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Archive for May, 2010

Remembering Mike

mike-h-caine-blogThere’s a saying that out of the mouths of babes comes wisdom. It is something I learn every year. The Miracle Marathon not only is a time when we as adults should take the time to help a very important facility. It also is the time that we should take to listen to what the youth of today is telling us. Sometimes we can learn very important life lessons from the young.

I know that as adults, we feel we are the ones who should lead. But as adults, we also should be able to recognize brilliance in people of any age. I have learned many things from the young people we have interviewed during the Miracle Marathon. The children who are battling for their lives very often have important lessons for us all.

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The magic and hope of Children’s Hospital

“You’re lucky you got him here when you did. If you had waited any longer, he could have died.”

I remember Dr. Cohen saying that as if it were yesterday. I can see where we were standing. I can see what I was wearing. I can see my wife crying. And then I remember very vividly his next sentence, “It’s ok. He’s going to be just fine.” Patrick had ruptured his appendix and if it weren’t for Dr. Cohen, the toxins released could have killed him within a few hours.

It happened between the first and second year of the Dave and Carole Miracle Marathon. I remember the first year of the marathon vividly, for a very embarrassing reason. On the morning of the first day of the telethon, I showed up late because I had driven downtown to the old location around 20th and Wisconsin. The hospital hadn’t been at that location for almost 10 years. Here I was, a guy with a 4-year old son who was about to go on the air for three days to raise money for the hospital, and I didn’t even know where it was located.

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Turn the key, be idle-free

studentsAs coordinator for Fight Asthma Milwaukee Allies, I keep very busy teaching Milwaukee students about asthma: what it is and how to manage it.  Last week was especially busy, as I also was gearing up for Milwaukee Public Schools’ anti-idling campaign. It was so great to see young students taking action to make the air they breathe better.

As the bell rang at the end of the day, students at Congress Elementary School ran up to parked cars, vans and buses and asked drivers to turn off the ignition and pledge to not idle. Check out the photos from the event. It’s part of an anti-idling campaign involving 20 other MPS schools through an asthma management grant from the Centers for Disease Control. FAM Allies received an additional grant from the CDC to provide these same schools with asthma education.

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What would you do?

Everyone at the hospital knows me as a huge and vocal sports fan. So when the Milwaukee Bucks qualified for the playoffs this year, I had to do something to celebrate with the patients I see in the MACC Fund Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders every day.

Check out my video to see what I did. I did this to give our patients a chance to laugh, have fun and be part of the excitement that comes with having our home team in the playoffs. I did it to raise awareness about the upcoming Miracle Marathon, which impacts the resources I have available as our team at Children’s Hospital provides care for these wonderful children.

What would you do? Would you:

  • Listen to 96.5 WKLH May 26-28?
  • Pledge your donation at chw.org/miraclemarathon?
  • Text 4CHW to 85944 for a small donation?
  • Spread the word to your family and friends?

Learn more at chw.org/miraclemarathon.

~ David Margolis, MD, program director, Blood and Marrow Transplant

A deeper level of care

bethcrivello2For a mom with a new baby, there’s nothing better than bringing him home from the hospital and embarking on a life adventure together. And there’s also nothing worse than taking that baby to the ER because he needs immediate medical attention.

Five weeks after my son Ben entered the world, I woke to him screaming with a temperature of 101.7. I immediately called my pediatrician and was told for a baby that young, any temperature over 100.5 was a significant danger. He had to get to the Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin ER as soon as possible. I was scared and I was praying that my little boy was going to be okay.

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