NationStates Jolt Archive


Doc interrupts surgery to donate his blood

Kedalfax
27-05-2006, 12:20
An article in today's Albany Times Union:
http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=486176


By JIM FITZGERALD, Associated Press
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. -- A heart surgeon had to take a break from a mercy-mission operation in El Salvador so he could donate his own rare-type blood for his 8-year-old patient.


Dr. Samuel Weinstein said he had his blood drawn, ate a Pop-Tart, returned to the operating table and watched as his blood helped the boy survive the complex surgery.

"It was a little bit surreal," Weinstein said by phone Friday from the Children's Hospital at Montefiore Medical Center in New York, where he is chief of pediatric cardio-thoracic surgery.

The 43-year-old Weinstein was on a charity trip with Heart Care International when he did the surgery at Bloom Hospital in San Salvador.

In the May 11 operation, which had begun 12 hours earlier, the boy's failing aortic valve was replaced with his pulmonary valve and the pulmonary valve was replaced with an artificial valve.

"The surgery had been going well, everything was working great, but he was bleeding a lot and they didn't have a lot of the medicines we would use to stop the bleeding," Weinstein said.

They were running out of blood to give the boy, Weinstein said. When he asked the boy's blood type, he discovered they were both B-negative.

Weinstein, who said he was an occasional blood donor -- "but never like this" -- said the interruption to donate a pint lasted about 20 minutes.

The American Red Cross says 2 percent of the population has B-negative blood. Only AB-negative is rarer.

On charity trips, Weinstein said, "We don't sleep a lot, we don't eat a lot, and we were working very hard, and here it was 11 o'clock at night and they hung my blood and he was getting my blood."

The patient, Francisco Calderon Anthony Fernandez of San Salvador, came off the ventilator the next day and had some lunch with Weinstein. He has since gone home from the hospital, said Weinstein.

"His mother was very happy with me and she said to me, `Does this mean that he's going to grow up and become an American doctor?'"

Weinstein said he and most of the other health care workers give up vacation time for the trips.

"It's a real team effort," he said. "I'm getting the attention because I'm the one who gave the blood, but there wasn't anybody on the team -- I mean anybody, the nurses, the clerks -- who wouldn't have done it."
The Remote Islands
27-05-2006, 14:02
An article in today's Albany Times Union:
http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=486176


Generousness has reached the next level.:eek:
Londim
27-05-2006, 14:13
Hooray for that doctor. Now if only we could see more kindness like that. The world would be in a better place
Arcelea
27-05-2006, 14:19
On-the-spot generosity like that is pretty hard to come by, yeah. I tip my hat to the good doctor.
Demented Hamsters
27-05-2006, 14:23
Mark of a true hero there.
Rotovia-
27-05-2006, 14:56
*cough*

I'm a blood, platelet and bone marrow donor, who takes three weeks off a year whilst the suck the marrow on out of my hips...

*searching for 'the love'... finds none*


Seriously though, the Red Cross desperately needs donors and anyone of reasonable health should check their eligibility to donate, it cost fifteen minutes of your time and is only mildly discomforting. That has to be the easiest way to save lives!
Super-power
27-05-2006, 15:23
Just when I'm about to lose faith in humanity, a story like this comes along :)
Naturality
27-05-2006, 16:04
Very cool.
Heikoku
27-05-2006, 22:07
Wow! Not only this is a truly good man, he also has STYLE! I mean, really, donating blood for your own surgery not only marks generosity, this guy also showed a great deal of panache. :)

"Okay, I'll donate a pint of my blood, eat a pop tart and back in we go!"

I mean, really, if that ain't stylish, I don't know what is. :)
IL Ruffino
27-05-2006, 22:13
What a facist asshole.
Heikoku
27-05-2006, 22:21
What a facist asshole.

:rolleyes:

And the "I'll let you have your way with me, whip me and call me 'little Sally' for attention" prize goes to...
IL Ruffino
27-05-2006, 22:39
:rolleyes:

And the "I'll let you have your way with me, whip me and call me 'little Sally' for attention" prize goes to...
I get a prize?! :D
Ifreann
27-05-2006, 22:42
I get a prize?! :D
You get to donate your blood. All of it!
Rubiconic Crossings
27-05-2006, 22:43
Yes its great etc but who would not have done the same in that situation?

It needed to be done...no great drama...
Kroblexskij
27-05-2006, 22:45
You get to donate your blood. All of it!
hooray, lets also donate our spinal fluids.
But that guys cool for doing that.
Ifreann
27-05-2006, 22:46
hooray, lets donate our spinal fluids
Nah, let's donate Ruffy's. Without all his blood he won't need it. Anyone else want a piece of Ruffy? Going cheap.
Havl
27-05-2006, 22:51
This news tidbit brought to you by Kellogg's PopTarts.
IL Ruffino
27-05-2006, 22:53
You get to donate your blood. All of it!
If you smoke weed.. can you donate?
IL Ruffino
27-05-2006, 22:57
Nah, let's donate Ruffy's. Without all his blood he won't need it. Anyone else want a piece of Ruffy? Going cheap.
Ruffy? Cheap? Never!
Ifreann
27-05-2006, 23:28
If you smoke weed.. can you donate?
I don't know. Try and find out.
Rotovia-
28-05-2006, 01:07
If you smoke weed.. can you donate?
Yes. Otherwise there's a half dozen pints of my blood being poured down a seedy drain, right now. Seriously though, according to the Red Cross Nurses, it's fine -not prefered- but fine.
IL Ruffino
28-05-2006, 01:13
Yes. Otherwise there's a half dozen pints of my blood being poured down a seedy drain, right now. Seriously though, according to the Red Cross Nurses, it's fine -not prefered- but fine.
They have em at my school, when I'm old enough, I plan on donating.
Rotovia-
28-05-2006, 01:16
They have em at my school, when I'm old enough, I plan on donating.
I've donated that much blod I have a pen and the clock, twenty more donations and.... I GET THE WATCH!