2021 Annual Report

Page 79

PHILANTHROPY A Gift for the Community Health Care Van

Orloff Gift to Fund Lectureship, Education

On Friday, February 12, the New England Chapter of the March of Dimes (MOD) and the Real Estate Foundation collectively delivered a $30,000 check to Yale School of Medicine’s Community Health Care Van’s Mobile Health Unit. March of Dimes also secured a $30,000 matching gift from its partner, the Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield Foundation in Connecticut, totaling $60,000 to help the Mobile Health Unit expand its capacity. In April 2020, the van was quickly repurposed to serve neighborhoods in New Haven by helping combat COVID-19 and providing postpartum visits for mothers and their infants, coordinated with telehealth visits with their doctor. Since then, the Community Health Care Van’s Mobile Health Unit has made more than 600 visits to patients, focusing on new mothers and babies, by helping them avoid unnecessary use of public transit or extra travel to doctor appointments during the pandemic. The March of Dimes Fairfield County Real Estate Award Breakfast has been raising funds for 25 years, totaling more than $8 million, to benefit the March of Dimes and research, programs, and local initiatives like this one, said Keely McMullin of MOD. In addition to financial support, March of Dimes has donated breast pumps, baby monitors, onesies, maxi-pads, toiletries, books, knit hats, reusable totes, and other newborn and new mom essentials to provide additional care and support to patient families. Katherine Kohari, MD, FACOG, said of the donation and partnership with MOD, “The March of Dimes has a long history of supporting healthy moms and strong babies. In no time in our recent history has this support been more needed than during the COVID-19 pandemic. When I first learned of the initiative, led by Leslie Sude and Rick Altice, to repurpose the Mobile Health Van to serve postpartum moms and newborns in our local community, I knew it was something the March of Dimes would want to be a part of. Bringing care right to the patient in their own environment helped to remove fear and anxiety about traveling to the office and increasing the risk for contracting COVID. Newly postpartum moms can get blood pressure checks and be screened for postpartum depression, newborns can get weight checks and examinations, all right there on the van. It seemed like a no-brainer to help support this initiative. We are so lucky that the Connecticut March of Dimes has an active group in Fairfield County that hosts the annual Real Estate Breakfast.” Ted Ferrarone of the Real Estate Foundation presented the donation to Drs. Altice and Sude in front of a small crowd in New Haven.

Yale School of Medicine’s Endocrine & Metabolism Section in the Department of Internal Medicine thanks John Orloff, MD, a former Yale endocrine fellow and faculty member, for his very generous donation to the Broadus Fund in the Endocrine Section. The fund was established in memory of former Section Chief Arthur Broadus, MD, PhD. “The Broadus Fund helps to support a named lectureship in Arthur’s honor as well as supporting, more generally, the section’s educational activities,” Section Chief John Wysolmerski, MD, said. Since leaving Yale, Orloff has had a successful career in pharma, with stints at Merck Research Laboratories, Novartis, Merck Serono, Baxter International, and Novelion. He served as the global head of research and development and chief scientific officer at Baxalta; and most recently was executive vice president and global head of R&D for Alexion Pharmaceuticals until it was purchased by AstraZeneca. Orloff currently is a venture partner at Agent Capital in Boston. “In his career, Dr. Orloff has helped develop and champion new science and innovative treatments for metabolic and other diseases. We truly appreciate his wonderful contributions to medicine and his support of the education programs that serve endocrine fellows and members of the endocrine faculty and community at Yale,” Wysolmerski added.

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