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Monday, April 29, 2013

Just do the best you can…




Is it just ME, or do you, too, still get inspired by the likes of the woman you are about to hear about… (Source: Huffington Post, by Eleanor Goldberg, posted 4/22/13)

After completing the Boston Marathon, Dr. Natalie Stavas raced to aid victims who were injured in the blasts.

After running the Boston Marathon on a broken foot, Dr. Natalie Stavas raced to save as many lives as possible.

As Stavas and her radiologist dad, Joe, neared the finish line after running a grueling 26.2 miles, the pair heard the blasts and immediately dove into the carnage to help, the Boston Globe reports.

“I was running like a bat out of hell,”Stavas, who broke her foot while training, told the paper. “I wasn’t aware of my fatigue.”

The 32-year-old physician, who’s a pediatric resident at Boston Medical Center, jumped over the barricades and started tending to the most severe cases.


Stavas provided life-saving treatment to a number of seriously injured victims. She pumped oxygen into a woman whose thigh had been blown open and then worked on another woman who had a hole in her groin. She also wrapped a tourniquet on a man with a mangled foot, according to the Los Angeles Times.



The heroic doctor’s dad also joined the rescue effort, aiding people with serious injuries and hypothermia, according to the Globe.




While Stavas’ quick actions were commendable, she wasn’t the only one to speedily segue from extreme athlete to emergency medical care professional.

Dr. David King, a physician who’s worked in Iraq and Afghanistan, completed the marathon and then ran to Boston Medical to perform surgery, ABC reports. He told the news outlet that the gruesome injuries he treated were not unlike those he tended to on the battlefield.

Though still shaken from the experience, Stavas has returned to work and continues to use whatever means she has to help the wounded.

She donated the $6,000 she raised for her race to the Boston Medical Center’s pediatric emergency department, according to the LA Times.

"As a physician, I take an oath to do the best I can," she told the paper.

So, IS it just me, or do you, too, feel so proud, so grateful that people like this amazing father and daughter walk – and run - among us?

Thank you, Drs. Stavas


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