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UCLA Today: Acts of Kindness and Compassion

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  • UCLA Today: Acts of Kindness and Compassion

    Mannik Sakayan
    UCLA Office of Government and Community Relations
    (310) 794-0760 (phone)
    (310) 794-6827 (fax)
    [email protected]
    December 17, 2004


    [Reprinted from "UCLA Today" December 14, 2004]

    Acts of kindness and compassion
    Their giving spirit extends near and far

    It's become our holiday tradition at UCLA Today to recognize and
    commend faculty and staff members who give selflessly of their talents
    and time to help the less fortunate in their communities. This year's
    Bruin Angels, selected from departments across the campus, have
    reached out to those near and far, from East Los Angeles to a town
    in Armenia. As our thoughts this season turn to giving, we honor them.

    ISHIYAMA and AKARAGIAN

    Not many travelers pack surgical drills for their trips abroad, but
    a UCLA medical team did just that twice this year - in March and
    November - when they donated their time and services to travel to
    Armenia to perform the region's first cochlear-implant surgeries.

    "It's really so different from what we know here," said surgeon
    Akira Ishiyama, associate professor of head and neck surgery at the
    David Geffen School of Medicine. "All of the infrastructure and the
    machinery they have are so outdated." Working with him to give seven
    deaf children the gift of hearing were audiologist Stanton Jones,
    anesthesiologist Denise Hawkins, surgical nurse Diane Sennott and nurse
    Salpy Akaragian, director of the UCLA International Nursing Center.

    The cross-cultural project was a few years in the making; team
    members had to train their Armenian counterparts from the Erebouni
    Medical Center.

    Meanwhile, the nonprofit Armenian International Medical Fund raised
    money to cover most of the expenses, including the purchase of
    state-of-the-art screening equipment.

    All the preparation and hard work paid off. "The whole country
    was talking about these surgeries," said Akaragian, who speaks
    Armenian. "They called the project 'Man-Made Miracles.' "

    For Ishiyama, the experience was also a personal triumph. "These were
    completely deaf people. [It's] very rewarding that you can make them
    hear," he said. "I take a lot of pride in doing this."

    Akaragian echoes Ishiyama's sentiments. "I will never forget
    the parents' emotional reaction when we told them the surgery was
    successful," she said. "I felt good about it. I feel like I have done
    my deed in this world now." - S.S.
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