Showing posts with label Heart surgery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heart surgery. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

URGENT NEED for a rescued girl [in Cambodia]


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SL4_Gt7zkM0


August 13, 2012
By Stephanie
Agape International Missions

We just found out one of our rescued girls has a hole in her heart. To our surprise, her teacher on our staff has the same affliction. Both need open-heart surgery in Bangkok for a total of $44,000 during one of the slowest months for donations.

We are believing for a miracle. Please give and share this with anyone who can help.


Agape International Missions (AIM) fights the ground war on sex trafficking in Cambodia. Our holistic programs fight trafficking, restore victims and transform communities.


Thursday, April 12, 2012

Lucky Children Get Second Chance After Major Heart Surgery

Eight-year-old Nan Kini remains in the hospital, after his heart was repaired recently at a hospital in Siem Reap. (Photo: by Say Mony, VOA Khmer)

Wednesday, 11 April 2012
Say Mony, VOA Khmer | Siem Reap, Cambodia
“If he is sick again, we will be in debt again.”
Eight-year-old Nan Kini remains in the hospital, after his heart was repaired recently at a hospital in Siem Reap. He is frail, but he is alive.

It has been a long journey for the family, one that often seemed hopeless. Nan Kini’s father, Huy Nan, says there were times he wanted to see his son die rather than suffer so much from heart disease.

The 42-year-old motor-taxi driver says he could not afford to have Nan Kini treated and often had to borrow money to send him to the hospital.

Huy Nan says he is glad to see his son safe for now, but he worries. “If he is sick again, we will be in debt again,” he says.

Thursday, February 02, 2012

Long Beach nonprofit brings heart surgery to Cambodian children

A team of physicians and health professionals from California and Wisconsin volunteered their services to help 15 Cambodian children to receive heart surgeries during a recent medical mission to the country. The Long Beach nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries helped sponsor a team of physicians who performed procedures.
One of 15 Cambodian children to receive heart surgeries during a recent medical mission to the country.
The Long Beach nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries helped sponsor a team of physicians who performed procedures on 15 Cambodian children, including this patient.

02/01/2012
By Greg Mellen Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram

For the first time, Long Beach nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries was able to offer life-extending surgeries to destitute Cambodian children in their home country, rather than bringing them to the United States.

During a five-day medical mission, doctors from California and Wisconsin repaired the hearts of 15 children at Angkor Hospital for Children.

Peter Chhun, founder of the nonprofit who first began bringing children to the U.S. when the equipment for open-heart surgeries was not available in Cambodia, was delighted with the outcome.

"To come to the country of my birth and witness sick children before the surgery, and then to see them after the surgery, smiling, playing and not having the same blue color on their fingertips and lips is a great feeling," Chhun said. "I don't think I can find anything better than this to do." 

Tuesday, November 08, 2011

Boy goes home with healthy heart

In this file photo, three year-old Bunlak Song arrives at Los Angeles International Airport of Cambodia on March 6, 2011. Bunlak Song was brought to the United States by Hearts Without Boundaries, a Long Beach, Calif.-based non-profit group, to help repair his heart. (Jeff Gritchen / Staff Photographer)

NONPROFIT: Bunlak, 4, had life-saving surgery.

11/07/2011
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)

LONG BEACH - A 4-year-old Cambodian boy brought to the United States for life-extending open-heart surgery will board a jetliner with his sister Tuesday to return to his homeland.

Bunlak Song was cleared to travel recently and his older sister, Bunkek, 24, is eager to get back home to their family eight months after arriving in the U.S.

"We had a lot of twists and turns, but guess what, we had a lot of support," said Peter Chhun, whose nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries sponsored the boy.

Friday, September 02, 2011

Boy, 3, readied for open-heart surgery

Bunkek Song holds her 3-year-old brother, heart patient Bunlak Song, in the Cambodian New Year Parade in Long Beach on Saturday. (Jeff Gritchen / Staff Photographer)

09/01/2011
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)

LOS ANGELES - An impoverished Cambodian boy in need of an open-heart operation met with hospital staff Thursday and appears set for the procedure.

Children's Hospital Los Angeles has set Sept. 23 as the tentative date for surgery for Bunlak Song, according to Peter Chhun, whose Long Beach-based nonprofit is sponsoring the boy.

Before the boy can have the heart procedure, he needs dental work done. That will be done Tuesday, which had initially been the the proposed date for the surgery. Bunlak had been scheduled to meet with heart surgeon Cynthia Herrington, who will perform the operation, but she was unavailable.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Cambodian boy finds local hospital, surgeon for heart

3-year-old Bunlak Song is comforted by his sister, Bunlak Song, after arriving at Los Angeles International Airport from Cambodia on March 6. Bunlak Song was brought to the United States by Hearts Without Boundaries, a Long Beach, Calif.-based non-profit group, to help repair his heart. (Jeff Gritchen / Staff Photographer)

07/29/2011
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)

LONG BEACH — The trip of an impoverished Cambodian boy halfway around the world for life-saving surgery was only a part of the journey.

Now it looks as if Bunlak Song, a 3-year-old suffering from several heart defects, won't have to travel much farther from the Long Beach home where he is staying to receive the open-heart surgery he desperately needs.

Children's Hospital Los Angeles agreed to admit the boy, and renowned surgeon Vaughn Starnes has said he will perform the operation and waive his fee.

Starnes is the same surgeon who operated on Davik Teng, another impoverished Cambodian child, in 2008.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Cambodian kids head home after latest trip for surgery

Phin Ken, and his daughter, Socheat Nha during the the Cambodian New Year Parade in Long Beach in April. (Jeff Gritchen/Press-Telegram)

08/18/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)


LOS ANGELES - As Peter Chhun led his small band of travelers through the gates to board a flight to Taipei and onward to Cambodia, he was close to the end of one of his most arduous trips to date.

This is the third time Chhun, founder of the fledgling Hearts Without Boundaries nonprofit, has been able to broker a deal to have a destitute child from his home country of Cambodia receive heart surgery. But it was by no means the easiest.

Six months ago, Chhun brought a now 3-year-old Socheat Nha and her farmer father, Phin Ken, to the U.S. for what should have been a straight-forward process.

But the story went sideways before a solution was found. Socheat was diagnosed with heart defects that required closing a hole, called a ventricular septal defect, and repair of the pulmonary artery between the heart and lungs.

However, her condition was so bad upon arrival that doctors canceled surgery because of the risk.

All seemed lost until the International Children's Hearts Foundation, a nonprofit specializing in children from Third World countries, agreed to fix Socheat's heart in the Dominican Republic.

"We were lucky. We were lucky," Chhun said Tuesday night as he prepared to return to Cambodia with Socheat, her dad and Davik Teng, an 11-year-old girl who was Hearts Without Boundaries' first patient. She was back in the U.S. to meet donors and have doctors assess her recovery.

The happy homecoming for Socheat almost was not.

"Close is not the word. I said 'Forget it. I'll never make it,"' recalled Chhun.

Already, he had spent personal money to bring Socheat to the U.S. Now he needed to fly to the Dominican Republic and pay $5,000 for the hospital stay which neither Chhun nor the organization had.

"I told them we couldn't do it," Chhun said. "They looked at me in such a way. Of course, (Phin) never said anything, but he looked so sad."

Refusing to accept defeat, Chhun rallied donors and the community and raised enough money to pay for the trip and surgery.

Today, Chhun can laugh at the irony that he brought the girl to the U.S. only to have to leave for treatment.

He recalls Phin looking at him in the airport in Santiago, Dominican Republic.

"He said, 'Wait a minute. I just came from a Third World country. What's this, another Third World country?"'

Ken had already risked everything. Before meeting Chhun, the rice farmer had sold two plots of land passed down through his family in a desperate, failed attempt to get Socheat treated in Cambodia.

"I was criticized by my neighbors, because I am a farmer and without land I can't work," Ken said through translation.

Ken said he was told it was foolish because his daughter's condition couldn't be cured.

"But I decided it was the right thing to do, because I had to do SOMETHING. If it works, good. If not, at least we did SOMETHING. But I never thought today would come," Ken said.

In the Dominican Republic, Ken said he realized he had come too far to turn back.

Luckily, despite the surroundings and the travelers' misgivings, the treatment was first rate.

When asked if the difficulties made the success any sweeter for him, Chhun said, "No."

Chhun said saving the child's life is all that matters, regardless of the process and obstacles.

"Because this girl could have gone back to Cambodia without surgery. I think the donors and the community should be prouder," Chhun said.

The obstacles were just a memory as well-wishers, donors and volunteers in Socheat's odyssey gathered to say good-bye to the effervescent toddler and her attentive dad.

One was Lauren Briand, a recent graduate of Millikan High, who raised money with a garage sale and hawking wristbands with Socheat's name.

Briand presented Socheat a necklace with a little heart-shaped pendant.

So excited was the toddler, she removed her dress to better show off the jewelry.

"She looks so different, so beautiful, Lauren's mom, Debbie, said as Socheat happily chattered away in Khmer and entertained the gathering.

Chhun said the journey with Socheat and Davik had brought another epiphany.

Chhun says he realized it is not enough to merely fix the hearts of children and return them to destitution. As a result, he is hoping to find a way to partner with other donors or nonprofits to provide education for the children.

At 11 years old, wearing designer jeans, an embroidered jacket and carrying a purse the size of a small RV, Davik looks like she could be any sprouting American kid.

She has already become a fan of Justin Bieber, Taylor Swift and Akon.

The look and tastes belie a harsher truth. Which is that she is going home to a one-room hut with no running water or electricity.

Because of her ailment, she was late starting school and has only a second-grade education. She is barely literate in her native language.

Donors have agreed to pay her education costs and Davik will enter a private school in Battambang in the fall.

Likewise, Socheat, an uncommonly bright child who learned the alphabet in five days and can count into the hundreds in English, could face a grim future.

Her dad doesn't know how or what work he will find when he gets back.

Chhun says he thought it was once enough to say, "I brought you would with a broken heart and now you're back with a working heart. Right now, we realize that's not the way to do it. It's such a waste to have this heart that is pumping good, but for what? Without an education, there's nothing to do. (My mission) is deeper now."

As Chhun, Davik and Socheat boarded their plane, their journey was coming to an end. And it was just beginning.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Saturday, August 07, 2010

Khmer duo offer heartfelt thanks to LB supporters

Phin Ken, and his daughter, Socheat Nha during the the Cambodian New Year Parade in Long Beach, Calif. on April 4, 2010. (Jeff Gritchen / Press-Telegram)

08/06/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram


LONG BEACH - Socheat Nha and Davik Teng, two Cambodian girls given second chances at normal lives, will be saying their "arkun charans," or "thank you" to residents tonight at Sophy's Restaurant.

Residents will get a chance to see the two girls who underwent successful heart surgeries at one last fundraising dinner.

Although the girls don't depart for Cambodia until Oct.18, this is the last time they will attend public functions.

Socheat, the 3-year-old daughter of a Cambodian farmer, was brought to the U.S. by Long Beach nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries for surgery not available in her home country.

Las Vegas Childrens Hospital, which had agreed to perform the procedure, backed out when it appeared too risky. However, Hearts Without Boundaries was able to broker a deal with the International Children's Heart Foundation, which performed the surgery in the Dominican Republic.

Dr. Rodrigo Soto performed a tricky four-hour procedure to close a hole in Socheat's heart. The defect, called a ventricular septal defect, was repaired along with part of an artery.

Davik was the first child saved by Hearts Without Boundaries. Dr. Vaughn Starnes at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles repaired a quarter-sized hole in her heart two years ago.

Davik returned to Cambodia but is back in the U.S. for a visit supported by Hearts Without Boundaries.

A fourth patient, Bunlak Song, is scheduled to come to Long Beach later this year.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Fundraiser Aug. 7 for Cambodian toddler [Socheat Nha] who had heart surgery


07/27/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)


LONG BEACH - Residents interested in seeing Socheat Nha, the Cambodian girl who underwent successful heart surgery thanks to a local nonprofit, will have one last chance at a fundraising dinner.

Socheat and her father, Phin Ken, will be feted Aug. 7 at Sophy's Restaurant, 3240 Pacific Coast Highway, from 6-10 p.m. The cost of the dinner is $30 for adults, $20 for students and $10 for children.

The 3-year-old daughter of a Cambodian farmer, Socheat was brought to the U.S. by Long Beach nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries for surgery not readily available in her home country.

Las Vegas Children's Hospital, which had agreed to perform the procedure, backed out when it appeared too risky. However, Hearts Without Boundaries was able to broker a deal with the International Children's Heart Foundation, which performed the surgery in the Dominican Republic.

Dr. Rodrigo Soto performed a tricky four-hour procedure to close a hole in Socheat's heart, called a ventricular septal defect, and repaired part of a damaged artery.

Socheat is the third patient Hearts Without Boundaries has helped receive surgery. The others, 11-year-old Davik Teng and 1-year-old Soksamnang Vy, both underwent successful surgeries and returned to Cambodia. Davik is back in the U.S. for a visit.

A fourth patient, Bunlak Song, is scheduled to come to Long Beach later this year.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com

Friday, May 21, 2010

Thank you Peter Chhun and Hearts Without Boundaries for saving another Cambodian child!

Socheat Nha, Davik Teng and Chantha Bob at Sophy's Restaurant in Long Beach on May 16. Taken just days after 3-year-old Socheat's surgery in the Dominican Republic, repairing a major heart defect. Davik was the first child helped by Long Beach nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries. (Photo by John Futch)

Cambodian toddler doing 'really, really well' after heart surgery

05/20/2010

By Kelly Puente, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)


LONG BEACH - Socheat Nha, a 3-year-old Cambodian girl who was brought to the Dominican Republic for life-extending open heart surgery, is making a remarkable recovery.

Last month, her father, Phin Ken, and supporters held their breath as doctors performed a risky and dangerous four-hour operation to mend a hole in her heart, called a ventricular septal defect.

On Wednesday, she had her first post-operative assessment by Dr. Paul Grossfeld, a pediatric cardiologist at University of California Medical Center in San Diego.

"She's had a very great surgical result and things look favorable for a long-term prognosis," the doctor said. "Basically, she's doing really, really well. It's like a new lease on life for her."

Socheat was originally brought to the United States for the surgery, but doctors at a Las Vegas hospital examined her and determined that the surgery was too risky.

Long Beach-based nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries, which helped broker the deal for the surgery, was able to arrange to have Socheat operated on in the Dominican Republic. Peter Chhun, the head of Hearts Without Boundaries, said he and his team were all surprised by her rapid recovery.

Socheat and her father returned to Long Beach on May 1. Chhun says he hopes to extend the their stay in the U.S. as long as possible.

"I want her to enjoy every moment here in America before she goes back to her village," he said. "It's going to be tough to let her go."

Hearts Without Boundaries brings Cambodian children with heart defects to the U.S. for surgery unavailable to them in their home country. Socheat is the third child Hearts Without Boundaries has helped.

Chhun said the organization has about 15 other children on its waiting list. The organization is working on generating funding for more surgeries.

"The list just keeps growing and growing," he said.

For Information on Hearts Without Boundaries visit www.heartswithoutboundaries.org.

kelly.puente@presstelegram.com, (562) 499-1305

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Cambodian girl released from Dominican Republic hospital after successful surgery

Phin Ken, and his daughter, Socheat Nha during the the Cambodian New Year Parade in Long Beach, Calif. on April 4, 2010. (Jeff Gritchen / Long Beach Press-Telegram)

Socheat, Hearts Without Boundaries sponsors expected in Long Beach Saturday

04/26/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)

Anyone interested in making tax deductible donations to Hearts Without Boundaries to help it bring more children to the U.S. and improve care in Cambodia can visit the group's website heartswithoutboundaries.org or call Chhun at 818-640-6191.
At 11 a.m. Socheat Nha, the Cambodian toddler brought from her country for life-extending heart surgery, walked out of Children's Hospital in Santiago, Dominican Republic, into the Caribbean sunshine.

Just five days after a tricky 4-hour open heart procedure to patch a hole in her heart and repair an artery, the 3-year-old was pronounced fit to leave the hospital.

She will spend the rest of the week recuperating and, pending the outcome of an exam on Friday, is expected to fly back to Long Beach on Saturday.

Peter Chhun, the head of a small Long Beach nonprofit that helped broker the operation, was overjoyed at the successful outcome of an improbable journey.

When Hearts Without Boundaries accepted Socheat as a recipient of one of the heart surgeries the group arranges for destitute children, it was planned that she would have an operation done in Las Vegas.

The first two Hearts Without Boundaries patients, 9-year-old Davik Teng in 2008 and 1-year-old Soksamnang Vy in 2009, sailed through their open-heart procedures and are now fully recovered.

However, Socheat's ailment was more complicated. Doctors in Las Vegas, who repaired Vy's heart, canceled her surgery because of complications and fear she would not survive the operation. At the time the blood pressure in her heart was high and the damaged pulmonary tract, which connects the heart and lungs, complicated the procedure.

At the time it was feared the girl would have to return to her village untreated and live a hard life as her heart and lungs slowly deteriorated.

However, Chhun sought a second opinion. With the help of cardiologist Paul Grossfeld in San Diego, Chhun was able to connect with International Children's Heart Foundation, which specializes in treating children from Third World countries.

That organization offered to perform the procedure in Santiago, Dominican Republic.

Socheat was also put on medication that brought down the blood pressure.

Chhun had to raise funds to cover travel expenses and to pay for the hospital, although the surgeon donated his services.

On Wednesday Dr. Rodrigo Soto performed the operation.

By Monday the fear and angst were finally beginning to subside. Chhun said as Socheat was being prepared for discharge he saw the girl's father, Phin Ken, smile, really smile, for the first time in weeks.

"We have crossed the largest ocean of our lives in a little canoe," Chhun said. "We survived all the storms and we just kept paddling. This is the biggest day in (Socheat's) life, but it's the biggest day in our lives too."

Grossfeld will be available to monitor Socheat's recovery after she returns to Long Beach.

Soto said Socheat may need more medical help in six to 12 years. In the interim, Socheat, who is about the size of an average 1-year-old in the U.S., will be able to grow normally for the first time in her short life. Once she is fully recuperated, Socheat and her father will return to Cambodia.

Chhun plans to traverse the city with Socheat after she is recovered to show donors what their contributions meant.

Anyone interested in making tax deductible donations to Hearts Without Boundaries to help it bring more children to the U.S. and improve care in Cambodia can visit the group's website heartswithoutboundaries.org or call Chhun at 818-640-6191.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Cambodian toddler is recovering

Phin Ken, and his daughter, Socheat Nha during the the Cambodian New Year Parade in Long Beach, Calif. on April 4, 2010. (Jeff Gritchen / Press-telegram)

SURGERY: The third child helped by Hearts Without Boundaries may be released soon.

04/23/2010
By Greg Mellen
Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)


Socheat Nha, the Cambodian toddler brought to the Dominican Republic for life-extending open heart surgery, continues to amaze supporters and doctors alike with her rapid recovery from a risky and dangerous four-hour operation.

On Friday morning, the 3-year-old was moved out of the intensive care unit and into a regular room at the hospital where she has been recovering.

Barring any unforeseen setbacks she could be released as early as Sunday morning.

Peter Chhun, the head of Hearts Without Boundaries, which helped broker the deal for the surgery, said surgeon Rodrigo Soto, who performed the operation, told him he and his team were all surprised by Socheat's rapid rate of recovery.

Although Socheat has had trouble eating solid foods and slept through much of her second day of recovery, her signs remain positive.

Socheat, her father Phin Ken, who has kept vigil at his daughter's bed nearly nonstop since her operation, and the rest of the Hearts Without Boundaries team hope to return May 1, after Socheat has some more time to recuperate.

Hearts Without Boundaries is a Long Beach nonprofit that brings Cambodian children with heart defects to the U.S. for surgery unavailable to them in their home country. Socheat is the third child Hearts Without Boundaries has helped.

She was brought to the United States suffering from a hole in her heart, called a ventricular septal defect. However, after doctors at a Las Vegas examined her they canceled a planned surgery because of its riskiness.

Hearts Without Boundaries was able to arrange with the International Children's Heart Foundation, which specializes in treating children in third world countries, to operate on Socheat in the Dominican Republic.

Soto performed a four-hour surgery, sealing the hole in Socheat's heart and repairing damage to her pulmonary artery.

Information on Hearts Without Boundaries can be found online at
www.heartswithoutboundaries.org or by searching Facebook for their page.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Friday, April 23, 2010

Cambodian toddler's recovery going well after heart surgery

Phin Ken, and his daughter, Socheat Nha during the the Cambodian New Year Parade in Long Beach on April 4. (Jeff Gritchen/Press-Telegram)

04/22/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)


Aside from being hungry and thirsty the morning after, Socheat Nha, the Cambodian girl who underwent life-extending open heart surgery Wednesday, appeared to be recovering well in a Dominican Republic hospital Thursday.

Peter Chhun, the head of Hearts Without Boundaries, the Long Beach nonprofit that helped Socheat get the surgery, said the 3-year-old was alert and talkative the morning after a complex and risky four-hour operation.

Chhun said Socheat's father, Phin Ken, emotionally kissed and hugged his daughter, while hiding his tears from her.

According to Chhun, Socheat's first words to her father were to ask him why he had been gone for so long.

"He told her, `Oh, I went to do laundry,"' Chhun recalled.

Socheat was having none of it, Chhun said: "She said, "Nobody is doing laundry this long. It's been too long' And he said, `I had a lot of laundry."'

Chhun said several doctors were amazed at the girl's quick recovery, not to mention quick wits.

"They said hers was the most risky case they have and she comes out this well, `My God, you should be very happy,"' Chhun said.

Socheat, the daughter of a farmer in rural Cambodia, had a hole in her heart fixed, as well as repairs to her pulmonary artery, which connects the heart and lung.

The surgery was not available to Socheat in Cambodia.

Doctors still caution that recovery in the first two days after surgery can be troublesome.

However, Chhun was optimistic and delighted.

"My God, this girl, she's a fighter," Chhun said.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Cambodian toddler recovering after surgery in Dominican Republic

Millikan High senior Lauren Briand, left, and Socheat Nha in her Briand's Long Beach home in February. Behind her is Nha's father, Phin Ken, and her cousin, Kenha Heang, right. (Jeff Gritchen/Press-Telegram)

04/21/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)


A Cambodian girl taken from her homeland to receive life extending surgery was resting comfortably after a four-hour surgery performed in the Dominican Republic.

Socheat Nha, who turned 3 years old Wednesday, survived a tricky operation to repair a large hole in her heart and also had work done on the pulmonary artery that connects the heart ventricle to the lungs.

Although Dr. Rodrigo Soto, who performed the procedure, said the next 48 hours remain critical, he did say Socheat left the operating room in good condition and that in some ways her condition was not as bad as initially feared.

Soto, a surgeon from Chile working for the International Children's Heart Foundation, said he closed the hole, called a ventricular septal defect. Socheat, however, might need more work done in 6 to 10 years on her pulmonary artery, he said.

If she gets through the recovery period without incident, "she should be able to grow, put on weight and live a normal life."

Socheat overcame a big hurdle by making it through the operation without issue, but there are myriad other complications that can arise in the two days of recovery, according to doctors.

Peter Chhun, the head of Hearts Without Boundaries, which brought Socheat from Cambodia for the procedure, was cautiously optimistic.

"We all jumped up and down with joy that she survived the surgery," he said, "but I told her father we will celebrate when we all walk out of here together."

Socheat has gone through a circuitous and fretful route to get this far.

When she was first accepted by Hearts Without Boundaries to receive the surgery, it was planned that she would have an operation done in Las Vegas. However, doctors canceled her surgery because of complications and fear she would not survive.

With the help of a cardiologist in San Diego, Chhun was able to connect with International Children's Heart Foundation, which specializes in treating children from Third World countries.

That organization offered to perform the procedure in Santiago, Dominican Republic.

Chhun had to raise funds to cover travel expenses and to pay for the hospital, although the surgeon donated his services.

Despite his immediate relief, Chhun sound exhausted when reached by phone in the Dominican Republic.

He said the celebration will come when Socheat walks out of the hospital doors.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Friday, March 19, 2010

Father opts for heart surgery for Cambodian toddler

Socheat Nha and her father, Phin Ken. (Photo provided)

03/18/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)

Fund-raisers:

Cambodian food buffet
Sophy's Restaurant, 3240 E. Pacific Coast Highway, Long Beach.
  • Saturday, 5:30 p.m.
  • Donations: $30 adults, $15 students
  • Information: Peter Chhun, Hearts Without Boundaries, 818-640-6191
-----------
Raise the Roof Benefit Concert
Carpenter Performing Arts Center, 6200 Atherton St., Cal State Long Beach campus
  • Sunday, 5:30 p.m.
  • Tickets: $20 at the door.
  • Information: Zeta Phi Rho Alpha fraternity, lbzetaphirho.com
LONG BEACH - The father looked at his 2-year-old daughter, who has a hole in her heart, and had to make the hardest decision of his life. But really, he felt he had no choice.

To move forward means throwing the child in harm's way by allowing her to undergo heart surgery with a very real chance of death.

To do nothing, leaves her to a slow irrevocable demise, measured in years, perhaps decades. She could live into her 40s or 50s or be dead before her 20s. In any case it's a life of progressive decline. Maybe just as bad, this choice means the death of hope.

This is what Phin Ken, an impoverished farmer from Cambodia, has had to wrestle with in the sleepless nights he has spent here in the United States. A journey that began with magical hope turned to despair and now has left him with a choice that has gnawed at his soul.

Peter Chhun, who brought the father and child to the U.S. recalls when Phin made his decision.

"He looked at me with teary eyes and said, 'Well, if I return her to the Cambodia without surgery, she will die. If I decide to go through the surgery, maybe I have a glimpse of hope."'

Ken chose to take the biggest gamble of his life and go ahead with surgery on his only child in the hope she can have a normal life.

The surgery is perilous with a 10 percent to 15 percent chance of mortality and no guarantees afterward.

To make this happen, however, Ken, his struggling family in Long Beach and a fledgling nonprofit in Long Beach need to find a way to pay for the procedure.

Already of couple of fund-raisers have been planned.

Ken and his daughter, Socheat Nha, were brought to the U.S. by Hearts Without Boundaries, which helps children with heart ailments receive life-altering surgeries unavailable in Cambodia.

Socheat suffers from several heart ailments, including a hole in her heart called a ventricular septal defect. In advanced countries such as the U.S., it is a condition that is repaired in infancy.

The ailment causes high pressure in the lungs from oxygenated blood flowing back into the lungs rather than to the rest of the body. Untreated, the ailment shortens life expectancy and is marked by increasing fatigue, breathing difficulty and cyanosis, or turning blue.

Initially there was hope Socheat would undergo serious but generally safe open-heart surgery to repair the hole. Hearts Without Boundaries brought two other children for whom hospitals have donated their facilities and staff, while the nonprofit arranged and paid for travel and living expenses.

That was supposed to happen with Socheat.

However, when she was examined by doctors in Las Vegas, they canceled surgery, deeming it too risky.

However, after a follow-up exam by San Diego cardiologist Paul Grossfeld, who initially examined the girl in Cambodia, another possibility emerged.

With Socheat's condition improved, Grossfeld conferred with Dr. William Novick, a renowned surgeon. Novick runs the International Children's Heart Foundation, which specializes in treating children with congenital heart defects in developing countries.

He also performs certain surgeries that won't be performed in the U.S. for a variety of reasons.

What Novick proposes is a more complex procedure he has performed and written about for the Society of Thoracic Surgeons. It is called a "flap valve double patch closure," which he helped design.

The procedure for children who already have already suffered damage from the lack of surgery early in life, uses a patch to repair the defect in the heart and has a second smaller patch over a hole in the first patch that can release when there is hypertension.

Grossfeld described it as being a kind of "pop off valve."

It is not the best scenario, but for children in developing nations with limited options for care, it's a last best resort.

As Novick wrote when describing the procedure, "In most sophisticated countries of the world, these pulmonary hypertensive events can be managed with either sophisticated pharmacologic agents ... or circulatory assist devices."

If Socheat lived in the U.S., Grossfeld said, she would likely be treated with medications to stabilize her blood pressure and oxygen levels until, hopefully, it would be safe to operate.

The emotion is evident in Grossfeld's voice when he talks about Socheat, in part because he knows that with adequate medical care early in life, her father would never have had to make such a heart-wrenching decision and she would not have to be exposed to such dangers.

Grossfeld's hope is one day he can help bring a cardiac lab to Cambodia so that hundreds of children with conditions like Socheat won't have to lived diminished and shortened lives.

Grossfeld said in the United States, 10 percent to 15 percent mortality rates are unacceptable, but for children like Socheat there are no other options.

"If you're Cambodian, you have to reset your expectations," he said.

According to the International Children's Foundation, about 1 percent of children in the world are born with heart defects. Only a third of them are diagnosed and fewer still are ever treated.

Novick, who has offered to do the surgery on Socheat, was unavailable for comment and traveling between India and Egypt to perform operations.

He has proposed treating Socheat in the Dominican Republic. Although Novick is donating his services, it will cost Ken, his family and Hearts Without Boundaries more than $10,000 for the hospital, travel to the Dominican Republic and lodging there.

Meanwhile, the father can only wait and worry about the future for his child.

"He looks confused but determined," Chhun said. "He says 'I have nothing else. I'm here, I'm here and I must go through this."'

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

Heart surgery for Cambodian toddler called off

Phin Ken holds his daughter, Socheat Nha at Sophy's Restarant in Long Beach last month. Socheat's heart condition is worse than originally thought and doctors have said the cannot operate. (Jeff Gritchen/Press-Telegram)

03/01/2010
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram


Monday was supposed to be a happy day. Instead, the family of Socheat Nha, a 2-year-old Cambodian girl scheduled for life-altering heart surgery, was dealt a devastating blow.

During a preoperation examination, it was determined the girl's condition was worse that initially thought and a donated surgery scheduled for Thursday in Las Vegas was canceled.

"This unfortunately is not going to be a feel-good story," said Dr. William Evans, the cardiologist who tested Socheat. "The risk (for surgery) is too great."

Shortly after beginning testing on the child, Evans had a sinking feeling.

An expected narrowing of the pulmonary tract between the heart and lungs was missing. This led to high pressure in the lungs from oxygenated blood flowing back into the lungs rather than out to the body and has already caused a significant amount of irreversible lung damage.

After consulting with other doctors of the Children's Heart Center and Sunrise Children's Hospital in Las Vegas, Evans had to tell the family that Socheat risked a better than 50 percent chance of dying on the operating table with the surgery.

That's a risk the doctors couldn't take.

"We have to do the right thing," Evans said.

Evans was part of the same team that in December 2008, performed open heart surgery on another Cambodian, 11-month-old Soksamnang Vy, but this time had to turn away a patient.

Vy's heart ailment was much less severe; the hole in his heart was smaller and he did not have the same lung damage as Socheat.

Evans said if Socheat were a U.S. citizen, she would likely be given oxygen and put on a list for a heart-lung transplant.

Evans said that option, even if available, would have its own set of drawbacks that might be worse than no treatment.

Among those are the long waiting list (about 16 percent die while waiting for a heart), the inability to receive care in Cambodia after the surgery, and the low prospects of long life expectancy after surgery.

Evans said it might be a blessing that Socheat is not an American where "we would be hard-pressed not to intervene."

Evans did his best to paint a positive picture and wouldn't give a life expectancy timeline. He said Socheat could live many years as have other patients of his with similar ailments.

Still the prognosis is grim.

There was some disagreement between Evans and Dr. Paul Grossfeld, who did the initial assessment in Cambodia about some aspects of Socheat's condition, but a variety of sources place her life expectancy to range between 20 and 40.

She will also suffer from cyanosis, or bluing of the skin from the lack of oxygenated red blood, shortness of breath and fatigue, that will increase as she gets older.

The daughter of a rice farmer from Southern Cambodia with family here in Long Beach, Socheat was the third patient brought to the United States for surgery by local nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries.

Her condition, however, was by far the most severe. And this is its first failure.

Hearts Without Boundaries founder Peter Chhun could barely speak and blamed himself.

"We brought this family here with great hope," Chhun said in a halting voice.

The prognosis drove home the problem of trying to properly diagnose and treat patients from long distances, especially from a country that lacks proper facilities and technology.

"It's a humbling reminder of what we're dealing with," Grossfeld said. "When we did the original evaluation, obviously we had limited resources. At that time, the hope was that we could operate."

Kenha Heang, a cousin who accompanied Socheat and her dad, said he was stunned and deflated.

"We had so many plans and so much hope," Heang said.

Heang said Phin Ken, Socheat's father, held in his emotion when he heard the news, possibly because he had heard it before when Cambodian doctors couldn't begin to assess Socheat properly.

Still, for someone who had gone from despair and resignation to delirious hope, the setback had to be hard. He came to the U.S. where he believed "miracles" occur, only to face a sobering reality.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Friday, February 26, 2010

Long Beach student, business owner raise funds for toddler's surgery

Millikan High senior Lauren Briand and Socheat Nha in Briand's Long Beach home on Wednesday. (Jeff Gritchen/Press-Telegram)
Socheat Nha at Lauren Briand's home. Behind her is Nha's father, Phin Ken, and her cousin, Kenha Heang, right. (Jeff Gritchen/Press-Telegram)

02/25/2010

By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram

Want to help?
  • What: Garage sale fund-raiser
  • When: Saturday 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. weather permitting.
  • Rain date Saturday March 6
  • Where: 2324 Palo Verde Ave.
  • Information: Bracelets available from Peter Chhun 818-640-6191.
LONG BEACH - A student and a Long Beach business owner are raising money to help save the life of a Cambodian toddler and support the fledgling local nonprofit that finds treatment for destitute children.

When Lauren Briand went to Cambodia, she was looking for a project. At Angkor Children's Hospital, her project found a purpose. Now that purpose has a face.

Lauren and her mom, Debbie, were part of an educational and humanitarian tour to Cambodia led by Cal State Long Beach professor Alex Morales. Lauren was hoping to find something that would inspire her for her upcoming senior project at Millikan High.

The 17-year-old found it when the group went to Angkor Hospital for Children in Siem Reap and saw scores of children in need of help. Already looking ahead to a future in medicine, Lauren found a natural fit in doing something to aid those in need.

However, it remained somewhat abstract - the idea of helping an anonymous child in a country far away whom she likely would never see.

That abstraction disappeared when Hearts Without Boundaries, a Long Beach nonprofit that helps children with heart ailments that can't be treated in Cambodia, decided to bring Socheat Nha to the United States for surgery.

Heather Duncan, owner of Blue Windows, a lifestyle and boutique store in Belmont Shore, had no idea what was ahead when she chose Hearts Without Boundaries to be a beneficiary of a portion of store sales in February. Certainly she never expected that two of the children the nonprofit helps would show up at her shop.

Socheat suffers from a defect known as tetralogy of Fallot. In addition to a large hole in her heart, Socheat has a second hole and other problems.

Possibly due in part to her heart ailments, Socheat weights half the median for an American girl her age.

While the heart condition is treated with relative ease in the U.S., usually in infancy, for the destitute in Cambodia it means a hard life and an early death.

Now, Lauren's QUEST project, raising money to help pay for Socheat's journey, is very real. And the Blue Windows charity drive is a little more personal.

That point was driven home Wednesday when Socheat, 2, and her family paid a visit to the Briand house and later to the Belmont Shore store.

As Socheat played with several toy ponies and chattered away happily in Khmer, Lauren and Deborah were all smiles.

"This makes me want to work SO much harder," Lauren said as she watched Socheat play. "She's a beautiful, vibrant little girl who can use the help. It's inspiring to me."

Lauren has several events lined up to help raise money for Socheat, including a garage sale Saturday, weather permitting, or the following Saturday in case of inclement weather.

There is also talk of a benefit concert in May or June.

Lauren also bought more than 1,000 yellow and white rubber bracelets that say "Help Heal a Heart," which she sells for $2 apiece. More than half of the allotment is already gone.

"A lot of people like them," Lauren said of the bracelets. "Especially when they hear the story."

Lauren has been selling the bracelets at school and community events and Debbie has had them at Carver Elementary, where she teaches fifth grade. More are available at Sophy's Cambodian and Thai restaurant in Long Beach.

Although Debbie said she told students and staffers at Carver about Socheat and her daughter's project, it struck a chord when she brought in newspaper accounts and pictures of the girl.

"(The students) were very excited, because they could see it was this kid," Debbie said. "Once they heard the story and knew it was a real kid, they were more willing to help."

Each month this year, Blue Windows will set aside portions of sales for local charities. In February, 10 percent of sales in jewelry go to Hearts Without Boundaries through Sunday. Duncan expects the amount raised be somewhere between $1,000 and $2,000. Duncan is blogging about her experiences online at http://bluewindows.net/journal/.

She picked Hearts Without Boundaries in part because it is a small nonprofit and in part because of the obvious tie-in between hearts and Valentines Day.

"Obviously yesterday was very special," Duncan said of meeting not only Socheat but Davik Teng, the first girl Hearts Without Boundaries brought to the U.S. for surgery. "To go from just picking a charity to meeting the girls is exactly why I did this."

Duncan gave Davik a necklace with hearts and Socheat a stuffed animal.

"This was particularly special," Duncan said. "It's not every time you do something like this that you get to see the face of what you're raising money for."

Peter Chhun, founder of Hearts Without Boundaries, is touched by the response to Socheat's arrival and the return of Davik, whom he first brought to the U.S. two years ago for repair of a quarter-sized hole in her heart.

"It's a great feeling to have all these kinds of support from the community," said Chhun, who recently retired as a news producer at NBC to devote all his time to Hearts Without Boundaries. "I feel so blessed. It really shows that people still care about these destitute children."

Debbie marveled at the circumstances that came together to turn a chance trip to Cambodia into so much more, something she says is life altering.

"It almost makes me feel like (Socheat's) a part of my family now," Debbie said. "Who knew that eight months (after visiting Cambodia) Socheat would be in our house?"

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291

Friday, December 05, 2008

Soksamnang Vy recovering from open-heart surgery

Soksamnang Vy and his mother at their home in Cambodia (Photo: Long Beach Press Telegram)

12/04/2008
By Greg Mellen, Staff writer
Contra Costa Times (California, USA)

Thanksgiving arrived in the first week of December for a young Cambodian boy and his family.

Soksamnang Vy, who turns 1 on Sunday, had life-altering open-heart surgery at Sunrise Children's Hospital in Las Vegas on Thursday.

The boy, from an impoverished village outside Phnom Penh, Cambodia, was brought to the United States by Long Beach nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries for the procedure, which is not readily available in his home country.

"We are truly blessed and thankful," said David Kem, Vy's cousin, upon learning of the successful surgery. "Without the community effort, Soksamnang wouldn't have another chance at life. From the bottom of our hearts we want to thank everyone."

Vy suffered from a ventricular septal defect, a relatively common and easily repaired heart symptom in the United States, but a lingering death sentence in Cambodia where access to heart-lung machines and qualified physicians is nearly non-existent, particularly to the poor.

Vy is the second child brought to the United States by Hearts Without Boundaries, a fledgling nonprofit founded by NBC producer Peter Chhun.

The first child, 9-year-old Davik Teng, had successful surgery at Los Angeles Children's Hospital in March and has since returned to her home village near Battambang in northwest Cambodia where she is reportedly in good health.

Vy will likely spend the weekend in the hospital recovering and could spend another two weeks recuperating in Las Vegas before returning to Long Beach.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Date for Cambodian infant's surgery is set

11/21/2008
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer
Long Beach Press Telegram (California, USA)

LONG BEACH - Soksamnang Vy, an 11-month old boy from an impoverished village in Cambodia who was brought to the United States for life-altering heart surgery, has had a date set for the procedure.

The Children's Heart Center in Las Vegas, which is donating its staff and facilities for the surgery, has scheduled Vy for an appointment on Dec. 1, with surgery on Dec. 4 or 5.

Vy and his mother, Ratha Pang, arrived in Long Beach on Sunday, accompanied by Peter Chhun, the founder of nonprofit Hearts Without Boundaries, which is sponsoring the trip.

The boy suffers from a ventricular septal defect or hole in his heart.

Although the surgery to fix it is relatively routine in the United States, it requires use of a heart-lung machine and expertise not readily available in Cambodia.

"The baby has a congenital heart defect that without surgery will shorten his life," said Dr. Paul Grossfeld of San Diego, a cardiologist familiar with Vy's condition.

Vy is the second child Chhun has brought out of Cambodia for the open-heart procedure. The first, 9-year-old Davik Teng, had surgery at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles in March and has since returned to her village outside of Battambang in northwest Cambodia.

After surgery, Vy will likely remain in the hospital for three or four days to recover and will stay in Las Vegas another week or two for checkups.

If all goes to plan, Chhun says Vy should be well enough to return home by the end of January.

greg.mellen@presstelegram.com, 562-499-1291