Advancing the Health and Health Care of Arkansas
2018 ADVANCEMENT REPORT UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
UAMS is
UAMS has educated and trained more than
Arkansas’
ONLY…
26,000 26,000
PHYSICIANS, SCIENTISTS & HEALTH PROFESSIONALS
prepared to provide leading-edge care in a rapidly changing health care environment.
Level One Trauma Center
Certified comprehensive stroke center
PHYSICIANS
Adult spina bifida clinic
Liver transplant program High-risk pregnancy program with board-certified maternal-fetal specialists
& 71% of practicing
in Arkansas graduated from UAMS.
ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease)
blood stem cell collection unit)
per year economic impact on the state.
PHARMACISTS
Adult cystic fibrosis center
Cord blood bank (and adult
$4.5 BILLION
60% of practicing
Adult sickle cell clinic
treatment center
UAMS has a
More than
$170
MILLION in research funding is held by UAMS researchers.
Every year UAMS providers treat
1 MILLION
PATIENTS
from every
state
50 &countries. more than
INSPIRE INVEST IMPACT
Chancellor’s Message Since joining UAMS just a few months ago, I have been deeply touched by the welcome my family and I have received from people all across our beautiful state. I feel fortunate to be a part of UAMS, which is not only an economic engine for Arkansas but is transforming lives every day through its many programs in patient care, education and research. The world of health care is transforming rapidly and dramatically, and we must change along with it if we are to provide the care that the 3 million people in Arkansas need and deserve. As the state’s only health sciences university, UAMS is well-positioned to navigate dynamic changes in biomedical technology and the health care marketplace. It is a university with a tremendous history – and a bright future. The potential here is remarkable. Our priority remains the same as ever: improving health and delivering high-quality health care outcomes to keep people healthy and productive. We achieve this through an uncompromising commitment to our core values of integrity, diversity and health equity, excellence and safety. We achieve this thanks to our more than 1,500 faculty members, 4,000 students and resident physicians, and more than 10,000 employees. We achieve this through partnerships with community, political and business leaders.
is critical to the advances we make every day. Thanks to your generous advocacy for and support of UAMS, we accomplish much together. The next 10 years will bring many changes for UAMS and the state, and we need to be prepared to embrace the opportunities ahead of us. We need to continue to evolve and do great work for the people of Arkansas. That evolution begins here, right now, at UAMS. We will continue to nurture our partnerships throughout the state, engaging patients, clinicians, researchers, educators and community leaders. We will continue to unify our goals as an institution, working as a true team with shared purpose and mutual accountability. UAMS must continue to lead the way, with a commitment to better health and health care that is second to none. We have an opportunity to build upon more than a century of service to the state and shape the future of health care for those who need it most. There’s a lot of work to be done. Together, we will ensure that UAMS is strong and vibrant for years to come.
Let’s dream big. With deepest gratitude,
And we achieve this thanks to you. Private philanthropy provides vital financial support for UAMS and its mission, and it ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
Cam Patterson, M.D., MBA Chancellor University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences 3
Walker Family’s Philanthropic Legacy Continues to Benefit UAMS and Arkansas
Throughout their lives, Pat and Willard Walker directed their philanthropy and civic engagement to causes and organizations across the state. The Walkers were revered and among the most well-known philanthropic couples in Arkansas. Although Mr. Walker passed away in 2003, followed by Mrs. Walker in 2016, their legacies live on through the continued good works of the foundation that bears their name. It is no understatement to say that lives have been changed by the Willard and Pat Walker Charitable Foundation, as it has helped to transform the medical and educational landscape in Arkansas. The significance of the family’s philanthropy is exemplified by their commitment to UAMS,
4
The Walkers have maintained a strong philanthropic relationship with UAMS for 35 years. Their support has not been limited to one area of the institution, and it reflects the family’s interest and passionate support of medical research, education and patient care.
intensified the family’s commitment to finding improved treatments for cancer and in continuing the search for a cure. “Pat and Willard Walker were among the first major donors to the Cancer Institute,” said Kent Westbrook, M.D., distinguished professor in the UAMS College of Medicine and one of the Cancer Institute’s founding directors. “We are most grateful to the entire family and the Walker Charitable Foundation for their continued support.”
Mr. Walker’s involvement as a board member of the Arkansas Cancer Research Center, now known as the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute, piqued his interest in the cancer programs at UAMS. His two successful battles with cancer only
Most recently, in 2017, the foundation pledged $4 million to expand the Cancer Institute’s network of infusion centers, which offers personalized care to patients receiving chemotherapy and other cancer-related treatments. The gift will
and their partnership in its mission to improve the health, health care and wellbeing of all Arkansans.
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
help construct, equip and support a new infusion center on the sixth floor, which will be named in honor of the Walkers’ greatgrandson, Braxton Walker. The first floor infusion center will be named in memory of Mrs. Walker. The Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute is another beneficiary of significant support from the Walker Charitable Foundation. The Foundation’s gifts through the years have included $6.5 million in 2003 to establish the Pat and Willard Walker Eye Research Center; $15 million in 2006 for a five-story, 56,000-square-foot addition to the institute, providing more clinical and research space; and establishing the Pat Walker Chair in Ophthalmology in 2008 with a gift of $1 million. In 2011, Mrs. Walker gave another $1 million to support the Leland and Betty Tollett Retinal and Ocular Genetics Center. In March 2018, a portion of the ninth floor of the Jones Eye Institute was dedicated as the Walker Eye Surgical Simulation & Education Center, named in gratitude for a $600,000 donation from the Walker Charitable Foundation. To date, the Walker family’s total gifts to the institute exceed $24 million. “Once Pat was committed to something, she never wavered,” said John Shock, M.D., founder of the Jones Eye Institute. “She truly believed she was put on this earth to serve others, be it family,
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
friends or institutions. Her generosity and commitment continues to impact lives through medical advancements.” A 2005 gift of $878,372 helped build the second floor outpatient service area of the Psychiatric Research Institute. The Walker Family Clinic is the institute’s home to the center’s specialty programs, including treatment for addictive, eating, anxiety, depressive and post-traumatic stress disorders. The Walker Charitable Foundation also supports UAMS activities in northwest Arkansas. The Walker Student Clinical Education Center opened in 2013 on the UAMS Northwest Arkansas Regional Campus, providing much-needed space for outpatient exam rooms and a clinical skills area. The center allows students to practice simulated tasks, strengthen clinical communication and physical exam skills, and work as part of a multi-disciplinary health care team. In 2005, the Walker Family Memory Research Center in the Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging was opened with a $5 million gift from the Walker Charitable Foundation. The center helps families struggling to care for a loved one with Alzheimer’s disease. The Walker family cared for Willard as his Alzheimer’s disease progressed, and has said that an early diagnosis, and the care that he received at the Institute on Aging, extended his life.
In 2017, the Walker Charitable Foundation created the Pat Walker Distinguished Chair in Senior Health with a gift of $1.5 million. The endowment supports the UAMS Department of Geriatrics’ programs in senior health care and education and the chair holder will be a faculty member who will work in Northwest Arkansas and who will hold a leadership position at the UAMS Schmieding Center for Senior Health and Education, located in Springdale, Arkansas. “The transformative gifts from the Walker Foundation to advance senior health and improve the quality of life for our population as we age will touch many lives, probably more than we will ever know,” said Jeanne Wei, M.D., Ph.D., executive director of the Reynolds Institute. “Senior health is one of the greatest health care needs facing us in the future.” Today, the Walker Charitable Foundation continues to build a tradition of health and hope with UAMS, thanks to the legacy built by Pat and Willard Walker through their selfless generosity and their vision to serve and help others. “We are thankful for the many contributions the Walker family has made to UAMS through the years,” said Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D, Ed.D., UAMS senior vice chancellor for academic affairs and provost. “UAMS would not be what it is today without the Walkers.”
5
Baileys Give $150,000 to Create Distinguished Lectureship in Otology Sharon and H.A. “Ted” Bailey, M.D., have been steadfast supporters of UAMS for decades, particularly when it comes to education. So it’s only fitting that the Baileys chose to continue that tradition by establishing a distinguished otology lectureship with a gift of $150,000. The Sharon and Dr. Ted Bailey Distinguished Lectureship in Otology will support lectures, seminars and other
education forums that will allow UAMS to invite and host renowned physicians and researchers as guest speakers to share their knowledge and advances in the field. Otology is the study of the anatomy and diseases of the ear. The lectureship will benefit the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery in the College of Medicine, which Ted Bailey oversaw for several years when it was still a division. The department plans to expand research in hearing loss and cochlear implantation in addition to its extraordinary research in head and neck cancers and vascular malformations. “Sharon and I are pleased to continue our support of UAMS by bringing renowned otologic physicians and researchers to share the latest developments in this field,” said Ted Bailey. “Our goal for this distinguished lectureship series is to keep UAMS at the forefront of otologic care and thereby benefit the many thousands of Arkansans who suffer from hearing loss and other ear problems.”
professor in the College of Medicine who served as chair of the Department of Otolaryngology for 43 years. “Dr. Bailey gave lectures to me when I was a student,” said Suen. “When I was a resident in training, I spent time in his office and he spent a lot of time teaching me. We became good friends after I became chairman of the department, and that relationship has grown over the years. I am thankful that this lectureship will honor Dr. Bailey indefinitely and greatly enhance the education of our residents and faculty. Dr. Bailey was one of the premier otologic surgeons in the U.S. He has restored hearing in thousands of patients.” “Dr. Ted Bailey is an icon for ear surgery in Arkansas,” said John Dornhoffer, M.D., chair of the Department of Otolaryngology. “This generous gift will allow us to bring national and international experts in hearing and balance disorders as invited lecturers to continue this tradition of excellence in otology.”
Ted Bailey, a 1947 College of Medicine graduate, taught UAMS medical students and residents for many years, including a young James Suen, M.D., a distinguished 6
Sharon and H.A. “Ted” Bailey, M.D.
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Bates Professorship Honors a Public Health Champion Joseph Bates, M.D., M.S., has always maintained a clear focus throughout his career on building a healthier Arkansas. To further his vision, Bates and UAMS recently established a professorship created to help ensure public health practice far into the future, named the Joseph H. Bates M.D., M.S., Professorship in Academic Public Health Practice. The endowment stems from the need for physicians to be educated in public health, and for physicians to assume leadership roles in academic public health practice. “Dr. Bates is truly remarkable,” said James Raczynski, Ph.D., dean of the UAMS Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health. “He is revered across Arkansas and around the world for his accomplishments in clinical medicine, medical education, research and public health practice. It’s an honor for the College of Public Health to be able to recognize his many accomplishments and immortalize him by creating this professorship, which will endure as long as the college exists.” The professorship will support the leadership, service, teaching and research activities in academic public health practice that Bates has so admirably exemplified. This will include promoting ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
population-based public health and practice-based research, with the end goal of education and leadership roles helping promote affordable and quality health care for all. Bates’ medical accomplishments span more than five decades. He is an internationally recognized researcher in tuberculosis and a tireless leader and advocate for public health. Bates helped pioneer short-course, outpatient treatment of tuberculosis, transforming how it was perceived and managed. That innovation, in collaboration with the Arkansas Department of Health, helped eliminate tuberculosis as a major public health threat and reduced Arkansas case rates to well below the national average. Bates is the associate dean for public health practice in the College of Public Health, as well as an adjunct professor. He served as College of Medicine faculty for 35 years and was chief of the medical service at the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare system for 30 years. He played a key role in the establishment of the College of Public Health at UAMS, and since 2005 has served as a member of its faculty and administration. He also has been a vocal supporter for state legislation
Joseph Bates, M.D., M.S.
affecting health and an advocate for the needs of the underserved. Other pivotal work includes his advocacy for using Arkansas’ share of the landmark 2000 tobacco settlement strictly for health initiatives, state legislation in 2006 to ban smoking in most workplaces and indoor environments, and funding many health initiatives through a major tobacco tax in 2009. He has championed the health needs of the more than 11,000 Marshallese living in Arkansas, and the Springdale Arkansas Department of Health Bates Outreach Clinic is named in his honor. Bates was honored by the Arkansas Medical Society with its 2014 Asklepion Award for contributions to health care in Arkansas, and was lauded that same year as a public health hero. In 2015, he was inducted into the College of Medicine Hall of Fame. In May, he received the UAMS Chancellor’s Award, presented to those whose service to UAMS is deserving of special recognition. 7
Rissers Give $500,000 to UAMS, Securing Cutting-Edge Technology for Myeloma Patients Bud Risser, of St. Petersburg, Florida, is known as an entrepreneur, philanthropist and community leader. But perhaps his favorite title is “survivor.” Risser, who received treatment at the worldrenowned UAMS Myeloma Center, is now in continuous remission for multiple myeloma. Each year, Bud and his wife, Fran, enjoy piloting his private plane to Little Rock. Besides being fun, it represents the newfound freedom they have since Bud went into remission. So, when the Rissers found out that the Myeloma Center needed a similar lift, they stepped up. Inspired by the center’s transformational research and treatments that helped save his life, the Rissers gave $500,000 and challenged others to make contributions. Their challenge was accepted, and the combined gifts allowed the purchase of a $1.5 million, cutting-edge piece of equipment. It’s another example of the Rissers leading from the front, but it means more to them than that. “Fran and I were more than pleased to make this happen,” said Risser. “It gave 8
us so much joy to know the difference we could make. There is nothing more rewarding than seeing patients and families benefit from something you helped deliver.” That delivery is the CyTOF instrumentation and super-computer infrastructure for mass cytometry, a biotechnology used in cell counting, cell sorting and biomarker detection. By suspending cells in a stream of fluid with heavy metal ion tags and passing them through an electronic detection apparatus, samples can be analyzed more quickly and accurately than using previous detection methods. “One of the things that really motivated us was the order of magnitude improvement in the time taken, and the astounding increase in the number of cells that can now be simultaneously identified,” said Risser. “The previous system was limited to testing for three kinds of cells and took a long time, but the new equipment can track 43 different kinds of cells simultaneously, and in a fraction of the time.” This new technology puts the Myeloma Center in rarified air as one of only a handful of institutions able to secure such UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
an advanced system. It allows UAMS researchers to study the whole immune system at a single cell level to better understand its function, including how cells become diseased and how they respond to various therapeutic agents. “I can understand that it may not mean much to some people, but for people who have some understanding it is light years ahead of what you could do previously,” said Risser. “This dramatic improvement will make it possible to track clinical treatments essentially in real time.”
With the help of the Rissers and other donors, the Myeloma Center Mass Cytometry Laboratory is now operational on the 9th floor of the UAMS Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute. “Bud’s engineering skills allowed him to fully understand the order of magnitude in information that this technology can provide and to perceive the potential therapeutic benefit for patients with multiple myeloma,” said Gareth Morgan, M.D., Ph.D., of the Myeloma Center.
Center Photo: Sarah Johnson, Ph.D., uses the CyTOF system. Bud and Fran Risser
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
9
Members of Team UAMS were there to cheer on donations.
10.05.2017
#UAMSDAYOFGIVING UAMS’ First-Ever Day of Giving Raises $356,137 in 24 Hours
#UAMSDAYOFGIVING
Mark it down: UAMS’ first-ever Day of Giving, held in 2017, was a smashing success. Over a 24-hour period, beginning early Oct. 5 and ending in the wee hours of Oct. 6, supporters from around Arkansas, the region and the world raised $356,137 for the state’s only academic health sciences university and its foundation.
10
The Second Annual Day of Giving will be held on October 2, 2018.
“What a difference a day makes,” said Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D., Ed.D., UAMS senior vice chancellor for academic affairs and provost. “We at UAMS are humbled and grateful for the outpouring of support from so many for an institution that does so much. From this Day of Giving, UAMS emerged even stronger in its commitment to improve health and health care in Arkansas.” UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Gardner kicked off the day’s events by making its first official donation at 6 a.m., Oct. 5. The campaign, the largest single-day philanthropic effort in UAMS’ 138-year history, blew past its stated goal of $250,000 before 5 p.m. Oct. 5, said Amanda May, director of annual giving. “We had a number of challenge and matching gifts that were met quickly because of all the individual donations that kept flowing in,” May said. “It is truly amazing to have the support of so many who recognize the difference UAMS makes in their lives. They made today a success.” All money raised will support the various programs, funds, colleges or institutes chosen by the donor and are spread across areas of patient care, education and research. Gifts came in from more than 1,000 donors from 16 states, and from as far away as the United Kingdom, May said. At least 186 separate areas of UAMS were earmarked by donors to receive funds. Most of the gifts were made via phone or online at the campaign website, dayofgiving.UAMS.edu, May said, but several were made in person at UAMS campuses across the state. Volunteers sporting shiny white-and-red buttons at tables festooned with red balloons accepted donations from employees passing by on a morning walk or during their lunch hour. ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
Social media was abuzz with photos and videos from patients, families, employees and supporters using the hashtag #UAMSDayofGiving. They shared stories about the difference UAMS made for them, and why supporting the institution today will help those in need tomorrow. Erin Wood, who delivered her donation by car, was grateful for the staff of the UAMS neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and the Wall of Hope, which showcases photos of NICU graduates. “Before our daughter was born at 23 weeks gestation, weighing 1 pound, 7 ounces, and we lost her twin brother, I was on bed rest at UAMS,” Wood said. “The Wall of Hope became my psychological lifeline, and remained so throughout our 128-day NICU stay,” she said. “Five years later, our daughter is thriving, I still pass the Wall of Hope with tremendous gratitude for the light it offered during a dark time.” “UAMS saved my life,” said Shalonda Michelle, who survived stage 4 throat cancer. “UAMS has been there to help service the people in our community and all over the world. Let’s help them continue to do what they do best, and let’s save lives.” More than 1 million patients each year are seen by UAMS faculty at its main campus, regional campuses, the Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System and Arkansas Children’s Hospital. UAMS graduates nearly
1,000 doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other health care professionals each year, the majority of whom stay in Arkansas to practice. It’s a difference felt across the state. UAMS relies in large part on its own revenue to support itself, but often that isn’t enough. State appropriations are only about 6 percent of UAMS’ $1.5 billion annual budget. Patient care revenue makes up the lion’s share, or 75 percent, and includes significant support from the Medicaid expansion of Arkansas Works. As state appropriations remain flat from year to year, and needs continue to grow, UAMS seeks additional philanthropic support. The Day of Giving helps alleviate some of the substantial financial hurdles that UAMS faces. “The UAMS Day of Giving shows the kind of transformative change made possible by a shared belief in the mission of the institution,” said Brigitte Grant, UAMS interim vice chancellor for Institutional Advancement. “We are immensely grateful for the generosity and commitment of individuals, corporations and organizations that made this day possible.”
SAVE THE DATE: OCTOBER 2, 2018 IS THE UAMS DAY OF GIVING. 11
Rakhshan Chair in Otolaryngology Established Through
“ Gifts of JOY and LOVE” Only a few years ago, the Rakhshan family’s lives were turned upside down. At age 18, Pamela Rakhshan had just completed her first year of college when she was diagnosed with mucoepidermoid carcinoma, a malignant tumor of the trachea. The rare condition only occurs 2 or 3 times per 100,000 people per year, and most often in the elderly. Chris Rakhshan, Pamela’s father, knew he needed to seek out the best physician to find a cure for his daughter. Rakhshan, who at the time lived in Arkansas, didn’t have to look far. “To my delight, it seemed the best surgeon in the country was practicing at UAMS, by the name of Dr. James Suen,” said Chris Rakhshan, who now lives in Boulder, Colorado. Suen, who served as chair of the Department of OtolaryngologyHead and Neck Surgery in the UAMS College of Medicine for 43 years, is known worldwide as a highly skilled head and neck cancer surgeon. A friend of the Rakhshan family attended medical school with Suen and knew of his extraordinary reputation, so he suggested the family reach out to him.
12
Chris and Pamela Rakhshan
“I realized that my daughter’s life was in the balance, and I had to focus,” said Chris Rakhshan. “My part was to bring her the very best care I could, and once we met with Dr. Suen, I knew that I could not have done any better.” Just days after that initial contact, Pamela was in the operating room for more than 10 hours under Suen’s care. It was a harrowing experience for Chris Rakhshan, and he feared the worst. “I thought for sure that we had lost her,” he said. “But Dr. Suen told me later that he took extra time, because she’s so young, and he wanted to be sure that not only the operation was successful, but that she would never have any issues. He took extra time to make sure everything was done to perfection.” During Pamela’s follow-up visits, her father was impressed with Suen’s skill and with his kind, soft-spoken and compassionate manner. “I realized then how very lucky my family and I were to have Dr. Suen save my daughter’s life, and I determined that somehow
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
I wanted to repay that kindness,” said Chris Rakhshan. Chris Rakhshan, who moved to Colorado recently, donated his Arkansas home to UAMS, and UAMS used the proceeds of that sale – nearly $1 million – to establish the Pamela Rakhshan Chair in Otolaryngology, both to celebrate Pamela’s bright future and to honor Suen, who made it all possible. “Sometimes we mistakenly measure our fortunes with what’s in our pocket,” said Chris Rakhshan. “And at the time, when I was going through this with my daughter, I realized that my true fortunes in life were what was in front of me – my family. And there’s no greater gratitude I could have had to Dr. Suen and UAMS for bringing her back to me.” An endowed chair is among the highest academic honors a university can bestow on a faculty member and is established with gifts of $1 million, which are invested to maintain and build the endowment value to allow for spendable distributions from the endowment to be used for the educational, research and clinical activities of the chair holder. Those named to a chair are among the most highly regarded scientists, physicians and professors in their fields of expertise. The endowment will provide funding for continued research and advancements to treatments and surgeries for head and neck cancers.
“I would like to thank Chris Rakhshan for this generous donation, especially because it’s honoring his daughter,” said Suen. “This chair will be at UAMS for as long as UAMS exists, and the interest can be used year after year for research, helping us find cures for patients that have these vascular anomalies. This gift will make a huge difference and I think will save many lives in the future. We’re grateful to Chris and Pamela for that.” “This is kind of like the eternal flame,” said John Dornhoffer, M.D., chair of the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery in the UAMS College of Medicine. “This is going to continue to support – so long as there are sick people, so long as there are diseases, so long as there’s cancer – this is going to allow us, essentially forever, to continue this research. I think that’s a really powerful gift. For somebody who does research, for somebody who supports clinicians and researchers, this is going to allow us to do it in a way that otherwise would not be possible.” Today, Pamela lives a life free of cancer, and Chris Rakhshan’s act of kindness will help many others. “Gifts of joy and love must be paid forward, and it brings great joy to my heart to know that this gift will help save many beloved sons and daughters in the future,” he said. James Suen, M.D.
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
13
Caroline T. Briggs
Briggs Trust Donates $436,000 for Schizophrenia Research A gift of $436,000 will allow the UAMS Psychiatric Research Institute to fund additional research for treatments and causes of schizophrenia, a serious mental disorder that can cause hallucinations, delusions and a loss of touch with reality. According to the National Institutes of Health, about 1 in 100 people in the United States have schizophrenia, which affects how a person thinks, feels and behaves. The donation from the Caroline T. Briggs Charitable Trust was delivered Dec. 19, 2017 by representatives of the trust and Simmons Bank to Pedro Delgado, M.D., director of the institute and chairman of the Department of Psychiatry in the UAMS College of Medicine. Briggs, a native of Pine Bluff, passed away in 2016 at the age of 92. UAMS is 14
“We are very grateful for this gift, which I think will go a long way toward making a difference in the lives of people with schizophrenia,” said Delgado. “This will allow us to develop a program that focuses on an area where, until now, we’ve had a gap in our research portfolio. We will be able to bring in some new researchers in the field as well as involve some of our younger faculty members to grow this program.” Simmons Bank’s Cathy Brazeale (left) and Laura Parrish (right) present a $436,000 check to Pedro Delgado, M.D., director of the UAMS Psychiatric Research Institute, on behalf of the Caroline T. Briggs Charitable Trust.
very grateful for Briggs’ generosity and for her philanthropic vision to establish a trust designating funds to address such a debilitating medical condition and to help others in the future.
Briggs will be honored as a member of the UAMS 1879 Society for her planned gift, and as a member of the Society of the Double Helix as a donor who has given $100,000 or more in cumulative giving to UAMS.
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
$1 Million Estate Gift to Benefit Breast Cancer Research at UAMS Cancer Institute She later joined Stephens, Inc. where she worked for 25 years in corporate finance and as managing director of investment banking.
Linda Garner Riggs
A $1 million gift from the estate of Linda Garner Riggs to the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute will be used to advance research of triple negative breast cancer. Riggs, a former Arkansas insurance commissioner and managing director at Stephens, Inc., died in November 2017. “This gift will have long-lasting effects on UAMS’ ability to help women living with breast cancer. We are grateful to Mrs. Riggs for this transforming gift, which provides vital funds for our ongoing initiative for cancer research,” said Stephanie Gardner, Pharm.D., Ed.D., UAMS senior vice chancellor for academic affairs and provost. A native of Fordyce, Riggs worked about 10 years in state government, serving as director of the research and committee staff of the Arkansas Legislature; legislative and budgetary director for Gov. Frank White; and insurance commissioner. ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
“ This gift will have long-lasting effects on UAMS’ ability to help women living with breast cancer. We are grateful to Mrs. Riggs for this transforming gift, which provides vital funds for our ongoing initiative for cancer research.” Gardner
research will enable us to expand our efforts to help women with triple negative breast cancer, which is a very difficult type of breast cancer. Breast cancer research has always been an area of significant emphasis for the institute.” In triple negative breast cancer, the cancer cells do not contain the hormones estrogen and progesterone or the protein HER2. Therefore, the most common hormonal therapies for breast cancer are not effective for women with this form of the disease, which is often aggressive and likely to spread or return after the initial diagnosis.
“Linda lived an exemplary life, and I was so privileged to know her and be her partner in it. She was a wonderful example and role model to anyone who wanted to become a better person,” said her husband, Lamar Riggs of Little Rock.
Triple negative breast cancer is diagnosed in up to 20 percent of cases and is more likely to occur in younger people, AfricanAmericans, Hispanics and those with the BRCA1 gene mutation.
“We are honored and humbled that Mrs. Riggs designated the Cancer Institute as a recipient for this generous gift from her estate,” said Kent Westbrook, M.D., distinguished professor in the UAMS College of Medicine and the Cancer Institute’s founding director. “Her foresight and dedication to the importance of cancer
In appreciation of her gift, Riggs will be honored as a member of the 1879 Society of UAMS, recognizing all individuals who have made estate gifts to the university, and as a member of the Society of the Double Helix, which recognizes donors who have given $100,000 or more in cumulative giving to UAMS. 15
Visionary Donors Establish Women’s Cardiovascular Health Professorship in the College of Nursing Jean C. McSweeney, Ph.D., R.N., professor and associate dean for research in the UAMS College of Nursing and co-director of its Ph.D. program, was invested March 12, 2018 in the Women’s Cardiovascular Health Professorship. According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, heart disease is the No. 1 cause of death for women in Arkansas. The Women’s Cardiovascular Health Professorship aims to lead the next wave of research and innovation to address this critical health crisis. The professorship will support UAMS’ recruitment of more cardiovascular researchers, studies to improve treatment and health outcomes for women with cardiovascular disease, and educational opportunities to illuminate women of the risk factors and symptoms associated with cardiovascular disease. McSweeney is an internationally known researcher with more than 20 years of experience in women’s cardiovascular disease. She was the first to identify different heart attack symptoms for women in a 2003 study published in the American Heart Association’s premier journal, Circulation. In 2016, she chaired the
16
first American Heart Association Scientific Statement fully devoted to cardiovascular disease in women. The Scientific Statement concluded that more research, improved diagnostic equipment and early recognition of symptoms is needed to identify and treat women with cardiovascular disease in order to improve outcomes. This professorship supports McSweeney’s continued efforts to enact the statement’s recommendations.
“The knowledge she’s generated has changed the ways women recognize the symptoms of a heart attack and the way clinicians listen to women and their symptoms. She is, indeed, the queen of hearts, women’s hearts.” Beck She sees the professorship as the next logical step in impacting clinical practice and outcomes for women with
cardiovascular disease, as well as a way to solidify those improvements in perpetuity. “This means this research can go on forever and that’s what we need,” said McSweeney. Established through the generosity of more than 170 individuals, this professorship represents not only a legacy of medical excellence but an unwavering commitment to progressive innovation, and ingenuity in patient care, research and education. McSweeney said she’s driven by the opportunity this professorship provides UAMS and the College of Nursing to continue to be a leader in women’s cardiovascular health. The fact that so many individuals funded the professorship — typically funded by one donor or a small group of donors — is significant. “It warms my heart,” McSweeney said. “It emphasizes the perceived and real importance of this research to people across the state. This work is very important to people and they understand why it is needed.” Cornelia Beck, Ph.D., R.N., a retired UAMS College of Medicine and Nursing faculty member, renowned researcher and close friend of McSweeney, said being a
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
compassionate listener is what enabled McSweeney to identify women’s different symptoms and to use this research for the benefit of others. “Dr. McSweeney has affected the lives of patients across the world,” she said. “The knowledge she’s generated has changed the ways women recognize the symptoms of a heart attack and the way clinicians listen to women and their symptoms. She is, indeed, the queen of hearts, women’s hearts.” Dr. McSweeney has been at UAMS for more than 20 years and served as the College of Nursing’s interim dean for most of 2015, prior to the appointment of Patricia Cowan, Ph.D., R.N., in November of that year. McSweeney helped develop the doctoral program of the College of Nursing. “She’s an outstanding educator, mentor and researcher,” said Cowan. “She’s the ideal person to serve as the inaugural holder of this endowed professorship.”
Jean C. McSweeney, Ph.D., R.N., shows off the medallion from her investiture in the Women’s Cardiovascular Health Professorship to Jeannette M. Shorey II, M.D. ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
17
Scholarships Dr. John Baker MHA Scholarship in the College of Public Health John Baker, Ph.D., MBA, now retired, was the founder and longtime professor of the Master of Health Administration (MHA) degree program, first established at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock and subsequently moved to the Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health at UAMS in 2005. It is the only accredited MHA program in the state of Arkansas. Baker’s friends, colleagues, and former students helped to establish the Dr. John Baker MHA Scholarship in the College of Public Health for students of the MHA program. The scholarship will provide greatly needed tuition awards to deserving students to support their academic and research efforts as they are becoming leaders in the highly complex and changing health care system.
18
“Thank you for the feeling of support and peace of mind that reducing my debt obligations brings me. It allows me to allocate more focus and energy on what is truly most important, making the most of my medical education.”
UAMS student
Deborah Flowers Fawcett, M.D. Memorial Scholarship in the College of Medicine Holli Fawcett Clayton wanted to honor the memory of her mother, including her many accomplishments as a 1977 graduate of the College of Medicine and as a physician specializing in pediatrics and adult allergy/ immunology. For this reason, Clayton established the Deborah Flowers Fawcett, M.D. Memorial Scholarship to be awarded to one student each year who is in his/her second, third or fourth year in the College of Medicine. Clayton’s mother once served as an assistant professor of pediatrics at UAMS, and she served as medical director of the Asthma Care Center at Arkansas Children’s Hospital.
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Butler Fuller, M.D. Endowed Scholarship in the College of Medicine Butler Fuller III, M.D., and his wife Beth wanted to help students in financial need, so they established a scholarship in the College of Medicine. Fuller, an Arkadelphia native, is an alumnus of the College of Medicine and did his ophthalmology residency at UAMS. He spent the last 23 years of his career as a surgeon at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, retiring two years ago. He and his wife decided to create an endowed scholarship to help students in perpetuity. In appreciation for their gift, UAMS named the scholarship the Butler Fuller, M.D. Endowed Scholarship.
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
“I rely on financial aid to help finance my education, and receiving this scholarship will help reduce my financial burdens as I pursue a BSN degree in nursing. As a mother of six, I wasn’t sure it would ever happen!”
UAMS student
19
Scholarships Don G. Howard, M.D. Scholarship in the College of Medicine Don G. Howard, M.D., a graduate of the UAMS College of Medicine, designated UAMS as a beneficiary in a charitable remainder trust, which allowed the College of Medicine to establish a $100,000 scholarship endowment in his name. The Don G. Howard, M.D. Scholarship will help medical students in financial need. His daughter explained that he came from humble beginnings, obtained a student loan from a local farm family for his medical school education, which he fully repaid, and he retired at the senior rank of brigadier general from the Arkansas National Guard. “We are honored to recognize Dr. Howard’s philanthropy and his work as a beloved and dedicated physician in Fordyce, Arkansas by naming the scholarship in his memory,” said Christopher T. Westfall, M.D., interim dean of the College of Medicine.
“This generous scholarship was a large factor in my decision to attend UAMS.”
UAMS student
20
Dr. Lee A. Nauss and Mrs. Vivian Maxwell Endowed Scholarship
“The scholarship has changed my life, and this award was my primary motivation for continuing my education in Arkansas, rather than an out-of-state program.” UAMS student
Lee Nauss, M.D., and his wife, Vivian Maxwell, of Rochester, Minnesota, recently established an endowed scholarship for students of the UAMS College of Medicine who have a financial need. Nauss, a 1970 graduate of the UAMS College of Medicine had to provide for himself growing up. He could not afford medical school initially, so he became a nurse. Eventually, he saved enough money to put himself through medical school and became an anesthesiologist. He had a successful career at the Mayo Pain Clinic, which he helped to create, as one of the first stand-alone pain clinics. It was his desire to establish a scholarship for students in need.
College of Nursing DNP Scholarship in Tobacco Control An anonymous donor with a passionate interest in reducing tobacco-related illnesses established a scholarship endowment in the College of Nursing. The donor saw the importance of helping to advance the education of nursing students seeking a doctor in nursing practice (DNP)
degree who state an interest in tobacco control as part of their DNP coursework. A DNP program is valuable to the health profession because of its focus on clinical practice leadership training. A doctor in nursing practice often moves into a leadership role in health care. This donor envisioned the long-term benefits of a DNP scholarship for the nursing profession and for the future benefit of patients and families.
Marty Bushmiaer Orthopaedic Nursing Scholarship C. Lowry Barnes, M.D., a well-known orthopaedic surgeon and chairman of the department of orthopaedics at UAMS, established a scholarship in the College of Nursing in honor of Marty Bushmiaer, A.P.R.N., who has worked with Barnes for more than 20 years. Barnes understands the importance of the skills and expertise of nursing professionals. The scholarship supports orthopaedic nurses who are UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
seeking an advanced nursing degree from the College of Nursing. The honor was a surprise to Bushmiaer, who said, “I fell in love with orthopaedics on my first job following nursing school. I was inspired by the nurses in the operating room who shared their love and enthusiasm for orthopaedics. I am proud to know that there will be an opportunity for another nurse to love and enjoy a fulfilling career in orthopaedic nursing.”
Blackwell-Barnes College of Medicine Scholarship In honor of his friend and mentor, C. Lowry Barnes, M.D., established a scholarship in the College of Medicine named for Banks Blackwell, M.D., a fellow Pine Bluff native who helped Barnes and other medical students struggling to make it financially through school. As a way to pay it forward, Barnes established the Blackwell-Barnes College of Medicine Scholarship. The scholarship will help students in the College of Medicine who are from southwest Arkansas, with a preference for students who also state an interest in practicing in orthopaedics. “Banks did this for me and others from Pine Bluff,” Barnes said. “He asked that we do it for others when we could, and I have enjoyed doing so.”
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
R. Louise Stout Simmons, M.D. Endowed Scholarship in the College of Medicine R. Louise Stout, a 1949 UAMS College of Medicine graduate, passed away unexpectedly in 1970. Her father, Carl R. Stout, wanted his daughter’s love of medicine to be remembered, so he created a charitable remainder trust. When Mr. Stout died in 1994, the trust provided income to his surviving daughter, Dorothy S. Aldridge, for her lifetime – with the College of Medicine named as the beneficiary of the remainder of the trust. Dorothy, a longtime supporter of UAMS,
passed away June 30, 2018. Her father’s trust will now fund the R. Louise Stout Simmons, M.D. Endowed Scholarship to carry on the legacy of his beloved daughter and sister. The scholarship, which supports medical students with financial need, will be funded with over $1.4 million, making it the single largest endowed scholarship at UAMS.
“I have always believed that no one is capable of accomplishing anything alone, and now when I reflect on this time in my life, your family will be included in those who have supported me through this journey.” UAMS student 21
UAMS Foundation Fund Board Honors Four for
Lifetime Achievement The UAMS Foundation Fund Board has recognized four honorees with lifetime achievement awards in gratitude for their decades of service and philanthropy to UAMS. The awards were presented Feb. 1, 2018 at UAMS’ annual All Boards Luncheon.
P.O. Hooper, M.D. Volunteer Leadership Award
Lee Ronnel
P.O. Hooper, M.D.
Jo Ellen Ford
Jo Ellen Ford and Lee Ronnel, both of Little Rock, were named the inaugural recipients of the P.O. Hooper, M.D. Volunteer Leadership Award. Hooper, along with seven other Little Rock physicians, who in 1879 helped found what is now UAMS. The award recognizes UAMS donors for their exceptional support of the institution’s mission through volunteerism, leadership and philanthropy. Like Hooper, they inspire, lead and motivate others to shape the future of the institution.
Kent Westbrook, M.D.
John Shock, M.D.
22
John Shock, M.D., founding director of the Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute, and Kent Westbrook, M.D., distinguished
professor in the College of Medicine, and co-founding director of the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute, were named the inaugural recipients of the Harry P. Ward, M.D. Visionary Award. The award recognizes current or former employees for their extraordinary ability to envision, promote and utilize philanthropy to transform the landscape and constitution of UAMS.
Ward, UAMS chancellor from 1979-2000, is remembered as a giant in the history of health care and higher education in Arkansas. A man of determination and commitment, he led UAMS’ transformation from a small medical school with a charity hospital into a health sciences university and research leader.
Harry P. Ward, M.D. Visionary Award Harry Ward, M.D., UAMS Chancellor 1979-2000
“Today, we honor our volunteer and employee leaders, who have, through generous donations of their time and talent,
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
made a better future for health care in Arkansas,” said William Clark, then chair of the UAMS Foundation Fund Board.
Helix, have given extensively to UAMS in support of critical initiatives over their long history with the institution.
Ford, along with her husband Joe, is a member of the UAMS Society of the Double Helix and had an instrumental role in supporting the formation of the Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging and the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute. She is a lifetime member and a former chair of the UAMS Foundation Fund Board, the Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging Community Advisory Board, and the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute Foundation Fund Board.
“It’s indeed an honor to receive the P.O. Hooper Volunteer Leadership Award,” Ronnel said. “It has been both an honor and a pleasure to have served as chairman of the UAMS Foundation Fund Board as that board’s representative to the University of Arkansas Foundation. I will treasure the Hooper Award, and I thank you for making me one of the first recipients.”
“I’m very grateful for this award,” Ford said. “I want to say thank you to my husband, who has always encouraged me to do whatever I felt led to do, whether it was Bible study fellowship or working at the university hospital, in the cancer center or the aging institute. It’s been a wonderful blessing to me to be able to help in this area.” Ronnel, along with his wife Dale and their extended family, has been a dedicated and passionate supporter of UAMS for more than four decades. Ronnel is a member and former chair of the University of Arkansas Foundation, Inc. Board of Directors, and a former member and chair of the UAMS Foundation Fund Board. The Ronnels, members of the Society of the Double
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
Shock joined the College of Medicine as chair of the Department of Ophthalmology in 1979, when there was only one other fulltime faculty member in that department. He significantly expanded the department’s faculty and increased patient visits from about 6,000 annually to almost 20,000. Shock was one of the first to develop the ultrasonic cataract machine and established the Jones Eye Institute. He was interim dean of the College of Medicine from 2000 to 2002 and was UAMS executive vice chancellor from 2002 to 2009. “I would like to thank the UAMS Foundation Fund Board for naming me a recipient of the Harry P. Ward Lifetime Achievement Award,” Shock said. “Dr. Ward was a master builder, and set the stage for enormous campus expansion that occurred during his tenure. He did this by giving people like Kent Westbrook and myself the
opportunity and encouragement to build programs which he thought contributed to the whole. He also openly welcomed individuals who were like-minded, that shared his vision to build a campus of which we all can be very proud.” Westbrook, a 1965 College of Medicine graduate, worked with colleagues throughout much of the 1970s and 1980s to develop comprehensive, multidisciplinary cancer programs at UAMS, culminating in the 1984 formation of the Arkansas Cancer Research Center, the predecessor of the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute. He served as its director for 14 years and was chief of the Division of Surgical Oncology from 1992 to 2003. Westbrook served as interim chair of the Department of Surgery from 1999 to 2002 and as interim vice chancellor for UAMS Development and Alumni Affairs, now the Division of Institutional Advancement, in 2011. He has been an associate dean and a member of the Chancellor’s Cabinet. “It’s really thrilling to me to receive this Harry P. Ward Visionary Award,” Westbrook said. “It’s a great honor. When my wife and I came to this campus 56 years ago, I had no concept of winning an award like this. This award came about because James Suen and I had a dream of a cancer center, and I really thank all of the people who were involved in the development of the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute.”
23
UAMS Foundation Fund Board I’m proud to have served these last six years as a member of the UAMS Foundation Fund Board, and I have the honor of being named this year as chair. Like so many of you, I know personally the positive impact that UAMS makes every single day on the lives of individuals and families with its unwavering dedication to patient care, research and health care education. We are very fortunate to have UAMS in our state to serve the people of Arkansas. We have access to the most recent scientific discoveries and advanced treatments for virtually every medical specialty. As a member of the UAMS Foundation Fund Board, and for all those who serve on the UAMS advisory boards, our role is to help promote the important work and accomplishments of this great institution by serving as ambassadors and leaders. To serve alongside the caliber of leadership that exists on our advisory boards is humbling. UAMS has 17 distinct affiliated advisory boards composed of more than 400 business and community leaders from across Arkansas and the region. By providing our time, resources and talents, we share a vision to improve the health and health care education for the people of our state. 24
More than 1,500 volunteers lend their time and energy to UAMS each year. Add that to the several thousand sharp minds we have across the state of Arkansas in service for our friends, family and neighbors, and we know that UAMS is in good hands. We are fortunate to have world-class care in our own backyard, and we must do all we can to preserve and promote that legacy of excellence. UAMS has tremendous importance to all of us, serving people both directly and through the community at large. We are committed to improving the lives of all Arkansans through philanthropy. It’s easy to get involved: just email us at advancement@uams.edu along with your contact information and interests. Please join us as we work to make our state a better, healthier place to live.
Beau Blair Chair, UAMS Foundation Fund Board
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
UAMS Foundation Fund Board
Jerry B. Adams
Judy Adams
Mike Akin
Kathleen D. Alexander
Larry J. Alman
Patricia Bailey
The Honorable Mike Beebe
Freddie Black
Beau Blair*
Lee Bodenhamer
Kristen Boozman
Mary Beth Brooks
The Honorable Robert L. Brown
William E. Clark II
Stuart Cobb
Dr. Carl M. Collier
Sandra G. Connor
Kevin A. Crass
James E. Darr Jr.
Ray C. Dillon
George H. Dunklin Jr.
Dr. Joycelyn Elders
Lewis E. Epley Jr.
Jo Ellen Ford
Charlotte Gadberry
Denise M. Garner
*Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
25
26
The Honorable Mike Gibson
Dr. Dewayne L. Goldmon
Stanley L. Hill
Sonja Hubbard
Dr. David W. Hunton
Patricia Johnson
Janet M. Jones
Dr. Frederick E. Joyce
James V. Kelley III
Kenan J. Keyes
Dianne Lamberth
Lester P. Matlock Jr.
Dr. Anita Groves McAllister
Hugh T. McDonald
Dr. Lisa M. McNeir
Mark E. Middleton
Dorothy Morris
Donald M. Munro
Walter S. Nunnelly III
Buckley O’Mell
Cindy L. Pugh
Charlene Reed
Jennifer Ronnel
Lee Ronnel
Ron G. Russell
Charles E. Scharlau III
Dana Silaski
Dewitt H. Smith III
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Judith Snowden
Gilda Underwood
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
Ross M. Whipple
Jane McGehee Wilson
Craig S. Wood
Joe “Clay” Young IV
27
Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute Foundation Fund Board Ginger Beebe
Ed Bennett
Penny Burkhalter
Stuart Cobb
Pat Cooper
Remmel T. Dickinson
Ray C. Dillon
Jo Ellen Ford
Denise M. Garner
Dr. Hershel H. Garner Jr.
Lloyd Garrison
Don L. Gibson
Herren Hickingbotham
Stephen W. Higginbotham
Martha Hill
Barbara Rogers Hoover
Lenka Horakova
Patricia Johnson
Philip R. Jonsson
Dr. Frederick E. Joyce
Kenan J. Keyes*
Mandy Macke
Susan C. Pruitt
Natalie Rockefeller
Carol Rodgers
J. Raye Rogers
*Chair
28
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Jennifer Ronnel
Wade A. Ruckle
Margaret C. Schueck
Stacy Sells
Cheryl Shuffield
Trip Stauss
Dr. Jonathan F. Thomas
Dr. Josetta E. Wilkins
James L. Witt
Janie Witt
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
Dr. Malcolm A. Smith
Hatim Smouni
29
Alumni Advisory Council
Dr. Laura MacDonald
Dr. Kristen Belew
Dr. Jack Blackshear Jr.
Martha Chamness
Jean Ann Coger
Lisa Conque
Dr. David Jacks
Dr. Rachael McCaleb
Walt Nickels
John Patterson
Dr. Austin Porter III
Dr. Chad Rodgers*
Sarah Wang
*Chair
30
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
College of Health Professions Advisory Board
Craig H. Gilliam
Garbo G. Hearne
Dr. Billy R. Thomas
Ben J. Wellons
Dr. Ruth Allen
Chad Avery
Brooke Ivy Bridges
Lisa Conque
Dr. Margaret A. Ellibee
John Owens
Drew Ramey
Judy J. Sims*
Patrick Skinner
Jenny H. Teeter
*Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
31
Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute Envoys Board of Directors Dr. Gwendolyn BryantSmith
Valerie Erkma
Deborah Linton Ferguson
Allyson Gattin
Melanie Gloster
Tisha Gribble
Lindsay R. Hale
Sandy Henry
Jenny Long
Tim Long
Sheryl McKelvey
Shalonda Michelle
Dr. William Mustain
Dr. Daniela Ochoa
Win Rockefeller Jr.
Jennifer Ronnel
Dr. Matthew A. Steliga
Dawn Stoffel
Bill Woodyard IV*
Not Photographed: Rochele Green
*Chair
32
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
College of Nursing Advisory Board
Michael O. Manley
Lester P. Matlock Jr.*
Michelle Anthony
Dr. Freda Bush
Fern D. Cross
Pat Dodson
Charles J. Penix
Jananne Reding
Mike Spades Jr.
Jane McGehee Wilson
Lolly Honea
*Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
33
College of Pharmacy Dean’s Advisory Council
Dr. Paul K. Halverson
Dr. Chris A. Hatwig
Dr. Bobby W. Sandage Jr.
Dr. Ed Pat Wright
Dr. Daniel Acosta Jr.
Jerry B. Adams
Alicia M. Berkemeyer
Dr. Dion F. Coakley
Michael Ellis
Dr. John C. Kirtley
Lester P. Matlock Jr.
Dr. Anita Groves McAllister*
Dr. Scott Pace
Jeremy Riddle
*Chair
34
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
College of Public Health Advisory Board Katy Allison
The Honorable Herschel Cleveland
Melinda P. Faubel
Dr. Anthony M. Flethcer
Allan Gates
Morril Harriman Jr.
Russell Harrington Jr.
Janet M. Jones
Steven M. Jones
Jayme Mayo
Martha J. Murray
Toyce Newton
Denver Peacock
David Rainey
Greg Ramon
Ruth Shepherd*
Gordon J. Silaski
Annice Steadman
Wesley R. Walls
Susan Weinstein
*Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
35
UAMS Northwest Arkansas Campus Advisory Board Kristen Boozman
William “Bill” Bradley
Mary Beth Brooks
Dr. Joel D. Carver
Ed Clifford
Dr. Carl M. Collier
Joy Drummonds
Dr. Mark Enderle
Lewis E. Epley Jr.
Dr. Daniel Ferritor*
Dorothy A. Hanby
Dr. Morriss M. Henry
Dr. Evelyn E. Jorgenson
Bob King
The Honorable Uvalde Lindsey
Mandy Macke
Dr. Shane McAlister
Dr. Mike T. Miller
Karen Parker
Nelson Peacock
Betsy Phillips
Ann T. Rosso
Archie Schaffer III
Charles E. Scharlau III
Donny Story
Philip Taldo
*Chair
36
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Dr. Joanna Thomas
Richard R. Trammel
Margaret Whillock
Dr. Russ H. Wood
Judy Adams*
Dr. Jack Blackshear Jr.
Robert Shoptaw
Frank E. Snell
College of Medicine Board of Visitors
Dorothy Morris
Ron Russell
Dr. Amy B. Cahill
Dr. Elder Granger
Dr. Marvin Hayenga
*Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
37
Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute Advisory Board Frederick E. Adkins III
Bryn W. Bagwell
Patricia B. Blass
Lee Bodenhamer
Richard C. Butler Jr.
John E. Chambers III
Margaret W. Clark
Barbara D. Crafton
Fern D. Cross
Dr. Philip J. Deer III
Mandy Dillard
Carrie Eggart
Greg P. Hartz
Joan Hearnsberger
Johnelle Hunt
Diane Jonsson
Peter G. Kumpe
Ann A. McCoy
Allen McDowell
Angela Moody
Walter S. Nunnelly III
Dr. John P. Shock*
Rebecca B. Tucker
Richard A. Williams
Jane McGhee Wilson
Craig S. Wood
*Chair
38
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Myeloma Advisory Board
Carol A. Ammon*
Michael L. Birnbaum
Owen Brown
Louis A. Cella
Stuart Cobb
Lucia A. Dougherty
Stephen C. Engstrom
Ken Halliday
Dr. Barry H. Hendler
Denny R. Holman
Samuel L. Jones
Larry Marks
Gladys Monroy
James A. Moses Jr.
Dr. Marie Pinizzotto
Dr. Daniel W. Rahn
Dag Skattum
Joseph A. Walker
Donald A. Yanick
*Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
39
Psychiatric Research Institute Advisory Board Judy Adams
Shayla Copas
Lillian Dee Davenport
June Freeman
Denise M. Garner
Russell Guerra
Michael J. Hennessey
First Lady Susan Hutchinson
Victor Jacuzzi
Ruthe A. Kaplan
Tad Krug
Donna Malone
William C. Mann III
George E. McLeod
Sheila W. Mehaffy
Donald M. Munro
Helen L. Porter
James Howard Shenep, Jr.
Graham Smith
Gerry “Nell” Spears
Laura Stanley
Caroline Hussman Stevenson
Colonel Nate Todd
Thomas L. Vandegrift
James H. Wilkins, Jr.*
*Chair
40
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging Community Advisory Board Larry J. Alman*
Sharon Bailey
Lee Bodenhamer
Stephanie G. Branton
Diane Allen Bressnick
Peggy Clark
Evlyn M. Clinton
Catherine C. Crass
James E. Darr Jr.
J. Mark Davis
Linda Lewis Eubank
Jo Ellen Ford
The Honorable Mike Gibson
Greer B. Grace
Dr. Reed Greenwood
Judy D. Grundfest
Dr. Sybil J. Hampton
William D. Haught
Martha Hill
Barbara J. Hoover
Diane Jonsson
Jeff Lynch
Patricia McClelland
Jane McMullin
Martha W. Murphy
Rick Murphy
*Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
41
42
Greg Nabholz
Julia Peck-Mobley
Terry Quinn
Tom Ricciardone
J. Raye Rogers
Philip W. Schmidt
Belinda Shults
Christy O. Snowden Davis
Judith Snowden
Kermit L. Tucker Jr.
Gilda Underwood
Ellis B. Walton
Dr. Walter Sedelow Jr.
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
UAMS Consortium
Daniel J. Beck
Phillip M. Brick
David Bush
Phillip Butterfield
Shane Carter
Keith E. Cragg
Neil Denman
Maria Furcron
Shana K. Woodard Graves
Tommy Keet
Eric Kitchens
Jared Landrum
David Mann
Erin C. Marcussen
Chris Marsh
Daniel M. Oberste
L. Buckley O’Mell
Lisa G. Rapp
Jacob Rice*
Susan Richards
Vernon A. Scott
Mitsy Tharp
Michael Videll
Jacob White
*Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
43
Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute Auxiliary Board Mason Campbell
Juli Chrisman
Stuart Cobb
Esther Crawford
Robin Dean
Deborah Dillon
Jake Eddington*
Tisha Gribble
Linda Harvell
Sandy Henry
Paula M. Jennings
Cheryl K. Johnson
Susan D. Jones
Kenan J. Keyes
Gretchen Leech
Janie T. Lowe
Elizabeth Meyer
Susie A. Roberts
Nancy J. Sink
Tara M. Smith
Peyton Woodyard
*Chair
44
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
UAMS Medical Center Auxiliary Board Allison Atkinson
Robin Dean
Kate Franks
Patricia Lavender
Theresa Olsen*
Caitlin Richards
Not photographed: Joseph Griggs Blake James Valerie Johnson Mary Leath Kevin Liang Tomiko Townley *Chair
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
45
UAMS medical students from the 1880s
“ T he true meaning of life is to
plant trees, under whose
shade you do not expect to sit.” - Nelson Henderson
Since its founding in 1879, the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences has been transforming health care in Arkansas, supported in its mission with philanthropic support from friends, patients, alumni and employees. The 1879 Society recognizes the legacy of health and hope through transformative philanthropy made by UAMS’ generous benefactors. The society’s mission is to recognize all living philanthropists who have committed to transforming the future of medicine with a planned gift to UAMS, and to remember those who have passed on. These generous gifts touch countless lives for decades to come. UAMS has been shaped by over $100 million in trust and estate gifts since its founding. These gifts have allowed UAMS to train worldclass health care professionals, provide leading patient care and conduct research producing groundbreaking medical treatments. 46
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
1879 Society Current Members Dr. and Mrs. George L. Ackerman Carlos A. Araoz, M.D. Mr. Russell Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Barber Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Barrins Margaret Bartelt, Ph.D. Mrs. Arminta J. Berry Dr. Claudia J. Beverly Mrs. Mary Biondo Lillian R. Blackmon, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Jack L. Blackshear Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight A. Blissard Dr. and Mrs. Warren C. Boop Jr. Ms. Edith L. Bowman Dr. Judith Garrett and Dr. Allen Bradley The Honorable Robert L. Brown and Mrs. Brown Mrs. Dean Buck Mr. and Mrs. Roy Burks Mrs. Jamie M. Byrne-McCollum Mrs. Emma Calloway Dr. and Mrs. Joel D. Carver Mr. and Mrs. David Chamness Dr. and Mrs. Jeffrey L. Clothier Mr. John T. Clower Drs. Dorothy and John Cody Mr. J. B. Cross Jr. Dr. Frances C. Dalme Mr. John Conant Davis Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dumas Mr. and Mrs. C. Don Edmondson Dr. M. Joycelyn Elders and Mr. Oliver B. Elders Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James Faulkner Dr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Ferris Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Fitzgerald Dr. and Mrs. Shannon Fleming Mr. Joe T. Ford and Mrs. Jo Ellen Ford Dr. and Mrs. Henry W. Foster Dr. Sue Frank Mr. and Mrs. James F. Gadberry Drs. Jo Etta and Bob Galbraith Dr. and Mrs. Paul M. Gardner
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
William P. Gibson, M.D.
Ms. Joanna M. Patterson
Dr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Goldsmith
Dr. Dola Thompson and Dr. John E. Pauly
James Graham, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Pollard
Dr. Gerard Halpern
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Pugh
Dr. Ann Harris and Mr. Thomas H. Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Pugh Jr.
Dr. Jan and Captain Terry Hastings
Mrs. M. Floreen Pullen
Dr. and Mrs. Marvin Hayenga
Mr. and Mrs. Ray A. Quick
Ms. Mary M. Healey
Dr. Martha Phillips and Dr. James M. Raczynski
Robert W. Henderson III, M.D.
Mr. John G. Ragsdale Jr.
Mrs. Anna Hill
Mrs. Geraldine Rayford
Mr. and Mrs. Don M. Hollingsworth
Michael C. Reese, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Honeycutt
Ms. Robin E. Reynolds
Mr. William R. Howard
Lamar Riggs, M.D.
Mrs. Emily Jackson
Mrs. Jeanne V. Robbins
Dr. and Mrs. Richard F. Jacobs
Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Rodgers
Dr. and Mrs. John R. Jefferson
Dr. Angelo J. Ruperto
Ms. Linda Jennings
Nancy Rusch, Ph.D.
Dr. and Mrs. W. Ray Jouett
Mr. Fred W. Schierlang
Mrs. Eleanor Karam
Mr. Gordon Schneider
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Keyes
Ms. Carolyn V. Scruggs
Mr. Robert L. Kinzel Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. John P. Shock
Dr. and Mrs. Peter O. Kohler
Dr. and Mrs. Whitney Shoup
Dr. and Mrs. J. Floyd Kyser
The Reverend Susan S. Smith and Dr. G. Richard Smith Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. John Lytle
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Smith
Dr. and Mrs. Michael G. Mackey
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Smith
Mark J. Malloy, M.D.
Jack T. Steele, M.D.
Mrs. Gladys Monroy and Mr. Larry Marks
Ms. Caroline Hussmann Stevenson
Dr. and Mrs. William L. Mason
Fred R. Sullivan, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross McCaskill
Mrs. Nina M. Sutherlin
Dr. and Mrs. Charles M. McClain Jr.
Mr. Charles E. Thomas
Mrs. June McClain
Dr. Jan Shorey and Mr. Lindsay Thomas
Mr. Thomas W. McGill
Mr. and Mrs. David Turney
Mr. and Mrs. George E. McLeod
Mrs. Judy Van Patter
Drs. Paulette and Jay Mehta
Dr. and Mrs. Ambrose T. Walker
Mr. Dirk Mellema
Ms. Debbie Walker
Mrs. Betty P. Moore
Mr. John M. Walker
Mrs. Dorothy Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Walton
Mrs. Jewell Murphy
Jeanne Wei, M.D., Ph.D.
Mr. and Mrs. George Nozicka
Ms. Imogene Simpson Westfall
Dr. Linda Hodges and Mr. Robert Orr
Dr. and Mrs. Richard P. Wheeler
Lt. Col. Clarence H. Overbay III
Ms. Linnea J. Whitman
Dr. and Mrs. Lee B. Parker Jr.
Mrs. Sue Williamson
Mr. Harold Parks
Dr. and Mrs. I. Dodd Wilson
47
1879 Society Dr. and Mrs. Joe T. Wilson Jr.
Ms. Dorothy Carr
Ms. Marie W. Howells
Mrs. Pat W. Wilson
Earnest L. Cashion, M.D.
Mrs. Lelva L. Huie
Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan J. Wolfe
Mr. Richard Lee Chappell
Ms. Margaret Humphrey
Mr. and Mrs. Craig S. Wood
Ms. Florence Char
Ms. V. Pauline Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Woodell
Robert L. Chester, M.D.
Harvey & Bernice Jones Charitable Trust
Dr. and Mrs. A. Gordon Worsham
Robert B. Clarke, M.D.
Jack W. Kennedy, M.D.
Douglas E. Young, M.D.
Estate of Wanda H. Cooke
Mr. and Mrs. Ruth H. Khan
Ms. Jennie Corvi
Mrs. Mary E. Kroencke
Junius Bracy Cross Sr., M.D.
Stephen L. LaFrance Sr., PharmD
Ms. Rita Jean Davis
Ms. Elizabeth Lang
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Dierks
Ms. Ruby G. Lawson
Mr. Edward B. Dillon Jr.
Mrs. Alice Leasher
James C. Dunbar, M.D.
Dr. Robert Lehmberg
Mrs. Pearl N. Dungan
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Lockwood
Ms. Greba Edens
Charles Lutterloh
Mrs. Lauraetta M. Edgar
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lyon Sr.
Mr. James J. Edwards
Mr. James F. Lyon Jr.
Estate of Charles Eickhoff
Mr. Don M. Mann
Estate of Billie L. Ellsworth
Mrs. Dolleen House Martin
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Ferguson
Ms. Thelma Martineau
Isaac Folsom, M.D.
Mrs. Daphine D. Doster Mastroianni
Mrs. Patricia Gennett
Mrs. Patricia A. May
Estate of Corrinne George
Mr. Bruce L. McEntire Jr.
Mr. Ira S. Gershner
Ms. Josephine T. McGill
Mr. Walter S. Glasgow
Mr. Samuel D. McGill Jr.
Mrs. Jenny Lynn Thomasson Glenn
Ms. Jejo Mobley
Thomas B. Goldsby Jr.
Ms. Bea Monge
Mr. Camden E. Greene
Ms. Valda Montgomery
Mrs. Negie M. Greene
Ms. Marjorie S. Moon
Ms. Susan K. Greene
Ms. Jane Dills Morgan
Ms. Pauline Grossbard
Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Moum
Mr. James H. Hamlen II
Ms. Johnnie Moum
The Albert R. Hammon and Betty M. Hammon Trust
Nolie Mumey Trust
Nelle Harris Trust
Ms. Mozelle Nelson
Dr. and Mrs. James W. Headstream
Drs. Mae and Anderson Nettleship
Ms. Louise Hearn
Jamie Nicholls & Fran Biondi Charitable Trust
Ms. Margaret Henderson
Mr. Ruskin C. Norman
Ms. Eleanore Hodnik
Ms. Mary Odom
Mrs. Wilkie Hogan
Frank W. Oldham, Ph.D.
Ms. Janet Toney Honeycutt
Ms. Margaret Ann Olvey
Estate of Laddie Hornik
Ms. Maryon Patterson
Ms. Helen Hout
Ms. Birdie Pearson
Don G. Howard Sr., M.D., P. A.
Mrs. Dorothy Pelko
In Memoriam Roy and Helen G. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ahrent Mrs. Dorothy S. Aldridge Dr. James Amis Ms. Helen M. Ansel Betsy A. Askew, M.D. Colonel and Mrs. T. H. Barton Mrs. Marion L. Beck Robert W. Beck, M.D. Byron A. Bennett, M.D. Mrs. Martha W. Bentley Dr. Daisilee H. Berry Dr. C. Bhuvaneswaran Dr. Charles W. Bishop Ms. Regina Blanz Francis H. Bogard, M.D. Booher Revocable Trust Dr. Craig Borden William P. Bowen Mr. Sam V. Bracy III Edwin G. Bradberry Harold M. Braswell, M.D. Ms. Caroline T. Briggs Ms. Virginia A. Brissey Charles M. Brizzolara, M.D. Mr. Fred R. Brown Mrs. Ruth H. Brunson Ms. Pearl Bujarski Mr. and Mrs. Dickie Butler Ms. Johnnie Butler Ms. Katherine Cagle Dr. Gene Virginia Campbell Dr. Robert G. Carnahan
48
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
1879 Society Ms. Barbara L. Phillips
Ms. Stella B. Smith
Ms. Ethel Smith Thompson
Powers Revocable Trust
Ms. Dorothy Snider
Frank Threlkeld, M.D.
Mrs. Jo Ann E. Pugh
Mrs. Erma Sobolewski
Ms. Jan M. Van Hise
Mr. Donald W. Reynolds
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Spain
Dr. and Mrs. Irving W. Varley
Mr. J.C. Rhew Jr.
Dr. Allen Spak
Mrs. Emeline Vincent
Mrs. Linda Garner Riggs
Dr. and Mrs. Irving J. Spitzberg
Ms. Pauline T. Wagnon
Lieutenant Governor Winthrop P. Rockefeller
Ms. Jean Stanford
Ms. Pamela K. Walker
Ms. Frances D. Shackelford
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Howard Stebbins III
Ms. Anna E. Webb
Mr. and Mrs. Buren Sharpe
Mr. James Henry Steele
Ms. Edith K. Wilbourn
Eloise B. Sherman, M.D.
Alan J. Stevenson, M.D.
Frieda Wilhelm, M.D.
Dr. and Mrs. Harold Silberbush
Mr. Carl R. Stout
Ms. Elizabeth S. Williams
Estate of Madge Simmons
Ruth Louise Stout, M.D.
Mr. Frank Williams
Ms. Lois J. Sirman
Mrs. Minnie Merrill Sturgis
Mr. William Earl Wilson Jr.
Mr. John W. Sjostrom
Roy and Christine Sturgis Charitable Trust
Ms. Ed Dell Wortz
Ms. Mary Louise Skelton
Mr. William H. Sturgis
Mr. Bruce K. Young
Mr. Fred W. Smith
Dr. and Mrs. Richard H. Sundermann
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Young
Mr. and Mrs. S. Harrow Smith
Mr. Charles M. Taylor
Mrs. Ruby Strauss Thalheimer McCaskill Smith
Bernard W. Thompson, M.D.
The 1879 Society is comprised of more than 300 members from 18 states, with $32.8 million in planned gift commitments.
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
49
The Society of the Double Helix The Society of the Double Helix recognizes the donors who have provided cumulative gifts exceeding $100,000 since the founding of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences in 1879. The UAMS Foundation Fund Board established the Society of the Double Helix on March 10, 1998. UAMS gratefully acknowledges the outstanding philanthropy and exemplary leadership of these individuals, foundations, corporations and organizations who have revolutionized the environment at UAMS through achievements realized with their support. They have helped to fund student scholarships, faculty and research endowments, state-of-the-art equipment purchases, construction of modern facilities and clinical centers of excellence.
Induction Ceremonies Through the years the philanthropic contributions of members of the Society of the Double Helix have helped advance the comprehensive mission of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences to achieve international recognition. UAMS, in turn, has held formal recognition ceremonies to officially induct philanthropic contributors into the Society with the first such ceremony being held in 1998. Donors that have requested anonymity have been excluded. Individual and household names appear as they existed at the time of induction. The list includes those who have been inducted into the Society by the close of Fiscal Year 2018 (June 30, 2018).
50
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
The Society of the Double Helix Abbott Laboratories
Suzanne and Steve Barker
Mrs. Harold H. Cabe
Dr. and Mrs. George L. Ackerman
Dr. and Mrs. C. Lowry Barnes
Horace C. Cabe Foundation
Estate of Mrs. Helen Guinn Adams
Dr. Gary Barone and Dr. Claudia Barone
Estate of Katherine Cagle
Adriano Buzzati-Traverso Fondazione
Colonel and Mrs. T. H. Barton
Care Foundation
Affiliated Foods Southwest, Inc.
Barton Foundation
Caregiving, Health and Education
Mr. Edwin B. Alderson III
Bass Family Charitable Foundation
Carl Zeiss Meditec, Inc.
Alltel Corporation
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Bates
Estate of Dr. and Mrs. Robert G. Carnahan
Ben J. Altheimer Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baum
Dr. and Mrs. Henry Murfree Carney
American Cancer Research Center & Foundation
Beaumont Foundation of America
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Carroll Family
American Cancer Society
Estate of Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Beck
Dr. Michael Carter and Dr. Sarah Carter
American Heart Association - SouthWest Affiliate
Mr. Melvyn Bell
Celgene Corporation
American Medical Systems
Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand M. Bellingrath Jr.
Mr. Charles J. Cella
Amgen, Inc.
Benevolentia Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Cella
Dr. James W. Amis Memorial Endowment
Estate of Dr. and Mrs. Byron A. Bennett
Central Arkansas Radiation Therapy Institute, Inc.
Dr. Marie E. Pinizzotto and Carol A. Ammon
Estate of Martha Wood Bentley
Estate of Florence Char, M.D.
Dr. and Mrs. Rex A. Amonette
Mr. Fabio Bertarelli
Estate of Robert L. Chester, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Gibson F. Anderson
Beverly Enterprises, Inc.
The City Trust
Mr. Lynn Anderson
Jamie Nicholls & Fran Biondi Trust
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Aubra Anthony
Michael and Beverly Birnbaum
Estate of Robert B. Clarke
Carlos A. Araoz, M.D.
Banks Blackwell, M.D., Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Cobb
Ares-Serono Group
Mai Banks Blackwell, M.D. Foundation
Carl Collier, PD and Collier Drug Stores
Arkansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield
Ms. Regina Blanz
Mr. and Mrs. George D. Combs
Arkansas Caduceus Club
Mr. and Mrs. Gus Blass II
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Connor
Arkansas Community Health and Education Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Noland Blass Jr.
Continental Ozark, Inc.
Arkansas Electric Cooperative Corporation
Blue & You Foundation
Estate of Wanda H. Cooke
Arkansas Farm Bureau Federation
Bodenhamer Foundation
Cooper Communities, Inc.
Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bogle
COR Therapeutics, Inc.
Arkansas Health Care Association
Estate of Craig W. Borden, M.D.
Wallace H. Coulter Foundation
Arkansas Medical, Dental & Pharmaceutical Association
Ms. Mary Ann Boreham
Mary Lou and Bill Cravens
Arkansas Medical Society Alliance, Inc.
Boston Properties, Inc.
Cromwell Architects Engineers, Incorporated
Arkansas Office of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention
Estate of William Poston Bowen
Deborah K. Cunningham, M.D.
Arkansas Pharmacists Association
Dr. and Mrs. Harper W. Boyd Jr.
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation Pharmacy, LLC
Arkansas Prostate Cancer Foundation, Inc.
The Estate of Sam V. Bracy III
Dairy Research Institute
Arkansas Research Alliance, Inc.
Karlee and Edwin Bradberry
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Dante
ARKLA
Estate of Harold M. Braswell, M.D.
Frederick K. Darragh Charitable Trust
Aromatique, Inc.
Dr. and Mrs. W. Mike Bridger
Dr. and Mrs. O. Leo Davenport
Ashley County Cares
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
Mr. and Mrs. Atley G. Davis
Estate of Betsy Ledbetter Askew, M.D.
Estate of Charles M. Brizzolara, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney P. Davis
AstraZeneca
Mr. and Mrs. Owen Brown
Delta Dental of Arkansas Foundation
Mr. Jerry H. Atchley and Stephanie Simonton-Atchley, Ph.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Brown
Deltic Timber Corporation
AT&T Arkansas
The Brown Foundation, Inc., Houston, Texas
Dr. Chun-Yang Fan and Ms. Peiying Deng
Aventis Pharmaceuticals Products, Inc.
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Bruce
Mr. Remmel Tyndal Dickinson
Bailey Family Foundation
Estate of Ruth H. Brunson
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Dierks
Bailey Foundation
Dr. and Mrs. J. Steven Bryant Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William T. Dillard Sr.
Baldwin & Shell Construction Company
Estate of Pearl Bujarski
Dillard’s, Inc.
Bank of America
Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Butler
Wilma C. Diner, M.D.
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
51
The Society of the Double Helix
52
Mr. and Mrs. Sam M. Dixon
Mr. and Mrs. Barnett Grace
W.K. Ingram Family
Dr. John H. Doran
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Grand
Mr. and Mrs. W. Kent Ingram Jr.
Estate of Daphine D. Doster
Dr. and Mrs. Paul M. Gray
Victor Jacuzzi Family
Ms. Lucia Dougherty
Mr. and Mrs. Camden E. Greene
Japan Green Stamp America, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. David Drexler
Estate of Negie M. Greene
J.A. Riggs Tractor Company
Estate of James C. Dunbar, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. David F. Gruenewald
George Frederick Jewett Foundation
Estate of Pearl N. Dungan
Estate of James H. Hamlen II
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Ms. Helen L. Porter and Mr. James T. Dyke
Mrs. Gerald F. Hamra and Family
Harvey and Bernice Jones Charitable Trust
Mr. and Mrs. James C. East
Jane Hunt and Bill P. Hardin
Harvey and Bernice Jones Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. C. Don Edmondson
Mr. and Mrs. Rush Harding
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Jones
Estate of James Joseph Edwards
Mrs. Joyce M. Harms
The Jonsson Foundation
Estate of Charles Eickhoff
Estate of Nelle C. Harris
Philip R. Jonsson Foundation
Eli Lilly and Company
John A. Hartford Foundation
Dr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Joyce
Estate of Mrs. Billie L. Ellsworth
The Hat Club of Little Rock
John and Dorothy Keeble III
Entergy, Little Rock
Dr. Cynthia S. Ross and Dr. Martin Hauer-Jensen
Estate of Jack W. Kennedy, M.D.
Episcopal Diocese of Arkansas
Dr. and Mrs. Marvin Hayenga
Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Keyes
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis E. Epley Jr.
William C. Head, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. John Allen Klabzuba
Edward P. Evans Foundation
Dr. and Mrs. James W. Headstream
Klabzuba Family Foundation
Fashion Footwear Association of New York
Estate of Louise Hearn
Ms. Sharon H. Knighten
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer A. Ferguson
Hearst Foundation, Inc.
Dr. and Mrs. Peter O. Kohler
Mr. William W. Ferguson
Mr. and Mrs. Jay L. Heflin, Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Heflin and
Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation
Fifty For The Future, Inc.
Terminix, Inc.
Kresge Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Finch Jr.
Helena Health Foundation
Dr. and Mrs. J. Floyd Kyser
First Commercial Bank
Helena Regional Medical Center
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond LaCroix Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Poindexter Fiser
Mr. Hugh L. Hembree
Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Lambert
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Fletcher
Carl J. Herzog Foundation, Inc.
Dr. and Mrs. James H. Landers
Isaac Folsom, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Hickingbotham
Estate of Elizabeth Lang
Mr. and Mrs. Joe T. Ford
Highfield Capital Inc.
Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas P. Lang
Foundation Resource Management
Highlands Oncology
Ms. Edie LaQuer
Drs. D. Karrol and Vicki C. Fowlkes
Judd Hill Foundation
Estate of Ruby Gladys Lawson
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey H. Fox
HipKneeArkansas Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Bennett LeBow
Fraternal Order of Eagles
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Hogan
Bennett & Geraldine LeBow Foundation, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Edmond W. Freeman
Mr. and Mrs. Denny R. Holman
Mr. and Mrs. J. Harry Leggett Jr.
Charles A. Frueauff Foundation
Albert and Lynne Hopkins
Mrs. Barbara Kaye Leonard
Fuji Medical Systems USA, Inc.
Estate of Laddie Hornik
Leukemia & Lymphoma Society
Helene Fuld Health Trust
Estate of Helen Hout
Mr. Alan Lewis
Dr. Algernon Sidney Garnett Memorial Trust
Dr. and Mrs. Don G. Howard
The Elizabeth Crook & Mark Lewis Foundation
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Mr. William R. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Lieblong
Genentech, Inc.
Estate of Marie Wilson Howells
Mr. James E. Lindsey
General Electric Corporation
Lelva L. Huie Revocable Trust
Lion Oil Company
Ira S. and Jean B. Gershner Charitable Trust
Mr. and Mrs. J.B. Hunt
Ms. Ginanne Graves Long
Mr. and Mrs. Ramon F. Getzov
Hussman Foundation
Lorber Charitable Fund
Ryan Gibson Foundation
Drs. Laura and Steven Hutchins
Mrs. Ruby F. Lott
Mr. and Mrs. C. Joseph Giroir Jr.
IBERIABANK
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Lubel
GlaxoSmithKline
Inglewood Foundation
Carroll Hartzell Lutterloh Family Memorial Trust
Goldsbury Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Keith M. Ingram
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lyon Jr.
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
The Society of the Double Helix Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lyon Sr.
Mr. Terry L. Norrington
W. P. Malone, Inc.
Northwest Health
The Honorable W. Percy Malone and Mrs. Malone
Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation
Markey Cancer Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Nutt
Larry Marks and Gladys Monroy Marks
Oaklawn Foundation
Massey Family Foundation
Oaklawn Jockey Club, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas May
Estate of Mary E. Odom
The Madelyne M. and Edward C. McCarty Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Ohlendorf
Betty J. McClellan, M.D.
Estate of Margaret Ann Olvey
Estate of Bruce L. McEntire Jr.
Ortho Biotech, Inc.
Estate of Josephine T. McGill
Ottenheimer Brothers Foundation
Estate of Samuel D. McGill
Carmelita S. Pablo, M.D.
Mr. Thomas W. McGill
Dr. and Mrs. James J. Pappas
Mr. and Mrs. Randy McNulty
Par Pharmaceutical, Inc.
Medical College Physicians Group
Parents Club of UAMS College of Medicine, Inc.
Medical Education Foundation for Arkansas
Mr. James T. Paxson
Medtronic, Inc.
Peck Family Partnership
Medtronic Foundation
Estate of Dorothy Pelko
Merck & Company, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Perrigo
Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Meyer III
Pfizer, Inc.
Mr. Larry Middleton
Dr. Beverly C. Phifer
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Middleton
Mrs. Barbara Phillips
Foundation for the Mid South
Mr. and Mrs John A. Phillips
Estate of Bea Monge
Phillips Charity Classic
Valda Montomery Trust
Marion E. Pool
Estate of Dr. and Mrs. Charles Roy Moon
Dr. and Mrs. John J. Pope
Jane Dills Morgan Trust
Powers Revocable Trust
Morris Foundation, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Chesley Pruet
Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Morrison
Mrs. Magalene Ingram Pugh
Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Moum
Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Pugh
Estate of Nolie Mumey, M.D.
Dr. and Mrs. Wayne G. Pullen
Don and Barbara Munro
Mr. and Mrs. Carl D. Purnell
Lupe Murchison Foundation
Dora Johnson Ragsdale and John G. Ragsdale Jr.
Murphy Foundation
Mr. Chris Rakhshan
Murphy Oil Corporation
Rampy MS Research Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Madison Murphy
Mrs. Nancy F. Rasco
Ms. Martha W. Murphy
Rebsamen Fund
Martha W. Murphy Foundation
Reckson Strategic Ventures
Dr. and Mrs. Randolph Murphy
Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Redfield
Musculoskeletal Transplant Foundation
Mrs. Billie Dean Reeder
Nabholz Charitable Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. John David Reese Family
National Breast Cancer Foundation, Inc.
Regions Bank
National Multiple Sclerosis Society
Research To Prevent Blindness
Estate of Mozelle M. Nelson
Donald W. Reynolds Foundation
Mae Nettleship, M.D.
J.C. Rhew Jr. Charitable Trust
Nolan Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Riady
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
53
The Society of the Double Helix
54
Wm. W. Richardson
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Smith
Trinity Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Riseman
Dorothy Snider Foundation
Tyson Family Foundation, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud N. Risser III
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Snowden Sr.
UAMS Medical Center Auxiliary
Jeanne V. Robbins Charitable Trust
Erma Sobolewski Trust
USA Drug
Roche Laboratories Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob I. Sopher
U.S. Pizza Co., Inc. / Judy Waller Breece
Winthrop Rockefeller Charitable Trust
Southern Skies Corporation
Estate of Pauline T. Wagnon
Winthrop Rockefeller Foundation
Southwestern Bell Telephone Company
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Walden
Lieutenant Governor and Mrs. Winthrop P. Rockefeller
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Sowell
Walgreens Corporation
Mr. Winthrop Paul Rockefeller Jr.
Estate of Neil and Clara Spain
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Walker
Dr. and Mrs. Porter R. Rodgers Jr.
Sparks Health System
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Roescheise
Sparks Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Willard J. Walker
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle W. Rogers
Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Spears
Walmart Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ronnel
Jean Stanford IRRV Trust
Ellis and Gus Walton
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rosen
Dr. and Mrs. William W. Stead
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Warmack
St. Jude Medical, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Howard Stebbins III
Washington County Medical Society
Ben N. Saltzman, M.D.
Jack T. Steele, M.D.
Estate of Anna E. Webb
Dr. Kathy and Mr. Jeffery C. Sanders
Stephens, Inc.
Jeanne Y. Wei, M.D., PhD
SBC Foundation
Stephens Charitable Trust
Mr. William P. Weinberg
Charles E. Scharlau III, J.D.
Mr. Jackson T. Stephens
Dr. and Mrs. Kent C. Westbrook
Scharlau Family Charitable Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Warren A. Stephens
Estate of R. Bates Wheeler
Schering-Plough Corporation
Estate of Alan J. Stevenson, M.D.
Mary and Ross Whipple
Schering Sales Corporation
Caroline H. Stevenson
Edith K. Wilbourn Charitable Trust
Schmieding Foundation, Inc.
Estate of Carl R. Stout
Estate of Frank Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Schneider
Strauss Foundation
Mr. J. Gaston Williamson
Mr. Lon Schreur
Mr. Trip Strauss
Dr. and Mrs. I. Dodd Wilson
Schueck Family Foundation
Ms. Susan Strauss
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pat Wilson
Carolyn V. Scruggs
The Barbra Streisand Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Wilson Sr.
Second Presbyterian Church
Sturgis Charitable Trust
Dr. and Mrs. Steven K. Wilson
Ms. Emma J. Sellers
Roy and Christine Sturgis Charitable and Educational Trust
Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson
Mrs. Frances D. Shackelford
Dr. and Mrs. James Y. Suen
Windstream Corporation
Estate of Buren and Edna Sharpe
Dr. and Mrs. Chao N. Sun
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Winn
Ginny and Bob Shell
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Sweeney Jr.
Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute Auxiliary
Mr. and Mrs. H. Elvin Shuffield Jr.
Alexander R. and Delorose A. Szeles
Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan J. Wolfe
Don Shula Foundation, Inc.
TAWANI Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Craig S. Wood
Dr. and Mrs. Harold Silberbush
Estate of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Minor Taylor II
McMath Woods P.A.
Simmons First National Bank
Norris Cunningham Taylor Jr.
Mrs. Rita M. Woods
Harold Simmons Foundation
Tenenbaum Charitable Trust Fund
Dr. and Mrs. A. Gordon Worsham
Estate of Madge Simmons
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Tenenbaum
Ed Dell Wortz
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Simpson III
The Tenenbaum Foundation
Wyeth Pharmaceuticals
Lois J. Sirman Trust
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Thomas
Professor and Mrs. M. Gazi Yasargil
Gertrude E. Skelly Charitable Foundation
Mr. Rodney A. Thomason
Dr. and Mrs. David M. Yocum Jr.
Mr. H. Eugene Smith Jr.
Drs. Benard W. and Dola S. Thompson
Mr. David Yocum IV
Smith Holloway Patton Foundation
Estate of Ethel Smith Thompson
York Foundation
Mrs. Ruby Strauss Thalheimer McCaskill Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Don Thompson and Thompson Electric, Inc.
Estate of Bruce K. Young
Stella Boyle Smith Trust
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Tollett
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young III
Estate of Stella Boyle Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Treadway
Zimmer, Inc.
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Advancing Our Mission You are shaping the future of health care. UAMS is the world-class health sciences university it is today because of your generosity, and we are grateful for your commitment to our shared goal of helping people live longer, healthier lives. Philanthropy is crucial to advancing the leadership and service we deliver to the people of Arkansas and beyond. Your investment in our mission fuels life-changing work: exceptional patient care, innovative research and leading-edge educational programs that train and inspire the next generation of health care professionals. The impact of your investment is powerful — seen every day in communities throughout our state. The stories in this report illustrate both the local and global impact of your philanthropy. Collectively, these stories are an expression of how together, we have changed lives. Each story exemplifies how an experience — as a patient, a student, an employee, a community partner — yields a lasting legacy benefiting generations. No two donors share a single motivation, but each gift is rooted in the deep-seated belief that we can make a difference for those in need. Every gift to UAMS, regardless of amount, emboldens our mission, which is vital to the people of our state, the region and the world. Today, new opportunities at UAMS for pioneering strategies are beginning to take hold and will shape the future of health care. Philanthropy fuels UAMS into the future. The momentum is building and we’re excited to have you join us on this journey. Thank you for partnering with us for a better state of health. We are truly better together. Warm regards,
I N S P I R E Brigitte Grant, MBA Interim Vice Chancellor for Institutional Advancement Executive Director, UAMS Foundation Fund
I N V E S T I M P A C T
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
55
Total UAMS Endowment $ 350,000,000
$300,000,000
$250,000,000
$200,000,000
$ 150,000,000
$ 100,000,000
$ 50,000,000
$0 Total University Foundation
FY10
FY11
FY12
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY17
FY18
$ 150,859,108 $ 183,634,753 $ 187,741,639 $ 211,828,176 $243,269,846 $ 258,647,520 $ 257,749,948 $ 296,826,578 $ 325,455,819 $ 29,439,802 $ 35,665,143 $ 36,586,377 $ 42,500,547 $ 49,897,875 $ 49,997,229 $ 49,843,837 $ 54,992,317 $ 59,639,510 $ 121,419,306 $ 147,969,610 $ 151,155,262 $ 169,327,629 $ 193,371,971 $ 208,650,291 $ 207,906,111 $ 241,834,261 $ 265,816,309
Employee Giving Rate 10 %
8 %
6%
4 %
2 %
0 %
56
F Y 12
F Y 13
F Y 14
F Y 15
F Y 16
F Y 17
F Y 18
6%
6%
5%
5%
6%
5%
8 %
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
Chancellor’s Circle Grants Chancellor's Circle Grants $500,000 $450,000 $400,000 $350,000 $300,000 $250,000 $200,000 $150,000 $100,000 $50,000 $0
FY13 $273,000
FY14 $300,000
FY16 $305,000
FY15 $325,000
FY17 $360,000
FY18 $425,000
Total Amount of Planned Giving Expectancies $45,000,000 $40,000,000 $35,000,000 $30,000,000 $25,000,000 $20,000,000 $15,000,000 $10,000,000 $5,000,000 $0
FY12
FY13
FY14
$9,991,751
$12,954,752
$16,965,386
FY15
FY16
FY17
FY18
UAMS ranks as 1 of only 11 ASSOCIATION FOR HEALTH CARE PHILANTHROPY member institutions internationally recognized as a High Performer for the last 3 years in a row
$27,991,274 $32,888,963 $38,200,885 $44,363,938
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
57
Friends of UAMS Friends of UAMS is an initiative designed to build a strong foundation with chapters in strategic communities across the state. Through communityfocused education and research, its goal is to focus on the impact of UAMS’ mission of improving the health and health care of all Arkansans.
EVENTS
38
ATTENDEES
3,112
Friends of UAMS Chapters N orthwest Arkansas Fort Smith Jonesboro Batesville Hot Springs
Pine Bluff Helena-West Helena Monticello Magnolia Texarkana
Searcy Russellville M ountain Home H ot Springs Village
Friends of UAMS Giving $3,500,000
$3,000,000
$ 2,500,000
$2,000,000
$ 1,500,000
TOTAL FRIENDS
2,859
58
$ 1,000,000
$ 500,000
$0
FY15 $ 211,111
FY16 $ 546,213
FY17 $ 2,564,876
FY18 $ 3,326,154
UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS FOR MEDICAL SCIENCES
FY19
Friends of UAMS This report is prepared by UAMS Institutional Advancement. Every effort has been made to provide a complete and accurate listing of donors and gifts. Please accept our sincere apologies if any omission has been made. Please contact us at advancement@uams.edu or call (501) 686-8200 to report any inaccuracies, and we will be happy to correct our records. The UAMS Foundation Fund and the Winthrop P. Rockefeller Foundation Fund are sub-organizations of The University of Arkansas Foundation, Inc., a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation. (Tax ID # 71-6056774). To opt out of future fundraising communications, please call 1-888-995-UAMS (8267) or send an email to advancement@uams.edu. We wish to thank UAMS Communications and Marketing for their work in the design and production of this publication.
ADVANCING THE HEALTH OF ARKANSAS
59
SAVE THE DATE 10.02.2018
10.05.2017 UAMS DAY OF GIVING #UAMSDAYOFGIVING INVEST
IN
ARKANSAS
Support health care and health care education in our state. Your decision to support UAMS students, educators, researchers, patients and their families makes YOU an important part of the life-changing work we do every day throughout Arkansas.
Give online: giving.UAMS.edu/giveonline Make a gift by phone: Call 501.686.8200. Ensure your legacy by including UAMS in your will. Call 501.686.7894 or visit giving.UAMS.edu/wills to learn more.
If you wish to opt out of future fundraising communications from UAMS, please email us at advancement@uams.edu or call 1-888-995-8267.