A physician compelled to help Ukrainian refugees from thousands of miles away

Chester County Hospital’s Kevin Sowti has assisted in humanitarian efforts globally. As an immigrant, he was compelled to help Ukrainian refugees fleeing Russia’s invasion.

The Iran-Iraq War in the 1980s remains fresh in Kevin Sowti’s mind. In the aftermath, he and his family fled, an experience which continues to influence his life, almost 40 years later.

Kevin Sowti stands in front of an aid tent.
Kevin Sowti is the medical director of hospital medicine and chief of internal medicine at Chester County Hospital. (Image: Penn Medicine News)

Sowti, the former chief of staff at Chester County Hospital (CCH) and current medical director of hospital medicine and chief of internal medicine at CCH, went into medicine to help people. That desire has compelled him to travel far beyond the hospital’s walls, too. Through the years, he’s assisted in humanitarian aid efforts on nearly every continent.

When Russian soldiers invaded Ukraine on February 24, the news immediately snared his attention. Sowti knew he had to help. The only question was: How?

One of his first moves was to contact Shawn Kohl, a friend from Sowti’s undergraduate years at the University of Dallas. Today, Kohl is the director for Central and Eastern Europe for a non-governmental organization (NGO) called International Justice Mission (IJM).

“He had a lot of contacts at the Ukrainian border, and he relayed their medical needs, which were mostly over-the-counter medications and antibiotics,” says Sowti, who was asking with the intent of delivering the supplies himself. However, at that point, he was not sure how he was going to get there.

Meanwhile, George Trajtenberg, the retired chief of Surgery at CCH, introduced Sowti to his niece, who had been volunteering in Ukraine for years. She shared a list of medications that were needed where she was.

From there, Sowti consulted Michael Duncan, president and CEO of CCH; Chief Operating Officer Michael Barber and Heather Teufel, director of the hospital’s pharmacy. Together, they agreed to donate all the medications on the list Sowti had compiled.

It was early April by this point, and Sowti had also figured out how he was going to deliver the medications, with the help of his wife, Roschanak Mossabeb, MD, a neonatologist at Temple Health. Mossebeb, who had not seen her parents in person in nearly three years due to the pandemic, had planned an eight-day trip for their family to visit them at their home in Vienna, Austria. From there, Sowti planned to head for Bucharest, Romania, where he would meet up with Kohl and drive to the Ukraine border.

In Bucharest, Sowti and Kohl bought groceries, loaded them into a car supplied by IJM, and then Sowti and an IJM representative made the five-and-a-half-hour drive to a spot along the Romania-Ukraine border, just west of Moldova.

Upon their arrival, they left the food with a group of local volunteers who were preparing and distributing meals to Ukrainian refugees situated around the village. They then delivered the medications to two separate shelters housing refugees—one a former homeless shelter operated by IJM. There, Sowti tended to a few ambulatory patients.

“Despite the chaos of war, it was all very well-organized,” Sowti says of the aid operations. “The area didn’t exactly have a wealth of resources, but everyone was pitching in, trying to help. People were cooking and consoling. I’ve never seen anything like it. At the same time, the worst of what people can do was happening just miles from us.”

Back home, a month removed from the experience, Sowti says he continues to feel “blessed.”

A roadside aid site at a Ukrainian border.
Roadside aid site at the Ukrainian border. (Image: Penn Medicine News)

“I know that most people around here think war is something that only happens in other, more unstable parts of the world,” he says. “But because of how I grew up, I always think it’s a possibility. And it’s because of that that I’m always active.

“I still think of myself as a poor immigrant country boy,” he adds. “But I also recognize that I am privileged now with some ability to make a difference. And I think it’s reached a point where it feels like the bigger sin is not doing something. I’m blessed to be working for a health system whose leaders empower all of us to try to change the world. I’m so proud of all the good we’re doing locally and abroad.”

Read more at Penn Medicine News.