Morton, then 22, was a student at Oakland University and working at an Arby’s in Eastpointe that night when a bullet passed through his stomach, diaphragm, pancreas and two main blood vessels.
Upon being admitted into the emergency room, doctors found massive internal bleeding and Kevin was told he only had a 10% chance to live. But apparently God had a different plan.
It was a painful road to recovery, being in the hospital for nearly two months. But it was because of that near death experience that Kevin has become a surgeon in order to save other people’s lives now.
Morton, now 34, found his calling to become a surgeon thanks to Dr. Dharti Sheth-Zelmanski, who was in the trauma unit at Detroit’s St. John Hospital nine years ago.
MUST READ: Future Doctor Transforms The Old Fashioned Way
The veteran doctor was there for Morton again when the 31-year-old graduated last week from Michigan State University’s College of Osteopathic Medicine.
“The compassion and drive that Dr. Sheth has shown in trying to save my life … I just wanna pay that forward,” Morton told NBC News.
Sheth-Zelmanski got a call for a Code 1 trauma patient that night. Doctors prepared Morton’s family for the worst.
“Whether we call it intuition, experience or a miracle … we put some extra sutures in and the bleeding stopped,” Sheth-Zelmanski recalled.
He had plans to graduate from school and go into the pharmaceuticals industry, but that all changed when doctors at St. John Hospital gave him another chance.
Now, he’s in his residency as a doctor at that very same hospital.
Morton even toyed with the idea of being a doctor when he was younger, but said he didn’t have any role models and never met doctors at career fairs while attending Pershing High School in Detroit. His stepmother’s career prompted him to study…
…biochemistry, with a goal of working in the pharmaceutical industry, when he enrolled at Oakland University in 2003.
Morton changed his major to biology after being shot.
Looking back, Sheth-Zelmanski is amazed at how far her patient-turned-protégé has come. He has a wife, a daughter, and a job where he can give others hope because of the miracles of medicine.
“We knew he wasn’t going to give up,” Sheth-Zelmanski said. “We weren’t gonna give up — so we had to make it happen.”
Morton has since married his longtime girlfriend, and invited Sheth-Zelmanski and her husband to the wedding. When they arrived a little late, Morton introduced her to the guests as the surgeon who changed his life.
“She was so influential in the path I am on,” Morton said. “It seems like everything in my life is perfect. It’s like a dream come true.”
For more feel-good stories like this, click here.