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Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care “Palliative care is an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problem associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual.” World Health Organization, WHO Definition of Palliative Care, 2010 HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010

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Page 1: Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care - HealthCare Chaplaincy · 2019-05-05 · Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care“Palliative care is an approach that improves the quality of life of patients

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

“Palliative care is an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problem associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual.”

– World Health Organization, WHO Definition of Palliative Care, 2010

HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010

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Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

Table of Contents

2 From the Chairman and the President & CEOT. Michael Long

Chairman

The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.

President & Chief Executive Officer

3 2010 At-A-Glance

4 About Us

5 Clinical Staff and Partners

6 What People Say About Us

7 From the Executive Vice President & COOClaire H. Altman

Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

8 Center for Continuing and Professional StudiesThe Rev. Dr. Martin Montonye

Vice President, Academic Affairs

9 The Pastoral Care Leadership and Practice GroupThe Rev. George Handzo, BCC, CSSBB

Vice President, Pastoral Care Leadership & Practice

10 The Spears Research InstituteKevin J. Flannelly, Ph.D.

Associate Director, Research

11 The Palliative Care CampusRobert Wolf

Senior Vice President, Innovation and Development

14 New Trustees

15 Treasurer’s Report

16 2010 Financial At-a-Glance

17 2006 – 2010 Statement of Financial Activities

18 2006 – 2010 Statement of Financial Position

19 Officers/Board of Trustees

20 Chairman Emeritus /Life Trustees/President’s Advisory Council

21 Marketing Advisory Council

22 2009 Wholeness of Life Awards Dinner

24 Gifts from Institutions

25 Gifts from Individuals/Gifts in Kind

29 In Honor Of/In Memory Of

32 Hope and Remembrance Society

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From the Chairman and the President & CEO

Imagine u Innovate u Inspire

Three simple words boldly express what HealthCare Chaplaincy wants to do—in ever-changing, mission-driven ways—as it enters its second half-century.

Imagine

Fifty years ago, who could have imagined the transformations that health care would undergo, and how prominent and influential multifaith chaplaincy care would become in advocating treatment of the whole person? Yet, as early as the 4th century BCE, Plato understood the necessity of integrated care. “As you ought not to attempt to cure the eyes without the head, or the head without the body, so neither ought you to attempt to cure the body without the soul…For the part can never be well unless the whole is well… And therefore, if the head and body are to be well, you must begin by curing the soul.” (Early Dialogues, Charmides)

Innovate

Health care is an innovative and dynamic field, which is striving to provide accessible and affordable patient-centered care. America is at a critical turning point in determining how it will best do this. As science, technology, care processes, and care teams have become more complex and diverse, the way in which the activities of care are organized and the institutional contexts in which they occur have become important determinants of the effectiveness and efficiency of that care. As better health delivery models are being developed and tested, palliative care will increase in importance.

At HealthCare Chaplaincy, we are becoming a palliative care nonprofit organization with a distinctive vision for how to provide outcomes-oriented, spirit-centered palliative care for persons with life-altering, progressive illness. Palliative care, which the New York Times called “one of the fastest-growing fields of medicine,” is built on a conceptual foundation that has long informed the thinking and practice of professional chaplains: putting patients at the centre of care, empowering them, listening and responding to them, working in partnership with them and their loved ones, and facilitating their choices whenever and wherever possible.

Inspire

The Latin root—inspirare—is “life-giving”: it literally means breathing life, exerting an animating, enlivening, or exalting influence on someone or something. For 50 years, HealthCare Chaplaincy has been inspiring people and institutions, students and researchers, city and nation. While it is consoling and instructive to look back and to take stock of all the good that HealthCare Chaplaincy has done in nurturing the lives of the more than five million patients and thousands of students it has cared for and supported through the years, this annual report will introduce our friends and supporters to the Chaplaincy’s inspiring and expansive vision for the next fifty years.

Palliative care is a prism through which HealthCare Chaplaincy is envisaging its future. We expect to help make “palliative care” a household term in America—where physical, psychological and spiritual needs are consistently met and cultural and religious traditions are honored. HealthCare Chaplaincy will strengthen and leverage its strategic health care and research partnerships, expand the scope of the education offered to health professionals, develop and clinically test new and integrated approaches to patient care, and build and operate the nation’s first palliative care campus.

Imagine u Innovate u Inspire

We invite each of our benefactors and philanthropic partners, our trustees and colleagues and friends, to join us on this imaginative, innovative and inspiring journey. We thank you for the countless ways in which your confidence and support are enabling HealthCare Chaplaincy to “find meaning” and “bring comfort” to those in need of compassionate and astute care.

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T. Michael LongChairman

The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.President & Chief Executive Officer

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2010 At-A-Glance

Professional Chaplaincy Care Services

Patient Visits 123,4812009-2010 Referrals 15,229Current Partner Institutions 13

Education

Clinical Pastoral Education Units offered (Each requires 400 hours of clinical and class time.) 212Students enrolled in CPE 182Students in Jewish Leadership Programs 91

Research

Peer-reviewed articles published 9Articles published since 2001 86

The Spears Research Institute publishes original studies on spirituality and health in national peer-reviewed journals. These journals span a number of professional disciplines, such as chaplaincy care, medicine, psychiatry, psychology, and nursing.

Consulting

Consultation services were provided to:

- U.S. Navy Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Washington, DC- Intermountain Healthcare, Salt Lake City, Utah- John Muir Health, Walnut Creek, California- Mount Sinai Medical Center, New York, New York- Maine General Hospital, Augusta, Maine- Archstone Foundation, Long Beach, California

Clinical Staff and Faculty

Chaplains 26Faculty 10

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Mission Statement

To improve the effectiveness and efficiency of health care through the innovative ways

chaplains promote and advance palliative care research, education and practice.

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Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

Over 50 years have helped more than 5 million people find meaning and comfort

Our chaplains help patients, loved ones and health care institution staff to discover and use their spiritual and religious resources in the service of their decision-making and healing – regardless of religion or beliefs.

Unique combination of services, education, and research

• We are the direct provider of professional, board-certified chaplaincy care in an expansive network of metropolitan New York hospitals and long-term care facilities whose chaplaincy departments we manage and staff. This care helps to improve patient outcomes and satisfaction through the unique and constructive connections that professional chaplains are able to create with people of all religions, beliefs, races, ethnicities, cultures, and backgrounds.

• We are expanding our work into community settings through senior centers, local congregations, and correctional facilities to help more people who are seeking spiritual support as they deal with crises and loss.

• Our Center for Continuing and Professional Studies, a major provider of chaplaincy education in the United States, is now affiliated with Columbia University Teachers College.

• Our Spears Research Institute is a leading center on the relationship between spiritual care and health.

Developing America’s first Palliative Care Campus

Palliative care helps people with life-altering illness live well and live fully.

The New York Times reports that palliative care is one of the fastest growing fields in medicine.

HealthCare Chaplaincy is leading the way as we develop America’s first Palliative Care Campus. At its core will be a 120 unit enhanced assisted living residence for persons with serious illness, which will demonstrate how to provide spirit-centered care in a community-based, long-term care residential setting. In addition, the Campus will bring together in one collaborative space the Chaplaincy’s clinical practice, education and research operations and administrative services. The Campus will include a geriatric and palliative care medical home that will provide outpatient health care both for residents and people who live in the neighboring communities.

This comprehensive Palliative Care Campus will serve as a learning classroom not only for chaplains but for other health care professionals who together are committed to provide patient-centered care for those living with progressive, life-altering illnesses.

About Us

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Clinical Staff and Partners

Beth Israel Medical CenterChaplain Eileen PesekRabbi Dr. Bonita E. Taylor

Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer CenterThe Rev. Jill BowdenSister Elaine Goodell, P.B.V.M.Al-Hajji Imam Yusuf H. HasanRabbi Harry Rothstein

St. John’s Riverside HospitalThe Rev. Sarah Fogg, Ph.D.The Rev. Paul W. Rickert

Hospital for Special SurgeryRabbi Ralph KregerSister Margaret T. Oettinger, O.P.

New York Hospital QueensRabbi David M. KeehnThe Rev. Eun Joo KimSister Rosarine Quinn, C.S.J.

St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital CenterAl-Hajji Imam Yusuf H. HasanRabbi Dr. Bonita E. Taylor The Rev. Florine Thompson

Lawrence Hospital CenterThe Rev. Simmons Gardner

NYU Langone Medical CenterThe Rev. David FleenorChaplain Holly GaudetteThe Rev. Maria Lopez

St. Mary’s CenterThe Rev. Daniel Shenk

Lenox Hill HospitalRabbi Ralph KregerThe Rev. Wilfredo Rodriguez

North Shore University HospitalThe Rev. Jon OvervoldThe Rev. Kimberli LileRabbi Daniel ColemanRabbi Nathan Goldberg

Steven & Alexandra Cohen Children’s Medical Center of New York

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Winthrop-University HospitalThe Rev. Eglon Angel The Rev. Dr. Min Jung Park

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What People Say About Us

“Palliative care helps the whole person – body, mind, and spirit. Understanding and satisfying the patient’s spiritual needs is vital to effective palliative care, and I view HealthCare Chaplaincy to be expert in this field.”

– R. Sean Morrison, MD, Professor of Geriatrics and Palliative Care, Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Director, National Palliative Care Research Center

“HealthCare Chaplaincy’s professional chaplains are an important part of our health care team. I’m convinced that they help improve outcomes in difficult medical situations. They bridge cultural gaps, and bring comfort and support to patients, families and staff who are dealing with great stress.”

– Jim Foy, Former President and CEO, St. John’s Riverside Hospital, Yonkers, NY

“The gold standard of research and advocacy on behalf of professional chaplaincy.”

– David A. Lichter, D.Min, Executive Director, National Association of Catholic Chaplains

“Unlike most clinical pastoral education programs that are housed in one institution, HealthCare Chaplaincy has created a model of education and pastoral/spiritual care that brings several unrelated institutions under one umbrella. This is the kind of innovation that is its hallmark.”

– The Rev. Dr. Teresa Snorton, Executive Director of the Association for Clinical Pastoral Education and Presiding Bishop for the Eleventh Episcopal District of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

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From the Executive Vice President & COO

In FY 2010 HealthCare Chaplaincy embarked on a re-engineering effort to align our clinical practice, professional education and research work with our focus on palliative care. What chaplains do and have done throughout our 50 year history is an important component of palliative care – providing comfort and help-ing people find meaning in their lives as they grapple with life-altering illness.

The field of palliative care formally recognizes the importance of spiritual care, and HealthCare Chaplaincy is taking the lead to expand the role of spirit-centered palliative care through a range of important initiatives:

In the pages that follow, my colleagues will tell you more about these exciting initiatives.

Claire H. AltmanExecutive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer

Through continuing professional education – We have begun to develop the first continuing profes-sional education curriculum that will equip chaplains to be effec-tive members of trans-disciplinary palliative care teams, alongside physicians, nurses, social workers, and others. Once this curriculum is created, the Association of Pro-fessional Chaplains, the certifying body, will establish the process for board certified chaplains to gain ad-ditional certification in the palliative care sub-specialty.

Through clinical practice – As we continually work with our partner institutions to help them achieve their missions, we are highlighting the growing area of palliative care services.

Through research – We are focus-ing on how the spiritual dimension of palliative care makes a difference in the health of patients, and how family members, caregivers and health care institutions and their staffs benefit from spiritual care.

Through the development of America’s first Palliative Care Campus – This will house a 120 unit enhanced assisted living residence for persons with serious illness; our own education, research, clinical practice and administrative of-fices; and a geriatric and palliative care medical home that will pro-vide outpatient health care both for residents and people who live in the neighboring communities.

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The Center for Continuing and Professional Education

Applying both inspiration and imagination, the Center developed new programs and sources of revenue in FY 2010. This innovation continues in FY 2011.

• We created and delivered in Fall 2010 a seminar of thirteen sessions for all staff to become conversant in the sub-specialty of palliative care. Nationally recognized speakers and qualified HealthCare Chaplaincy faculty led the seminar. Each session is videotaped and archived together with the teaching materials on HCC’s intranet. The curriculum covered:

1. The philosophy of palliative care2. Current research findings 3. Pain and symptom identification and management 4. Models of spiritual screening, history taking, spiritual care and

assessment5. Ethical and legal issues pertaining to palliative care6. Advance directives – legally valid documents which identify the

person you select to be your voice for your health care decisions if you cannot speak for yourself and you would or would not want at the end of life.

7. Family Systems Theory and its implications for communication with patients and families.

8. Relevant theological and spiritual issues (suffering, hope, meaning, afterlife)

9. Cultural issues germane to palliative care10. The roles of prayer and ritual in palliative care

• We are redesigning our clinical education and pastoral educator preparation curriculum to strengthen the role of the spiritual care specialist on the palliative care team.

• We are creating grant proposals to fund the development of palliative care sub-specialty education and certification for board certified chaplains in conjunction with the professional chaplaincy associations.

• We launched a new Online Learning Center and two courses which are generating new revenue.

• We have signed a collaboration agreement with Teachers College of Columbia University to offer our supervisory education students and other pastoral educators an opportunity to earn the Doctor of Education degree in Adult Learning & Leadership.

• We revamped and upgraded the PlainViews® online newsletter into a paid, revenue-generating subscription service for chaplains and other spiritual care providers worldwide.

• We are reconfiguring Supervisory Education Students as part-time students and part-time chaplains.

• We are combining the roles of Clinical Pastoral Education Supervisors and Pastoral Care Directors in institutions where education and clinical practice are valued equally.

The Rev. Dr. Martin MontonyeVice President, Academic Affairs

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Videotaping of Palliative Care Seminar for Chaplaincy staff.

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HealthCare Chaplaincy is taking a leadership role in a national effort to make spiritual care led by professional chaplains central to the health care enterprise.

We are advocating with our local clinical partners and in various national forums for a transdisciplinary model of care in which all members of the team are trained in and administer spiritual care. In this model, the professional chaplain is the spiritual care leader on the treatment team and also takes an active role in helping to plan and deliver physical and emotional care. Thus, care is more patient centered because the patient’s desire to include spiritual and religious care is honored.

To move this envisioned model forward, HealthCare Chaplaincy continues to provide innovative leadership on various levels, mainly through the lens of palliative care. Many of our chaplains take leadership roles on their institutional palliative care teams and lead training on issues of spiritual care and cultural competence:

• The Rev. Dr. Sarah Fogg co-chairs the institutional Ethics Committee at St. John’s Riverside Hospital and has done significant palliative care training for hospital staff.

• The Rev. Jon Overvold sits on the Ethics and Cancer Committees for North Shore University Hospital.

• The Rev. George Handzo was a major project advisor and co-author on the Archstone Foundation’s ground-breaking initiative which developed national guidelines for spiritual care in palliative care. He continues to present on this initiative which has drawn significant national attention.

HealthCare Chaplaincy and its staff continue to take the lead in inspiring chaplaincy colleagues nationally and all those involved in spiritual and religious care to raise the level of spiritual care and the leadership of professional chaplains.

• The Rev. Jon Overvold, in his role as Chair of the Commission on Quality in Pastoral Services of the Association of Professional Chaplains, led an effort to establish the first Standards of Practice for professional board-certified chaplains in any realm of health care, thus inspiring his colleagues to a higher level of performance and integration. Three other members of Chaplaincy’s clinical staff also participated in this initiative.

• The John Templeton Foundation awarded HealthCare Chaplaincy a grant to a) establish and evaluate the evidence base for spiritual care as delivered by the professional chaplain as a fully-integrated and measurable component of health care, and b) to increase the knowledge pool regarding the quantifiable results produced by the consistent delivery of quality chaplaincy care. The photo and caption at the top of the page show you the expert team we have assembled to help us accomplish these objectives which will have significant impact for the profession.

The Rev. George Handzo, BCC, CSSBBVice President, Pastoral Care Leadership & Practice

The Pastoral Care Leadership and Practice Group

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Templeton Grant Steering Committee. Back row left to right: Kevin Flannelly, Ph.D., Associate Director of Research, HealthCare Chaplaincy; Scott Richards, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Counseling Psychology and Special Education, Brigham Young University; George Fitchett, D.Min. Ph.D., Associate Professor and Director of Research, Department of Religion, Health and Human Values, Rush University Medical Center; Keith Meador, M.D., Th.M., M.P.H., Professor and Vice-Chair for Faculty Affairs of Psychiatry, Vanderbilt University; David Case, M.D., Executive Board Member, New York Physicians, LLP, Member, HCC Board. Front row, left to right: Richard Payne, M.D., Professor of Medicine and Divinity; Duke Divinity School, Esther Colliflower Director, Duke Institute on Care at the End of Life; The Rev. George Handzo, Vice President of Pastoral Care Leadership and Practice, HealthCare Chaplaincy (Chair); Katherine Jankowski, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Statistics and Research Methods, HealthCare Chaplaincy; Bruce Rapkin, Ph.D., Director, Cancer Prevention and Control Research Program, Albert Einstein Cancer Center. (Steering Committee member not in photo: Kenneth Pargament, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology, Bowling Green State University.

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The Spears Research Institute

Research contributes significantly to HealthCare Chaplaincy’s evidence-based practice and professional education programs. That principle guides the work of the Spears Research Institute. • Over the past year, the Spears Research Institute has published ten peer-reviewed articles in nursing, psychology, psychiatric, chaplaincy and other health care journals, with the generous support of the John Templeton Foundation.

• The articles include studies on the level of religious involvement in the United States, the association between religious beliefs and mental health, praying with patients, referrals to chaplains by nurses, and the effects of clinical pastoral education on self-reflection, emotional intelligence and pastoral care skills.

• Spears Research Institute staff and John Templeton Foundation Research Fellows have presented numerous posters and papers at scientific conferences, including a symposium on “Psychological Aspects of Chaplaincy and Pastoral Care” at the annual meeting of the Eastern Psychological Association.

• Two papers presented at the third annual conference on Spirituality, Theology and Health, at Duke University are particularly relevant to HealthCare Chaplaincy’s transition into the field of palliative care. One was a review of the literature on “Religion, Spirituality and Palliative Care.” The other was titled: “Holistic Needs and the Brain: A Theoretical

Model.” Although its connection to palliative care may not be obvious from its title, the point of the paper is that people’s needs that are typically thought of as merely psychosocial are represented in the brain, and therefore are biological needs.

• Supported by a grant from the Fannie E. Rippel Foundation, the Spears Research Institute conducted a large study of hospice, palliative and pastoral care and end-of-life outcomes, by combining data from the American Hospital Association’s annual survey of hospital facilities and services with hospital data from the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care. The findings indicate that patients who receive hospice care, palliative care, or pastoral care are significantly more likely to enroll in hospice compared to patients who do not receive such care. The observed effects are independent of one another, which means that they are additive – patients who receive palliative care and pastoral care are more likely to enroll in hospice than those who only receive just one or the other.

• Other research by Spears Research Institute staff and fellows has examined the relationship between religious and spiritual beliefs and end-of-life fears and concerns. A paper describing the results was presented at the annual meeting of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, and a manuscript is currently being prepared for publication. The staff and fellows have also written a number of related theoretical and empirical articles about how spiritual and other beliefs affect the brain and mental health, two of which were published this year, and another of which will be published before the end of the year.

Kevin J. Flannelly, Ph.D.Associate Director, Research

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Kevin Flannelly, Ph.D. (Associate Director, Research) and Kathleen Galek, Ph.D (Research Associate).

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The Palliative Care Campus

In 2004 HealthCare Chaplaincy identified a need for a residence in New York City for persons with serious progressive illness that would have at its core spirit-centered care.

Documenting this need are the demographics of the increasing aging population in New York City and the nation and the limited availability of appropriate health care and living arrangements for those with serious progressive illnesses:

• New York’s elderly population will see a 44% increase to 1.35 million by 2030.

• There is a need for 1,100 market-rate assisted living units below 79th Street, according to a market study conducted by HealthCare Chaplaincy.

• New York already has large geriatric populations with limited access to geriatric services. This includes the Manhattan Lower East Side area where the Palliative Care Campus will be located.

• At a time of skyrocketing health care costs for those with serious progressive illnesses, there is significant evidence that HealthCare Chaplaincy’s model will provide higher quality care at a significantly reduced cost.

For 50 years HealthCare Chaplaincy has provided patients and their families with spiritual, emotional and social support. HealthCare Chaplaincy has the experience to address these problems: spiritual care is a core part of palliative care that is often overlooked, and some of the more insistent developmental needs of seriously ill or dying persons are spiritual. People with serious progressive illness need a home—a safe haven—where spiritual needs are given as much attention as somatic and psychosocial needs.

HealthCare Chaplaincy’s Palliative Care Campus has three goals:

1. To change the way care is provided for patients with serious progressive illness through care that is patient-centered, more accessible, more coordinated, and integrated.

2. To provide an optimal quality of life for patients and their significant others during illness.

3. To help residents better understand their choices for care and tailor treatment to meet individual needs.

The Campus will be located north of the Manhattan Bridge at 265-275 Cherry Street and next to the FDR Drive in the area known as Two Bridges. This site offers easy access to public transportation, is adjacent to the planned East River Esplanade, features plenty of natural light and an expansive view of the river, and is affordable.

Also, Two Bridges is a medically underserved area that is a low income tract and has a large elderly population with essentially no access to local geriatric care.

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The Palliative Care Campus is adjacent to the planned recreational walkway that will run downriver to the Battery Maritime Building.

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Components of the Palliative Care Campus

The Residence

Each floor of the 10-story, 120 unit palliative care residence will house 12 apartments, organized into two neighborhoods of 6 residents. Each floor will offer private as well as communal spaces for socializing and dining. The residence will offer each resident personal assistance, housekeeping, medication management, spiritual care, social and recreational activities, transportation, exercise programs, and family-support services.

The temporal and spiritual affairs of the residence will be supported by a team of dedicated professional staff and volunteers.

HealthCare Chaplaincy’s Research, Educational, Clinical Practice and Administrative Home

The Palliative Care Campus will be the new home for our research, educational and clinical practice divisions as well as the administrative base for our operations.

This co-location in a single space will significantly enhance collaboration and innovation within an organization which already achieves high levels of both.

Future plans include:

• The Center for Continuing and Professional Studies will educate the next generations of palliative care clinical leaders and researchers— including professional chaplains—who will attend lectures and seminars, or participate in clinical rotations within the residence.

• In partnership with Teachers College at Columbia University, HealthCare Chaplaincy will offer its supervisory education students and other pastoral educators an opportunity to earn the Doctor of Education degree in Adult Learning & Leadership.

• The Spears Research Institute will conduct clinical trials of chaplaincy care interventions, outcome studies with family members and hospital staff, inquiries into the fundamental mechanisms linking religion and

health, and evaluation studies of all the academic programs.

Medical Home

Individuals living in the residence and those living nearby will be able to obtain basic medical care, lab tests and therapy on site in a geriatric and palliative care medical home. The medical home is a multidisciplinary practice that will ensure in-patient and ambulatory care to its patients on a 24-hour basis; appropriate referrals to subspecialty services; consultation and interaction with our residence staff and our residents’ loved ones; and a central electronic medical record database, which will collect relevant health information.

Automated parking

To accommodate the parking requirements of its visitors, staff and neighbors, the Campus will include a 125-car, automated parking garage that will park and retrieve cars using a computerized system of shuttles, lifts and carriers. This system is reliable, safe and secure, utilizes a footprint one-third less than conventional garages, requires less lighting, and eliminates emissions because none of the vehicles are driven through the system.

The Palliative Care Campus

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A Highly “Green” and Sustainable Building

The Palliative Care Campus will be one of the first LEED (Leadership in Energy & Environmental Design) Platinum certified health care facilities in the United States and will demonstrate the importance of environmental health to spiritual, mental and physical health.

Some of the “green” features include green roofs, geothermal climate control, rain water collection for irrigation and flushing, and photovoltaic cells around the rim of each floor.

Community Outreach

HealthCare Chaplaincy has been working closely with community organizations in the Two Bridges area. Members of the community will be some of the first to live in the residence, and HealthCare Chaplaincy will hire members of the local community to work in the campus as staff.

Once complete, the campus will provide new green areas for the community and act as a sound and air pollution barrier against the FDR Drive .

Experienced Management Team

Two co-executive directors will manage the palliative care campus.

A professional board-certified palliative care chaplain will be responsible for management of the other staff chaplains, continuing education of all residence staff, resident and family relations, and all resident programs and services.

An experienced New York City licensed nonprofit assisted living operator will manage day-to-day business activities of the residence.

We have formed a Residence Advisory Council – experts from a diverse range of personal and professional expertise who will help shape the principles

governing the culture of the Residence and guide development of the campus and provide recommendations for how residents can live in a healing way.

Timeline & Financing

u Purchasing contract signed: May 2010u Architectural schematic design: September 2010u Projected construction start: June 2011u Projected completion date: May 2013u Finance through combination of equity raised through capital campaign,

debt, other

Robert WolfSenior Vice President, Innovation and Development

The Palliative Care Campus

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New Trustees

Susan Spindler Jordan has been a principal in her own advertising agency since the early 80’s. Most of her work focused on television campaigns for consumer drug companies. Lately she has also worked on film documentaries for various nonprofit organizations. She has served on boards at Choate Rosemary Hall and Villa Maria School and is looking forward to joining the work of the HealthCare Chaplaincy board. Susan holds a BA in

English from Elmira College.

“My husband’s illness and passing showed me the value of quality end of lifecare. Chaplaincy has played an important part in my life and I am pleased to join a board that supports that mission.”

Kate Kibler is senior vice president of men’s merchandising and merchandise planning at Tommy Hilfiger, having joined the firm in 2004 as director of design. She received a B.S. in fashion design from Philadelphia University and an MBA in corporate finance and strategy from New York University’s Stern School of Business.

“HealthCare Chaplaincy has a critical and unique mission aiding the medical community but more importantly, aiding patients,” says Kate. “So often the spiritual and psychological needs of patients and loved ones are overlooked. I look forward to helping the team at Chaplaincy contribute to the fulfillment of patient needs.”

Jeannette Watson Sanger founded New York City’s fabled Madison Avenue bookstore, Books & Co., in 1977 and was its proprietor until it closed its doors in May 1997. She and the bookstore have been memorialized in two publications: Bookstore: The Life and Times of Jeanette Watson and Books & Co., and Letters to a Bookstore: Books & Co. 1978-1998.

Jeannette is working as a healer in an independent practice using Healing Touch Techniques and is pursuing certification at the Four Winds-Healing the Light Body School. She is a volunteer at the Lenox Hill Hospital Emergency Room and serves on the boards of The New York Society Library, The Open Center, and The North Haven Library.

She says, “I am excited to be working with such a capable group of people to help hospital patients. The palliative care offered is similar to my healing work with the body, mind and spirit of my clients. I am a firm believer in integrating spirituality with medical care.”

Michael Schoen is a Managing Director of Credit Suisse in the Investment Banking division, based in New York. He is Head of Debt Capital Markets for Latin America and CEEMEA (Central/Eastern Europe, Middle East and Africa), responsible for overseeing the origination and execution of all debt transactions from those regions.

Michael graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a B.S. degree from the Sloan School of Management where he serves on the Corporation Development Committee. Michael is also a member of the Foundation Board of The Ohio State University’s Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute.

Upon joining the Board of Trustees Michael remarked: “I am truly honored to be working with such wonderful people on such a critical mission. I believe that my background in finance and not-for-profits will bring a different perspective to the team’s efforts. I’m excited to get started.”

Suzanne Sunshine is a principal of S. Sunshine & Associates, an advisory service assisting nonprofit organizations in all of their real estate needs. Prior to forming her company, Suzanne was vice president, nonprofit practice group at CB Richard Ellis, and director, nonprofit advisory group at Cushman & Wakefield. She holds a B.A. in international relations from Brown University and an M.B.A. in real estate from Columbia University.

“I am very pleased at a relatively young age,” says Susan, “to be working with a nonprofit that is focused on end of life issues and care. My own experience with my father at the time of his passing, was as meaningful and important as the birth of my children.”

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Treasurer’s Report

The challenging economic environment continues to impact our operations, as is the case for the entire social/nonprofit sector. However, we are encouraged by improving investment returns.

Total support and revenue, excluding interest, dividends and net investment income, reached parity with the previous year at $5.2 million. Our investment portfolio valuation (including both restricted and unrestricted funds) changed from a loss of $5.1 million in 2009 to a gain of $3.1 million in 2010.

Total net assets increased by $1.5 million to $23.6 million.

On the spending side of the ledger, our reengineering and cost control efforts yielded impressive results. Total expenses declined by $1.3 million, from $8.6 million in 2009 to $7.3 million in 2010, or a 15% reduction. These expense reductions were primarily made in the administrative areas so that HealthCare Chaplaincy’s highly professional staff has continued to provide excellent service to our partner institution hospitals and long-term care facilities, our students, and in our research endeavors.

As HealthCare Chaplaincy pursues its bold vision to lead in the field of spirit-centered palliative care, it proceeds on a sound financial footing.

Jude A. CurtisTreasurer

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2010 Financial At-a-Glance(In Thousand)

Total Expenses Support and Revenue Net Assets

Program Expenses 78.9%Management & general 11.1%Fundrasing 10.0%

Contributions 23.6%Service Income 30.7%Investment Income 41.2%Tuition, Student Fees, Misc. 4.5%

Unrestricted 66.8%Temporarily Restricted 15.4%Permanantly Restricted 17.8%

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Program Expenses 78.9%

Investment Income Used

41.2%

Service Income 30.7%

Unrestricted 66.8%

Contributions 23.6%

Tuition, Student Fees, Misc. 4.5%

Temporarily Restricted 15.4%

Permanantly Restricted 17.8%

Management & general 11.1%

Fundrasing 10.0%

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2006-2010 Statement of Financial Activities (In Thousand)

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FY 2010 FY 2009 FY 2008 2007 2006Support and Revenue (6 mos) Contributions Foundations and trusts 530,125 105,100 44,025 1,881,180 845,000 Corporations 25,150 7,500 60 5,000 51,125 Religious organizations 29,930 7,900 4,000 33,730 41,350 Individuals/estates 611,576 936,856 1,445,320 610,832 594,305 Special event revenue 1,053,281 1,398,012 1,460,056 1,218,256 Less direct expenses of special event (164,642) (234,937) (177,237) (176,194)Service revenue 2,706,263 2,862,627 1,421,030 2,598,708 2,473,292 Educational fees 391,339 302,899 56,425 149,460 147,810 Interest and dividend income (1) 464,172 635,599 Investment income, net of fees 3,111,330 (5,085,608) (3,007,949) 1,001,704 2,489,820 Change in value of charitable remainder trusts 57,219 (226,416) (57,304) (123,569) 219,518 Miscellaneous income 1,220 173,989 79,344 5,488 14,820 8,816,963 883,521 (15,049) 7,445,352 7,919,102 Expenses Program expenses Patient/family care 2,181,556 2,365,958 1,097,033 1,863,801 1,975,123 Professional education 1,590,257 1,994,857 990,531 1,671,039 1,529,657 Research 678,480 953,642 375,571 634,734 616,646 Community outreach 922,190 1,578,458 826,205 1,477,848 1,259,167 Pastoral care consulting 379,915 104,034 60,629 107,464 Wholeness of Life Center 217,901 Total program services 5,752,398 6,996,949 3,349,969 5,754,886 5,598,494 Supporting services General and administrative 807,131 749,131 383,504 702,885 744,581 Fundraising 731,624 852,876 427,038 708,650 812,687 Total supporting services 1,538,755 1,602,007 810,542 1,411,535 1,557,268 Total expenses 7,291,153 8,598,956 4,160,511 7,166,421 7,155,762 Increase (decrease) in net assets before other changes in net assets 1,525,810 (7,715,435) (4,175,560) 278,931 763,340 Other changes in net assets (47,788) (732,614) (369,820) (258,316) Increase (decrease) in net assets 1,478,022 (8,448,049) (4,545,380) 20,615 763,340 Net assets, beginning of year 22,095,488 30,543,537 35,088,917 35,068,302 34,304,962 Net assets, end of year 23,573,510 22,095,488 30,543,537 35,088,917 35,068,302 (1) Interest and dividend income was consolidated with investment income in the years 2008, 2007 and 2006.

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2006-2010 Statement of Financial Position(In Thousand)

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FY 2010 FY 2009 FY 2008 2007 2006 (6 mos)

Assets Cash and cash equivalents 267,119 402,283 234,004 753,613 1,045,365 Investments 15,873,638 14,736,213 22,586,477 26,099,191 26,118,082 Accrued income receivable 489,751 574,289 448,557 394,588 377,882 Pledges and grants receivable, net 482,584 650,603 2,233,337 2,677,641 2,200,277 Due from affiliate 1,390,928 580,973 Prepaid expenses and other current assets 90,374 23,291 111,847 95,975 41,557 Beneficial interest in charitable remainder trusts (1) 985,497 928,278 Land, building and equipment, net 4,305,670 4,542,869 5,206,318 5,308,768 5,612,350 Total assets 23,885,561 22,438,799 30,820,540 35,329,776 35,395,513 Liabilities and net assets Accounts payable and accrued expenses 312,051 343,311 277,003 240,859 327,211 Commitments and contingencies Net assets: Unrestricted 15,756,212 15,471,966 19,304,671 22,214,408 21,567,150 Temporarily restricted 3,630,403 2,436,627 7,053,271 8,749,974 9,399,083 Permanently restricted 4,186,895 4,186,895 4,185,595 4,124,535 4,102,069 Total net assets 23,573,510 22,095,488 30,543,537 35,088,917 35,068,302 Total liabilities and net assets 23,885,561 22,438,799 30,820,540 35,329,776 35,395,513

(1) Charitable remainder trusts were consolidated with Pledges and grants receivable in 2008, 2007 and 2006

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Board of Trustees

Officers

T. Michael Long, ChairmanGeneral PartnerBrown Brothers Harriman

The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.President & CEOHealthCare Chaplaincy

Amy J. Radin, Vice ChairExecutive Vice President & Chief Innovation Officer E*TRADE Financial

Thomas A. Renyi, SecretaryFormer Chairman & CEOThe Bank of New York Mellon

Jude A. Curtis, TreasurerChief Ethics and Compliance OfficerPricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP

Trustees

Elizabeth A. BaltzFormer Senior Vice PresidentMasterCard International

Thomas C. BrascoManaging DirectorGoldman Sachs & Co

David B. Case, M.D.Executive Board MemberNew York Physicians, LLP

Emanuel ChiricoChairman & CEOPhillips-Van Heusen Corporation

John S. DysonChairmanMilbrook Capital Management

Kathleen M. Foley, M.D.Attending NeurologistProfessor of Neurology and Neurosur-gery and Clinical Pharmacology at Weill Medical College of Cornell University; Director of the Palliative Care Initiative Network, Public Health Program of the Open Society Institute

Rita V. FoleyFormer Fortune 500 global president

Adam B. FrankelSenior Managing Director & General Counsel Evercore Partners, Inc.

Diana S. GoldinConsultant to nonprofit institutions

James C. GortonPartnerLatham & Watkins, LLP

Christopher C. GrisantiPrincipalGrisanti Brown & Partners, LLC

Nicholas N. HainesExecutive Vice President and COO The Bromley Companies

Tasabbur (Tas) HasanVice PresidentDeerpath Capital Management, LP

Susan Spindler JordanPrincipalSusan Spindler Advertising, Inc.

Susan L. JurevicsSenior Vice PresidentGlobal Retail CRM and Brand MarketingSony Corporation

Anita M. LarsenDirectorMedia RelationsUnilever USA

Kate KiblerSenior Vice PresidentMen’s Merchandising and Merchandise PlanningTommy Hilfiger

Burton LehmanOf Counsel & Founding Partner Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP

Irene McGrath McCreeryFormer Head, Middle School The Chapin School

Mary E. Medina,MSW, JDExecutive DirectorCenter for Trustee InitiativesGreater New York Hospital Association

George E. PineFormer President and COOInterep Corporation

Elaine LaMonica Rigolosi, Ed.D., J.D.ProfessorColumbia University, Teachers College

Marcella RosenFounder & PresidentCampus Tolerance Foundation

Ellen J. Roth, LCSWClinical Social Worker

E. Joshua RosenkranzPartnerOrrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, LLP

Jeannette Watson SangerFormer Bookseller and PublisherCurrently practitioner of Healing Touch

Michael H. SchoenManaging DirectorCredit Suisse

Alan V. SchwartzPresident & CEOBernard Hodes Group

Janet Prindle SeidlerFormer PartnerNeuberger Berman, LLC

Andrew E. Slaby, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H.Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, NYU School of Medicine; Psychiatrist

Mario J. SuarezPartnerThompson Hine, LLP

Suzanne SunshinePrincipalS. Sunshine & Associates

Jill TotenbergPresident & CEOThe Totenberg Group

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Chairman Emeritus/Life Trustees/President’s Advisory Council

Chairman Emeritus

Lawrence J. ToalFormer Chairman, President & CEOThe Dime Savings Bank of New York, FSB

Life Trustees

Edith C. BjornsonConsultant

The Rev. Dr. John S. DammPastor EmeritusSaint Peter’s Church

William W. DonnellPrivate Investor

Donald J. KellerPrivate Investor

Samuel C. Klagsbrun, M.D.Executive Medical DirectorFour Winds Hospitals

Charlotte MillerPhilanthropist

Ralph U. PriceArchitect (Ret.)Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates

William G. SpearsPrincipalSpears Abacus Advisors LLC

Carolyn A. TwinameFormer Co-PresidentHealthCare Chaplaincy

The Rev. John D. TwinameFormer Co-PresidentHealthCare Chaplaincy

Rabbi Harlan J. Wechsler, D.D.Senior RabbiCongregation Or Zarua

President’s Advisory Council

John C. BeckSenior PartnerBeck, Mack and Oliver

John S. ChalstyChairmanMuirfield Capital Management

The Rev. Dr. James H. CooperRectorTrinity Church, Wall Street

Charlotte M. FordPhilanthropist/Author

Thomas S. JohnsonChairman & CEO (Ret.)GreenPoint Financial

Helene L. KaplanOf CounselSkadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom

Martin LiptonSenior PartnerWachtell, Lipton, Rosen and Katz

Edward D. MillerFormer President & CEOAXA Financial, Inc.

Richard D. ParsonsChairman & CEOTime Warner Inc.

Jack RudinChairmanRudin Management Company, Inc.

Daniel R. TishmanChairman & CEOTishman Construction Corp.

Suzanne WrightCo-FounderAutism Speaks

Alan R. YuspehSenior Vice PresidentChief Ethics and Compliance OfficerHospital Corporation of America

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Marketing Advisory Council

Lisa BlumensteinStrategic Planning DirectorEuro RSCG Worldwide

Bonnie CatoneDirector of CommunicationsTreatment Research Institute

Richard ChesneyPresidentHealthcare Market Resources, Inc.

Mark ChmielFormer EVP, Chief Marketing and Innovation Officer, Denny’s Restaurants

Roger ChiocchiPrincipalThe Brand Loft

Donna CusanoEditor, North AmericaTelecare Aware

Laura deBuysDirector of Communications & MarketingInstitute for Student Achievement

Joe DohertyFormer Vice-President of Marketing Communication, Owens Corning

Nancy Dolan-BradyPresident & Executive RecruiterNDB Associates

Jill EastonFreelance Copywriter & Healthcare Writer

Marc EngelsmanVice President for Client Programs and ServicesDigital Brand Expressions

Wendy FeinConsultant for Marketing + Service + Education

Danielle FreniDirector of CommunicationsCentral Synagogue, NY, NY

Sharen GlennonAssociate Director of MarketingStevens Institute of TechnologyHowe School of Technology Management

Meredith Gould, Ph.D.Sociologist and writer about health care and spiritual life

Tom HesposPartner, Chairman and PresidentUnderscore Marketing

Hallie Deaktor KapnerPublic Relations & Communications consultantFormer Director of Public Affairs, The Partnership for a Drug-Free America

Stuart M. KeatingIntegrated Account ManagerBloomberg Businessweek

Daniel KatsinManaging PartnerKDS Health

Joe KeenanExecutive Vice President for Digital Product DevelopmentThe Partnership for a Drug-Free America

Shelly LiptonChief GrownUpGrownUpMarketing

Amy LittPrincipalBrand A

Linda LombergAdvertising Media ConsultantLCL Media LLC

Josh MoritzManaging PartnerCustomer Growth

Catherine Morrison, J.D.Assistant ProfessorJohns Hopkins Carey Business School

Hunter MurtaughSenior Vice President for Business DevelopmentTuneSat

Andrea NorritoSenior Account Directordesign matters inc!

Lisa PetrilliProgram DirectorMarketing Executives Networking Group (MENG)

Michael ShoreCopy EditorThe FOX Report with Shepard Smith

Johanna SkillingExecutive Vice President, Director of Strategic PlanningSaatchi & Saatchi Consumer Health+Wellness

Ruth StevensPresidenteMarketing Strategy

James W. WeldonPresidentStrategic Directions AssociatesAssociate Professor of MarketingFordham University Colleges of Business

Carol WinerBranding ConsultantRecent Director of Creative Services, Hadassah

Christine Wright-Isak, Ph.D.Assistant Professor of MarketingFlorida Gulf Coast University

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2009 Wholeness of Life Awards DinnerA GATHERING OF FRIENDS

On November 10, 2009 nearly 500 health care, business and civic leaders attended the 23rd annual Wholeness of Life Awards Dinner at Cipriani 42nd St. The benefit raised close to $1,050,000 in support of HealthCare Chaplaincy’s innovative and evidence-based programs in research, education, and clinical practice.

The dinner honored health care professionals who recognize and tend to the whole person – spirit, mind and body.

Honorees included twelve patient care professionals from our metropolitan New York partner institutions.

Honored were HealthCare Chaplaincy and its Chief Executive Officer the Reverend Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J. Introducing Father Smith was Thomas R. Rochon, Ph.D., President, Ithaca College, and presenting the award was John M. Templeton, Jr., M.D., Chairman and President, The John Templeton Foundation.

Lifetime Achievement honorees were Kathleen M. Foley, M.D., Professor of Neurology and Neurosurgery and Clinical Pharmacology at Weill Medical College of Cornell University and one of the world’s leading authorities in cancer pain management and palliative care; Jean B. Case, M.D., Internist, Preventive Medicine at New York Physicians, LLP and a specialist in internal medicine and rheumatology, and David B. Case, M.D., Executive Board Member, New York Physicians, LLP and an educator, researcher, clinician and expert in the field of hypertension.

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Jean Case, M.D. and David Case, M.D. (Life-time Achievement Honorees)

Honoree The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J. (President & CEO, HealthCare Chaplaincy); T. Michael Long (Chairman of the Board of Trustees, HealthCare Chaplaincy); Thomas Rochon, Ph.D. (President, Ithaca College); John Templeton, Jr., M.D. (Chairman and President, The John Templeton Foundation)

Kevin Browne (Director of Nursing for Pediat-rics and Critical Care, Memorial Sloan-Ketter-ing Cancer Center); Margaret Burke (Admin-istrative Vice President); Sr. Elaine Goodell (Patient Care Honoree, Staff Chaplain)

Dr. Kathleen Foley (Trustee and Lifetime Achievement Honoree)

Amy Horrocks (Vice President for Hospital Operations, Medical Services, NYU Langone Medical Center); Joan Dauharje (Director of Patient Centered Care); Dr. Anna Pavlick (Patient Care Honoree, Director, Melanoma Program); Dr. Bernard Birnbaum (Se-nior Vice President, Vice Dean & Chief of Hospital Operations); Sarah By-rne (Staff Chaplain)

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Laura Landy (President, Fannie E. Rippel Foundation) and Rob-ert Corman

Catherine Long and W. Jack MacNeish, Jr.

Edward Dinan (President & CEO, Lawrence Hospital); Dr. Peter Foley Rizzo (Patient Care Honoree); The Rev. Sim-mons Gardner (Director of Pastoral Care)

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Nienke Padberg and Trustee Tasabbur Hasan Tobi Kahn; Honoree the Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J. (President & CEO, HealthCare Chaplaincy); Rabbi Mychal Springer

Sabina Theodore, Life Trustee William G. Spears, and Trustee Maria T. Spears

Geraldine Varrassi (Patient Care Honoree, Nursing Edu-cation Specialist, Lenox Hill Hospital); The Rev. Wilfredo Rodriguez (Director of Pastoral Care)

Jim Foy (President & CEO, St. John’s Riverside Hospi-tal); Irene Murphy (Patient Care Honoree, Nursing Direc-tor); The Rev. Dr. Sarah Fogg (Director of Pastoral Care); Lynn Nelson (Executive Vice President, Patient Services/Chief Operating Officer)

2009 Wholeness of Life Awards DinnerA GATHERING OF FRIENDS

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Gifts from Institutions

$100,000 and AboveThe John Templeton FoundationWachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz

$25,000 - $99,999The Achelis FoundationThe Bank of New York MellonThe Hagedorn FundThe Haines Family FoundationThe Ambrose Monell FoundationThe Henry & Lucy Moses FundPhillips-Van Heusen CorporationFannie E. Rippel FoundationMay and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation, Inc.The Starr FoundationThe Jackson E. & Evelyn G. Spears Foundation

$10,000 - $24,999AnonymousThe Rose M. Badgeley Residuary Charitable TrustCollegiate Church CorporationHospital for Special SurgeryThe Lucius N. Littauer FoundationThe New York Physicians Foundation, Inc.PricewaterhouseCoopers LLPThe James and Chantal Sheridan FoundationSt. Thomas Church Fifth Avenue

$5,000 - $9,999Amelior FoundationBaruch College of the City University of New YorkBeth Israel Medical CenterBrandeis University - The Andrea and Charles Bronfman FundThe Lauder FoundationLawrence Hospital CenterLenox Hill HospitalMemorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer CenterMilbank Foundation for RehabilitationThe New York Hospital Medical Center of QueensNorth Shore University HospitalNYU Langone Medical CenterSt. John’s Riverside HospitalSt. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital CenterThe Silvercrest Center for Nursing and RehabilitationAlan B. Slifka Foundation, Inc.

Tishman Construction CorporationUnited Hospital Fund

$2,500 - $4,999The George F. Baker TrustCongregation Emanu-El of the City of New YorkThe Peter T. Joseph FoundationLeon Levy FoundationMarble Collegiate ChurchMasterCardThe Resource Foundation, Inc.

$1,000 - $2,499J. Aron Charitable Foundation, Inc.DEARS FoundationThe Dyson FoundationFifth Avenue Presbyterian ChurchWilliam T. Foley FoundationThe Glickenhaus FoundationThe Mayday FundMetzger-Price Fund, Inc.The Vincent Mulford FoundationNemco Brokerage, Inc.The Evelyn Sharp Foundation

$999 and BelowSonia Alden Foundation, Inc.Christ Church United MethodistChurch of the Heavenly RestCongregation Shearith IsraelDigital Brand Expressions, LLCDycon Enterprises Inc.ExxonMobil CorporationThe Jewish CenterMerrill Lynch & Co. Foundation, Inc.National Association of Jewish ChaplainsSt. Luke’s Episcopal Health SystemSt. Luke’s Guild of Episcopal Church WomenSt. Michael’s ChurchSt. Peter’s Church of CortlandtUnilever United States Foundation, Inc.The Teagle FoundationTemple Israel

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Gifts from Individuals/Gifts in Kind

$100,000 and AboveJosie and Julian H. Robertson, Jr.Kathe B. and John S. Dyson

$50,000 - $99,999AnonymousJoanne and Emanuel ChiricoJanet Prindle Seidler and Charles J. Seidler, Jr.Maria T. and William G. SpearsJudith and Michael H. Steinhardt

$25,000 - $49,999Anonymous Kathleen M. Foley, M.D. and Charles T. FoleyMonika and Charles A. Heimbold, Jr. Catherine and T. Michael Long Elizabeth M. and Thomas A. Renyi Susan and Edgar Wachenheim

$17,500 - $24,999Elizabeth and Jude Curtis Alexandra and Robert G. Goelet Brenda and Burton Lehman Sheryl and Daniel R. Tishman

$10,000 - $17,499Elizabeth A. Baltz Hondi and Tom Brasco David F. DeLucia Suzanne P. Fawbush and Christopher C. Grisanti Diana S. Goldin and Harrison J. Goldin The Honorable Eugene and Carol Ludwig Lucy Flemming McGrath Miriam K. Moran Claude-France and George E. Pine Catherine A. Rein Alan V. Schwartz Gillian and Robert K. Steel Alice and Thomas J. Tisch Sheila and Lawrence J. Toal

$5,000 - $9,999

Kim and Stephen E. Bepler Virginia L. and David Butters Antonia B. and James C. Gorton Victoria S. Reese and Gregory D. Kennedy Jeanne and James W. Lee Christy K. and John J. Mack Sherry M. and Walter R. McDonald Anne Moore, M.D. and Arnold L. Lisio, M.D. The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J. Ellen Hopkins and Mario J. Suarez, Esq. Sharon Wee and Tracy Fu

$2,500 - $4,999Alice and Michael Arlen Marilyn and Richard Blair Robert L. Cahill, Jr. Emy Cohenca Lavonne and David A. Cowan Rosemarie E. Dackerman and Andrew E. Slaby, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H. Rita V. Foley Naomi Friedland-Wechsler and Rabbi Har-lan J. Wechsler Kathleen T. and Peter F. Heimbold Rochelle and David A. Hirsch Susan L. and Maris A. Jurevics Martha and Donald J. Keller Francine and Samuel C. Klagsbrun, M.D. Judith A. and David J. Lewittes Sandy and Hugh P. Lowenstein Irene M. and Charles McCreery Mary E. Medina, Esq. and Elbin Ramos Ronay A. and Richard L. Menschel Nancy and Morris W. Offit Nienke Padberg and Tasabbur Hasan Amy J. and Mitchell Radin Sydney and E. Joshua Rosenkranz Lynn Rothstein, Ph.D. Jill and Howard F. Sharfstein Donna and Alan N. Stillman Rocio Suarez Jill Totenberg and Brian Foreman

$1,000 - $2,499Joan and Alan Ades

Lilyan H. AffinitoJohn AlcivadesRev. Susan Andrews and Rev. Simmons S. GardnerMr. and Mrs. William H. Barton, Jr.Lidia BastianichAnson and Debby BeardMarilyn and John C. BeckPeter Benedetto IIStephen BermasAnn and Dan BernsteinGenie and Robert S. BirchJames R. Booth and Francis ArcaroDaryl F. and Joseph L. BorenLivio M. BorgheseMargaret and Edward H. Bragg, Jr.Iris CantorJames F. CapalinoDonna S. and Derrick D. CephasRobert J. ChamineJulie P. Cho, D.M.D.Kathryn ChristensenDawna and Donald B. ChristianAnnabelle G. and Denis P. Coleman, Jr.Martine and Gerald A. ConwayLaura K. Landy and Robert CormanLeisa S. and Charles G. CranePeggy and Richard M. DanzigerJoan H. and Alfred C. DeCraneGladys and Carter J. DinkelooJudith A. and Daniel J. DonahueWilliam W. DonnellVivien and Vincent DuffyCharlotte M. FordSamuel J. FotiJacqueline and William T. FriedewaldArlyn and Edward L. GardnerAristides GeorgantasGail C. and Philip B. GeorgeNorman GeringBari and Neil J. GoldmacherCandice and Terry W. GoodwinMargaret F. GraceLinda J. and Ira J. GreenblattSpencer Haber

David HellerJosephine and Herbert Hendin, M.D.David A. Hidalgo, M.D. P.C.Albert A. Holman IIIJudith and Walter A. Hunt, Jr.William JenningsMr. and Mrs. John W. Johnson, Jr.Elma L. and Harold E. JohnsonMargaret Ann and Thomas S. JohnsonMaria Rosa and Ricardo JoveElaine and Henry KaufmanShirley C. and David T. KearnsThomas L. KempnerJudith P. and Lawrence KudlowAnita M. Larsen and Cliff S. WieselHelene and James LawrenceEllen and W. Walker Lewis, Jr.Loretta and Robert K. LiftonJonathan S. LinenGilbert F. LloydMichele B. and Matthew M. LudmerDanielle M. and Edward MarbachJoanne Jaffin Mason and Douglas MasonAlexander and Karen MauskopBarbie and John A. Mayer, Jr.Cheryne and David A. McBrideSally and John J. McNallyMrs. Nancy Anne Mead and The Rev. An-drew C. Mead, D.D.Colette and Achim MoellerAnne R. and Robert C. MyersBarbara and Edward NetterDiane A. NixonDiane S. and Steven C. ParrishDina G. and Brent PendletonPatricia R. and F. Herbert PremRuth H. PrennerJohn PrunierJo Ann and Carl S. QuinnMargaret Phelan ReedRita RejzekGenie and Donald RiceBillie H. and P.J. Richardson IIMarcella RosenMarianne and Fred Rosenberg

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HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010 u

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

Sibyl C. Jacobson and Frank R. RosinyJohn J. RydzewskiKathryn Beeby and Louis J. Scenti, Jr.Nancy and Henry B. SchachtRobin and Arrien L.C. SchiltkampKathleen and Michael H. SchoenWilliam SchulmanRalph A. SicilianoMichael ServentiVirginia W. SheerinJoshua SiegelAbby Simpson and Todd MydlandJosephine B. SokolskiChristos SpyropoulousDaniel W. StantonRichard J. SterneAlfred Stillman, IIILeila and Melville StrausCarolyn L. and William C. StuttDavid E. StutzmanLinda R. TaylorDavid TeigerDonna M. and Charles P. TurlinskiCarolyn A. and The Rev. John D. TwinameB. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.Ellen M. ViolettSusan H. and George J. VojtaDiane and Paul WaldmanRobert Weinstein and Ann E. ClaytonSuzanne R. WeissMickey and Mayer WinogradKim A. White and Kurt J. WolfgruberTeri W. and John B. WoodJanet H. Yuspeh, M.D. and Alan R. Yuspeh, Esq.Judy Francis Zankel

$500 – $999Susanne K. AlbertAnonymousAddie BacklundDorothy O. and Richard T. BergeronFrancis J. BergoldMelvyn H. Bergstein, Esq.Willa and Robert Bernhard

Margaret BoothLeonard and Enid BoxerHelen W. BrannJennifer and Brian ButtigiegLinda and John ColquhounTay Cooper and The Rev. Dr. James H. CooperCandace A. CrawshawJoanne and Roberto De GuardiolaDonna S. DeCoursey and John C. StratonRuth D. and Robert E. DiefenbachAntonia P. DuBrulBarbara and Ira J. DubinKathaleen M. DuffinJohn T. Dunlap Esq.Benjamin R. EisenbergSusan L. FischerSusan M. Fitzpatrick and Thomas P. WymanJo-Ann FordCandice and John FrawleyGloria and William H. Gelles, Jr.Phyllis GellesMary Jane and Frederick W. Gettler, Jr.Adelaide P. GomerAnn GottliebCatherine and Dennis GrahamPatricia B. GreenwaldJane B. GrimesRuth C. Haupert-LengemannJohn G. Haverly, M.D.Gary HayesSheila HoerleGail and Richard D. HoffmanCharles E. InturrisiGene F. JankowskiJohn J. Kindred IIIYukako Kawata and Teodulo HenriquezPaula S. and Thomas N. Keltner, Jr.William Kistler IIIThomas E. Knox, M.D.Bartley R. Labiner, D.D.S.Hugh LamleNancy LaValleConstance and Peter LowensteinMartin Lucibello

David LyonsJames K. Malernee, Jr.Ellen J. and Kenneth L. MarksDorothy L. and William F. McDonaldAlan MillerGuido A. MoscaJoseph W. Mullen, Jr.Jane and Saleem MuqaddamKathleen MurnionMatthew MurrayMary Jane and Gerald E. MurrayJohn E. NicholsMarjorie K. NicodemusJudy NortonCarolyn L. and Peter S. O’DriscollLawrence S. Olanoff, M.D., Ph.D.Judith A. and James P. Owens, Jr.Elizabeth T. PeabodyDavid PiakerCatherine S. and Thomas J. PiercePaul J. Powers, Jr.Ralph U. PriceGino M. PulloAnne QuiggleNancy QuinnJo-Ann and Michael RapaportRobin ReardonShirley RitterAmber and Thomas R. RochonLee RomanelliSylvia M. RosenbergJacqueline Rose and Saul O. LeopoldHarriet Cary RossArlene and Chester SalomonGwendolyn and Stuart M. SarnoffShelly and Kenneth L. ShapiroDavid and Susan SiphronMaryAnn Sudo and John B. BaxterRobert J. TaskGail P. and Samuel T. TelericoHelen S. TuckerTimothy N. WallachSylvia and Benjamin WeinstockRobert G. WilsonMona Winograd

Camilla and Andrew WylieAlicia Zwass, M.D.

$250 - $499Susan and Lawrence M. AllevaJohanna and Laurent AlpertJohn P. AnnicelliAnonymousMicky and Frank K. BambergerJean J. BeardSherri and Allan BentonVirginia BenzakAnne and Philip J. BerganFreya and Richard BlockJames T. ChandlerMargaret and J. Jeffrey CianciCarol CollinsKaren and David E. CowanThe Rev. Dr. John S. DammKathleen and Gonzalo De Las HerasMichael A. Del BalsoKatharine and Rohit M. DesaiElizabeth and George H. EhrhardtJohn A. EmmerlingSidney EudeneAnnette and J. Donald FairbanksStephen Fealy, M.D.Rose A. FollieroLinda and Harold FriedmanDiverra and Jack GalvinPatricia and Gilbert R. GonzalesAnn and Herbert GranathJosephine B. HambrickDrs. Jimmie and James HollandHarriet HuberRosalind G. JacobsThe Rev. Dr. Martha R. Jacobs and Patricia A. YostBarbara KaliffLorna KettanehBrian KimLillian E. KraemerBetty KranzdorfPatricia KrasnauskyMaureen and James Krinsley

Gifts from Individuals/Gifts in Kind

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HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010 u

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

Ethel S. LeFrakJill and Jonathan J. Lerner Esq.Sheree G. and David A. LinkerBobye G. ListChristie C. Salomon and Richard LombardPeter C. Lombardo, M.D.Robert A. LorelliCatherine MathisJulia M. McNamara, Ph.D. and Richard LolatteCecilia and Peter P. MullenAnn Van NessSybille and Gerald NovackMuriel PalitzThe Rev. Min-Jung Park and Dong H. ParkStella and Robert E. PlevanSuzanne and John H. Prunier, M.D.Julie M. and David P. RicciardiJudy and Robert RiceAndrew H. RosenthalFanny SaninEllen and Keith C. ShaughnessyMargaret and William SlatteryAnne and John R. TorellDonald J. Toumey and Paul Loong Foo ChanBrenda B. and Frank X. TroisiPatricia Koo TsienKathleen T. UllmannElinor J. and Charles J. UrstadtMary and Philip Van OrmanPatrick J. Waide, Jr.Julia and Laurie J. WarderAnn S. and William G. WhitneyBessie L. WilsonYing-Ying T. Yuan, Ph.D.

$249 and BelowHarriet P. AberleDjuna H. AckerBr. James F. AdamsHarold Agler, C.P.A.Isa and Paul AllersmeyerMaire AllikStephen D. Amoroso

Gordon Wood Anderson, Ph.D.Gilda and Marc D. AngelAnonymousMargaret and Fr. Mark AnschutzElaine ArmstrongAbigail AtkinsLucelle and Francis D. AugerFelice AxelrodSally Ann BaileyVelma and Ted J. BalestreriBarbara BantivoglioMarion BastaDeanna and Joseph BastianichBruce BatkinSonja BayMarguerite S. BedellScott BedsonAndrea and Robert BergerThilo H. BestElaine and James P. BiesterBetty G. BlackGeorge M. BlumenthalWatson F. BoslerDora and Russell BourneFrieda K. BradlowTheresa and Frederick BrascoThomas Brenner B.C.C.John BrewerClara BronsonElizabeth BrownAdrienne L. BrownAnne and McBee ButcherNancy CampbellAlyce and Norman CannonFrederick A. CarriganRichard CathellLita W. ChangMabel ChangDorothy M. and Ralph W. ChapmanJudith A. CionElizabeth CollierCandace N. Conard and Stanley L. Malkin, M.D.Susan Condon and Dennis McDadeAnne S. Connor

Gerald A. Conway, Jr.Barbara W. and Theodore F. CookePatricia and Donald T. CoughlinEvan Jay CraneJames CroegaertJohn Da CunzaLouise S. and Robert E. DaileyAaron DanielsMary M. and Anthony R. DavisThe Rev. Dr. Russell DavisAnne P. R. DeanLucille F. DeLuciaReena and David W. DentonClaire C. and Bipin B. DesaiGeneroso R. DiChiaraMonica H. and Michael H. DiminoRosie Hardart DobbinMartha J. DodgeMarie and Michael DoyleMonique DraftsMonica DraftsRuth DrazenJane I. and Larry D. DroppaLouise DunnHenry Van DykeRobert F. Ebin, Esq.Elizabeth A. and James J. EbzeryChristina J. EldridgeBader El-JeaanMartha EverdsMaria FanDoris and Raymond FarrellyChristine and Christopher M. FashekCatherine and Martin FeatherstonDebra and Andrew FechterRenee and Fred FeuerbachWilliam FillyawPaul H. FitzgeraldPeter A. FitzgeraldMargaret M. FlahertyJulie ForgioneJeanne M. and Donald J. FowleyStephanie and Adam B. Frankel, Esq.Sarah E. Friedewald, M.D. and John J. Friedewald, M.D.

Jeffrey FryerElizabeth and Logan FulrathKathryn G. and Joseph F. GagliardiKathleen M. GarnerMarjorie A. GeigerSandra GeringJane A. and Craig S. GeringAnne H. GerliThomas D. GettlerAlice Adams GordyDavid GotwaldDonald GrahamAnthony GrassCheryl GreenJoseph V. GreeneElleen T. and George H. GrimmBarbara GriswoldSuzan HabachyBarbara and Gary HaberFrances A. and Daniel J. HaganCharles W. HalleyHolly HallmanDr. George W. Hambrick, Jr.Patricia and Joseph HamiltonKathryn and Erik A. HansonGregory HartmannMelissa and Daniel HatterCarol F. HeffernanMildred and Alvin K. HellersteinPhyllis R. Hersch, Ph.D. and Charles Hersch, Ph.D.Clair HochstetlerIngeborg S. HoffmanMargaret M. and Martin R. HoffmannAnne D. and G. Malcolm HoldernessLesley B. and Joseph C. HoopesCatherine and Barnaby W. HortonThomas J. HubbardRichard R. HuebnerLeonard HummelDavid M. HurstHortense HurwitzFred Taylor IsquithEllen M. JancourtzNancy T. Jerome

Gifts from Individuals/Gifts in Kind

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HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010 u

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

Dorothy R. and Bruce JohnsonJoyce A. JohnsonStephen C. Josephson, Ph.D.Rosemary D. KappenmanSandra KatzHerbert KayMary M. KelleherHenry KellermanStephen J. KrassDeborah and E. Peter KrulewitchJudith M. and Harold L. Kulman, M.D.Adrianne and Leon LebensbaumCarol and Evan LevyDorothy Downie LewisEllen and Alfred B. Lewis, M.D.Joan M. LewisRuth and Robert J. LindnerRenee LinnenAnn Marie and Bruce LoganNick LongworthRev. Judith Lund and William LundDonald W. Lundquist and Joseph B. WalshRita LynchLane MaasR. Bruce MacGregorMargaret S. Mahaney and Donald R. Mah-aneyRobin MaitlandCatherine E. and Thomas A. MalarkeyRoy MarineBetsy H. and Anthony P. MarshallJohn & Lauretta MaslankaSandra Mayer and Jimmy RobertsMarlene McHughPatricia T. MeadowRobert P. MeyjesSusan J. Milamed and Jack L. JacobsJacqueline C. and Philip J. MillerBetty and James R. MitscherLouisa MooreAnne and Kevin MulvaneyMargaret A. Muncie and Stephen BolleKifah MustaphaDavid NeubertSheryl J. Nicholson

Gladys T. and Edward H. NovitchHerbert F. Oettgen, M.D.Alegra and Lawrence OkunWilliam O’ReillyJanice C. and Roger OresmanJudith & Martin OstJo Lynne and the Rev. Stephen OverallLaurence A. PagnoniDorothy A. and Alec A. PandaleonRobert R. Pandaleon, Esq.Gavril W. Pasternak, M.D., Ph.D.Caroline J. PattersonDonald D. PattersonMary and Michael L. PauleyLoretta M. and Enrico PerezLynn C. Perry and Michael C. HallowsAlice T. and Robert PetizonCharles J. PhilippinCantor Daniel PincusAnn PisanoWayne PittengerLinda and Patrick A. PlevenTheodore E. Plucinski, M.D.Phrem PottamplF. Gadalla, M.D. and A. PotulickiBetty A. PrashkerAnn L. and Edward W. ProbertMary Ellen Raftery and The Honorable Michael A. CorrieroJohana C. RanftSarah E. and James T. RichMichaela and Melvin RichterGordon RitchieBarbara A. RosenfeltRobert RosenthalJohn J. RothJohn W. RussoSuzanne and William SalesFrederic S. SaterFrances G. ScaifeJeffery ScheerStanley J. ScherLynn and Homer D. SchoenChristine M. and David B. SchoenrockWendy S. and Richard M. Schwartz

Kathleen and Arthur SchweithelmBetsy and Alfred L. ScottJoel SeltzerMichael A. SelzerRobert SharonAnne L. and Robert H. ShawEleanor B. SheldonLaura ShermanRita ShermanJames D. SiegelAmy SingerPaula E. and Jerald L. SlackBernice SlotnickSuzanne T. SmartCharles Smith and Joseph S. ShapiroLiz SmithEllsworth G. Stanton, III, MBEPatricia C. StewartLyle Stillman and Warwick M. CarterKathryn E. and Richard StricklerEvelyn SturhannMargaret ThompsonRobert J. Timberger, M.D.Phyllis and Edward TooheyNicholas J. TortorelloMarcia and Stanley TreimanMiriam and James D. Twiname, Jr.Allison and Innes Van NostrandAdelaide H. Villmoare and Peter G. StillmanCarolyn A. and Edward O. WagnerMary Kit WallaceSusan WallnerOlia WangDorisanne and Jacob WassermanFredric L. WeissJosephine and Will Maitland WeissMildred WeissmanHelene and Francis M. Weld, M.D.Janell WeumSusan A. WeyburnDr. Charles and Eileen WheelerTeresa J. WhiteChristine L. Williams, M.D., and Gary M. Williams, M.D.Elizabeth D. Winn

The Rev. Carmen Y. C. WongFrank S. WooL. Randall YatesSheri C. and Joe V. YoungTheresa B. ZadrosnyMarion P. and Salvatore D. ZaffinoArnold ZiegelCaroline A. and Edwin ZimmermanRobert and Diane ZingaliDavid J. Zucker

Gifts in KindArnold L. Lisio, M.D.Dewey & LeBoeufMutual of AmericaOrrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe LLPPhilips-Van Heusen CorporationPreston Bailey

Gifts from Individuals/Gifts in Kind

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HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010 u

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

In Honor Of

In honor of Sandra M. BoydB. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.

In honor of David B. Case, M.D. and Jean B. Case, M.D.Joan and Alan AdesHarold Alger, C.P.A.Alice and Michael ArlenSally Ann BaileyMicky and Frank K. BambergerDeanna and Joseph BastianichJean J. BeardMelvyn H. Bergstein, Esq.Ann and Dan BernsteinLita W. ChangJudith A. CionSusan Condon and Dennis McDadeKathleen and Gonzalo De Las HerasMichael A. Del BalsoReena and David W. DentonRuth D. and Robert E. DiefenbachBarbara and Ira J. DubinRobert F. Ebin, Esq.Elizabeth and George H. EhrhardtJohn A. EmmerlingSidney EudeneDebra and Andrew FechterJo-Ann FordLinda and Harold FriedmanDavid GotwaldBrabara GriswoldDr. George W. Hambrick, Jr.Josephine B. HambrickCarol F. HeffernanDavid HellerAlbert A. Holman IIIHortense HurwitzStephen C. Josephson, Ph.D.Elaine and Henry KaufmanHerbert KayMary M. KelleherLorna KattnehThomas E. Knox, M.D.Lillian E. KraemerHugh LamleJill and Jonathan J. Lerner, Esq.

Carol and Evan LevyConstance and Peter LowensteinLane MaasRoy MarineGuido A. MoscaMary Jane and Gerald E. MurrayAnne R. and Robert C. MyersSybille and Gerald NovackAlegra and Lawrence OkunBetty A. PrashkerJo Ann and Carl S. QuinnNancy QuinnGenie and Donald RiceSandra Mayer and Jimmy RobertsAndrew H. RosenthalGwendolyn and Stuart M. SarnoffFrederic S. SaterWilliam SchulmanKathleen and Arthur SchweithelmShelly and Kenneth L. ShapiroAnne L. and Robert H. ShawPaul E. and Jerald L. SlackDonna S. DeCoursey and John C. StratonRobert J. TaskMarcia and Stanley TreimanBrenda B. and Frank X. TriosiMary and Philip Van OrmanCarolyn A. and Edward O. WagnerDiane and Paul WaldmanDorisanne and Jacob WassermanSusan A. Weyburn

In honor of David B. Case, M.D.Marion BastaBruce BatkinGeorge M. BlumenthalThomas D. GettlerDorothy A. and Alec A. PandaleonRobert R. Pandaleon, Esq.Gino M. PulloRobert Weinstein and Ann E. Clayton

In honor of Julie P. Cho, D.M.D.Brian Kim

In honor of Cheryl A. ClarkeLucille F. DeLucia

In honor of James B. CreedB. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.

In honor of Fredrick DraftsMonique Drafts

In honor of Susan L. FischerJudith M. and Harold L. Kulman, M.D.

In honor of Kathleen M. FoleyKim and Stephen E. BeplerRuth DrazenCandice and John Frawley Bobye G. ListChristy K. and John J. Mack Millbank Foundation for RehabilitationElizabeth and H. Virgil Sherrill

In honor of Ann Fulton CurranB. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.

In honor of Nathan GoldbergJoel Seltzer

In honor of Diana GoldinFelice AxelrodArlene and Chester Salomon

In honor of Eliane GoodellLyle Stillman and Warwick CarterCatherine and Dennis GrahamRosemary D. KappenmanMichele B. and Matthew M. LudmerStanley J. ScherRita Sherman

In honor of Martha R. JacobsAnonymousRoger Edwards

In honor of James B. Jeffrey St. Luke’s Guild of Episcopal Church Women

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HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010 u

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

In Honor Of

In honor of Margaret Ann Johnson Janice C. and Roger Oresman

In honor Thomas S. Johnson Janice C. and Roger Oresman

In honor of Chuck LaMonte Mary Kit Wallace

In honor of Florence Lawrence Andrea and Robert Berger

In honor of Arnold L. Lisio Susanne K. Albert Joan M. Lewis Alice T. and Robert Petizon

Ruth H. Prenner David and Susan Siphron

In honor of T. Michael Long The Resource Foundation, Inc. Allison and Innes Van Nostrand In honor of Larry Mayer Marie and Michael Doyle

In honor of Anne Moore Ruth H. Prenner

In honor of Buddy Moss B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.

In honor of Lottie Newman Cheryl Green

In honor of Mary Owen Fred Taylor Isquith

In honor of Margaret Phelan Reed B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.

In honor of Ralph U. Price Watson F. Bosler

In honor of Peter Rizzo Barbara and Ira J. Dubin

In honor of The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J. Gilda and Marc D. Angel Margaret and J. Jeffrey Cianci Ruth D. and Robert E. Diefenbach Rose A. Folliero Kathleen M. Garner Mary Jane and Frederick W. Gettler, Jr. Monika and Charles A. Heimbold Kathleen T. and Peter F. Heimbold Phyllis R. Hersch, Ph.D. and Charles Hersch,Ph.D. Lynn and John W. Johnson, Jr. Brian Kim John J. Kindred III The Lauder Foundation Rita Lynch Christy K. and John J. Mack Donna and Alan N. Stillman Leila and Melville Straus Gail P. and Samuel Telerico Mary Kit Wallace Donald W. Lundquist and Joseph B. Walsh Sylvia and Benjamin Weinstock David J. Zucker

In honor of Maria T. Spears Helen S. Tucker

In honor of William G. Spears Warwick M. Carter

In honor of Lyn Stefenhagens Diane A. Nixon

In honor Jill Totenberg Margaret Booth Amy Singer

In honor of B. Gayle Twiname Margaret Phelan Reed Miriam and James D. Twiname, Jr.

In honor of Carolyn A. Twiname Anne P.R. Dean In honor of James D. Twiname B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.

In honor of Stanley Wyman Gladys T. and Edward H. Novitch

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HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010 u

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

In Memory Of

In memory of James Aberle Harriet P. Aberle

In memory of Viiu Allik Maire Allik

In memory of Susan T. Auger Lucelle and Francis D. Auger In memory of Stewart P. Brown Elizabeth Brown

In memory of Jaques Cohenca Emily Cohenca

In memory of Betsy Cormany Judith A. and Daniel Donahue

In memory of Thelma A. Dinkeloo Judith A. and James P. Owens, Jr. In memory of Harold Flaherty Margaret M. Flaherty

In memory of Kathleen B. Fowley Jeanne M. and Donald J. Fowley

In memory of Margaret E. Larsen Anita M. Larsen and Cliff S. Wiesel

In memory of John P. Lynch Rita Lynch

In memory of Ann Maitland Robin Maitland

In memory of Raymond L. Mallon Barbara and Gary Haber

In memory of Maria Lopez Medina Mary E. Medina, Esq.

In memory of Lottie Newman Cheryl Green

In memory of Leonard Novitch Gladys T. and Edward H. Novitch

In memory of Alfred Pisano Ann Pisano

In memory of Margaret Renahan Maureen and James Krinsley Rita Lynch

In memory of Mary E. Roth John J. Roth

In memory of Ruth Scheidecker Phyllis and Edward Toohey

In memory of Seymour Schwartz Alan V. Schwartz

In memory of Donna Shultz Catherine Rein

In memory of Marion Stern Deborah and E. Peter Krulewitch Susan and Robert Skolnick

In memory of Eugenia W. Stillman Monica H. and Michael H. Dimino

In memory of P. Gordon Stillman Monica H. and Michael H. Dimino Alfred Stillman, III Adelaide H. Villmoare and Peter G. Stillman

In memory of Madeline A. Thomas Caroline A. and Edwin Zimmerman

In memory of Elizabeth A. Timberger Robert J. Timberger, M.D.

In memory of Kia Chi Tsien Patricia Koo Tsien Ying-Ying T. Yuan, Ph.D.

In memory of Michael C. Tsien Djuna H. Acker Mabel Chung Maria Fan Donald Graham Sherry M. and Walter R. McDonald Louisa Moore Elizabeth Oppenheim Wayne Pittenger Olia Wang Dr. Charles and Eileen Wheeler

In memory of George Weissman Mildred Weissman

In memory of Marian G. Wyman Susan M. Fitzpatrick and Thomas P. Wyman

In memory of Michael Zadrosny Rita Lynch Theresa B. Zadrosny

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HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010 u

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care

Hope and Remembrance Society

Ruth L. Cohen, Ph.D.Lavonne and David A. CowanLeisa S. and Charles G. CraneMarie and Peter J. DeLucaSusan L. FischerPhyllis R. Hersch, Ph.D. and Charles Hersch, Ph.D.Margaret M. HillPatricia HillHarriet HuberBetty KranzdorfAriel and Alaleh OstadMuriel PalitzMargaret Phelan ReedPatricia R. and F. Herbert PremRalph U. PriceJill and Howard F. SharfsteinThe Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.Maria T. and William G. SpearsSheila and Lawrence J. ToalPatricia Koo TsienB. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.Carolyn A. and The Rev. John D. TwinameMs. Sherry Jacobson and Mr. Eugene I. Zuriff

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HealthCare Chaplaincy Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010 u

Palliative [pal-ee-ey-tiv] Care 33

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To contact HealthCare Chaplaincy, please email [email protected] or call:

Executive Offices Program Administration315 East 62nd Street, 4th Floor 307 East 60th StreetNew York, NY 10065-7767 New York, NY 10022-1505Phone: 212.644.1111 Phone: 212.644.1111Fax: 212.758.9959 Fax: 212.486.1440

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