Harpist Touches Hundreds Of Lives At Brigham & Women ’ s Hospital

BOSTON (CBS) – Five days a week Nancy Kleiman plays her harp at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. It’s her job as part of the hospital’s Caring and Healing Modalities. “I’ll go down to radiation oncology, go up to the NICU,” she says. It’s a soothing, peaceful sound. And she meets people, like the Sullivans from Portland, Maine. Last spring 21-year-old Patrick Sullivan was at the Brigham in tough shape with a form of cancer called lymphoma. “You could kind of watch the disease travel through my body,” he says. Four months of chemotherapy knocked it down, but not out. He needed a stem cell transplant. On that day, Nancy was playing harp in the lobby when Patrick’s’ mother Barbara heard her. Harpist Nancy Kleiman at Brigham & Women’s Hospital (WBZ-TV) The two talked. “She was just wonderful and she was just sharing with me not to be scared,” says Barbara Sullivan. Barbara told Nancy that Patrick would undergo the transplant, but that’s all the musician knew. Barbara hurried to her son’s side as doctors and nurses gathered to begin the procedure. “I’m lying in bed, and I hear music,” Patrick remembers. “It turned out that Nancy not only had found us, but was outside our room and playing,” Barbara says. Nancy says she had a feeling she should go to that floor. “I think my music makes people feel good and I think when you feel good, a lot ...
Source: WBZ-TV - Breaking News, Weather and Sports for Boston, Worcester and New Hampshire - Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Tags: Health Local News Seen On WBZ-TV Syndicated Local Brigham & Women's Hospital Dr. Mallika Marshall Source Type: news