Medic Alert: Paying it Forward-
Non-profit organization started in Turlock in 1956
This is a story about a teenager, her parents, and the start of a non-profit organization that has saved many lives over the past seven decades.
Thanks to the Collins family paying it forward, an estimated four million lives have been touched in life-saving ways.
The story begins with our neighbor city to the north of Merced County: Turlock, Stanislaus County, California. It was 1953 and thirteen year-old Linda Collins cut herself while playing with her cousins.
She was taken to the ER where the doctor followed standard procedure and administered a tetanus antitoxin.
Linda had an allergic reaction to the antitoxin and went into a coma. She nearly died. Had her parents been with her at the time, they could have told the doctor about the allergy.
Escaping a potential tragedy wore on the minds of Linda’s parents: Dr. Marion Collins and his wife Chrissie.
From that point forward, Chrissie attached a small note to her daughter’s bracelet stating what the allergy was in case something like what Linda went through should ever happen again.
But Chrissie and Marion knew there had to be a better way for medical professionals to get that kind of information. Their concern went beyond their own family.
They wondered how to prevent something like this from happening in any family. Within three years, the Collins’ formed a non-profit organization that we now know as MedicAlert.
It was all based in the family’s hometown of Turlock.
According to the MedicAlert website, the first bracelet was custom made by a San Francisco jeweler who inscribed Linda’s allergies (she was also allergic to aspirin and sulfa).
Upon entering college in 1956, classmates saw the bracelet and asked about having some made for others with similar needs. The MedicAlert Foundation was formed as the Collins’ family believed strongly that providing vital medical communication was a public service.
The bracelets led to other items of jewelry and eventually to the establishment of a 24-hour hotline for medical professionals to access critical information about the conditions of MedicAlert members.
Dr. Marion Collins was proud of the creation of Medic Alert.
On the MedicAlert website, he is quoted: “I believe I can save more lives with MedicAlert than I ever can with my scalpel.”
The Collins family remained in Turlock all their lives. Linda’s father, Doctor Marion Collins passed in 1977.
Chrissie remained in Turlock in the years following her husband’s death. She served on the MedicAlert board and was known to ask pointed questions about the non-profit’s operations and the foundation's huge computer system.
She passed in 2001. Linda graduated from Stanford University with a degree in nursing.
She married, had three children, and later divorced. Linda was a gifted golfer, winning amateur titles including the California Women's Golf Association Championship.
She turned professional and won the LPGA (Ladies Professional Golf Association) Senior Teaching Division National Championship.
She died from breast cancer in 2004.
The community of Turlock has never forgotten the legacy left by the Collins family.
There’s a story in Chrissie Collins obituary about how the community of Turlock came together to get Medic Alert up and running in the late 1950s.
In 1960 after a story ran in This Week magazine, an insert in Sunday newspapers, the non-profit received one-hundred thousand orders for MedicAlert bracelets.
Chrissie was quoted at the time that the whole town of Turlock worked out of the family room of their home to sign up new members and ship bracelets.
In 1981 the Kiwanis Club of Turlock presented a stone marker that was placed in front of the non-profit’s office on Colorado Avenue.
On the marker, these words are inscribed:
Medic Alert Foundation International. Founded on March 26, 1956 in Turlock , California by Marion C. Collins, MD to provide a lifetime of emergency medical identification for all people.
Presented by the Kiwanis Club of Greater Turlock, March 26, 1981.
Medic Alert moved from Turlock to an office in Salida, Stanislaus County, in 2015.
Four years later, it moved back to Turlock occupying an office on Lander Avenue. A year later, COVID forced all employees to work from home.
Eventually, the non-profit moved out of the Lander Avenue office. Medic Alert is now exclusively on-line. From that humble start in the mid 1950s to now nearly seventy years later, Medic Alert has over four million members in fifty countries.
Members pay $35 to join, and $15 in annual dues. Over the years, the organization has entered into strategic alliances to expand the reach of the system.
For profit companies, such as Citizen Watch, license products such as the Citizen Eco Watch with the Medic Alert logo. Medic Alert demonstrated that a near tragic situation could be turned into something positive.
The non-profit estimates that four-thousand lives are saved annually thanks to the bracelet and the phone system that provides information on members to emergency personnel.
That original medical ID bracelet that Linda wore is now stored in the Smithsonian Institution.
It represents the story of a teenage girl and her parents who would not let a near tragedy go to waste. According to the non-profit website, over four million Medic Alert members may very well owe their lives to the thoughtfulness of the Collins family of Turlock way back in the 1950s.
The Collins’ story of paying it forward has established a seventy year legacy that began right here in the Central Valley.
Steve Newvine lives in Merced.
He first wrote on Medic Alert in his book 9 from 99-Experiences in the Central Valley.
On September 6, he will speak before the Merced Women’s Club at their facility on 707 W. 22nd Street in Merced.
He will talk about his writing for MercedCountyEvents and feature several of his books available for sale.
His latest novel is Dreaming Big, and it is available at Lulu.com The Medic Alert website is MedicAlert.org