Issue link: http://digital.copcomm.com/i/857677
torrancememorial.org PULSE | 43 "I WAS LOST AS WELL. NOW I'M FOCUSED AND DRIVEN. I'VE UNCOVERED A PASSION I NEVER KNEW I HAD." T he incident took place five years ago, but it still reverberates for Julie Weiner. At that time she was dating the man who would become her husband and living at home with her Vietnamese immigrant parents. For the first time since starting community college six months earlier, her younger brother, Alan Tran, failed to come home for the weekend. Julie texted Alan, who assured her he was fine. But he wasn't fine. On Friday night Alan had undergone a fraternity hazing. e brothers used a wooden paddle to pummel Alan's buttocks with 150 sharp blows. Alan fainted in the bathroom that night and spent the next two days passing in and out of con- sciousness. His fraternity brothers brought him home Sunday evening. Alan, a sturdy bodybuilder and basketball player, had shed 10 pounds over the weekend. His father thought Alan might have the flu. Over the next four days Alan could not eat, sleep or use the bathroom. He grew paler and pal- er. By the following Friday, he had lost an alarm- ing 30 pounds. at evening Julie's father decided to take his son to Torrance Memorial Medical Center, the hospital where both his children were born and a place the family trusted. Julie, working at a promotional event for her job, received a call from her father. For the first time in her life, she heard her father cry. He didn't know if Alan would survive. Julie rushed to the hospital. Even at this point, Alan had not revealed what happened to him at the fraternity house. Julie coaxed the story from her brother and immediately told the Emergency Room physician. at information, along with his exam, alerted the doctors that Alan was suffering from kidney failure. Alan was admitted to the ICU, where his doc- tors administered a variety of treatments, includ- ing dialysis. Aer five days of unconsciousness, Alan woke up. He then spent several weeks being treated in the Pediatric Unit. Julie credits Alan's nephrologist, David Bloom, MD, for not only saving her brother's life, but also for saving his spirit. "He told Alan not to dwell on the past and to go on with his life. He said Alan had a lot to live for." Since that time Julie reports, Alan has turned his life around, transferring to California State University, Long Beach and majoring in business and marketing. "Before, he had no direction, pur- pose or drive," she says. "He has blossomed into an amazing man." Alan has completely recovered physically as well, working out constantly and posting videos of his workouts on social media. e experience not only changed Alan, but also transformed Julie. She le her marketing job to take a position at a nonprofit health organiza- tion and started volunteering as an Escort at Tor- rance Memorial. During Alan's hospitalization, Julie says, she marveled at the "helpful, friendly and reassuring" nature of Torrance Memorial's nurses. She and her parents, "felt like family whenever we walked in. It was like coming home." Last summer Julie enrolled in an accelerated program at West Coast University to earn a nurs- ing degree. "I was lost as well," she says. "Now I'm focused and driven. I hadn't taken a science class since high school, but I've uncovered a passion I never knew I had." She says her dream would be to come full circle by working as a nurse at Torrance Memorial someday. Wherever she ends up, Julie looks forward to doing for others what the physicians and staff of the medical center did for her brother. Each day she volunteers, Julie says, reminds her "how amaz- ing the doctors were to be able to fix him, heal him and bring him back to life so quickly. It's a testa- ment to the people who work at Torrance Memo- rial and how much they really care. We wouldn't go anywhere else."