Feature story for the lifestyle section of The Commercial Appeal
September 13, 2009
In December 2006, Dr. William Novick was in Pakistan for the first time, as part of a medical mission team with the International Children's Heart Foundation, the charity he founded in 1994 to take cardiac care to children in need around the world.
A young boy, less than 3 months old, was presented to him suffering from a condition in which the vessels carrying blood from his heart to his lungs, and vice versa, were in abnormal positions. He also had a hole between the two pumping chambers of his heart.
"He was totally emaciated. You could see every rib on this baby," Novick recalls now, as his organization celebrates its 15th anniversary.
Though Novick is generally wary of doing a procedure of this magnitude on a first visit, he knew the child wouldn't last until his team's next visit, so he operated.
The surgery went as well as could be expected and the boy, Abu Bakr, was expected to live. Later, Novick learned that Abu was the only living grandson of a former Taliban fighter ... (read more)