As Memorial Day approaches, we're honoring the life of the famous poet and service member, known for his iconic “Trees” poem, who was the son of the company's first Scientific Director—and a writer for Johnson & Johnson.
Some 50 million people would succumb to the Spanish influenza outbreak of 1918. And this Johnson & Johnson employee went out of her way to be at the very front lines of caring for the sick.
We crack open the pages of a special issue of Red Cross Notes, a company publication that spotlighted several ways surgical care changed after the war—and how Johnson & Johnson contributed to many of the advances.