Amid vaccine rollbacks at the federal level and rising cases of meningitis and other vaccine-preventable diseases across the country, we hope you will take a moment today to read Emily Stillman's story and remember her life and legacy 💜.
Emily was vibrant, unbelievably funny, and known for making everyone around her laugh. One late-January morning, she called home from her dorm with what seemed like a regular headache. She and her mom thought it might be the flu or exhaustion from studying. She took some Motrin and planned to rest, but hours later, the pain intensified. She packed her backpack and went to the hospital, still unaware of how sick she truly was.
At first, Emily was treated for a migraine. As her symptoms rapidly escalated, doctors suspected
#meningitis — but her family thought it must be something else, as Emily had been vaccinated against meningitis as a child and again before leaving for college.
Just 36 hours after her first symptom of a headache, Emily lost consciousness and never regained it. She passed away on February 2, 2013, from
#MeningitisB, at just 19 years old.
Emily did not have the chance to be vaccinated against the type of meningitis that took her life, as the Meningitis B vaccine was not yet available in the U.S. Today it is.
Many parents assume their child is fully protected because a school requires a “meningitis” vaccine. That is not always the case. Protection requires coverage against all five serogroups: A, B, C, W, and Y—and one vaccine alone is not enough.
Take a moment to double-check your loved one’s protection. Learn more at
meningitisprevention.org.