Dan’s life has always been relatively peaceful, living in a quiet wooded area with his family. He lives an active lifestyle and enjoys tinkering around with different types of machines.
“Using my hands is highly important for me because my hobbies include working on tools or trucks, you need to be able to have fine motor skills to grab everything, from a wrench or a chain saw down to a fine screw.” said Dan.
One day changed everything for him.
“I was putting gas on a bonfire that wasn’t starting,” said Dan. “I figured I could light it later, but it was lit enough to light the gas on fire. When I tossed the gas tin away from me, it splashed all over my torso and caught my sweatshirt on fire.”
Immediately, Dan stopped, dropped and rolled. He went to an outdoor spigot to extinguish the fire. Due to the extent of Dan’s injury, he was in shock, not feeling any pain. He decided to go inside for dinner like nothing was wrong. Upon seeing his hands bleeding, he decided to casually mention to his parents that he might need medical attention.
Dan’s mom, Sheryl, looked at her son’s arms and took action immediately. “I thought, ‘This is not good’,” she said.
Dan was quickly rushed into an ambulance, helicoptered to UC Davis Medical Center for emergency treatment, and transferred an hour later to the Neil Reitman Pediatric Burn Institute at Shriners Children’s Northern California.
The Neil Reitman Pediatric Burn Institute is widely recognized as one of the world's leading pediatric burn research and treatment centers in the United States. The institute provides all aspects of burn care – from initial management, critical care and wound coverage – to rehabilitation, inpatient care and reconstruction. Shriners Children’s Northern California has the largest pediatric burn treatment center west of the Mississippi, and many hospitals and health systems refer their most complex and complicated patients because of the training and expertise the burn doctors have to treat the most complicated and life-threatening burn injuries.
“When I started telling everyone that my son was being treated at Shriners Children’s for burns, the response was always, ‘That is the best place for burn care’. I started doing my own research,” said Sheryl. “I realized that my son was at the best possible place he could be for burn care.”
Exceptional Care for Burns
Because Dan had burns in several places, he required skin graft surgery. A skin graft is the removal and placement of a patient’s healthy, unburned skin onto the area of the burn, which helps it heal. Dan’s care team made sure everyone was well-informed about each procedure. This included pros and cons of each procedure, down time and how much longer it would add to his stay, opinions on medication dosage, and even food preferences.
“At one point Dr. Greenhalgh asked me about how I felt about re-grafting my back since it wasn’t taking,” said Dan. “Him taking the time to seek me out, to come to me and ask me, made a lasting impression on me that he didn’t want to do whatever he thought was best, but something I wanted to do.”
His parents couldn’t agree more. His mom remembers observing the intensive care unit (ICU) staff in the early morning during a daily huddle, talking about Dan’s care. A doctor saw her and asked what she thought of the plan.
“I soon learned that was part of the process,” she said. “They wanted to take the information from everyone – therapists, parents, the patient – to make the best care plan they could, every day.”