PHILADELPHIA (KYW) More than 170,000
people were killed in the tsunami that struck Southeast
Asia. Anchor Alycia Lane meets a local medical student
who is going to help those in need.
While thousands are dealing with the tsunami's
devastation, Katie Golloto and her husband have
a full life, balancing their role as parents, and
doctors on the other side of the world.
However, when she saw the horrific destruction
she felt compelled to help. “You can't help
but want to do something, and I think everybody
feels that way. I think everybody wants to help,”
she told Lane.
Within days she began organizing a month-long trip
to Sri Lanka. “Everything fell into place
really easily and I think that's what made me realize
that it was meant to be,” she said.
Convincing their extended family took some time.
“They're very supportive but they can't quite
understand we have to be the ones to go,”
she said, adding, “If everybody thought that
way then there wouldn't be anyone over there helping
out.”
Together with her husband and two other doctors,
the couple will travel to the region this week to
treat the sick and help apply for medical grants.
Much of the trip is funded by donations Katie has
collected. Her husband Mike was a skeptic at first,
but says his wife is a hard person to say no to.
”Her smile, that you know she's sincere when
she tells you what she's doing and why she needs
to do it,” he said.
On the night she met Lane, Katie was holding a
fundraiser at a local bar.
Golloto says she knows the hardest part will be
leaving her kids: “You know these guys are
my life…and I just hope that I'm setting a
good example for them and the values that are instilled
form us going over there will last a lifetime.”
The medical team she has organized is sponsored
by the International Medical Health Organization,
the Mid-Atlantic Pain Association, the Garrettford
Elementary School, the Richard Stockton College
of New Jersey, The Grape Street Pub, and miscellaneous
Manayunk businesses.