’s life story is when she got acquainted with her future

husband Baha Salh via the Internet after the September 11 attack. After years of

correspondence through distance, the couple got married in February 2026 once

Salh got a visa to enter the United States.

She is also a great example of the great effects that vaccination can have in

eradicating some of the deadliest diseases. Prior to 1955 when vaccinations for polio

were invented, outbreaks would lead to paralysis amongst children all across the

United States. Polio was then officially considered eradicated from circulation in the

US in 1979, which means that Lillard was one of the last survivors of a time when

polio took away many lives every year.

With the death of Martha Lillard, the iron lung—a symbol of hope amidst the polio

epidemic—has entered into history books.

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