Aidan – BMW Dallas Marathon Patient Champion

Aidan – BMW Dallas Marathon Patient Champion

Since 2007, the Patient Champion program has enlisted Scottish Rite Hospital patients to help encourage and cheer on runners in the BMW Dallas Marathon. This program is a way to highlight some of the wonderful kids the marathon generously supports each year. We’re excited to introduce you to Aidan!

Aidan, age 10, of Frisco, has been a patient at Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for the past year, where he receives treatment for Perthes Disease in his right leg. The physicians in the Center for Excellence in Hip conduct groundbreaking research to determine the best treatment plan for each and every patient, including Aidan.

Aidan’s favorite part about coming to Scottish Rite Hospital is playing in the Child Life Playroom, where he can “escape” and play videogames with other kids, just like he does at home.

Outside of the hospital, Aidan enjoys spending time with his family and friends and loves to play sports.  He plays four different sports, and his family of six all plays soccer. He is is eager to join them again back on the field!
Aidan’s doctors are experts in caring for children and someday he hopes to be an expert in caring for the community. He aspires to become a Police Officer and with his big heart and positive attitude, he is sure to succeed!
For more event information, visit: bmwdallasmarathon.com

Scottish Rite Hospital Doctors Make Friendly Competition out of Dallas Marathon

Scottish Rite Hospital Doctors Make Friendly Competition out of Dallas Marathon

It’s part tradition, part friendly competition: Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children’s faculty vs. fellows.

Teams of five will relay the 26.2-mile BMW Dallas Marathon on Sunday.

“There’s a fellow team every year made up of fellows who are training to become specialists in pediatric orthopedic surgery, and they compete every year against the faculty and staff who are their educators and mentors,” said orthopedic surgeon Anthony Riccio. 

Back in the day, Dr. Riccio ran on the fellows team. Since then, things have changed.

“Since 2010 I’ve been faculty, and now of course I’ve switched allegiances and run with the staff,” he said.

Their competition dates back at least 20 years that they know of, and almost every year, guess who’s come out on top? To see the full story, watch here

Dallas Morning News: Bragging rights on the line during next month’s BMW Dallas Marathon

Dallas Morning News: Bragging rights on the line during next month’s BMW Dallas Marathon

Read original story here.

Lorena Floccari hopes she and her four Texas Scottish Rite Hospital for Children co-Fellows can halt a 13-year losing streak against the hospital’s orthopedic staff in a deep-rooted competition involving next month’s BMW Dallas Marathon.

This marks the 20th year that the staff and its Dorothy and Bryan Edwards Fellowship in Pediatric Orthopedics and Scoliosis recipients have fielded five-person relay teams. The Cox School of Business Relays are held in conjunction with the Dec. 10 marathon and half marathon.

“It’s grown to be an expectation,” said the hospital’s chief of staff, Dr. Dan Sucato, one of the staff relay members. “The camaraderie it engenders is really strong. It allows people to come together under the guise of competition. It’s all about generating enthusiasm and support for the hospital, the community and the marathon.”

The hospital, the primary race beneficiary, has received $4 million from the marathon since the partnership began in 1997.

Each August, the hospital welcomes its five Fellows to work alongside its attending staff and to participate in extracurricular activities. Floccari remembers learning about the marathon relay while interviewing as a fourth-year resident at the Mayo Clinic. She said opportunities to bond with the staff and the other Fellows through such events helped persuade her to accept the Dallas fellowship.

“There’s more of a community feel here than any other program,” she said following a training run at the hospital. “It sets you up well for everything to come when you have these relationships with your mentors.”

The Fellows have beaten the staff only once, back in 2002. That year, one of the Fellows was a former Navy SEAL. He rallied the group, which consisted of numerous other athletes including an ultramarathoner, a former NCAA Division I soccer player, a college baseball player and a woman who was an Olympic hammer throw participant, recalled Dr. Tony Riccio, the staff team captain.

There were a few years the Fellows should have won, according to lore, such as the year the staff used a ringer or in 2005, when one of the Fellows needed a ride to the relay exchange location. The staff member responsible was late, and the Fellows lost a big lead.

The 2017-18 Fellows, who range in age from about 28 to 32, are all athletes. Dustin Greenhill, an All-American gymnast at West Point, started running while serving in the Army. Jeff Peck, a four-sport high school athlete who played intramurals at Northwestern, has run the 12-person, 200-mile Hood to Coast relay multiple times. Surya Mundluru played NCAA Division I tennis at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Ian “Corky” Corcoran-Schwartz played baseball and rugby at Johns Hopkins.

And then there’s Floccari, a former pitcher for the Saint Louis University softball team, who has completed several half marathons.

Most of the staff’s team members, who range in age from about 40 to 68, were former Fellows, and they have run the relay many times, said Dr. Riccio, a staff orthopedic surgeon and avid cross fitter. Dr. Sucato participated as a staff member the first year of the competition.

Others include Dr. Philip Wilson, assistant chief of staff and director of the Center for Excellence in Sports Medicine, who competes in cutting horse events; Dr. John Birch, assistant chief of staff smeritus, an avid soccer player and long-distance runner; and Dr. Henry Ellis, a staff orthopedic surgeon and competitive skier, who has worked as a physician for the U.S. Olympic Ski Team.

Floccari said she and her co-Fellows have become more focused as race day approaches.

“We weren’t taking it as seriously until we found out the history and that the staff wins every year,” she said. “We’ve been ramping up our training. We’ve been doing some strategizing.”

Michael – BMW Dallas Marathon Patient Champion

Michael – BMW Dallas Marathon Patient Champion

Since 2007, the Patient Champion program has enlisted Scottish Rite Hospital patients to help encourage
and cheer on runners in the BMW Dallas Marathon. This program is a way to highlight some of the
wonderful kids the marathon generously supports each year. We’re excited to introduce you to Michael!

Michael, age 16, of Mesquite, has been treated at both our fracture clinic and our Center for Excellence in Hand, where Christopher Stutz, M.D., and the rest of the expert team treated his fractured finger. As both an outside linebacker and a running back for the Mesquite Skeeters Football Team, making a full recovery was of the utmost importance to this dedicated athlete.

“Everyone is caring, understanding, and wants to help you,” says Michael in regards to the staff at Scottish Rite Hospital. “They do everything they can to get you back to doing the things that you love.”

Michael loves football, and being able to play again was of the utmost importance to him. His determination on the football field will translate well into his aspirations of becoming a stockbroker.

Although Michael won’t be competing in the race this year, he’ll likely be “carb-loading” with his favorite meal, spaghetti. He’ll need the energy to cheer on the Dallas Marathon runners on Sunday, Dec. 10.

We invite you to join our team of fundraisers on behalf of Patient Champions like Michael and all the patients of Scottish Rite Hospital through our marathon fundraising page.

For more event information, visit: bmwdallasmarathon.com.