St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation One Children’s Place St. Louis, MO 63110-1077 Address Service Requested
To make a gift to St. Louis Children’s Hospital, please visit StLouisChildrens.org/giving or call: 314.286.0988 888.559.9699 toll free
More ways we care for kids and the planet they call home.
Dear Friend of St. Louis Children’s Hospital, Today, portions of our society seem to seek more of everything. More excitement. More technology. More stuff. At St. Louis Children’s Hospital, we’re always striving to deliver our patients and families a different and truly meaningful kind of “MORE.” More exceptional and compassionate care. More lifesaving cures and treatments. More moments with loved ones. It’s these types of “More’s” that are at the heart of our 2011 Annual Report. Over the past 25 years, we’ve developed the breadth and depth of programs, medical expertise and treatments that place us among the nation’s elite children’s hospitals. But most importantly, these expanded programs have allowed us to help more children and families. Children like Katelyn Jackson, who receives ongoing heart care at St. Louis Children’s Hospital so she can sing more songs. Children like Dominic Morgan, who survived a terrible car crash thanks to the swift treatment he received through St. Louis Children’s Hospital’s Level I Pediatric Trauma Center so he can give his mom more brilliant smiles. Children like Brittany Butts, who fights through sickle cell disease with the help of Child Life Services so she can create more beautiful paintings. Children like Matt Williams, who bravely faced brain tumor treatment so today he can help more kids with cancer. As we look back at 2011, we’re proud of the strides we’ve made to provide the most advanced medical care in a warm, child-friendly environment. As we look toward the future, our goal is to continue to deliver more of the best care possible for every patient, every family, every day. Thanks to our generous donors, talented staff and physicians, and our community supporters, we will be able to do more of what’s right for kids.
Lee Fetter
Kelvin Westbrook
John T. O’Connell
President
2011 Hospital Board Chair
2011 Foundation Board Chair 2011 Annual Report 1
2 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Connections of the Heart With four kids between the ages of 4 and 10, busy mom Karin Jackson calls her family a “Children’s Hospital family.” That’s because three of her four children have been treated for serious health conditions at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. Karin’s relationship with the hospital began long before she had children. She was a speech-language pathologist at Children’s Hospital for three years when she became a mother of twins, Katelyn and Tommy. But her career was put to the side when one of her newborn twins was diagnosed with a congenital heart defect—Katelyn had a large hole in her heart. At 4 months old, Katelyn had openheart surgery at St. Louis Children’s Hospital and spent six weeks in the hospital following the surgery. “As a first-time mom, it was incredibly emotional,” Karin says. “But having worked at the hospital, I wouldn’t have taken Katelyn anywhere else for care.” Katelyn is now 10. Since her first open-heart surgery, she’s had five more over the years, combined with several hospitalizations for other procedures and illnesses related to her heart
condition. Each time, the St. Louis Children’s and Washington University Heart Center team has been there for the Jackson family. “The staff of the Heart Center is absolutely amazing,” Karin says. “Over the years, we’ve developed close relationships with them. Many of the same nurses have been there for Katelyn since she was a baby. When we show up, everyone knows Katelyn’s name. The staff has a high level of commitment and dedication, and I trust them completely.” Katelyn is a confident fourth-grader who rides her bike, jumps rope and loves to sing. Most recently, she’s singing a new, very personal tune. St. Louis singer and songwriter Erin Bode composed a special song inspired by Katelyn. The song, “The Space Between,” uses Katelyn’s recorded heartbeat as the rhythm track. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of the song on iTunes benefits the Heart Center. “Katelyn is very proud of her heart and wants to build more heart-health awareness,” Karin says. “She also would like to be a cardiothoracic surgeon when she grows up. While we may have more surgeries down the road, right now her heart is healthier than it has ever been.”
2011 Annual Report 3
Tommy, 10
Katelyn, 10
Matthew, 7
Sara, 4
Thankfully, Katelyn’s twin, Tommy, hasn’t had any heart problems. Younger brother Matthew was born with a congenital heart defect similar to Katelyn’s, although it wasn’t as severe. When he was a toddler, Matthew also had open-heart surgery at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. “We were shocked when he was diagnosed, but my husband pointed out that at least we already had a medical team in place that we love and trust because of our experience with Katelyn,” Karin says. “The quality of care at Children’s Hospital is so high.” Today, 7-year-old Matthew is considered the family daredevil. “You can’t hold him down,” Karin says. “He’s into every sport as well as being in his school’s gifted program with Katelyn and Tommy.” The youngest member of the Jackson family, 4-year-old Sara, had her own experience with St. Louis Children’s Hospital. At age 2, she was diagnosed with appendicitis, which is extremely rare in a child so young. “The doctor spent a lot of time studying the ultrasound to make sure the diagnosis was correct because it was so unusual,” Karin says. “We are grateful for his compassionate concern and thorough review. Had he second-guessed his diagnosis or postponed surgery even by a few hours, I don’t think Sara would have survived.” Karin continues: “Because of our experiences, my family has a deep connection to St. Louis Children’s Hospital. I’m so grateful to the hospital for giving me the greatest gift of all— the lives and health of all four of my children.”
4 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
“I’m so grateful to the hospital for giving me the greatest gift of all—the lives and health of all four of my children.” – Karin Jackson
2011 Annual Report 5
Pushing the Envelope for Better Heart Care Pediatric cardiothoracic surgeon Pirooz Eghtesady, MD, PhD, is never satisfied with the status quo. So he raised the bar even higher for himself and others when he came to St. Louis Children’s Hospital in May 2011 as co-director of the St. Louis Children’s and Washington University Heart Center. “Although we’re an excellent center, my focus is always on how we can do even better in heart care to help more kids,” he says. “If we are happy with the status quo, that is what we will get.” He says the Heart Center’s strength lies in the people who work there. “I’m surrounded by unbelievably brilliant people who inspire me on a daily basis. We’re leveraging their knowledge and skills, and collaborating more to deliver the best care to patients through the Heart Center.” Dr. Eghtesady believes the hospital offers everything children—and their parents—need. “Every person at the hospital gives 100 percent to the kids every single day. No other center in the region has this combination of advanced techniques, technology, expertise and skilled, compassionate staff. That’s why kids come from far distances to be cared for here.”
Seeking New Solutions Dr. Eghtesady’s primary focus is on heart repair and heart transplants. Admittedly a perfectionist, he’s never afraid to push the envelope in his surgical techniques. “When they say it can’t be
6 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Pirooz Eghtesady, MD, PhD
done, I don’t accept that,” he says. “Sometimes the traditional or simpler way to do things isn’t the only way for patients.” For example, children often are referred to Dr. Eghtesady for heart transplants. In some cases, he is able to repair the child’s heart instead, so a transplant isn’t necessary. “These can be technically difficult surgeries, but it’s a better option than waiting for a heart that may never come, considering the shortage of donated organs,” Dr. Eghtesady says. In his first year at the Heart Center, Dr. Eghtesady broke new ground with a patient who had a single ventricle heart defect, a complex condition in which one of the heart’s lower chambers is too small or weak to pump blood effectively to the body and/or lungs. The child, in very serious condition, was referred to Children’s Hospital for a heart transplant after having undergone multiple surgeries. Under Dr. Eghtesady’s direction, the child was placed on the Berlin Heart ventricular assist device with modifications that had not been applied before. Soon after, the child recovered and ultimately had a successful heart transplant. “There is limited experience using the Berlin Heart in this setting in the world. Supporting
“No other center in the region has this combination of advanced techniques, technology, expertise and skilled, compassionate staff.” – Pirooz Eghtesady, MD, PhD
MORE on the Heart Center • The Heart Center has one of the most active pediatric heart transplant programs in the United States. • The pediatric heart team is the largest in the region and includes cardiac intensivists; cardiothoracic surgeons; cardiologists; cardiac Heart Center Co-directors Pirooz Eghtesady, MD, PhD, and George Van Hare, MD, with heart patient Katelyn Jackson.
a single ventricle patient with a device until transplantation was a first at our Heart Center, and I’m proud of this accomplishment,” says Dr. Eghtesady. “Our Center is among the leaders in pediatric heart transplant, assistive devices such as the Berlin Heart and heart failure.”
interventionalists; electrophysiologists; cardiac anesthesiologists; and nearly 90 dedicated clinical staff members. • The Maxine Clark and Bob Fox Cardiac Intensive Care Unit (CICU) is the only CICU in the state of Missouri. • Surgeons at Children’s Hospital
Finding Inspiration in the Faces of Children While Dr. Eghtesady has always been driven to improve care, he says having his son, now 5, made him an even better surgeon. “He’s the light of my life, my everything,” he says. “Having him changed me. When I’m operating on a child, I always remember that this is someone’s little boy or girl.”
performed the first Berlin Heart procedure in Missouri. The Berlin Heart serves as a bridge to transplant by supporting cardiac function.
He says the children and parents he meets are his inspiration. “Kids facing heart problems are amazing. They have tremendous resilience and a great attitude toward life. And they are a reminder of the fact that we need to do better. But they also symbolize life at its best. When they go through so much and still have a wonderful attitude, it makes you stop and appreciate everything around you more.”
2011 Annual Report 7
Kallie Finn
A New Heart for Kallie Four-year-old Kallie Finn was born with a heart defect and needed a transplant, just as her father, Mitch, did 24 years ago at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. While Mitch required a very sophisticated heartlung bypass machine to keep him alive while he awaited his transplant, Kallie was able to use a pumping device called a Berlin Heart. Unlike her dad, Kallie was able to get up and walk around, play and eat normally while on the Berlin Heart, which helped ensure her body was in the best possible condition to tolerate transplant surgery once a donor heart was available. Kallie was on the Berlin Heart for nearly six weeks when a heart became available. However, it had been declined at several centers due to a hole in the heart—many thought it couldn’t be used. But Dr. Eghtesady thought differently. He repaired the heart and then transplanted it in Kallie. Today she’s strong and healthy. “I don’t think what I did was special; it was just a different way of looking at the problem,” Dr. Eghtesady says.
8 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
“Kids facing heart problems are amazing. They have tremendous resilience and a great attitude toward life.” – Pirooz Eghtesady, MD, PhD
Care Beyond Hospital Walls
Kohl’s Safety Street program
MORE Investment in Kids in Our Community Improving the health of children is central to the mission of St. Louis Children’s Hospital. This care for kids and their families can be seen within the hospital’s walls, as well as across the region and metro area, through innovative programs and services. Every child deserves a chance to live a healthy and vibrant life, and St. Louis Children’s Hospital is doing more to make that happen through its community outreach programs. Each year, St. Louis Children’s Hospital invests thousands of staff hours—and millions of its donor dollars—to provide healthcare services and education to families and children in need. It’s all part of the hospital’s commitment and mission to do what is right for kids.
In 2011, St. Louis Children’s Hospital and its foundation invested more than $6 million to deliver community health programs that include hearing and vision screenings, immunizations, community flu shots, car seat safety checks, helmet safety checks, health screenings and parenting presentations.
Community benefits are programs or activities that provide treatment and/or promote health and healing as a response to community needs. Thanks to programs offered by the hospital’s Child Health Advocacy and Outreach (CHAO) Department, funded through St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation, kids and families across the St. Louis metropolitan area are learning how to improve their health and safety. In 2011, CHAO programs served more than 49,600 children. The department’s outreach efforts are guided by current health trends, such as the growing number of children at risk for obesity or asthma. CHAO programs focus on health promotion and injury prevention, and offer community health services through the Healthy Kids Express mobile health programs. Healthy Kids Express is the St. Louis area’s first dedicated, on-site pediatric mobile health program and now serves more than 23,000 children a year with three mobile units. The service visits schools and community agencies to provide hearing and vision screenings, lead and anemia testing, immunizations, comprehensive dental care and asthma management services.
2011 Annual Report 9
MORE on Child Health Advocacy and Outreach (CHAO) CHAO also offers three injury prevention programs and three health and wellness programs:
• Kohl’s Safety Street: A life-size, interactive and mobile neighborhood setting that provides instruction for kids on pedestrian and passenger safety, stranger awareness, stray animal awareness and bicycle safety.
• Click-It Crew: A seat belt awareness presentation for teens that includes dramatic, real-life examples of what it’s like to be in a crash. The presentation also includes testimonials from those whose lives have been changed because they were in an automobile accident without a seat belt.
• Safety Stop: Free education about car seat, bicycle and home safety as well as expert guidance from a certified child passenger safety technician. Reduced-priced car seats, helmets and home safety products also are sold through the program.
10 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
• Fit ’n’ Fun Adventure: Age-specific nutrition and exercise classroom lessons as well as advice on healthy eating and staying active. This highly interactive 12-week program motivates kids in elementary schools and community organizations to get moving and make healthy choices.
• Head-to-Toe: Evidence-based weight management information and advice for kids and parents about living a healthy lifestyle. The curriculum includes instruction from trained professionals and group meetings, monthly workshops and monthly follow-up phone calls with trained experts.
• Food Allergy Management and
Education (FAME): Food allergy tools and education for schools that are faced with unique challenges due to the increasing number of students with one or more severe or life-threatening food allergies.
Healthy Kids Express Dental Program MORE Smiles
The Healthy Kids Express Dental Program was created after a community assessment performed seven years ago uncovered a dramatic percentage of children with dental problems in at-risk areas. In 2010, the dental program expanded its services and now visits different sites four days per week to perform screenings and cleanings. Thanks to funds from St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation, restorative services are now available, including fillings, extractions, crowns and root canals. For many of these children, it’s their first experience with dental care. Tooth decay is one of the most common childhood diseases in the United States. It’s five times as common as asthma and seven times as common as hay fever. Like adults, children should have a dental checkup every six months. The Healthy Kids Express Dental Program’s mobile unit visits partnering schools and community organizations to educate children and their parents on the importance of regular brushing, flossing and using fluoride. Exams and procedures are performed in the mobile unit by the team’s full-time dentist, Latoya Wilson, DMD.
Latoya Wilson, DMD, saw patients at a community health center before signing on as the dentist for the Healthy Kids Express Dental Program in 2010. “Kids add a lot of energy and make this job fun,” she says. “I like the variety of going to different places and meeting with children every day. It’s really a dream job.”
In 2011, the program saw a dramatic increase in patients needing restorative care, which proves the dire need for these services. “Parents tend to choose medical care over dental care,” Dr. Wilson says. “Our schools have nurses, not dentists, so parents just don’t know—this is why it’s so important we educate the parents and the children. If you know better, you do better.” Currently, the Healthy Kids Express Dental Program’s mobile unit visits more than 35 sites in the St. Louis metropolitan area, including a few schools in surrounding counties with a significant number of immigrant students in need of dental care. Medical interpreters and social workers are also involved in identifying students in need of dental services , and helping facilitate care and track progress. “Everyone deserves the best care, and we don’t want to have to compromise on care we provide to our community,” Dr. Wilson says. “Thanks to donor support through St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation, we don’t have to make compromises.”
2011 Annual Report 11
Most dental patients are preschool and elementary school age. However, the program also sees teens during regular visits to St. Louis Children’s Hospital’s affiliate organization, The SPOT (Supporting Positive Opportunities with Teens), a one-stop drop-in center for youths ages 13 to 24. The Healthy Kids Express Dental Program mobile unit is a unique setting for care. The unit uses state-of-the-art portable dental equipment, which allows Dr. Wilson and her team to perform nearly any dental procedure that can be done in a traditional dental office. The unit also eliminates common barriers to care such as lack of transportation to a clinic and prohibitive costs to families. “A great deal of pride comes from our team when we can provide immediate visible changes in the lives of the children we serve,” Dr. Wilson says. “Many enter our office with some oral discomfort or visible discoloration of teeth. Once restorative care is completed, each child can see a shiny, tooth-colored filling where there was once a black spot or hole… and they can now drink cool liquids and chew their lunches without pain.”
Healthy Kids Express Helps Ease Fear of Dentists On a dental screening visit to Kingdom House, Dr. Wilson and her team met 3-year-old Kayley. After Kayley’s cleaning exam with the Healthy Kids Express Dental Program, her first-ever visit to a dentist, the team found an area of decay that required an extraction and a filling. “It is always difficult to tell a child they need to come back to see us for a restorative procedure, since it takes a lot of courage to make that initial visit to our van,” Dr. Wilson says. But Kayley proved the team wrong when she said, “I’m afraid, but I can still be brave.” Kayley’s mother joined her daughter on the Healthy Kids Express Dental Program mobile unit when she came back for her second visit. “She told us she knew her mom wouldn’t let her get hurt.” Kayley bravely held on to a stress ball, squeezing it during her procedure, and did very well. Dr. Wilson, a mother of three, is proud of her young patients when they are able to overcome their fears. “It takes a lot for kids just to meet new people, but to then be able to receive dental treatments that are unfamiliar and do so well… I am amazed by the courage of kids.”
In 2011, the Healthy Kids Express Dental Program made 168 site visits and provided dental services to 1,483 patients. The program also provided restorative services to 410 children and teens, more than doubling the program’s goal for restorative care.
Kayley told Dr. Wilson, “I’m afraid, but I can still be brave.”
12 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
MORE on the Healthy Kids Express Dental Program: • The Healthy Kids Express Dental Program
• Tooth models, like a smiling dinosaur, are used
mobile unit visits the same sites every six months for cleanings.
to show patients what their teeth look like. Digital X-rays are also used for this purpose.
• More than one-third of students seen at each
• Maps, crossword puzzles and other games are
school visit requires restorative care. The team then returns to the school two weeks later to perform these procedures.
• During restorative care days, one patient is seen per hour.
used to help educate and distract patients.
• Each patient who receives a dental checkup is given a toothbrush, toothpaste (depending on age), a tooth-brushing timer, educational brochures, a toy and book (depending on age).
• Age-appropriate health and wellness videos are • Dr. Wilson stays away from words that might shown to help educate patients on dental care and other health-related topics.
scare children, like “drill,” and instead uses words that describe her instruments in a less intimidating way.
2011 Annual Report 13
14 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Hats Off to Matt When Matt Williams began having “We weren’t sure what functions Matt would occasional headaches in the spring of 2006, have after surgery, but when he woke up and talked to us, he was all Matt,” Jeanne says. “We his mother, Jeanne, wasn’t overly worried. were so relieved. While he was in the hospital, After all, he was a bright, active 9-year-old we were such a critical part of Matt’s care team. and seemed generally healthy. But when The staff was friendly, included us in everything Jeanne took Matt for his school physical and answered all our questions. It meant a lot.” in July of that year, she mentioned Matt’s headaches to the pediatrician. The doctor “Radiation Vacation” Launches considered a possible sinus infection and ordered a CT scan. The results changed Charitable Hat Collection the family’s life. Matt had a golf ball-sized tumor on his brain. Technically called an ependymoma, these tumors can appear anywhere along the brain or spinal cord. They are relatively rare, accounting for only 2 percent of brain tumors. Five hours after Matt’s diagnosis, the Williams family arrived at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. The 150-mile drive from their Vienna, Ill., home to St. Louis was surreal, Jeanne says. “We were in shock. The day before, we had been at his swimming and diving lessons, and he was fine.” Everything moved quickly. Upon the family’s Friday evening arrival, they met with Josh Rubin, MD, PhD, pediatric neuro-oncologist, and then Matt had an MRI. On the following Monday morning, pediatric neurosurgeon Matthew Smyth, MD, performed an extensive eight-hour surgery to remove the tumor.
Thankfully, the tumor hadn’t spread anywhere else. Three days after surgery, Matt came home for two weeks before returning to St. Louis for three months of radiation treatment. Jeanne and Matt stayed at Hope Lodge, a facility for cancer patients receiving treatment in the St. Louis area who live more than 50 miles from the hospital. David Mansur, MD, radiation oncologist, oversaw Matt’s radiation therapy through the Siteman Cancer Center. “Matt handled the radiation well and actually enjoyed coming to the hospital,” Jeanne says. “He became good friends with another young boy having radiation just before Matt—they still keep in touch.” Matt took a positive approach to radiation treatment. “In the morning, Matt had radiation and then we explored the city in the afternoon,” followed by homework in the evening,” Jeanne
2011 Annual Report 15
says Jeanne. “Matt called it our ‘Radiation Vacation.’ We visited Forest Park, the Zoo and took paddle boat rides at the Boat House.” Those adventures were the beginning of a new path for Matt. While visiting the various destinations around St. Louis, Matt began collecting hats to cover his baldness. Some were purchased, and some were given by compassionate people at the places Matt visited. “Everyone was so good to us,” Jeanne says. Once Matt completed treatment and returned to his southern Illinois home, he continued to collect hats. Soon his hat collection began spilling from his room. “Matt decided he wanted to do something with those hats to help other kids going through cancer treatment,” Jeanne says. This was the birth of “Matt’s Hats,” a fundraising effort led by Matt. Last fall, when Matt was 14, he set up his hats for sale at local festivals. He also involved local schools in “Hat Days.” Then, after touring Dr. Rubin’s research lab, Matt decided to donate the funds he had raised to support Dr. Rubin’s brain tumor research efforts. “Seeing the advanced technology in Dr. Rubin’s lab blew my mind,” Matt says. “One study he’s doing measures brain tumor growth in mice using the enzyme that makes fireflies’ tails light up. Dr. Rubin also talked about how close his colleagues are to a major breakthrough for a new, more targeted radiation treatment for brain tumors.”
16 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Currently, Matt is applying to have “Matt’s Hats” designated as an official nonprofit organization so he can do even more for kids with cancer. “I want to focus on giving hats to kids with cancer and the money to research,” this young entrepreneur says.
A Bold Future Helping Others Last fall, Matt reached the five-year cancer-free mark after his diagnosis. To celebrate, Matt went back to his favorite St. Louis destination, the Boat House at Forest Park. “We appreciate the way the doctors worked together to ensure Matt received effective and appropriate treatment,” Jeanne says. “We’ve been very blessed that Matt hasn’t had any aftereffects from the tumor or surgery. The main change I’ve seen in him is a boldness. He’s more confident. I think he feels like, ‘I survived cancer, I can handle anything.’” Now 15, Matt is an honors student and loves music. He plays the guitar, the trumpet and sings. He also had the lead role in his school play. As Matt looks to the future, he hopes to pursue a career in medicine or research. His maturity is beyond that of a typical teenager, and he recognizes that his experience with cancer changed him. “I’m more outgoing, and easy and comfortable with myself. I don’t feel invincible, but I do feel confident. My attitude is that when you’re here, you should do all you can do. We’re here for a reason, and you have to find that reason.”
“I’m more outgoing, and easy and comfortable with myself. I don’t feel invincible, but I do feel confident. My attitude is that when you’re here, you should do all you can do. We’re here for a reason, and you have to find that reason.” – Matt Williams
Be sure to check out Matt’s Hats Facebook page! facebook.com/MattsHatsforChildhoodCancer
2011 Annual Report 17
Speeding Breakthroughs in Brain Tumors It’s a rare moment when you’ll find Josh Rubin, MD, PhD, sitting idle. At home, he may be honing his woodworking skills building a new piece of furniture. Or playing one of the three instruments he’s learned over the years. Or spending time exploring St. Louis with his wife and two daughters. By day, this Washington University pediatric neuro-oncologist at St. Louis Children’s Hospital is equally busy making breakthroughs in pediatric brain tumor research. “It’s the kids that inspire me to work on brain tumors,” he says. With his warm, friendly smile, Dr. Rubin puts patients and families at ease. “I like helping them recover and want so badly to cure more of them. Matt Williams is the kind of kid (see story on page 15) that makes me feel lucky I take care of kids with brain tumors. His positive attitude impresses me most. It’s not often that you get glimpses of the enormous depth and strength of the human spirit. You can see it in abundance in kids like Matt. They make me feel like anything is possible, even curing brain tumors.” The Neuro-Oncology Program at St. Louis Children’s Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine focuses on diagnosing and treating pediatric tumors of the brain and
18 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Josh Rubin, MD, PhD
spinal cord by using the latest therapies and the most advanced technology available. These advancements are made possible through research, including the research projects Dr. Rubin and his colleagues are doing. One significant contribution Dr. Rubin has made is the creation of a unique pediatric brain tumor bank. In 2006, Dr. Rubin, together with neurosurgeon Jeffrey Leonard, MD, created this brain tumor bank to collect and study brain tumor tissue cells. This also gives scientists the unusual opportunity to study living tumor cells to see what makes them grow and how they respond to various treatments. This research was supported by the Children’s Discovery Institute, a partnership between St. Louis Children’s Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine to accelerate cures for the most devastating pediatric diseases. “This brain tumor bank is a powerful tool that doesn’t exist anywhere else,” Dr. Rubin says. “One of our goals is to develop new therapies with less toxicity to cure brain tumors. Many researchers around the world now are using the brain tumor bank information we’ve gathered— so our efforts are multiplying.” Another of Dr. Rubin’s research projects is developing a drug that already has shown promise in slowing the growth of malignant
brain tumors. In the coming year, it could enter clinical trials as a new type of cancer therapy. One of his newest projects is studying the differences in brain tumors between males and females, an area that hasn’t been focused on before. “We’ve known that brain tumors develop more frequently in males than females, no matter what ages—from childhood through adulthood,” Dr. Rubin says. “We want to know why, and explore what molecular mechanisms cause brain tumors and how they’re different in the sexes. This project could tell us who is at higher risk for brain tumors, and ultimately change how brain tumors are treated in males and females.” Meanwhile, Dr. Rubin has designed a test to screen thousands of compounds to determine which ones have an effect on brain tumor cells. While it’s like finding a needle in a haystack, his findings could lead to the development of new drugs to fight brain tumors—so more children can be cured.
MORE on the Children’s Discovery Institute • The Children’s Discovery Institute is a multidisciplinary, innovation-based research partnership between St. Louis Children’s Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine designed to make advances toward cures. • Since it was founded in 2006, nearly $28 million in scientific grants has been awarded to projects aimed at some of the most devastating childhood diseases and disorders. • In 2011, the Children’s Discovery Institute awarded 11 Washington University research teams $3.8 million in new grants to seek answers to serious health issues such as congenital heart disease, lung infection, resistance to antibiotics and more. • Awards from the Institute have enabled awardees to leverage their initial “seed funding” to gain more financial support from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other national organizations. For more information, visit ChildrensDiscovery.org.
2011 Annual Report 19 2011 Annual Report 19
20 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Teenage Warrior Fights Sickle Cell Disease with Grace Don’t let her soft-spoken demeanor fool you. Brittany Butts is a strong, smart and determined 13-year-old who bravely has been fighting sickle cell disease since she was a baby. Caregivers at St. Louis Children’s Hospital have given Brittany the nickname “Warrior.” Sickle cell disease, or sickle cell anemia, is an inherited disease in which normally circularshaped red blood cells form an abnormal crescent shape. These fragile-shaped cells carry less oxygen to the tissues, resulting in problems throughout the body. Patients with sickle cell anemia can have painful episodes called crises, which can last from hours to days. Symptoms can include abdominal pain, bone pain, breathlessness, fatigue, fever and rapid heartbeat. And while the crises may be triggered by weather, sometimes they can strike seemingly out of the blue. These types of symptoms, including severe leg pain, are why Brittany has been a frequent patient at St. Louis Children’s Hospital over the last several years.
“The nurses and doctors at St. Louis Children’s Hospital are cool,” Brittany says. “They’re patient, answer my questions and help me understand how to take care of myself. They make me feel special. I don’t worry because they’re right here beside me, and I trust them.” Behind her gentle smile, this “Warrior” is tough. While Brittany is hospitalized, she is usually connected to a mechanical pump for pain management. She can tell you all the details about the machine and her medications. But you won’t often find her lying around in a hospital bed; she’s usually busy visiting the hospital’s Olson Family Garden, making arts and crafts or hanging out in the Teen Lounge.
“They make me feel special. I don’t worry because they’re right here beside me, and I trust them.” – Brittany Butts
2011 Annual Report 21
“When I go to camp, it feels like I’m not alone. I meet other people who have the same thing I do, and we learn more about sickle cell disease.” – Brittany Butts
Brittany with her little sister, Brina
22 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
She says her favorite activity is art therapy. “I like to get my hands dirty with the paint. I usually paint soothing places in my artwork.” Recently she’s added yoga to her repertoire to help her feel better. “It’s relaxing and stretches me out to help with pain,” she says. Brittany also enjoys the iPad® that Child Life Services staff members often bring for her to use. “The iPads are fun because they help me keep my mind off the pain, and I can learn about sickle cell disease by playing games on the iPad,” she says. “I can even use the iPad to play the guitar, piano and harp!” Another destination for Brittany is the hospital schoolroom, where she enthusiastically keeps up with her schoolwork. “I love math and am good at it, but I loooove science,” she says. During the summer, Brittany attends Camp Crescent, a special camp funded by St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation for kids living with sickle cell disease. At Camp Crescent, kids can interact with other kids with sickle cell and gain confidence in dealing with this lifelong disease. “When I go to camp, it feels like I’m not alone. I meet other people who have the same thing I do, and we learn more about sickle cell disease.”
When Brittany turns 18, she looks forward to being a camp counselor at Camp Crescent. Brittany has ambitious career goals, but she’s confident she can achieve them. “I want to be a veterinarian, a hematologist with a PhD or an RN,” she says. While she’s confident in her career plans, this eighth-grader shows a flash of nervousness when she talks about her high school plans. “I’m excited about clubs, sports, the teachers and high school boys,” she says sheepishly. “I’m going to try out for the drill team, the golf team, and join the science club and Key Club. And when I graduate, I plan to be valedictorian. If I don’t make some of these, I’ll just make another goal.” With her fighting spirit and gentle nature, this Warrior is destined to achieve every goal she sets her mind to and more.
“I want to be a veterinarian, a hematologist with a PhD or an RN.” – Brittany Butts
2011 Annual Report 23
Child Life Services
MORE Focus on Patients’ Social and Emotional Needs The Child Life Services Department works with patients and families to develop ways to cope with fear, anxiety and separation from friends and family by using play, music, art, recreation and education techniques. Everyone at St. Louis Children’s Hospital is focused on delivering quality care to children struggling with serious health conditions, and this care extends to Child Life Services. The department employs specially trained professionals called Child Life Specialists to bring normal play experiences and socialization to infants, children and adolescents in the hospital. Child Life Specialists play a vital role in the care of children at the hospital by meeting their social and emotional needs through a variety of fun, interactive therapies. In addition, these specialists help explain to children their diagnosis in a way that is appropriate for their age level, and reduces their anxiety with hands-on preparation for upcoming tests and procedures. “We use dolls to help play through some of their hospital experiences,” says Child Life Specialist Jenny Brandt. “We also help prepare patients for the procedures that they have to do throughout their treatment course. The goal is to try and make it less scary for them when they are here.” During treatment, Child Life Specialists use distraction and relaxation techniques to help children cope. One of those distraction techniques is the use of the iPad.
The iPad® Intervention The iPad is a tablet computer with a touchscreen that includes online media such as the Internet, movies, music, games, art activities and various applications.
exemplifies the mission of St. Louis Children’s Hospital. In fact, an emergency unit nurse once stated that during IV insertion, the iPad works better than morphine.
One of the medical procedures children fear most is having an IV inserted. When a child must be restrained for IV insertion, it can cause great distress. This medical procedure can be highly traumatic for parents, too. The iPad intervention—the use of the tablet to distract, prepare and educate patients—helps provide safe, effective care and exceptional service that
The idea of using the iPads came from two tech-savvy Child Life Specialists, Stacy Sedlack and Tyler Robertson. They knew that distraction worked in reducing anxiety and stress in children, and they felt the use of new technology had great potential to engage patients.
The computers proved so beneficial that now 15 iPads are used, thanks to generous donations to St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation.
24 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
“These kids communicate through technology, and they distract themselves at home with technology,” Sedlack says. “It made sense for us to try this as a tool.”
MORE on Child Life Services 2011 Child Life Services statistics: In 2009, Child Life Services began using two iPads in a trial run. Now, 15 iPads are now used by the department for: Preparation: Patients and families learn online about an upcoming procedure, and they can reference a pictorial roster of Child Life Specialists to familiarize themselves with a new face if they’re about to go to a new unit. Distraction: Patients can play games on the computer during an IV insertion or other procedures. Education: Child Life Specialists can help access customized diagnosis information for patients and families. “Our Child Life Specialists no longer have to lug thick binders full of preparation materials and pictures. Everything has been downloaded to the iPad so it can be accessed from anywhere at any time,” says Jill Malan, Child Life Services Manager. “We still use books and toys, but the iPad offers limitless options.”
87
Average music therapy patient visits per month
174
Average art therapy sessions per month
4,900
Clown Docs visits to patients and families
6,145
Visits to the Sibling Playroom
13,686
Visits to the Inpatient Playroom
2,376
Visits to the Teen Lounge
1,520
Patients served by the School Program
21,247
Hours of education services provided
On the St. Louis Children’s Hospital dialysis/infusion unit, Child Life Specialist Stacy Sedlack uses an iPad tablet to distract patient Ian Calloway.
2011 Annual Report 25
26 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Faster Treatment for Better Outcomes Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Care Makes All the Difference As a 6-foot, 1-inch-tall 14-year-old boy, Dominic Morgan seems to have a natural build for sports. But this quiet, smart teenager would rather spend his time reading. And that’s just fine with his mom, Lisa Moore. She prefers the safety of book reading after nearly losing Dominic in a horrific car accident last November.
A couple who had stopped to help took Lisa’s daughter and grandson to the hospital, while Lisa and Dominic waited for ambulances. Lisa just had minor cuts, but Dominic was suffering severe stomach pain. When the ambulance arrived, Dominic promptly was taken to St. Louis Children’s Hospital, a designated Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center in both Missouri and Illinois.
It all happened so fast. The car Dominic, Lisa, her daughter and 3-year-old grandson were riding in hit a highway median and flipped three times before landing upside down and catching fire.
At the hospital, Jacqueline Saito, MD, a pediatric surgeon, told Lisa that Dominic had a life-threatening perforation in his intestine as well as possible damage to his spleen and kidneys. He needed immediate surgery.
Lisa’s motherly instincts quickly took over. A petite woman just 4 feet, 11 inches tall, Lisa mustered enough strength to kick out the passenger window and pull out her daughter and grandson. Aside from a bump on the toddler’s head, they both appeared to be OK. But Lisa was too small to move Dominic, who weighed 203 pounds at the time. Thankfully, a stranger helped her pull her son to safety in the roadside grass.
The Best of Both Worlds
Soon after everyone was out of the car, it exploded.
Dr. Saito says getting Dominic to the trauma center and treating him quickly was critical. The trauma center is an integrated system specifically designed to treat kids with traumatic injuries efficiently and quickly, Dr. Saito explains. “Some hospitals are good at trauma but not with treating kids, or they are good at treating kids but not trauma. We have the best of both worlds at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. Our staff is attuned to children and well versed in trauma. And for some types of injuries, the faster a patient is treated, the better the outcomes.”
2011 Annual Report 27
Before a patient arrives at the hospital, the emergency staff receives a status report from the ambulance team. Then a skilled trauma team is assembled and ready to act when the patient arrives. This trauma team, available on short notice, includes pediatric surgeons, traumatrained nursing staff, respiratory therapists, anesthesiologists, pharmacists, operating room staff and even blood bank staff. After Dominic arrived in the trauma center, he spent several hours in surgery. Dr. Saito performed the entire surgery laparoscopically through small incisions in Dominic’s abdomen to repair the tear in Dominic’s small intestine. Thankfully, his spleen and kidneys were just bruised, not severely damaged.
Support Brings Smiles Back to a Family As a devoted single mother, Lisa stayed by Dominic’s side throughout his hospital stay, except to work a few night shifts while Dominic slept. The hospital staff gave Lisa meal vouchers, which were made possible through donor support to St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation. Through it all, Lisa was confident in Dominic’s care. “I prayed and knew he would be OK,” she says. “Plus Dr. Saito and her nurse, Mary Alice McCubbins, were like family. They always made Dominic and me feel better. All the other nurses were so nice, too.”
In 2011, St. Louis Children’s Hospital provided $4.2 million for charity care.
28 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Lisa recalls Dr. Saito’s kindness when Dominic’s best friend came to visit in the hospital. “His friend saw all the tubes coming out of Dominic and started crying. But Dr. Saito came in and explained what everything was and comforted him.” Three weeks after the accident, Dominic finally went home. Lisa admits finances had become a struggle, and she found out Dominic’s health insurance had lapsed a few months before the accident. She didn’t know how she was going to pay Dominic’s hospital bills. The hospital Social Work Department worked with Lisa to reinstate Dominic’s insurance coverage for the future. Meanwhile, through donor support from the Free Care Fund, St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation paid for Dominic’s entire hospital bill. The Foundation also helped provide a new car seat for Lisa’s grandson. “The Foundation’s assistance really helped during a difficult time,” Lisa says. “I’m so thankful for all the support from my family and the hospital. I also want to thank the strangers who stopped to help us after the accident.” Dominic was happy to return to school in December. “He’s back to normal for the most part,” Lisa adds. “And he still has the most beautiful smile that lights up his face.”
Free Care Fund
MORE Compassionate and Supportive Care for Kids in Need
The primary goal of St. Louis Children’s Hospital is to heal a child who is faced with illness, injury or disease. The hospital treats each patient who comes through its doors with compassion, skill and groundbreaking medical expertise. This care extends to those who can’t afford medical care, or those who don’t have medical insurance. Thanks to donations to the Free Care Fund, St. Louis Children’s Hospital is able to treat all children who need medical care. Not only does this fund serve children from all over the United States, it also provides charity care to international patients. In fact, Children’s Hospital provides charity care to patients from countries such as Mongolia, Haiti, Honduras, Liberia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Jamaica, South Africa and Kenya. These children are treated for illnesses ranging from life-threatening heart conditions to complex neurological diseases.
z
Patrick Booker and his grandmother
Patrick from Liberia Four-year-old Patrick Booker came to St. Louis Children’s Hospital all the way from Liberia after accidentally ingesting a substance that burned his esophagus so badly, he couldn’t eat. Brad Warner, MD, surgeon-in-chief at Children’s Hospital and the Jessie L. Ternberg, MD, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Pediatric Surgery, performed a life-saving operation that replaced the damaged part of Patrick’s esophagus with a section of his colon. Dr. Warner performed the surgery at no cost to the family, who also received help from charity care funds during their stay. After making a full recovery from surgery, Patrick returned to Liberia in March 2011, where an owner of a private school gave him nine years of free schooling and uniforms.
2011 Annual Report 29
Pediatric Advanced Care Team
MORE Support to Families and Patients with Life-limiting Illnesses
At St. Louis Children’s Hospital, the ultimate goal is to heal each patient, cure their disease, or help them comfortably manage their illness through ongoing disease management. Unfortunately, a successful outcome is not always possible. When parents and their child are faced with this difficult reality, palliative care becomes an important focus of the care team. In 2011, with support from St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation, the hospital established the Pediatric Advanced Care Team (PACT), a palliative care program that provides medical, nursing and psychosocial support to patients and families experiencing chronic or terminal illness. The purpose of PACT is to ease the suffering of a child with a potentially life-limiting illness, and provide the support patients and their families need to cope with a life-altering outcome. “Our goal is to help children live as long as possible and as well as possible,” says Dr. Joan Rosenbaum, a neonatologist and director of the PACT program at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. “We are really walking that journey with the families we serve.”
Through PACT, families have a guide as they navigate the issues of end-of-life care. The skilled multidisciplinary PACT team helps coordinate psychological and spiritual support as well as facilitate medical management of pain and other symptoms to reduce the child’s suffering. Children receive the support needed to cope with their illness and fears associated with their prognosis. The team is skilled in helping families find the appropriate language for their cultural and religious background that is developmentally appropriate for the child.
“Our goal is to help children live as long as possible and as well as possible.”
In 2011, PACT provided 80 patients and families with palliative care consultation and support— more than double the number of patients and families projected for the first year of the program.
30 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
– Dr. Joan Rosenbaum
MORE Baseball Games for Jake As a child, Jake was diagnosed with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Despite being in a wheelchair for more than 10 years, Jake—now 19 years old—still participated in all the things kids love to do growing up, including swimming, going to camp, riding horses and playing baseball. However, as Jake has gotten older, the complications from his condition have become worse and won’t improve. After nine days in the hospital’s Cardiac Intensive Care Unit, Jake and his family met with Dr. Rosenbaum and her team.
A self-proclaimed “#1 Fan” of the St. Louis Cardinals, Jake Vollmer smiles for a photo in his room during a special home visit from beloved Cardinals’ mascot, Fredbird.
The PACT team worked with Jake and his mom Julie to help them understand the next steps in his care, which would be palliative. “Palliative care is the perfect blend of spirituality and medicine,” says Dr. Rosenbaum. “It takes a holistic approach to helping a child, from the spiritual to the emotional to the physical.” Now back home with his mother and his grandmother, Jake is resting, living relatively pain-free and receiving home healthcare assistance and support services through Wings (BJC HealthCare’s pediatric supportive care and hospice program) and PACT. His outcomes at home thus far have been very positive, and after graduating from high school, Jake plans to attend community college to study broadcast journalism.
2011 Annual Report 31
Awards and Recognition
32 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Hospital Earns Elite State Trauma Designation In June 2011, two years of preparation culminated in St. Louis Children’s Hospital being designated as an Illinois Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center. Previously, the only Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Centers in Illinois were in the Chicago area. Children’s Hospital has been a designated Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center in Missouri since 1981, and was again reviewed and approved in 2008. For designation as a Level 1 Pediatric Trauma Center, pediatric surgeons, emergency medicine physicians and trauma program managers from various regions of the country provide a rigorous on-site review to ensure compliance with an extensive list of specific regulations. An essential component of a trauma center is to anticipate and be ready for the needs of the critically injured child 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Thorough evaluation and treatment must be provided in a timely manner. The operating room and trained staff must be immediately available. Because children are the focus at St. Louis Children’s Hospital, all training and education, as well as equipment, are pediatric specific.
More than 50,000 patients come to the Emergency Department each year; approximately 1,500 of those cases are injury-related, from minor to severe, including head trauma, burns and orthopedic injury.
Dana Brown
Dana Brown Charitable Trust to Support New Surgical Suite A new surgical suite at St. Louis Children’s Hospital will soon become a reality, thanks to a $1 million commitment from the Dana Brown Charitable Trust. The new Dana Brown Surgical Suite will be located on the sixth floor of the hospital. This addition, which is currently in the planning stages, will allow the hospital to dedicate an operating room that will provide immediate access for trauma patients needing surgery. As a result, Children’s Hospital will maintain the standards necessary to achieve the country’s highest level of trauma designation to become Missouri’s only American College of Surgeons (ACS) Trauma Center for pediatrics. One requirement for ACS certification is that an operating room always needs to be available to rapidly respond to possible accidents or tragedies. With the new Dana Brown Surgical Suite, the hospital can accommodate this requirement, while still giving surgeons enough operating room times for scheduled surgeries. Having the additional surgical suite offers the added benefit of attracting the most skilled surgeons in the country to St. Louis Children’s Hospital. Designed as a state-of-the-art, minimally invasive operating room, the Dana Brown Surgical Suite will feature robotic surgical instruments along with other capabilities to enable the hospital to meet the growing surgical needs of its patient population. “We’re extremely grateful for the continued support of the Dana Brown Charitable Trust,” says Lee Fetter, President of St. Louis Children’s Hospital. “Dana Brown’s generosity has had a tremendous impact on the hospital.” 2011 Annual Report 33
Hospital Makes U.S. News & World Report Honor Roll For the ninth consecutive year, St. Louis Children’s Hospital was named among the nation’s elite pediatric hospitals on the Honor Roll of U.S. News & World Report’s 2011 listing of America’s Best Children’s Hospitals. St. Louis Children’s Hospital is one of only 11 pediatric hospitals that made the Honor Roll by ranking in all 10 specialties evaluated. It is the only hospital in Missouri and the surrounding eight-state region to receive Honor Roll status. Hospitals are ranked in cancer, diabetes and endocrine disorders, digestive disorders, heart and heart surgery, kidney disorders, neonatal care, neurology and neurosurgery, orthopedics, respiratory disorders and urology. The specialty survey is the most extensive pediatric hospital report prepared by a U.S. publication. “We have the privilege of caring for patients and their families from across our community, the nation and the globe every day,” says hospital President Lee Fetter. “The U.S. News Honor Roll is an important validation that our staff and physician partners at Washington University School of Medicine are consistently delivering our mission: to do what’s right for kids by providing safe care, effective care and exceptional service.”
34 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Child Advocates Doing MORE for Kids St. Louis Children’s Hospital presented its 2011 Advocacy Awards to United States Senator Roy Blunt and Judge Jimmie Edwards. Established in 1994, the awards recognize local and state leaders who leverage their positions, resources and influence to do what’s right for kids.
United States Senator Roy Blunt State Advocate of the Year Senator Blunt’s history with St. Louis Children’s Hospital stretches back to his first days as a member of the House of Representatives, but his dedication to issues involving children spans all 30 years of his political career. “As a father of four and grandfather of six, I know young people are the future of this country. We must provide better access to good quality, affordable care for Americans of all ages,” he says.
L-R St. Louis Children’s Hospital President Lee Fetter, award winners Senator Roy Blunt and Judge Jimmie Edwards, and Hospital Board Chair Kelvin Westbrook
Judge Jimmie Edwards Community Advocate of the Year Judge Jimmie Edwards has served as a juvenile court judge in St. Louis since 1992. For more than 18 years, Judge Edwards watched as a stream of “broken” children entered his courtroom. Some serious infraction had removed these children from their public school and funneled them into a labyrinthine system where education was unlikely, and graduation seemed completely out of reach. In 2009, with the help of myriad community partners, Judge Edwards created Innovative Concept Academy in the abandoned Blewett Middle School on Cass Avenue as an alternative school for juvenile offenders.
During his years in the House, Senator Blunt Innovative Concept Academy is the country’s was on the Appropriations Committee and the first school run by the court system, and Judge Energy and Commerce Committee, both of Edwards’ idea is working. Since opening, 18 which exercise jurisdiction over the Children’s students have earned a high school diploma or Hospital Graduate Medical Education (CHGME) GED, and two have gone to college. program. He co-sponsored the CHGME reauthorization legislation and has always “Most youth just need structure and someone to supported full funding for the program. He also was the Co-Chair of the House Education Caucus, care about them,” Judge Edwards says. “If you give young people a sense of worth and value, sponsored legislation to require healthcare then they will have the motivation to succeed plans to continue to include dependent children because they feel like they belong in society.” through age 25, and supported legislation establishing a nationwide AMBER alert system for Judge Edwards has received national recognition missing children. for his work. On December 21, 2011, The Today Show featured Innovative Concept Academy as Since the citizens of Missouri elected Roy Blunt part of their three-day series called “Getting to to the United States Senate in 2010, he has the Heart of Christmas.” Judge Edwards also was maintained his commitment to healthcare and named a “Hero of the Year” by People magazine. issues important to St. Louis Children’s Hospital. 2011 Annual Report 35
By the Numbers
15,388
Hospital Admissions
77
Total Transplants Performed
9 Kidney
2,076
Trips Made by the Transport Team
51,164 Emergency Department Visits
18 Heart
11 Liver
12,140
Surgeries Performed
13 Lung
25 Bone Marrow
75,888 Patient Days
36 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
1 Heart/Lung
202,930 Outpatient Clinic Visits*
*Includes St. Louis Children’s Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine outpatient visits
MORE Opportunities for Support at St. Louis Children’s Hospital This list provides examples of programs that are funded—either entirely or partially—by the many donors who give so generously to St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation.
Art Therapy
Healthy Kids Express
Bereavement Program
Healthy Kids Express Asthma Program
Camp Crescent
Joint Adventures Camp
Camp Hope
Mobile Intensive Care Units
Camp Independence
Music Therapy
Camp Rhythm
Nursing Support
Child Health Advocacy & Outreach
Olson Family Garden
Child Life Services Children’s Discovery Institute
Patient Care Research Enhancement Grants
Children’s Surgical Sciences Institute
Pediatric Neurocritical Care Program
Clown Docs
Plastic Surgery
Dialysis Support
Project Safety Net/454-TEEN Line
Endowed Chairs
Resident Education
Family Care Fund Program
Resident Training Opportunities
Family Resource Center
Safety Stop
Ferring Scholars Program
School teachers for patients
Fetal Care Center
Sibling Playroom
Food Allergy Program
S.P.O.T. Youth Center
Free Care Fund
Transport Team Equipment
Global Harvest Alliance
Traumatic Brain Injury Support and Research
Carol and Paul Hatfield Cerebral Palsy Sports & Rehab Program
The Wish List Program
2011 Annual Report 37
Endowed Chairs St. Louis Children’s Hospital is recognized nationally each year for being one of America’s top pediatric hospitals. This excellence can be traced to the physicians at Children’s Hospital, who are among the best and brightest in the world. Those doctors who hold the prestigious position of an Endowed Chair are trailblazers in their field of medicine and help maintain Children’s Hospital’s elite reputation. Endowed chairs play a critical role in attracting and retaining proven thought leaders who can drive St. Louis Children’s Hospital toward continued advancement in healthcare for children. Endowed chairs are a coveted and widely recognized accolade, signaling that a physician/researcher is at the top of his or her field.
St. Louis Children’s Hospital Chairs
Other endowed chairs represented by physicians of St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Appoline Blair Chair Recruitment in Process
Melvin E. Carnahan Professor of Pediatrics Dr. Phil Tarr
Helene B. Roberson Professor of Pediatrics Dr. Mark Manary
Allen P. and Josephine B. Green Professor of Pediatric Neurology Dr. Jeff Neil
Jessie L. Ternberg, MD, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Pediatric Surgery Dr. Brad Warner
Shi Hui Huang Professor of Neurosurgery Dr. T.S. Park
Harriett B. Spoehrer Professor of Pediatrics Dr. Alan Schwartz
Blanch F. Ittleson Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics Dr. John Constantino
A. Ernest and Jane G. Stein Professor of Developmental Neurology Dr. Brad Schlaggar
Dana Brown Chair in Emergency Medicine Dr. David Jaffe Ferring Family Chair in Pediatric Cancer and Related Disorders Recruitment in Process William McKim Marriott St. Louis Children’s Hospital Professor of Pediatrics Chair Dr. Jim Keating William R. Orthwein Jr. and Laura Rand Orthwein Chair for Pediatric Anesthesiology Recruitment in Process Fred M. Saigh Distinguished Chair for Pediatric Research Dr. Mary Dinauer Ruth L. Siteman Chair in Pediatrics, supporting efforts in Childhood Infectious Disease Dr. Greg Storch Louis Larrick Ward Chair in Pediatric Cardiology Dr. George Van Hare 38 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
James P. Keating, MD, Professor of Pediatrics Dr. Aaron Hamvas Dr. Joseph B. Kimbrough Chair for Pediatric Dentistry Recruitment in Process Carol B. and Jerome T. Loeb Professor of Medicine Dr. David Murray
Donald Strominger Professor of Pediatrics Dr. Robert Strunk Park J. White, MD, Professor of Pediatrics Dr. F. Sessions Cole
The Heart of Gold Award 2011 2011 Recipient John and Julie Stupp
Previous Recipients ‘10 Harry and Sally Johnston ‘09 Alison and John Ferring ‘08 The Saigh Foundation ‘07 Anne and Doug Albrecht ‘06 Jan and Chuck Mueller ‘05 Jim and Libby McDonnell ‘04 Corie and Lou Fusz ‘03 Hale and Sally Irwin ‘02 Carol and Paul Hatfield ‘01 Ollie and Mary Langenberg ‘00 John and Sylvia Londoff ‘99 Dana Brown ‘98 Doris and Donald Schnuck ‘97 Harriet Spoehrer
The Heart of Gold Award is the hospital’s most prestigious honor. Award recipients demonstrate the highest levels of philanthropy through gifts of both time and resources. John Stupp, President of Stupp Bros., Inc., has been a longtime supporter of St. Louis Children’s Hospital. In 1978, he volunteered for the second-annual Hale Irwin Golf Tournament to benefit the hospital, and in the 23 years that followed, John worked on and played a key role in planning the event. His wife Julie signed on to help after the two married in 1983. “One year, Julie and I sorted and folded 128 golf shirts by size for distribution the following day. It was a lot of fun but tiresome, considering we had young children at home.” Several years into serving as a volunteer for the Hale Irwin Golf Tournament, John joined the Children’s Hospital Development Board and, later, the hospital’s Board of Trustees and the BJC HealthCare Board. He continues to be an active member in St. Louis Children’s Hospital Board leadership. “I have really enjoyed all my involvement with the hospital over the years. Children’s Hospital is a real gem in the BJC system, and it has reached a national level of notoriety that is well deserved.” In addition to John’s personal investment in St. Louis Children’s Hospital, his family’s company, Stupp Bros., Inc., made a significant gift in the name of John’s grandparents, Erwin and Mildred Stupp, during the building of the new hospital in the early 1980s. Since that time, most of John and Julie’s gifts have been largely unrestricted. “I am a big believer in giving funds that are unrestricted, knowing that the hospital can best determine where funds are most needed.” John and Julie are parents to five children, four of whom have needed surgeries at Children’s Hospital. “We understand the concept of giving back and hope to pass that along to our children,” says John. “This place takes incredible care of kids, and they don’t shy away from the challenges of trying to find cures and improve lives every day. If only everyone could see the way children and families are treated at this hospital, they would understand why we are so lucky to have St. Louis Children’s Hospital in our community and why it is so deserving of support.”
2011 Annual Report 39
Giving MORE Than Just Hugs Susan Bowles has been a nurse at St. Louis Children’s Hospital for 40 years. She currently works part time in General Surgery, but that’s not all. She also works as needed in the Community Education Department, helping out at various community events such as car seat and helmet checks, or CPR, baby-sitting and parenting classes. “I’ve always been interested in teaching. This opportunity ‘just happened,’ and I had to take it,” Susan says. It is clear that Susan is invested in the hospital, but it was made even clearer when she became a volunteer in Guest Services more than five years ago. Just like her opportunity to work in Community Education “just happened,” a volunteer position was presented to her by Dwayne Ingram, St. Louis Children’s Hospital’s Patient Advocacy Coordinator. “I have known Dwayne for a long time, and he asked me if I would like to work with him to help patients and families in the hospital. I couldn’t pass it up!” Susan began working with Volunteer Services, went through the orientation and started visiting families. Once a week for half the day, she is on the hospital floor—sometimes in the NICU, the hematology/oncology clinic or the General Medicine floor—saying hello to patients and families and bringing information, gifts and smiles with her.
40 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
When visiting a family, Susan Bowles has her “go-to” gifts at the hospital’s Small World Gift Shop, which include a BuildA-Bear® in scrubs, balloons and fun stuffed animals. “It’s great when you find the perfect gift, like the time I bought a huge pink dog and walked into a little girl’s hospital room to find everything was pink!”
“My favorite thing about doing this are the hugs. Sometimes, a family just really needs a hug. I hope that I can make a small difference by visiting them,” Susan says. And making a difference is what Susan is all about. Her experience as a volunteer has evolved from simply doing her Guest Services position to also becoming a part of volunteer leadership. After creating a hospital tour for guests through her position in Community Education, she decided to bring that tour to Volunteer Services. She now gives tours to new volunteers and assists with other needs during volunteer orientation. Susan credits the staff in Volunteer Services for inspiring her to give back in a more substantial way. “I love to represent the hospital, and I am proud of all the work I do,” she says. She also is rewarded for her work when she sees a patient’s or parent’s face light up. “That special moment with families doesn’t always happen, but when it does, it really touches you.”
MORE on Volunteers
736 38,173
Contributing volunteers in 2011
Volunteer hours at St. Louis Children’s Hospital in 2011
Cornbread and Children’s Hospital patient Bryn Tracy take a break to have a little fun in-studio during the 2011 Cornbread’s Kids Crusade radiothon.
Cornbread: A Devoted Voice for Children When Cornbread, the morning personality from 92.3 WIL, became a father nearly four years ago, he quickly realized the magnitude of a parent’s responsibility. “When babies are born, the weight of the world goes on parents to keep their child healthy,” he says. “Children deserve a chance at life to grow up, get their driver’s license and go to prom. While I can’t save every child, I do what I can to help with my voice, the microphone and the airways of the radio station. Raising money for Children’s Hospital is a value I hold dear.” For the past two years, Cornbread has spearheaded Cornbread’s Kids Crusade, a fundraising radiothon on 92.3 WIL to benefit St. Louis Children’s Hospital. For more than 28
hours on December 21 and 22, 2011, listeners made more than 1,300 gifts that raised $216,000 for the hospital’s Transport Team and Child Life Services programs. Sponsors were Imo’s Pizza and Johnny Londoff Chevrolet. “I wanted to help a hospital in my neighborhood,” Cornbread says. “Through the Cornbread’s Kids Crusade, we received such passionate and emotional calls from listeners about St. Louis Children’s Hospital. It always surprises me how many kids are sick out there. I was amazed by the grace and strength people have to handle their children’s illnesses.” He says the Cornbread’s Kids Crusade event has evolved more each year. “I’ll only stop when there are no sick kids left.” Cornbread frequently visits patients at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. “It’s been really fulfilling,” he says. “I get more than I give—visiting these kids makes me feel good. And I’m impressed by the caliber of the people who work there. They love what they do, and it shows. I’m just glad we have this great hospital in St. Louis in case we ever need it for my own daughter.”
2011 Annual Report 41
Your Support in 2011
$27,595,791 9,313 16,601 Total amount donors invested in 2011
Number of donors
Number of gifts
Source of Gifts
15% Corporate & Foundation
4% Children’s Miracle Network
16%
32%
Individuals
Gift Planning
16% Other*
17%
*Third-party events, general contributions, tributes, Friends and Gift Shop revenue, direct mail
Special Events
Areas Your Gift Supported
17%
3% Physician Partnerships, Staff Education & Employee Engagement
Patient & Family Care
31% Pediatric Research
24% Facilities & Equipment
25% Community Outreach 42 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Transformational Leaders for Children Transformational Leaders for Children (TLC) is a distinguished group of generous supporters whose lifetime gifts total $1 million or more. TLC members have helped transform St. Louis Children’s Hospital into one of the nation’s top pediatric hospitals. Their gifts have not only transformed the hospital, but also the lives of the children for whom we care.
Doug and Anne Albrecht Ameren Anheuser-Busch and its charitable foundation Anonymous (4) Apex Holding Company Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Bascom* Mr. and Mrs. Van-Lear Black III Boeing Company Foundation Betty Brittain Dana Brown Charitable Trust, U.S. Bank, Trustee Donald H. and Mary Jane Buchanan Foundation Joe Buck Maxine Clark and Bob Fox The Danforth Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Leo A. Drey Harry Edison Foundation Emerson John and Alison Ferring Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Fusz Jr. Eugene D. Godfrey* Daisy Gutman Estate Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Hatfield Mr. and Mrs. William F. Holekamp Sally and Hale Irwin Kenneth Koerner* Estelle Koetter Estate Kohl’s Department Stores The Kresge Foundation Mary and Oliver Langenberg*
J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation Mr. and Mrs. James S. McDonnell III Missouri Foundation for Health Jan and Chuck Mueller Chester Myers Estate Velma Neiman* Nestlé Purina PetCare Company William K. Norris* Spencer T. and Ann W. Olin Foundation Bruce and Kimberly Olson William R. Orthwein Jr. & Laura Rand Orthwein Foundation Jane K. Pelton* Ms. Rebecca Mae Robertson* Frank A. Ruf Trust* The Saigh Foundation Doris I. Schnuck Al and Ruth Siteman Sidney and Sylvia Souers Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Hermann F. Spoehrer* St. Louis Area GM Auto Dealers Stupp Bros. Bridge & Iron Co. Foundation Mr. Jack C. Taylor Michelle Trulaske Mrs. Adelaide C. Ward Eugene Wilson Estate Alan A. and Edith L. Wolff* Hugo Wurdack Trust * Deceased
Circle of Champions
Annual gifts of $25,000 or greater Alberici Healthcare Constructors Doug and Anne Albrecht Ameren Anheuser-Busch Companies, Inc. Anonymous (3) Andrew and Renee Bell Mr. and Mrs. Van-Lear Black III Dana Brown Charitable Trust, U.S. Bank, Trustee Donald H. and Mary Jane Buchanan Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Burdick Children’s Miracle Network of Greater St. Louis City of St. Louis Department of Health Jim and Stacy Cooper Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Diemer Eldora Speedway, Inc. (Prelude to the Dream) Emerson Enterprise Holdings Foundation Express Scripts Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Jeffry M. Faust John and Alison Ferring Rosemary Finn Memorial Fund The Sean Glanvill Research Fund Mr. Mario Gleijeses Mr. James C. Gould Dr. Virginia Hagemann Hager Companies Mr. Mark R. Hanneke Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Hatfield Hauck Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. William F. Holekamp Hope on Wheels Hyundai Dealers Mr. and Mrs. Henry O. Johnston William T. Kemper Foundation, Commerce Bank Trustee Katie and Don Klingler Kohl’s Department Stores 2011 Annual Report 43
McCarthy Building Companies, Inc. Ms. Karen S. Sauder and Mr. John F. McDonagh III Mr. and Mrs. James S. McDonnell III Mr. and Mrs. Nathan McKean Mercury Communications, LLC Becky and Tim Meyer Mr. and Mrs. Jason R. Mills Missouri Jack, LLC Virginia Winter-Moellenhoff Catherine and Birch Mullins Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Nix Jr. North American Dining, LLC
Mr. and Mrs. James G. Koman
Kate and Dale Cammon
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Lester Jennie Mallinckrodt Endowment Fund
CFC Gateway Combined Federal Campaign
March to the Arch
Maxine Clark and Bob Fox
Bruce and Kimberly Olson
Missouri Foundation for Health
Mr. Robert G. Clark
Missouri Professionals Mutual and the Timothy H. Trout Family
Covidien
P&G Fund of the Greater Cincinnati Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. John D. O’Hara R. Joseph Olk, MD
The P.A.I.G.E. Foundation
Jan and Chuck Mueller
Caleb C. and Julia W. Dula Educational and Charitable Foundation
Nestlé Purina PetCare Company
Edward Jones
Linda and Matt Renner
Anita and John O’Connell
Explosive Professionals Midwest, Inc.
Cleaves and Mae Rhea Foundation
William R. Orthwein Jr. & Laura Rand Orthwein Foundation
Mr. Patrick Fahey
Mr. Carl A. Rhodes
Paric Corporation
Mr. and Mrs. David C. Farrell
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Ross
Gary and Karman Parker
Lee and Barb Fetter
Thomas and Stephanie Schmidt
Peabody Energy
Mr. and Mrs. Steven A. Fischer
Todd and Julie Schnuck
Mr. Louis A. Russo
Mrs. Solon Gershman
Schnuck Markets, Inc.
The Saigh Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Goldstein
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Sehnert
Mr. Joseph and Dr. Carlotta Sansone
Dr. and Mrs. Aaron B. Greenspan
Glenda and James Seldin
Mark and Stephanie Schnuck
Mr. and Mrs. Darren L. Haar
Mike and Paula Shanahan Family
Scott and Julie Schnuck
Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Hadfield
JoAnn and Don Shaw
Terry and Sally Schnuck
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Harbison
Susan and David Sherman III
Carol and Rick Short
Hautly Cheese Company
Sigma-Aldrich
St. Louis County Fair, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Hermann Jr.
Simmons Charitable Foundation
Michelle Trulaske
Martha W. Hillman
Mr. and. Mrs. Joseph R. Sivewright
Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Tschudy
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Hogan
Slackers, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond R. Van de Riet Jr.
Hogan Transportation Companies
Jill and Martin Sneider
Dr. and Mrs. David Holley
The Solae Company
Walgreens Drug Stores
Ryann Hope Foundation
Dr. and Mrs. Randall S. Sterkel
Wells Fargo Advisors
Mr. and Mrs. R. Christopher Imbs
Linda and Peter Werner
Mr. and Mrs. Hale S. Irwin
Rabbis Susan Talve and James Goodman
Sandi Young
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Johnson III Simon and Francine Katz Mr. and Mrs. Jerald L. Kent
Tarlow Family Foundation Tarlton Corporation Heather & Chris Thompson Trudy Busch Valentine, RN
Circle of Care
Mr. Robert Klopmeyer
Annual gifts of $10,000 - $24,999
Mr. and Mrs. Jon D. Knauss
Variety, the Children’s Charity of St. Louis
Mary and Oliver Langenberg Aetna Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian A. Walk
Julie and Rich Ledbetter
Anonymous (3)
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer T. Walker
Susan and Steven Lipstein
Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Albrecht
Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Walsh Jr.
Lockton Companies
American Direct Marketing, Inc.
Drs. Brad and Barbara Warner
John Allan Love Charitable Foundation
Janice and Jack Bailey
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A.
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin A. Maher
Brent Bergheger Chrysler Dodge, Inc. Golf Tournament
Barbara and Richard Mahoney
Mr. Kelvin R. Westbrook and Ms. Valerie D. Bell
Lisa and Greg Boyce
Mama Campisi’s Restaurante Janie Marie Memorial Golf Tournament
Joe Buck
Maritz
Cadan’s Carnival for CDH Awareness
Tracey and William Marshall
44 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Kelly and John Whicker W. Grant Williams III Herbert A. and Adrian W. Woods Foundation
Circle of Promise
Annual gifts of $5,000 - $9,999
Mr. Albert F. Metzger Rick and Sue Meyer Dr. Steven B. Miller and Dr. Victoria J. Fraser
Abt Associates Inc.
Mississippi Lime Company
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Alexander
Ms. Martha J. Mitchell
Mr. Joel Allen and Mrs. Susan Taylor Allen
Ms. Rebecca R. Morrissey
Anonymous
Murphy Company
Arch Coal, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Parish Jr.
BAaware Corporation
Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Perry
Jackie and Randy Baker
Peters Family Charitable Fund
Ms. Katherine Button Bell
Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Pflager III
Bellwether Foundation
Mrs. Ralph E. Piper
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Bloom
Poltronieri Tang & Associates
Dana Brown Charitable Trust Foundation
Louie and Catherine Ponder
Brown Shoe Company Charitable Trust
Betty J. Moses
Doug and Kathy Pope
Averi Budde Foundation
Rawlings Sporting Goods Company, Inc.
Mr. Adolphus A. Busch IV
Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Ray
Mrs. Gertrude Busch
Mr. Eric J. Schaefer
Mr. Dan Creston
Mrs. Edward J. Schnuck
The Cup LLC
Mr. and Mrs. Greg G. Schuler
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen E. Cupples
Mark Sneider
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher P. Dorr
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Specker
Edison Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. David R. Spence
Mr. and Mrs. David G. Eichhorn
St. Louis Blues
Emmis Communications Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. Fisher
State Farm Insurance Columbia Operations Center
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey L. Fox
Stifel Nicolaus Operations Group
Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Frey
Suntrup Automotive Group
Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Fusz III
Mr. James Traube
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. George
The Jacob Urschler Foundation
Peggy and Richard Gordin
US Bank North America
Peggy and Mark Griege
Walsh Ridenour Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel T. Guirl
Wells Fargo Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Holland
Ms. Patricia D. Whitaker and Mr. Dick Miles
Suzanne and Tom Hough Illinois Jack, LLC Mr. and Mrs. Webb K. Kane
Circle of Hope
Annual gifts of $2,500 - $4,999 Frank Adam Foundation, Guaranty Trust Co. of Missouri, Trustee Mr. Barry Albrecht Alive Media Group LLC Anonymous (2) Mr. and Mrs. J. Douglas Audiffred B.A. Cure Mr. Turner Baur Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey A. Biskup In memory of Rosetta Cain Mr. and Mrs. Ferman Carrillo Dr. and Mrs. Richard Chole City of St. Charles, Missouri Ralph A. and Rhonda Coers The Commerce Trust Company Community Health Charities of Kansas & Missouri Mr. Thomas G. Connelly Cathy and Dave Cortright Dr. William H. Danforth Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Davidson Jeffrey L. Dee Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. Demzik Mr. and Mrs. Ken J. Elkins Employees Community Fund of Build-A-Bear Workshop James and Karla Endicott Esse Health Fifth Third Bank First Bank First National Bank of St. Louis Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. Fusz Sr. Charles and Barbara Galli Mr. and Mrs. Steven E. Garlock
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Wood Jr.
Mr. Larry Goodwin
The Suzanne Feld Zalk Charitable Trust
Goodwin Brothers Construction Co.
Joni and Drew Karandjeff Mrs. Helene B. Keller Whitney Kenter Kids Helping Kids Fix Broken Hearts Mr. and Mrs. Matthew E. Kopsky Mr. and Mrs. George W. Krull Jr. Laclede Gas Charitable Trust Mr. and Mrs. John W. Lemkemeier Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Lintz Mr. Kent M. Lion Constance Lohr The Lowenbaum Partnership, LLC Lucas Flint Fund LUXCO Macy’s Larry E. and Rebecca A. Mayer Mr. and Mrs. Gregory G. McKee
2011 Annual Report 45
Ms. Zoe Haemer Mr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Hager Mr. and Mrs. R. Dwight Hardin Andy and Anita Higginbotham Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Holton Mr. and Mrs. George J. Holway Mr. and Mrs. James V. Host Impact Group Charitable Foundation Interim Physicians, LLC Mrs. James L. Johnson Jr. Mary Ranken & Ettie A. Jordan Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Timothy T. Kalinowski Donamay and Bob King Mr. and Mrs. William J. Koman Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Kranzberg Mr. Joseph Kronsberg Luke Team Benefit Fund
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Wilson
Lee Bohm
Mrs. Colleen McMillan
Caroline and Fritz Zaegel
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Boldt
Mr. Fernando Merce
Jane Zbinden
Dr. Keith H. Bridwell
Mid-America Transplant Services
Mr. and Mrs. Ted C. Brogden
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew E. Miller
Lauren Broughton
Circle of Love
Mr. Robert L. Burg
Annual gifts of $1,000 - $2,499
Billy and Christi Busch and Family
Omniflight Helicopters, Inc.
A. Friends’ Foundation Trust
Cardinals Care
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Painter
Advanced Environmental Services, Inc.
Cards for Causes, LLC
John G. Peluso Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry G. Albright
Casco Corporation
Mr. Michael R. Perry
Mr. and Mrs. Gary R. Aldenderfer
Casey-Westfield Jr. High
Piper Jaffray
Mr. H. McKinnon Allman
Cassidy Turley
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Polk Jr.
Anonymous (7)
Charitable Auto Resources Inc.
Prince Hall Grand Masonic Lodge
Mr. and Mrs. John Anthon
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Chelew
Puttin for Down Syndrome
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Arnoldy
Club Fitness
Ralcorp Holdings, Inc.
Arthritis Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Cohen
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Ray Jr.
Norman D. & Marie L. Atkins Charitable Trust
Mississippi River Car Show Don and Sally Morton Mr. and Mrs. R. Gordon Myers
Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Robertson Rock Hill Mechanical Corp. Dr. and Mrs. Perry L. Schoenecker Scottrade Inc. Sean’s Trail Run Sigma Phi Epsilon Smiles for Life Foundation Tom and Ruth Sobbe Soft Surroundings Southern Real Estate & Financial Company
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Cahalin
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Baer Bill Bahn Memorial - Lardy Classic Bank of America Mr. and Mrs. Osamah Barakat Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Barr Charles and Christina Bascom Mr. and Mrs. Andrew S. Baur Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. Baur Mr. and Mrs. John P. Beauchamp
Ms. Jennifer R. Cole Color Art Integrated Interiors, LLC Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Condie Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Cook Mr. and Mrs. S. Bryan Cook Rosemary Kohn Cooper Mr. and Mrs. John R. Costello Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cranston Mr. and Mrs. Donald Danforth III Mr. Robert Danis
Deborah and Flip Becker
Danny’s Dream – Mr. and Mrs. James C. Wiley IV
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Spagnuolo
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Behan Sr.
Jennifer and Stephen Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Steussie
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Behnke
Mr. and Mrs. Ryan S. Davis
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Stiften
Belle-Clair Speedway
Mr. Ryan DeGrand
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew C. Taylor
Mr. Edwin Benn
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Desloge
Trainwreck West, Inc.
Ms. Allison Benz
Mr. and Mrs. William O. DeWitt III
UMB Bank, N.A.
Mr. and Mrs. Barry Beracha
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Dimit
U.S. Steel Corporation Granite City Works Employees’ Torch Club
Mr. and Mrs. James G. Berges
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Dolson
Kathleen and Kip Bilderback
John and Libby Donnell
Washington University Genetics
Bluegrass Area Modified Midgets
Dr. and Mrs. Joshua L. Dowling
Weber Granite City Chevrolet Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J. Blumeyer
Mr. and Mrs. Leo A. Drey
Ron Wick and Pam Sheppard
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bock
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Drury III
46 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
In loving memory of Steven Howell
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Maher
Mr. and Mrs. Drew Dubray
Dr. and Mrs. Keith A. Hruska
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Majzun
Mr. and Mrs. Scott M. Dutcher
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Huber
Maplewood Bicycle
Dynegy Foundation
Michael and Barbara Hurst
Dr. Kenneth R. Mares
Dwight D. Eisenhower Elementary School
Mr. Aaron Hyland
Sawyer Marglous Foundation
Gary C. Imo Memorial Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Margulis
Mr. Trevor Ellerbrake
Mr. and Ms. Harry F. Imster Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Mark
Mr. Dave Elliott
John Louis, Inc.
Richard J. Mark
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Elliott Jr.
Johnny Londoff Chevrolet
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn J. Markwort
Eric and Jill Endicott
Mr. and Mrs. David M. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Marquitz
Mr. Richard G. Engelsmann
Mr. and Mrs. D. Scott Johnson
Tim and Jan Marshall
Eric Felty Design Inc.
Jeff and Carrie Johnson
Essman Family Charitable Foundation
Mr. Robert F. Johnston
In honor and memory of Derek D. Martin
Dr. Ron and Hanna Evens
Mr. Adam Jokisch
Dr. and Mrs. John D. McAllister
Michael L. Ewald
Ms. Laurie L. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. McClanathan
Exotic Motors Midwest
Mrs. Marianne Jones
Emmy and Alan McClelland
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Fahnestock
Mr. Wesley M. Jones and Ms. Nancy J. Ylvisaker
Mr. and Mrs. John F. McDonnell
Suzanne Fontaine Mr. M. Rankine Forrester
Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Kalsbeek
Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. McKee III
Mr. and Mrs. Lucien R. Fouke Jr.
KCI Enterprises, Inc.
Dr. Robert C. McKinstry
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Fox
Kellsie’s Hope Foundation, Inc.
Mrs. Carrie McLean
Drury Hotels Company
Mr. and Mrs. Chase McKeague
Mr. Merry B. Franklin
Drs. J. Andrew and Susan Kendig
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. McMillin
The Fraternal Order of Eagles
Mr. and Mrs. John Kester
Mr. and Mrs. John C. McPheeters
Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Freeman
Mr. Stephen Kiewiet
Mended Hearts Gateway Chapter 120
Fresh Art Photography
Mrs. Madeleine Kimbrell
Dr. and Mrs. J. Neal Middelkamp
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth R. Fritz
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas O. Kirberg
Andrew and Denise Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Fromm
Knights of Columbus
J. Ben Miller
Full Moon Saloon Car Show
Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. Koch
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Miller
Mr. Anthony C. Fulton
Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Kolman
Missouri Valley Glass Co., Inc.
Funtyme Limousine LLC
Mr. Christopher O. Koon and Mrs. LisaRose Williamson-Koon
Monarch Metals, Inc.
Kozeny-Wagner, Inc.
Ms. Priscilla Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kramer
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Morley
Ms. Diana J. Kraus
Mrs. David Moulton
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart J. Krawll
Harry and Genie Mueller
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Kurtz
Don C. Musick Construction
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kusterer
Michael and Kay Neal
Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. LaBrier
Never Enough, LLC
Woody and Heather Lalumondiere
New Outlook Pioneers
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Layhew
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew E. Newman
Mr. and Mrs. Randall T. Graham Jr.
Sally and Ned Lemkemeier
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. David Griege
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel R. Leritz
Niehaus Construction Services, Inc.
Grisanti Brown & Partners LLC
The Leritz Company, Incorporated
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Nouss Jr.
Gross Mechanical Contractors, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. David B. Lewis
Grossman Iron & Steel Company
Life Skills Foundation
Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Grubb Jr.
Lindberg Waterproofing, Inc.
Hayden Wrecking Corporation
Mr. and Mrs. Mark J. LoCigno
Helmkamp Construction Company
Mr. Stephen H. Loeb
Kay Heeren Gaines Mr. Robert L. Garven Mr. and Mrs. D. Bruce Geary Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey S. Geile The Gentsch Family Jerome and Catherine Gidlow Paul and Susan K. Goldberg Mr. and Mrs. Graham Goldwasser Mr. Stephen Goold and Ms. Elizabeth Holman-Goold
Dr. and Mrs. John C. Herweg
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Longenecker
Hill-Rom
Longstreet Grill
Gary and Mimi Hirshberg
Dr. and Mrs. Maurice J. Lonsway Jr.
HM Capital Management, LLC
Lou Budke’s Arrow Finance Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Holley
Joseph G. Lunt
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Holley
Lutz Agency, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Horner Mr. and Mrs. Michael Horwitz Mr. and Mrs. John M. Howell Jr.
2011 Annual Report 47
Mr. Joseph O’Brien
Mr. Alexander Schoch
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis D. O’Neill
Mr. Albert F. Schoendienst
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Odenwald Mr. Tim J. Oleary
Dr. Alan L. Schwartz and Ms. Judy Child
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Oliver
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore F. Schwartz
Jim Trenary Automotive Group
Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Orchard
John and Sharon Scott
Frank and Mary Trulaske
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher D. Orthwein
Mr. Barry Seidel
Mr. and Mrs. Mike E. Uhl
Ms. Madeleine R. Ortman
Mr. and Mrs. Coleman Sheehan
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Owens
Shop ‘N Save Warehouse Foods
Drs. Middy Estabrook and George Van Hare
Pace Properties, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Sippy
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas M. Vanderslice
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Painter
Mr. and Mrs. David D. Sliney
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Parish
SNR Denton US, LLP
Jack and Suzy Villa Charitable Foundation
Dr. Meera Patel and Mr. James Penilla
Mary Beth and Allen Soffer
Ms. Melody Patterson
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. Spirn
Mr. and Mrs. Sean M. Patty
Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. St. Cin Sr.
Rick and Linda Pearce
Julie and Doug Stanley
Mr. and Mrs. Gary S. Perotti
John L. and Bet J. Stapleton
Mrs. Marian Phelps
The Starlight Group, LLC
Post Pack & Ship
Mr. Alexander L. Steen
PRO Rehab, P.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Steinberg
Puxico R-8 Schools
Phil and Leslie Steinmeyer
Ms. Elizabeth Reckers
Marcella and Greg Stevens
Mrs. Kristin L. Redington
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Stevens
Julie and Paul Reinke
Marilyn and Layton Stewart
Rhodey Construction, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Stolze
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Rice
St. Louis Cardinals
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Virant Jr. Mr. Adalbert von Gontard III Mr. Patrick von Gontard Mr. and Mrs. Percy von Gontard Mr. David T. Wade Wal-Mart Store #1177 Mr. Harvey N. Wallace and Ms. Madeleine Elkins Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Watkins Mr. Todd Weaver Mr. and Mrs. James J. Welch Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Werner Mr. Jerry West Dr. Andrew J. White and Dr. Hilary M. Babcock
Dr. and Mrs. K. Daniel Riew
Ed and Ruth Streit
Dr. and Mrs. Neil H. White
Roberts Tower Company, LLC
Stupp Bros. Bridge & Iron Co. Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Dave P. Wickness
Jan and Buck Rogers
Dr. and Mrs. Stuart C. Sweet
Dr. Joan L. Rosenbaum and Mr. Matthew S. Bosner
Mrs. Suzanne Swoboda
Alan and Donna Rosenberg
T.J. Wies Contracting, Inc.
Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Rothbaum
Kathi and Ken Tacony
Rothman Furniture Stores
Talbert Industrial Commercial Services
Mr. Joseph Rousseau
Taylor Leasing Company
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm T. Royse
Tchoukaleff Kelly Hartke Associates
Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Ryan
Thompson Coburn LLP
Sachs Electric Company
Dr. Jean Holowach Thurston
Jenny and Mark Sadow
Mary A.T. Tillman, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Sansone Sr.
Betty Ann Keller Timmer
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred N. Saunders
Tin Mill Brewery
Mr. and Mrs. Matt Sauter
Mr. Robert A. Tisone
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Schneider
Mr. Sean Tracey
48 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Williams Mr. Matthew Williams Mrs. Oscar Edward Williamson Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Wolff Dr. Gerald and Sandra Wool Mr. Michael Yoon Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Young Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Zaitz William J. Zickel Company Dr. Janice E. Zuke and Mr. Mark A. Zuke
Stars Society The members of the Children’s Stars Society have made a commitment to remember St. Louis Children’s Hospital in their estate plans. Their foresight and planning have created legacies of hope that shine on children like stars in the sky, turning compassion into action, transforming hope into healing. These people have chosen to share a portion of their life’s work with children. We gratefully acknowledge their inspiring leadership. Dorothy and Bill Albers in memory of K. Susie Martin Mr. and Mrs. H. Dieter Ambos Mary Ann and William Anderson Anonymous (36) Janice and Jack Bailey Mr. Raymond Battaglia Mr. and Mrs. James G. Berges Kathleen W. Bilderback Milford and Lee Bohm Charitable Foundation Betty Brittain Marcella J. Brown Robert P. Bruns Donald H. and Mary Jane Buchanan Foundation Vincent and Anne Cannella Mark H. Critchfield Leo and Kay Drey Marilyn Eisen John and Alison Ferring Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Fusz Jr. Ms. Kay H. Gaines Susan Goddard
Alison and Paul Gonzalez
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Schneck
Dorothy Gould Barbara Grace
Robert E. Schoor and Joan Luttig Schoor
Dr. Virginia Hagemann
John and Sharon Scott
Mark R. Hanneke
Pearl A. Sellenriek
Dorothy M. Hanpeter
Carol and Rick Short
Lewis T. Hardy
Mabel B. Smartt
Zena Hellman
Douglas and Julie Stanley
The Robert & Signa Hermann Endowment Fund in Honor of Lilly Busch Hermann and Vernon Lynch Merrill
Audrey and John Steinfeld
Dr. and Mrs. John Herweg Jean and Wells Hobler Brian and Kristen Hogan Gerald and Carol Holmdahl Kimberly A. Hume
Gene L. and Mariam F. Steward Laura Trowbridge Mat Madison Turner Anthony and Angeline Venegoni John A. Vogler Kelly and John Whicker Adrian W. Woods
Arvalla Jaycox Mr. and Mrs. James L. Johnson III Mr. and Mrs. Henry O. Johnston
Trust Gifts
Robert Klopmeyer
Robert A. Barnes Fund
Mr. Stephen H. Loeb
Tom W. Bennett Trust
Hubert P. Macklin
William K. Bixby Trust
Kenneth R. Mares
Kennard Trust
Mr. and Mrs. James S. McDonnell III
Hubert P. Macklin Charitable Trust
Sheryl and Jim Miller
Jennie Mallinckrodt Endowment Fund
Virginia Winter-Moellenhoff
Marco Matranga Estate
Betty Cook Moses
John L. Messmore Fund
Jan and Chuck Mueller Pearl Mueller
William R. Orthwein Jr. & Laura Rand Orthwein Foundation
Jerry and Linda Musselman
Ridge Farm Fund
Ms. Byrd Dell Ohning
Frank Ruf Estate
Mr. Warren L. Opfer and Mr. Edward B. Rensing
Elsie Schumacher Estate Sidney & Sylvia Souers Foundation
Jerome B. Osherow
Florence E. Wamser Trust
W.R. Persons Charitable Trust Lou Politte Steven and Marsha Puro
Bequests – Estate Gifts
Jan Rogers Elizabeth Russell Leon J. and Eula M. Schmidt
Charles and Muriel Bailey Fern E. Benetti C. June Bisplinghoff Julius D. and Martha L. Blanke Trust Ruth C. Brink Marcella J. Brown Lorraine S. Butler George D’Arcy Barbara Grace Russell and Dolores Guese Trust Marcella Hager Norma M. Heim Johne E. Kaiser Grace Reavis Dorothy J. Scott Audrey J. and John Steinfeld Trust Alan A. and Edith L. Wolff
2011 Annual Report 49
Michael Dietrich Fuse and Michael Presley Fuse Fund Megan Spitzer Gidlow Neonatal Fund Susan K. Goddard Nursing Scholarship Fund Margaret and Daniel Good Endowment for the Children’s Discovery Institute Goodwin Brothers Construction Company Endowment Fund for Children’s Hospital Wish List Great Clips Endowment Fund for the Needs of Transplant Patients and Their Families Greenspan Family Endowment Adele K. and Bernard B. Gross Fund for Research on Children’s Crippling Diseases
Endowment Funds Established at St. Louis Children’s Hospital with gifts or commitments of $25,000 or more
Children’s Discovery Institute Endowment for Lung & Respiratory Support
97.1 FM Talk Radio Endowment for St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Chad Crandall Endowment Fund for Children’s Cancer Research
George Achuff Memorial Fund for Cardiology
Creston Fund for St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Ed, Marian, Kate and Mikki Alexander Fund for Child Life Services
Owen Gregory Curtis Fund for the Newborn Intensive Care Unit
Allgaier Family Endowment Fund in memory of Edwin F. Allgaier Sr., Dorothy Allgaier and Edwin F. Allgaier Jr.
Benjamin B. and Jessie L. Dennis Fund
Anonymous Wings and Bereavement Endowment Fund Arhaus Free Care for Kids Fund Joseph H. and Elizabeth E. Bascom Fund Bedel Greenhouse Fund Berges Endowment Fund for Congenital Heart Disease Brent Bergheger Family Endowment Fund for Cancer Research William K. Bixby Fund Julia Kimball Bramman Fund for the Research of Congenital Heart Disease Mary and Robert Bronstein Fund for Pediatric Lymphoma Marcella June Brown Endowment for Children Paul Brown Fund Corbin Joe Burdick Fund for Lung Transplant Burn and Wound C.A.R.E. (Children Advocacy - Research - Education) Fund Carl Busch Fund James Gay Butler Fund Kate & Dale Cammon Endowment Fund for the Children’s Discovery Institute Theron E. Catlin Fellowship Children’s Cancer Fund
50 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Children’s Transplant Fund
Max Deutch Memorial Library Fund
Steven Howard Gutman Memorial Fund Hadfield Family Endowment for Children’s Hospital Ann and Elwood Hamsher Fund for Child Advocacy and Outreach Lillian C. Harris Endowment Fund for Neonatology Carol and Paul Hatfield Endowment for the Cerebral Palsy Sports and Rehabilitation Programs Robert and Signa Hermann Fund in Honor of Lilly Busch Hermann and Vernon Lynch Merrill
Development Board Endowment Fund for the Joint Adventures Camp
Judith Ann Herweg Endowment Fund
Development Board Endowment Fund for Music Therapy
Douglass D. Horner Pediatric Hospice Endowment Fund
Diemer Fund for Brain Tumor Research
Hale Irwin Endowed Fund for Children with Cancer
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Donnell Fund
Lara and Jay Holley Fund
Caleb C. and Julia W. Dula Educational and Charitable Foundation Fund for Congenital Heart Disease
Johnston Family Charitable Trust Endowment
Paige Lynn Dunaway Endowment for Lung & Respiratory Research
Justincredible Gifts Endowment Fund
Harry C. Josephson Fund
Celia Mary Eisen Fund
Maurice J. Keller, MD COPE Award Endowment
Emerson Fund for the Children’s Center for Congenital Heart Disease
Katie and Don Klingler Endowment Fund for Cancer Research
Faust Family Endowment
Koerner Family Fund for Indigent Care
Julie and Jamie Finger Fund for the Children’s Center for Lung and Respiratory Disorders
Kohl’s Department Stores Fund for Car Seat Safety
Rosemary Finn Oncology Endowment Fund Earl Frank and Marcella J. Brown Memorial Endowment for Cardiology Earl Frank and Marcella J. Brown Memorial Endowment for Neurology Ted W. Frey Fund for Social Services
Jennifer and James Koman Art and Expressive Therapy Fund Berkley Williamson Koon Heart Fund Mary and Oliver Langenberg Endowment Fund to benefit Children’s Congenital Heart Center L.E.A.R. Endowment Fund Debbie Koritz Lefton Fund for Children
Carol Sue Ross Friedman Children’s Endowment Fund
Elsa Lemp Fund
Friends of St. Louis Children’s Hospital Endowment Fund for Camp Rhythm
Elizabeth Anne Levy Newborn Library Fund
Friends of St. Louis Children’s Hospital Fund for Free Care
Stephen H. and Carol T. Loeb Indigent Care Fund
Friends of St. Louis Children’s Hospital Nursing Opportunities Fund
Jason Lohr Fund for Children’s Hospital Maher Family Endowment Fund
March to the Arch Endowment Fund
Mildred Wamser Fund
Dr. Kenneth R. Mares Children’s Endowment Fund
Daniel Scott Wiley Newborn Intensive Care Unit Endowment Fund
Margolis Family Oncology Endowment Fund
Ann Elizabeth Wilson Endowment Fund for Dialysis Services
Maritz Endowment Fund for Children’s Education
John and Minnie K. Winter Fund for Children
Maritz Endowment Fund for Children’s Literacy
Alan A. and Edith L. Wolff Endowment Fund
Maritz Endowment Fund for the Sibling Playroom
Henry Wood Fund Hugo Wurdack Fund
Larry and Becky Mayer Endowment Fund
Bruce K. Young Fund for Cancer Research
Aida Mayham Fund McCulloch/Beggs Plastic Surgery Fund Luke Nathan McKean Endowment Fund William Whitaker Meyer Endowment Fund for Plastic Surgery Bobby Miller Endowed Fund for Cystic Fibrosis Family Care Sheryl and Jim Miller Fund for Respiratory Disorders Morris Family Endowment Fund for Brain Tumor Support Jan and Chuck Mueller Endowment Fund for the Congenital Heart Disease Center Emanuel and Lillie Myers Fund Chip in for Children and Hailey Jane Norman Endowment Fund for Congenital Heart Disease William K. Norris Endowment John O’Connell Endowment Fund for Clown Docs Lucille Kurusz Osterkamp Endowment Fund for Free Care Owens Family Endowment for Music Therapy Martha Parsons Free Hospital Fund Peabody Energy Corporation Endowment W.R. “Buck” Persons Endowment Fund Pope Family Fund for Congenital Heart Disease Greg Primo Pediatric Neurocritical Care Fund Pryor Family Fund Nancy A. Ross, RN Nursing Awards Endowment Fred M. Saigh Endowed Fund for Preventive Health Care Barbara J. and James A. Saitz Endowment Fund for the Children’s Discovery Institute Sara Lee Endowment Fund for Congenital Heart Support for the Children’s Discovery Institute Drew Schmidt Children’s Bereavement Fund
Special Events JoAnn and Don Shaw Endowment Fund for the Children’s Discovery Institute, specifically for the Children’s Cancer Center Shoebox Endowment Fund Eleanor Shoenberg Children’s Wish Fund Short Family Endowment Fund for the Cure of Musculoskeletal Diseases
Table Tops Spring Event More than 700 women attended this unique luncheon and shopping experience at The RitzCarlton, where more than 65 of St. Louis’ finest boutiques, florists and designers decorated tables.
W.H. and Ellen Smith Fund Martin K. and Jill F. Sneider Endowment Fund for the Children’s Congenital Heart Center within the Children’s Discovery Institute
Platinum Heart Partner
George E. Southwick Fund
Gold Heart Partner
Paige Sandra Marie Suter Fund for the Pediatric Neurocritical Care
Miss Elaine Inc.
Solae, LLC
Robert and Sylvia Spector Fund
Silver Heart Partners
Spoehrer Development Fund
ELCO Chevrolet Cadillac
Jean Adamson Stanley Endowment Fund for Neonatology
Ralcorp Holdings
Connor Liam Stapleton Fund for Congenital Heart Disease
Bronze Heart Partners
Tony Stewart Endowment for the Pediatric Neurocritical Care Program at St. Louis Children’s Hospital
The Leritz Company Inc.
Butch Suntrup Family Endowment
Stephen Barr
Benton Taylor Family Fund for Newborn Medicine
Color Art Integrated Interiors, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack E. Thomas Fund for the Children’s Discovery Institute Heather and Chris Thompson Family Fund
kci Enterprises/ DBA Sylvan Learning Three French Hens
Drury Hotels Company
Red Heart Partners Faultless Healthcare Linen
Toyota Art Therapy Fund
Mark and Debbi Mehlman
Transport Team Fund
Cedar Creek Conference Center
Michelle K. Trulaske Endowment for Youth Leadership
CDG Engineers
Len and Karen Ruzicka
Michelle K. Trulaske Fund for the Cure of Musculoskeletal Diseases Turken Family Fund for Children’s Health Jacob Urschler Memorial Fund
Doris and Donald Schnuck Fund for Children in Need
Van de Riet Family Endowment for the Children’s Center for Lung and Respiratory Disorders
Estelle and Bernard Schwartzman Lectureship Fund
John K. Wallace Fund
Veeter Fund
2011 Annual Report 51
Young Friends Cocktails and Clowns More than 400 people gathered at the MOTO Museum for an entertaining night of music, fun and friends. Major Sponsors Cassidy Turley First Bank Jim Trenary Chevrolet John Louis Inc. Koch Development Sigma Aldrich
Event Sponsors Behr, McCarter & Potter, PC E&E Enterprise Group Fromm Family Foundation Greensfelder, Hemker, and Gale Hancock Investment Advisors LLC Ivy Hill The Sibbernsen Family
11th Annual Joe Buck Golf Classic
St. Louis favorite Joe Buck hosted his annual dinner and golf tournament at Old Warson Country Club. Major Sponsors Albrecht Family Foundation Bud Light
Ace Sponsor Nestlé Purina PetCare Company
Eagle Sponsors Alberici Healthcare BJC HealthCare Bodley Group Enterprise Holdings Foundation Lockton Companies John and Anita O’Connell R. Joseph Olk, MD, The Retina Center of St. Louis Co.
Laclede Gas Company
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Johnson III
Lou Fusz Automotive Network
The Lowenbaum Partnership
Rawlings Sporting Goods
Luxco
St. Louis Blues
Macy’s
Par Sponsors NewSpace, Inc. St. Louis Cardinals
National Real Estate Management Corporation Nestlé Purina PetCare Company Dave and Suzie Spence Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., Inc. Thompson Street Capital Partners
28 Annual St. Louis Children’s Hospital Day at Six Flags th
The park closed early so 3,600 special guests could enjoy a catered dinner, free snacks and a night of riding their favorite rides with no lines.
Supporters Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Albrecht Butler’s Pantry CapitalSource Chill Cool Frozen Yogurt The Commerce Trust Company Emmis Communications Hager Companies
Presenting Sponsors
Hauck Charitable Foundation
Missouri Professionals Mutual
Hautly Cheese Company
Wells Fargo Advisors
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Polk Jr. PRORehab
Patrons
Repco Graphics Inc.
Aero Charter, Inc.
Tarlton
Aetna
Truffles Restaurant
Dr. Brown’s Natural Flow Enterprise Holdings Foundation
Friends
Huntleigh McGehee
Cardinals Care
Pershing Charitable Trust
Matthew and Melissa Sauter
Todd and Julie Schnuck
Mr. and Mrs. David D. Sliney
The John and Trudy Valentine Family
SNR Denton Thompson Coburn LLP
Peabody Energy
Sponsors Golf Cart Sponsor
Alpha Packaging
In-Kind Donors
Schnuck Markets
Castle Contracting LLC
Anheuser-Busch Companies
Clayco, Inc.
Craftsmen Industries
Birdie Sponsors
Fox Family Foundation
J. Buck’s Restaurant
Center Oil Co.
Harbison Corporation
Six Flags St. Louis
Fifth Third Bank
Hermann Companies
Stolze Print Company
Harbison Corporation
Hogan Transportation Companies
52 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Young Friends Kickball for a Cause More than 400 people and 37 teams enjoyed a day of playing kickball in Clayton’s Shaw Park. Grand Slam Brown Shoe Sigma Aldrich
Home Run Richard and Nancy Arnoldy First Bank Merrill Lynch
Base Kick Dan and Barbara Ball Enterprise Bank and Trust Jeff and Anne Geile
Purina
Paric Corporation
Wells Fargo
Rhodey Construction, Inc.
Contributing Benefactors
Zickel Flooring
Arch Coal, Inc. ELCO Chevrolet
KIDstruction Week Companies
Enterprise Holdings Foundation
CK Power
Hermann Companies
Drilling Service Company
Miss Elaine, Inc.
Environmental Operations, Inc.
Peabody Energy
Fred M. Luth & Sons, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Pope
Grant Contracting Co., Inc.
Event Sponsors Build-A-Bear Workshop Foundation
Kaemmerlen Electric Company
Suzanne and Jim Johnson
Marcal Rope & Rigging, Inc.
Scottrade
McGrath & Associates, Inc.
Sparkling Spitfire TWIGS
Midwest Aerials & Equipment, Inc.
KIDstruction Week More than 1,400 employees and tradespersons in the construction industry contributed $1 or more to Children’s Hospital via payroll deduction for each hour they worked during this week in May 2011.
Major Underwriter Ameren Corporation
Contributing Underwriters Centric Group Waterhout Construction
Major Benefactors Alberici Healthcare Crane Agency
Horizon Engineering Johnson Controls, Inc.
Tarlton Corporation
This beautiful black-tie event hosted more than 400 of St. Louis’ finest at The Fabulous Fox Theatre.
Guarantee Electrical Company
BCD Meetings & Incentives
Mike and Lynne Owens
Carousel Gala
Rock Hill Mechanical Corp.
KIDstruction Week Cornerstone Companies
National Association of Women in Construction St. Louis Chapter S.M. Wilson & Co. Sachs Electric Company Sachs Steel & Supply Corporation Schaeffer Electric Co., Inc. T.J. Wies Contracting, Inc.
Third-Party Events and Cause Marketing Promotions
Alberici Constructors, Inc. Ben Hur Construction Company
$200,000 or greater
Budrovich Contracting
Pedal the Cause
Castle Contracting Clayco
$100,000 - $199,999
Goodwin Brothers Construction Co.
Cornbread’s Kids Crusade on 92.3 WIL
Helmkamp Construction Company
Kohl’s Cares for Kids
Kozeny-Wagner, Inc.
Prelude to the Dream - The Tony Stewart Foundation
McCarthy Building Companies
Edward Jones
Murphy Co., Mechanical Contractors & Engineers
Lou Fusz Automotive Network, Inc.
Niehaus Construction Services, Inc.
Teaming Up for Kids Scratch-and-Win Ticket Promotions with Walgreens, Jack in the Box, Chevy’s, Noodles & Company, Slackers, Great Clips, The Magic House, Massage Envy, Papa Murphy’s Take ‘N Bake Pizza, St. Louis Cardinals, Six Flags St. Louis, Sportservice, Cfx Advertising and Fox Sports Midwest
$50,000 - $99,999 March to the Arch
$10,000 - $49,999 Best Seat in the House Brent Bergheger Chrysler Dodge, Inc. Golf Classic Cadan’s Carnival for CDH Awareness Dining 4 Kids fuN Fest Hooked on Hope Golf Tournament
2011 Annual Report 53
Kozeny-Wagner Golf Tournament
Sean’s Trail Run
Mama Campisi’s Restaurant
Schnucks E-Scrip Community Card Program
P.A.I.G.E. Foundation Rosemary Finn Pediatric Oncology Fund
Shaving My Head for the Kiddos
Ryann Hope Foundation Rounds 4 Ryann Golf Tournament
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Scramble for Kids
Spencer & Michael’s Lemonade Stand
St. Louis Blues Better Halves Festival of Trees Trystan Gives Back Jeans Day
$500 - $9,999 97.1 FM Talk Golf Tournament Accelerated Health Systems LLC Jeans Day Akima Holiday Party ALIVE Magazine Fashion Week
Shoot for Seamus Smiles for Life Foundation Teagen’s Healing Heart Troy Toyland Christmas Display Jacob Urschler Memorial Golf Tournament
Bill Bahn Memorial “Lardy Classic” BBQ Benefit
John O’Connell, Chair Janice Bailey Todd Baur Kathy Button Bell Joe Buck Dale Cammon John Capps Stacy Cooper Lee Fetter
Washington University Physical Therapy Class of 2012 Prom
John Ferring
Window Licker Records Concert
Lou Fusz Jr.
Young Friends of St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Derek Glanvill Rob Goldstein Becky Hadfield
BA Player BA Cure BAaware Art for a Cure
Foundation Board of Trustees
Board of Trustees
Keith Harbison Bob Hermann Jr.
Kelvin Westbrook, Chair
Brian Hogan
Bitter Pill Benefit Show
Greg Boyce
Jim Johnson
Averi Budde Foundation
F. Sessions Cole, MD
Paul Kalsbeek
Caps by Kate
Steven Cousins
Kathy Lintz
Cards for Causes
Don Danforth III
Steve Lipstein
Casey-Westfield Jr. High Change Collection
Nancy Diemer
Kevin Maher
John Ferring
Jim McDonnell
Lee Fetter
Joe McKee
Cliff Franklin
Chuck Mueller
Lou Fusz Jr.
Karen Myers
Christmas for Kids Benefit Club Fitness - Halloween Hottie Contest The Dailey Method Grand Opening Dancers Against Childhood Cancer Dance-A-Thon Danny’s Dream Holiday Shopping Bazaar Eisenhower Elementary School Penny Challenge Exotic Motors Midwest grand opening Fraternal Order of the Eagles Full Moon Saloon Car Show Harmony Grand Chapter Order of the Eastern Star KIDS Caring 4 Cancer Benefit Show Kids Helping Kids Fix Broken Hearts Loading Zone April Fools Trivia Night Lucas Flint Fund Maplewood Bicycle Matt’s Hats MICDS May Day Midwest Golf Scramble Mississippi River Car Show Missouri Jr. Beta MX for Children Piece by Piece Primo Foundation Prince Hall Grand Masonic Lodge Bingo Prince Hall Grand Masonic Lodge Golf Tournament Puttin for Down Syndrome 54 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
Jim Gould
Bruce Olson
Becky Hadfield
Terry Pflager
Keith Harbison
Randy Schilling
Tracy Hart
Rick Short
Bob Hermann Jr.
Joe Sivewright
Chris Imbs
Doug Stanley
Steve Lipstein
Jack Stapleton
Richard Mark
Susan Talve
Jim McDonnell
Chris Thompson
Steve Miller, MD
Michelle Trulaske
Chuck Mueller
Ray Van de Riet
Birch Mullins
Kelvin Westbrook
Alison Nash, MD
John Whicker
John O’Connell
Grant Williams
Eric Rhone Perry Schoenecker, MD Alan Schwartz, PhD, MD Larry Shapiro, MD David Sherman
Children’s Discovery Institute Board of Managers
Rick Short John Stupp
Andy Newman, Chair
Donald Suggs
Dale Cammon
Chris Thompson
Lee Fetter
Ann Wagner
Jeffrey Gordon, MD
Brad Warner, MD
Keith Harbison
Pat Whitaker
Jennifer Lodge, PhD Dick Mahoney Jim McDonnell
Megan Stephens Amy Wellington Jeffrey Whitford
St. Louis Children’s Hospital Development Board Chris Thompson, Chair Ted Albrecht Michelle Bock Julie Buck Jim Cooper Dan Creston Chuck Mueller
Jennie Picha
Bill Neaves, PhD
Kathy Pope
Alan Schwartz, PhD, MD
Corinne Qureshi
Larry Shapiro, MD
Mary Riew
Ray Van de Riet
Mary Ann Schwartz
Kelvin Westbrook
Glenda Seldin Carol Short
Friends of St. Louis Children’s Hospital Board
Susie Sivewright Bet Stapleton Pam Tvedt
Becky Hadfield, Chair
Lisa Uxa
Paula Bahn
Tammy Walsh
Renee Bell
Becky Wood
Suzanne Boyle Kim Chulick Cathy Cortright Libby Donnell
Young Friends of St. Louis Children’s Hospital Board
Amy Feit
Graham Goldwasser, Chair
Barb Fetter
Dana and Alex Borchert
Melissa Fox
Lisa Brucker
Britt Garlock
Eric DiFate
Mary Gentsch
Brian and Katie Dimit
Graham Goldwasser
Hillary and Scott Dutcher
Julia Grubb
Anne Geile
Nancy Heet
McKenzie Goldwasser
Lisa Holley
Lauren and Randy Graham
Suzanne Hough
Katie Hughes
Joni Karandjeff
Jessica Kester
Becca Klingler
Lindsey and George Kriegshauser
Dana Kramer
Kelly Reed and Michael Lee
Retta Leritz
Retta Leritz
Tara Lewis
Kelly Lowery
Andrew Davidson Ryan Davis Jeff Dee Jason Dunaway Ann Frerotte Lou Fusz III Aaron Greenspan Alan Hautly Heather Hawk Rob Holton John Howell Jr. Whitney Kenter Dan Leary Rich Ledbetter Mary Lemkemeier Tom Margulis Carrie McLean Becky Meyer Jason Mills Ricky Nix Jr. John Parish John Peluso Jr. Bill Polk Jr. Dave Roemer David Sliney Dan Spirn Bob Tisone Albert Watkins
Children’s Legacy Advisors Leadership Board
Beth Lochmoeller
Brian Lyss
Martha Markwort
Aaron McMurry
Kathleen Bilderback
Leona McAllister
Maggie and Tim O’Shaughnessy
Stephen Cupples
Denise Miller
Jim Ploszay
Jennifer Davis
Douglas Stanley, Chair
Genie Mueller
Brigid and Piers Pritchard
James Maher
Cathie Mullins
Angela Rathjen
Thomas J. Ray Jr.
Chrissie Noble
Tim Reichardt
John Scott
Lisa Nouss
Jeff Sackman
Mat Madison Turner
Linda Pearce
Stacy Scherrer
Wendy Van Ronzelen
Joan Perotti
Lauren and Coleman Sheehan
Daniel Watt
Ann Perry
Shelley Smith
Fred Zrenner 2011 Annual Report 55
56 St. Louis Children’s Hospital
More ways we care for kids and the planet they call home.
St. Louis Children’s Hospital Foundation One Children’s Place St. Louis, MO 63110-1077 Address Service Requested
To make a gift to St. Louis Children’s Hospital, please visit StLouisChildrens.org/giving or call: 314.286.0988 888.559.9699 toll free