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Texas man who used an iron long for decades after contracting polio as a child dies at 78 | TribLIVE.com
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Texas man who used an iron long for decades after contracting polio as a child dies at 78

Associated Press
7142989_web1_7142989-31bd46d855a04797a12055487a88cee3
The Dallas Morning News via AP
In this Friday, April 27, 2018 photo, attorney Paul Alexander looks out from inside his iron lung at his home in Dallas. Alexander died Monday at a Dallas hospital, said Daniel Spinks, a longtime friend.
7142989_web1_7142989-129c30d27e69477a8095c17d5233964e
The Dallas Morning News via AP
In this Friday, April 27, 2018 photo, attorney Paul Alexander chats with caregiver and friend Kathryn Gaines as he drinks coffee and she eats breakfast beside his iron lung at his home in Dallas. Alexander died Monday at a Dallas hospital, said Daniel Spinks, a longtime friend.
7142989_web1_7142989-fa4a2a2bf29342d0af28a6143ebb17c0
The Dallas Morning News via AP
In this Friday, April 27, 2018 photo, caregiver and friend Kathryn Gaines washes the face of attorney Paul Alexander beside his iron lung at his home in Dallas. Alexander died Monday at a Dallas hospital, said Daniel Spinks, a longtime friend.

DALLAS — A Texas man who spent most of his 78 years using an iron lung chamber and built a large following on social media, recounting his life from contracting polio in the 1940s to earning a law degree, has died.

Paul Alexander died Monday at a Dallas hospital, said Daniel Spinks, a longtime friend. He said Alexander had recently been hospitalized after being diagnosed with covid-19 but did not know the cause of death.

Alexander was 6 when he began using an iron lung, a cylinder that encased his body as the air pressure in the chamber forced air into and out of his lungs. In recent years, his TikTok account, Conversations With Paul, has had millions of views.

“He loved to laugh,” Spinks said. “He was just one of the bright stars of this world.”

Alexander told The Dallas Morning News in 2018 that he was powered by faith and that his late parents, whom he called “magical” and “extraordinary souls,” motivated him to succeed.

“They just loved me,” he told the newspaper. “They said, ‘You can do anything.’ And I believed it.”

The newspaper reported that Alexander was left paralyzed from the neck down by polio, and operated a plastic implement in his mouth to write emails and answer the phone.

Alexander earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Texas in 1978 and a law degree from the school in 1984.

Polio was once one of the nation’s most feared diseases, with annual outbreaks causing thousands of cases of paralysis. The disease mostly affects children.

Vaccines became available starting in 1955, and a national vaccination campaign cut the annual number of U.S. cases to less than 100 in the 1960s and fewer than 10 in the 1970s, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 1979, polio was declared eliminated in the U.S., meaning it was no longer routinely spread.

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