Stevenson, director of the聽Johnson Center for Pregnancy and Newborn Services聽at Packard Children鈥檚, cites Sunshine鈥檚 鈥渋ntellectual versatility and extraordinary clinical insight鈥 as a researcher. For example, he was a member of the team that first implemented mechanical ventilation at Stanford, and devised the first scoring system for selection of infants to be treated with assisted ventilation. He was the first in the United States to describe a child with ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency, a rare and deadly metabolic disorder. He was part of the team that documented for the first time the occurrence of hyperammonemia, a dangerous rise of ammonia in the blood, accompanying intravenous feedings of newborns.聽Sunshine has also led groundbreaking research in developmental gastroenterology and nutrition, including one landmark 1964 study that was the first to show that lactose malabsorption can result from acute gastroenteritis.The list of his research accomplishments continues, all very deep, all very scientific, and all very lifesaving.
Looking back, Sunshine remembers one key practice he helped to advance that is now so customary it would seem bizarre to do otherwise. 鈥淯p until around 1966, parents weren鈥檛 allowed to even come into the nursery with their babies,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut we discovered that parents provide care that doctors and nurses could not. Parents get to know their babies at an early stage of life and the babies relate well to this. Decades later, Sunshine is a comforting, unpretentious presence in the聽Intermediate Intensive Care Unit, where he prepares preemies and families for the transition home. The big-time Sudoku fan has made only one concession: He鈥檚 trimmed his workweek to around 30 hours, leaving him more time for biking, tennis, grandkids and dancing with his wife, Beth.
Sunshine is famously unflashy. In the 1970s, while he was leading several divisions in neonatology and gastroenterology at Stanford, serving on national neonatology boards and associations, creating exam certification measures and more, he was tooling around Palo Alto in a clunky old Dodge Dart to the tune of 275,000 miles, Stevenson recalls. 鈥淲e also used to joke about the way he dressed, with lots of keys and stuff. People mistook him for a night janitor,鈥 he says. The awards from his peers have piled up, including the Alwin C. Rambar-James B.D. Mark Award for Excellence in Patient Care, presented May 27 at Stanford鈥檚 student clinician ceremony. He is also the recipient of the prestigious Virginia Apgar Award in Perinatal Pediatrics from the American Academy of Pediatrics, as well as dozens of other honors the Denver native is too modest to mention. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know why they give me these things,鈥 says Sunshine.
鈥淗e鈥檚 launched an unbelievable number of careers,鈥 says聽William Benitz, MD, chief of neonatology and also the Philip Sunshine, MD, Endowed Professor in Neonatology, a position Benitz calls 鈥渁 tremendous honor.鈥 Benitz notes Sunshine鈥檚 coast-to-coast influence on leaders such as Josef Neu, MD, professor of pediatrics at the University of Florida, who salutes Sunshine as 鈥渁 terrific mentor both clinically and scientifically, one who will always be remembered as truly special.鈥 Sunshine turned 80 on June 16, and he has no plans to leave the institution he has been a part of since 1957, minus a two-year stint in the Navy in the late 1950s and four years in leadership positions at Children鈥檚 Hospital Los Angeles and the University of Southern California School of Medicine.
鈥淧hil is an amazing contributor,鈥 Benitz says. 鈥淗e鈥檚 out on the road and involved in regional outreach programs, visiting community hospitals and providing ongoing medical education.鈥 鈥淚鈥檝e been lucky,鈥 Sunshine says. 鈥淚 grew up in an exciting new sub-specialty, I have five healthy children and six healthy grandkids, my wife still puts up with me, and if my health stays OK, I鈥檒l keep working. My agreement with the division chief is that as long as I do an excellent job, he鈥檒l keep me on.鈥 OK, so let鈥檚 ask the chief. 鈥淔rom my perspective, Phil just might work forever,鈥 Benitz says, 鈥淗e鈥檚 still fully-engaged in babies and their care, not as a detached authority figure but in a very intimate way. He is extraordinarily important to our mission as neonatologists, and his perspective and achievements are timeless.鈥
Authors
Robert Dicks
(650) 497-8364
rdicks@stanfordchildrens.org
Connect with us:
Download our App: