Episode 552: Childhood Lyme Disease, Medical Gaslighting, The Quiet Epidemic, and Becoming the Doctor She Needed – Julia Bruzzese
31 January 2026

Episode 552: Childhood Lyme Disease, Medical Gaslighting, The Quiet Epidemic, and Becoming the Doctor She Needed – Julia Bruzzese

Tick Boot Camp

About

In this powerful and deeply moving episode of the Tick Boot Camp Podcast, we sit down with Julia Bruzzese, a 22-year-old Lyme disease survivor, disability advocate, and future physician whose life was forever changed by an untreated tick bite in childhood.


After developing a classic bull’s-eye rash at age 9, Julia went undiagnosed for nearly two years, despite textbook symptoms of Lyme disease. By age 11, she experienced a catastrophic neurological decline that left her paraplegic and wheelchair-bound. Over the next decade, Julia saw more than 100 doctors, endured profound medical gaslighting, and navigated an exhausting journey through antibiotics, IVIG, IV antibiotics, plasmapheresis, stem cells, ozone therapy, and integrative care.


Julia’s story became internationally known after a moment with Pope Francis on the JFK airport tarmac went viral in 2015—an event that opened doors to care, advocacy, and awareness. She later became the emotional centerpiece of the award-winning documentary The Quiet Epidemic, appeared at New York Fashion Week as a Lyme disease advocate, and was profiled by renowned journalist Mary Beth Pfeiffer.


Today, Julia is finishing her undergraduate degree and has been accepted into medical school, determined to become the kind of doctor she needed when the system failed her.


This episode is a masterclass in:




    Pediatric Lyme disease




    Medical gaslighting vs. lack of education




    Clinical diagnosis vs. unreliable testing




    The patient-doctor relationship




    Chronic illness, disability, and purpose




    Why Lyme disease changes lives—and why early treatment matters




Childhood Lyme Disease & Missed Diagnosis


    Tick bite and bull’s-eye rash dismissed at age 9




    Two years of worsening symptoms labeled as “growing pains,” viruses, or psychological




    Why early Lyme treatment saves lives




Neurological Collapse & Hospital Trauma


    Sudden onset of paralysis, vision loss, fevers, hair loss, and weakness at age 11




    Over 100 doctors and repeated hospitalizations




    Being accused of malingering and conversion disorder




    The devastating impact of medical disbelief on children




The Quiet Epidemic Documentary


    How Julia became the heart of the film at age 12




    Why she initially hesitated to share her story




    The emotional impact of seeing her illness reflected on screen




    How the documentary helps families explain Lyme disease to others




Meeting Pope Francis & Global Awareness


    How a school principal secured last-minute tickets




    The Pope walks directly to Julia’s wheelchair




    The moment that changed everything




    Media coverage that led to access to lifesaving care




Treatment Journey


    Lyme-literate diagnosis by NP Somer DelSignore




    Oral and IV antibiotics




    IVIG (including under-dosing issues)




    Plasmapheresis




    POTS, Babesia, Bartonella, and autoimmune complications




    Stem cell therapy abroad




    Ozone and integrative protocols




    Why there is no single silver bullet for Lyme disease




The Medical System & Lyme Denial


    Why doctors often say “it’s all in your head”




    The difference between malice and lack of training




    How medical education fails chronic illness patients




    Fear of insurance companies, lawsuits, and “accepted guidelines”




    Why Lyme is a clinical diagnosis, not a test result




Reframing “Medical Gaslighting”


    Why anger is understandable—but not always healing




    How patients and doctors can become better partners




    Understanding doctors’ limitations without excusing harm




    Advocacy with clarity, not hostility




Disability, Identity & Resilience


    Navigating life and education as a wheelchair user




    Accommodations, accessibility, and invisible illness




    “I have Lyme. I am not Lyme.”




    Learning when to rest, when to fight, and when to live




Becoming the Doctor She Needed


    Working as a medical assistant and hospital volunteer in a wheelchair




    Applying to and being accepted into medical school




    Becoming the first wheelchair-using medical student at her institution




    Why lived experience belongs in medicine




Medical Malpractice Lawsuit


    Lawsuit filed in NYC (March 2021) against multiple doctors and hospitals




    Failure to diagnose and treat Lyme disease despite clear evidence




    Why Lyme malpractice cases are rare—and necessary




    Seeking accountability, not revenge




Purpose, Faith & Meaning


    From “Why me?” to “Why not me?”




    How suffering clarified her calling




    The role of faith, family, and community




    Why Julia wouldn’t give this journey back—even now




Memorable Quotes


    “I was criminalized as an eleven-year-old child for being sick.”




    “It actually
    was
    in my head—the bacteria was in my brain.”




    “I have Lyme disease. I am not Lyme disease.”




    “There is no silver bullet for Lyme. Healing is trial and error.”




    “I wouldn’t be who I am—or know my purpose—without this journey.”




Why This Episode Matters

This episode is essential listening for:




    Parents of children with unexplained symptoms




    Lyme disease and chronic illness patients




    Medical professionals and students




    Advocates fighting for better diagnostics and care




    Anyone who has ever felt dismissed, unseen, or unheard in healthcare




Julia Bruzzese’s story is not just about Lyme disease—it’s about truth, resilience, accountability, and hope.