Straub Benioff Burn Care Unit Featured in The New York Times for Response to Maui Fires
Published Aug. 21, 2023
Straub Medical Center's Burn Unit and Straub Plastic Surgeon David C. Cho featured in The New York Times' Aug. 15 online issue.
Straub Benioff Medical Center's Burn Care Unit was the focus of a lead story in The New York Times' Aug. 15 online issue for the Honolulu burn unit's valiant efforts caring for the most severely wounded survivors of the Maui wildfires.
In the article, which also ran in the print publication Aug. 16, reporter Mitch Smith speaks with Straub Benioff Plastic Surgeon Dr. David C. Cho about how he first learned of the fires, and how he and other members of the Burn Care Unit team prepared for what was to come next.
When Dr. Cho's phone rang in the middle of the night, it was an emergency room physician calling from Maui, two islands away, seeking help.
"In very plain and simple terms he said, 'Lahaina is destroyed.' ... And then it just went silent."
Dr. Cho got out of bed, went to the hospital and waited.
"I just knew there was going to be a pipeline of patients," he said.
Smith goes on to capture the heroic efforts of the Straub Benioff Burn Care Unit doctors, nurses, and staff who went to work trying to stabilize the Maui burn patients, some whose burns covered up to 70% of their bodies.
Among those lending their expert care are Dr. Robert Schulz, Straub Benioff Burn Care Unit medical director who cofounded the unit in 1983 with Dr. James Penoff, as well as Kim Webster, RN, who manages the Burn Unit and a critical care unit at Straub Benioff. Smith speaks with both Dr. Schulz and Kim in the article to gain their perspectives.
Smith also profiles the history of the Straub Benioff Burn Care Unit, which earlier this year observed its 40th anniversary of being the only facility of its kind in the state, and the only one in the North Pacific between California and Asia.
Read the original New York Times article (PDF) or reprinted online in The Honolulu Star-Advertiser.