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Loved ones mourn loss of Nataline

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  • Loved ones mourn loss of Nataline

    Glendale News Press, CA
    Dec 29 2007


    Loved ones mourn loss of Nataline


    Family and friends gather at Armenian Apostolic church to remember a
    life that ended too early after a long bout with leukemia.

    By Ryan Vaillancourt

    GLENDALE - A week and a day after Nataline Sarkisyan was taken off
    life support, about 250 mourners gathered Friday at St. Mary's
    Armenian Apostolic Church and then Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills for
    the 17-year-old Northridge resident's funeral.

    Thousands of roses and colored carnations molded into decorative
    sculptures sat behind Nataline's white coffin, which was flanked by
    many of the same friends, family and well-wishers who protested
    outside Cigna HealthCare's Glendale office last week, urging the
    company to reverse its decision to deny a doctor-recommended and
    potentially life-saving liver transplant.

    Minutes after the protest, the insurance company changed course and
    promised to cover the transplant, but it was too late. Nataline's
    condition took a turn for the worse, and her family took her off life
    support at UCLA Mattel Children's Hospital hours after the protest.

    A flower sculpture made to look like a clock - pink carnations were
    situated as numerals around an otherwise white leafy circle - was set
    at 5:50 p.m., the minute on Dec. 20 that the Sarkisyan family lost an
    aspiring fashion designer, devoted Armenian activist, trained dancer
    and budding chef.

    And even as Nataline toiled through her bout with leukemia, going
    back and forth from home to the doctor's office for chemotherapy and
    check-ups while battling recurrent sickness, she didn't complain,
    said Bedig Sarkisyan, 21, Nataline's brother and only sibling.

    `Her last year, she lived her life in a way she didn't believe she
    was sick,' he said. `She went in and got her driver's license and
    never even got a chance to drive her car, but she still got it
    anyways. Even when she was with her friends, they never looked at her
    as sick. . . . They never saw what we saw, like,
    when she was in the hospital. That was really bad.'

    Sarkisyan underwent bone marrow transplant surgery on Nov. 21 to help
    his ailing sister.

    The transplant was successful, but complications from the surgery and
    ensuing chemotherapy caused her liver and other organs to fail.

    On Dec. 10, Nataline's doctors sought to give her a liver transplant,
    but Cigna denied the coverage, calling the surgery `experimental,'
    given Nataline's critical condition.

    The day after Nataline died, the family's attorney, Mark Geragos,
    said he would file a civil suit against Cigna and push for criminal
    charges.

    The dozens of television news cameras that lined the back row of the
    church Friday were signs that, while Nataline has passed, the
    circumstances that surrounded her death are likely to keep the teen's
    name on the tongues of lawyers, lawmakers and media reporters well
    into the future.

    It's a legacy that Nataline's mother, Hilda Sarkisyan, plans to
    invoke in years to come as she plans to become a devoted activist for
    healthcare reform and urge everyone she meets to register as an organ
    donor, she said.

    `I'm going to focus on helping other kids and families not to go
    through what I went through,' she said. `I'm going to get the word
    out. I'm going to save a life. We're going to deliver her wishes.'
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