- Alumni
STL doctor will soon be smiling for Lay's potato chips
by Joe Holleman
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
July 24, 2019
While it may not be like getting on the cover of a Wheaties box, having your smiling mug on a bag of chips is close to all that.
Just ask Dr. Chris Erkmann of Chesterfield.
To help raise money for children with cleft-palate issues, Erkmann is one of 31 people whose selfies were chosen to grace bags of Lay's potato chips for a limited time.
The bags will be available at area supermarkets starting Sunday. Proceeds from the sales go to Operation Smile, which provides free surgeries for children and young adults with cleft-palate problems and other facial deformities.
A pediatric anesthesiologist, Erkmann actually works for Operation Smile and was chosen by the charity to be their representative.
"Kinda crazy, but if it spreads the word for OpSmile I’ll have achieved my goal for getting involved," Erkmann said in a Facebook post.
A product of SLUH and St. Louis University, Erkmann — who is described in the promotional material as "a fun-loving anesthesiologist" — has taken part in more than 600 procedures for the charity since joining in 2001.
Service with a Smile
SLUH Magazine (2017)
Dr. Chris Erkmann ’73 is like many SLUH graduates in that his Senior Project was a moving experience that shaped his worldview and heightened his sensitivity to the needs of others. But it did much more...
Dr. Erkmann on a service trip with Operation Smile.
“Senior Project started my career in medicine,” says the veteran anesthesiologist. He served at St. John’s Mercy Hospital during Senior Project as a volunteer transporter, which mostly consisted of moving patients in wheelchairs around the hospital.
During high school, Dr. Erkmann, whose brothers Dr. John and Maj. Joseph Erkmann graduated from SLUH in 1964 and 1967, respectively, spent a lot of time working outdoors and cutting grass to make money. “The idea of getting a paid job indoors was incredibly appealing,” he says. He was delighted, then, to earn a summer job at the hospital after graduating from SLUH. He worked at Mercy in Central Supply, restocking supplies and even picking up deceased patients and taking them to the morgue (the latter, he says, was not on the original job description). The following year he earned a patient contact position at Mercy.
After completing medical school at Saint Louis University and his residency in anesthesiology at University of Missouri-Columbia, Dr. Erkmann returned to Mercy to start his career—and he has been there since.
Early in his career he was inspired by fellow classmate Dr. Keith Krummenacher ’73, also an anesthesiologist at Mercy and who did medical mission work in Haiti. “I knew at the right point in my career, I could also utilize my own skills and expertise to help others throughout the world,” says Dr. Erkmann.
That time came in 2001, after his kids had grown up (he and his wife Linda—an operating room technician who he met at, of all places, the operating room at Mercy—have a son and daughter). Dr. Erkmann began by taking annual trips to Juticalpa, Honduras to assist with medical procedures for the poor. He enjoyed working with Catholic priests, Francisan Friars and a team of doctors to help those without adequate care, but it became unsustainable without funding and logistical support.
In 2011, he started working with Operation Smile, an international organization that provides surgical care to children throughout the world suffering from cleft lip or cleft palate (facial and oral malformations that occur very early in pregnancy). He also increased the frequency of his trips, from one to two and up to four trips per year. It’s an ambitious endeavor, given the amount of work each trip requires. Typical days are about 14 hours of work—time for which he is taking vacation—with an international team of 40 doctors that sees 30-40 cases daily for five successive days.
Dr. Erkmann’s passport is well worn. In the past six years he has taken 17 mission trips to places like Asuncion, Paraguay; Monterrey, Mexico; Wenzhou, China; Guwahati, India; and Santa Cruz, Bolivia. Some of the countries he has assisted, like Rwanda, only have a handful of anesthesiologists. This lack of trained professionals calls for him to serve a dual role: provide service for those in need as well as medical training for local caregivers.
Children flock from far corners of the countries he serves to receive that care. In Congo, for instance, a young boy arrived at the medical clinic after traveling more than 1,000 miles for days with his older brother. He was given priority even though he showed up after the registration deadline.
Dr. Erkmann created a blog at the request of family and friends who wanted to follow his journeys. Though he does not solicit donations, occasionally he asks for small stuffed animals, which he takes on his trips and hands out to the kids.
After Dr. Erkmann's eventual retirement, he says he vows to continue bringing smiles to children throughout the world via Operation Smile. It’s a motivating force in his life, a foundational value he formed long ago.
“SLUH instilled in me a real sense of what it means to be a Man for Others,” he says. “The satisfaction I get from helping others is very rewarding.”
Following are photos from some of Dr. Erkmann's service trips with Operation Smile.