His death was confirmed by his daughter Diana Sunshine.
Before Dr. Sunshine and a handful of other physicians became interested in caring for preemies in the late 1950s and early ’60s, more than half of these unimaginably fragile patients died shortly after birth. Insurance companies wouldn’t pay to treat them.
Dr. Sunshine, a pediatric gastroenterologist, thought that many premature babies could be saved. At Stanford, he pushed for teams of doctors from multiple disciplines to treat them in special intensive care units. Along with his colleagues, he pioneered methods of feeding preemies with formula and aiding their breathing with ventilators.
“We were able to keep babies alive that would not have survived,” Dr. Sunshine said in 2000 in an oral history interview with the Pediatric History Center of the American Academy of Pediatrics. “And now everybody just sort of takes this for granted.”
At CGAS San Francisco (late 70-early 80s) there was a baby incubator that was built to be strapped down in our helicopter (HH-52A) just for taking preemies down to Stanford.
ReplyDeleteA life well lived. God Bless and RIP my good man.
ReplyDeleteAnd through him, many many other lives get to be lived.
Delete"Sunshine" is a fitting surname for the good doctor.
ReplyDeleteIf anybody has an E ticket to Heaven this guy does. Sunshine indeed!
ReplyDeleteSpin
Amen.
DeleteMarty
I caught that Anon and Anon. Spin and Marty, one of my all-time favorite serials on the Mouseketeer TV show.
DeleteThanks to doctors like him, we are getting closer and closer to the age of Doctor McCoy.
ReplyDelete"Dammit, Jim!"
Delete