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Giving second chances

Fri, Sep 01, 2017

The most striking thing to Dr. Theodore 鈥淭ad鈥 Boeve 鈥88 about his work is the juxtaposition of sorrow and joy.

He is the Richard DeVos Endowed Director for Heart and Lung Transplant Surgery and Mechanical Circulatory Support at Spectrum Health in Grand Rapids, Michigan. His team launches into action as one family is experiencing deep grief and another family is anticipating new hope.

鈥淚t is a staggering thing to witness,鈥 said Boeve. 鈥淥ne family is dealing with tragic loss, and immediately following is the joy that comes to another family, seeing their loved one back in their lives, doing all of the things they had been longing to do together.鈥

Boeve has deep respect for organ donors and their families and encourages people to consider that special method of caring for others. He also delights in the celebration and gratitude of the transplant beneficiaries.

He is awed by God鈥檚 creation of the human heart and fascinated about what can be done in treatment and surgery to keep that organ beating.

鈥淭he heart is amazing,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e can stop it, work on it and restart it. To me, it鈥檚 foolish thinking to believe this all happens by chance. I鈥檓 reminded daily of the creative God behind the heart鈥檚 structure and function.鈥

What鈥檚 becoming more distressing to Boeve is the dramatic increase in drug overdoses as a major cause for donor organ availability. He is an advocate of substance abuse programs of all kinds and to strategies that remedy the loneliness, pain and depression behind the addiction.

He became Spectrum Health鈥檚 transplant program director this May after the retirement of the internationally known founder, Dr. Asghar Khaghani. Boeve came to Spectrum in 2012 and worked alongside Khaghani as the program developed.

鈥 I鈥檓 reminded daily of the creative God behind the heart鈥檚 structure and function.鈥
Dr. Theodore "Tad" Boeve '88

Boeve鈥檚 team of three surgeons conducts about 20 heart transplants, 25 lung transplants and 60 left ventricular assist device procedures per year. In his role as director, he will focus on program quality, growth and innovation.

鈥淢r. DeVos and his family gave a tremendous gift to the community when they helped us start this program,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are focused on stewarding that gift for the benefit of our patients.鈥

Boeve recalls his collegiate choice of Calvin as being threefold鈥攆riends, soccer and medicine鈥攂ut adds that the rigors of the premed program had him spending a little less time in the dorms and on the playing field and much more time in the classroom and the lab.

He remembers a number of influential professors, but in general credits Calvin for two things. First, the times he was 鈥渟hown mercy for errors in judgment鈥 in the residence halls and in the classroom; and second, the 鈥渟olid education鈥 that prepared him for the University of Michigan School of Medicine.

After Michigan, Boeve and wife Sherry Brink ex鈥85 spent the better part of nine years at the University of Iowa in residency and on research (with one stint in Massachusetts). They returned to Michigan for a position at Muskegon鈥檚 Mercy Health in cardiothoracic surgery. That proximity to Grand Rapids eventually led to a connection to Spectrum鈥檚 transplant program.

The Boeves have four children, and their oldest, Johanna, is a graduate of Calvin鈥檚 nursing program and works in the Meijer Heart Center, the same building as her dad.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to be known as a heart surgeon, but as a person of faith who serves a risen Savior,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he grace I was given at Calvin was a lesson learned, to be ready to give people second chances.鈥

It turns out that in his work, Boeve does just that鈥攅nables those with serious heart and lung issues to have another chance at a vibrant life.