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Micah Goldblum Micah loves
playing hockey as much as he loves playing the
cello. |
Micah Goldblum is 13 now, a good student, an avid hockey player, a gifted
cellist thriving in an arts magnet school.
Each evening he takes his cello
from its case and puts in the long hours of practice that transform natural
talent into remarkable skill. There is a routine to this work that is, in its
way, comforting. But, when Micah was 5 years old, all routine, all normality was
shattered. Suffering from flu-like symptoms for several days, Micah suddenly
experienced very shallow breathing.
His parents, recognizing the grave danger, rushed him to Sinai�s
ER-7. In less than an hour, unable to breathe on his own, Micah�s weak
hold on life was sustained by one machine�a special ventilator�in Sinai�s
Pediatric Intensive Care Unit.
Micah�s condition was not just critical, it was extremely complex
medically. He had developed pneumonia, which triggered toxic shock syndrome, and
then acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Dr. Aaron Zuckerberg, head of the PICU and a pediatric anesthesiologist,
an expert in Micah�s condition, was one of only a handful of physicians in the
country at the time with the knowledge to successfully utilize a neonatal
ventilator in a child of Micah�s age. This knowledge saved Micah�s life.
But, Dr. Zuckerberg didn�t just exploit his expertise, he showed his
fierce commitment to Micah and his family. Dr. Zuckerberg spent that entire
first night in Micah�s room, sleeping on a windowsill, watching over Micah. That
first night held the greatest threat, but Micah�s illness was severe, and he
spent four weeks at Sinai. For two of those weeks he was in a medically induced
coma to give his ravaged lungs time to heal.
Five years after Micah�s complete recovery, he invited Dr. Zuckerberg to
participate in his bar mitzvah, and donated all of his gifts to Sinai�s PICU. He
did it because he is an exceptional young man and because he and his family will
never forget that night when Micah was tied to life by a single string�a string
that was thin, but strong, woven of all of Sinai�s expertise and skill�and of
all the knowing, caring people who wouldn�t let that string
break.