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To My Life-Saving Surgeon, Who Immigrated From Iran

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March 2, 2015. I was dying from cystic fibrosis (CF). I was on 24-hour supplemental oxygen support, counting the days I had been in the hospital waiting for an organ donor who would save my life — about 106 days at that point.

In 1976, when you were only 16 years old, you chose to immigrate to the United States of America from Iran to seek a better life full of opportunities this country could offer. In 1986, you received your medical degree, and by 1990 you had made a home in the hospital you still save lives in every single day.

For nearly 30 years, American citizens, among others, have sought refuge in your care as they pled for a second chance at life. You’ve advocated for their well-being, for their right to be treated regardless of cultural or financial background, and have helped create an institution that proudly claims #1 best hospital in California and #5 in the nation (a ranking that has been consistent for 28 years). 

On March 3, 2015, I received a life-saving double-lung transplant, and despite going into the operation with only 9-percent lung function, you pulled me through. Just 12 hours later, I was walking, free of an oxygen tank, free of struggle, free of suffering. I was free.

In just over a month, I will be celebrating two years since that miraculous day. I have hiked mountains, I have biked along beaches, I have completed a 5k run, I have helped raise thousands of dollars for charities, and more importantly, I have shared countless more memories with my family and friends — all because of your decision to migrate to this country as a teenager.

My family, my friends, the charities I support and the massive amount of people who have followed my journey are forever grateful for you, for your work and for your commitment to practicing medicine in the United States of America.

So many people are free of pain because of you. I know you know how incredibly loved and supported you are by the amount of people you’ve taken in and tended to in the most desperate of times. We would not be here today had it not been for the sanctuary of your care.

God bless you, and God bless my donor,

Travis Flores

UCLA Organ Transplant Recipient, 2015

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Thinkstock photo by Ingram Publishing

Originally published: February 7, 2017
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