Children's Medical Center Foundation - Annual Report - 2020

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2019 IN REVIEW

I CHOOSE CHILDREN’S HEALTH DREAM TEAM SM

Nowitzki, Aikman, Spieth and Kershaw

Meet Camila — one of our 2019 Faces of Children’s Health

Michigan family turned to us as their daughter’s last hope

How we’re bringing technology into schools to address mental health


Jordan & Annie Spieth

Troy & Aikman & Catherine Capa Aikman Mooty

Dirk & Jessica Nowitzki

Clayton & Ellen Kershaw


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allas hometown heroes Clayton Kershaw, Dirk Nowitzki, Jordan Spieth and Troy Aikman are known for their incredible performances on the pitcher’s mound, basketball court, golf course and football field. There’s no question they’re standout athletes. And all of us in North Texas are proud to call them our own. But one thing you might not know about these guys is their commitment to make life better for children. Clayton, Dirk, Jordan and Troy — along with their spouses — have supported the kids and families who turn to Children’s Health for years. Each couple was quietly meeting needs in different areas of the hospital that moved them, blissfully unaware the others were doing the same thing. Until one day, we asked each one if they knew of their fellow athletes’ involvement. And so, they recently came together to collectively spread the word across North Texas, which still echoes today: “I Choose Children’s!” These four couples generously empower this mission to make life better for children, and they also generously encourage anyone who will listen to do the same. They want you to know that Children’s Health is a nonprofit; charitable giving is important here. They want you to know that the doctors, nurses, Child Life specialists and other staff members are doing worldclass work on the frontlines to care for sick and injured kids. They want you to know that there are really big plans ahead at Children’s Health to help even more kids. They want you to know that Children’s Health continues to provide care for our most vulnerable children. Your help is still needed to support families, now more than ever. And, they want you to know that, regardless of what’s happening in the world, our mission doesn’t change. Will you join them?

Christopher Durovich President & CEO Children’s Health

Brent E. Christopher President Children’s Medical Center Foundation

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BOARD OF DIRECTORS C HI L DREN’ S MED ICAL CENT ER FO UN DAT I ON C H AI R Rebecca Egelston Caso

ACT IVE DIRECTOR S Ashley Arnold Girish Bachani Jill Bee George Billingsley Cordelia Boone Bill Carter Christie Carter Cullum Clark Marie Crowe R. Brooks Cullum Jr. Sandra Estess Chase Evans Cole Evans Susan Farris Steve Gruber Steve Harasym Juli Harrison Ward Hunt Joe Jouvenal Avi Kahn J. Peter Kline Amy Korenvaes Harlan Korenvaes Joyce Lacerte Anne Logan Karen R. Matthews Lynn McBee Jill McClung P. Mike McCullough Gail M. McDonald Katy Miller Kyle Miller Robert E. Morgan, D.D.S. Randall Muck Burk Murchison Connie O’Neill

Chris Patrick Mike Pickens Claude B. Prestidge, M.D. Deborah R. Price, Au.D. Sheri Rosen Betty Schultz Debbie Scripps Ric Scripps John R. Sears Jr. Michael Seay Amanda Shufeldt Michael Silverman Ellis Skinner II Barbara Stuart Mersina Stubbs Debra Brennan Tagg Michael Tanner Richard Terrell Kacy Tolleson Jimmy Westcott Joel T. Williams III Mark Zacheis

HON OR A RY D I R EC TOR S John L. Adams Kim Askew Marilyn Augur Sheila Beuerlein John J. Carona Scott Dabney Ann Delatour Carolyn B. Dickson John Eagle Steve Folsom Kelli Ford Linda Gibbons Leslie Greco Randi N. Halsell Alex Hamley

Hunter Henry Sue Hughes Donna Ivy Gene Jones Katie Lavie C.S. Lee Melanie Medanich Lindsey Miller Marisa Miller Elizabeth Miracle Kristin Mitchell Joa Muns Jan Myers Teresa Parravano Pamela Dealey Petty John T. Pickens Mary Martha Pickens Deborah Raynor Carlotta Rhoades Mary Louise Sinclair Frank O. Sloan Joan Smith Sandra Snyder Lauren Swann Smokey Swenson John P. Thompson Jr. Tracy Tomson

C H I L D R EN ’S M ED I CA L C EN T ER DA L L AS OPERAT I N G D I VI SI ON CHAIR

ASS O C I AT ES

Thomas A. Montgomery

Larry Banda Bill Corrigan Kourtny Garrett Venkat Kondala Ken Lear Chris Regis Marcos Ronquillo Florence Shapiro Ghoussudin Syed

DI R E C TO R S Anne Bavier David Berry Robbie Briggs Sylvia Cespedes Steven M. Gruber Caren Kline Charles Koetting C.S. Lee Thomas A. Montgomery P. Scott Ozanus Dotti Reeder Denis Simon Mary Suhm Debra Brennan Tagg Rajiv Trivedi Daryl Walker Hiawatha Williams Mark Zacheis Dora Zapata

D I R E C TO R S E ME R I TI Ann Goddard Corrigan H. Leslie Moore, M.D. Ann Duckett Reed Gifford Touchstone

VOTI N G E X O F F I C I O M E MB E R S Christopher J. Durovich Ed Heffernan Thomas A. Montgomery

CHAIR VOTI N G ME MB E R S

C H AI R Ed Heffernan

DIR ECTORS Rebecca Egelston Caso Robert A. Chereck Michael Dardick Christopher J. Durovich John Eagle Lou Grabowsky

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Steven M. Gruber Ed Heffernan Lee Hobson Lee Jackson Caren Kline Charles Matthews Jr. Thomas A. Montgomery Anne Motsenbocker Connie O’Neill

CH A I R E ME R I TU S David W. Biegler

Rebecca Egelston Caso, Foundation Board Chair Stephen Hoang, M.D., 2019 Medical/Dental Staff President Alan Farrow-Gillespie, M.D., 2019 Medical/Dental Staff President-Elect Julio Perez Fontan, M.D., CMCD Senior Medical Officer Dai Chung, M.D., Surgeon-in-Chief

C H I L D R EN ’S M ED I CA L C EN T ER PL A N O OPERAT I N G D I VI SI ON Michael Dardick

C HI L DREN’ S HEALTH SYSTEM OF T EXAS

N O N -VOT I NG EX O F F I C I O M EM B ERS

Sally Bane David Berry Rebecca Egelston Caso William Cawley Michael Dardick

Lisa Guerrero Joyce Houlihan Dan B. Jones, M.D. David Kelly Tracy LaRosiliere Rob Maher David Pfeil Mark Speese Mark Weinzierl

H O N O R A RY L I F E M E MB E R Joel T. Williams III

Board chairs current as of Jan. 1, 2020. Board rosters reflect all those who served in 2019.


TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUM E 7, M AY 2020

The annual magazine is a publication of Children’s Medical Center Foundation. Copyright, 2019, Children’s Health. For permission to quote or reprint any information written herein, for permission to reproduce art or to request additional copies, please contact us at 214-456-8360.

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2 01 9 Y E A R I N R E V I E W Donor support enhanced care for our most critical patients, supported advanced medical research that is providing cures and improved the health of kids across our community.

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CHILDREN ’S RESEARCH INSTITUTE Scientists and physicians push the boundaries of knowledge and receive recognition with awards and accolades.

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2 01 9 FAC E S O F C H I L D R E N ’ S H E A LT H Meet some of our superhero patients and how your support is helping them get back to being a kid again.

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‘ S H E F E LT L I K E T H I S WA S H E R H O S P I TA L’ After her husband helped build Children’s Medical Center Dallas, Betty Farnsworth left a legacy gift to Children’s Health.

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VO L U N T E E R L A D I E S How more than two decades of volunteering at Children’s Health turned these strangers into best friends.

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2 01 9 C H I L D R E N ’ S H E A LT H H I G H L I G H T S As a health care system, the Children’s Health mission is to make life better for children, from daily wellness and primary care to specialty visits and critical care.

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EVENT RECAP Alliance Data Red Balloon Run & Ride; Red Balloon Children Helping Children Tennis Tournament; Cape Day; Boo Yard Sign Challenge; North Texas Giving Day; Giving Tuesday; “We Choose Children’s;” Children’s Miracle Network

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FRIENDS Women’s Auxiliary to Children’s Medical Center; Changemakers for Children’s; The One Society

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B OA R D Children’s Health welcomes new board members appointed in 2019.

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P H I L A N T H R O PY H I G H L I G H T S 2 01 9 G I F T S

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CARE, CURES & COMMUNITY Your support of Children’s Health allows us to do more than treat illness and injury. Together, we help make life better for children.

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or more than a century, Children’s Health has cared for kids. And although many things have changed, one thing remains the same: Gifts to Children’s Health touch kids’ lives and make a difference. When you choose Children’s Health, you’re choosing care for some of our most critical patients by supporting the reconstruction of our emergency room at Children’s Medical Center Dallas. You’re choosing advanced medical research that is finding cures for kids like Lylah, whose family turned to us as their last hope. You’re choosing to improve the health and wellness of kids across the North Texas community by growing our School-Based Telebehavioral Health program to give more kids access to mental health care. Your time and money go to giving kids the best care, the best experience and the best chance to get back to being a kid again.

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CARE

First phase of new emergency room opens, fundraising still underway to reach $30 million project goal

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e opened the first phase of our new emergency room at Children’s Medical Center Dallas — the flagship hospital at Children’s Health — last fall with a new circle drive on

Southwestern Medical Avenue. The construction marked the first step in overhauling our ER to serve more children, enhance operational efficiencies and reimagine the ER

experience for everyone — patients, families and team members. We wouldn’t have made it to this point without your support, and we appreciate your generosity.

We opened the first phase of our new emergency room at Children’s Medical Center Dallas last fall.

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But we’re not finished yet. In 1967, Children’s Health opened As we continue this journey through the emergency department to 2021 to reconstruct our ER, your accommodate 35,000 patient visits support remains critical to helping annually. At that time, North Texas us reach our had a population of $30 million about 570,000. fundraising goal Now, our and making this community totals space a reality. more than 7 EMERGENCY ROOM The ER at million people, FUNDRAISING GOAL Children’s and the pediatric Medical Center emergency needs Dallas has are greater. become one Our Level I of the busiest trauma center pediatric ERs in receives the most the nation with critical patients about 122,000 in the area, and visits each year treatment ranges and as many as from asthma 400 children seen daily. attacks to traumatic injuries. Our When Children’s Health was multidisciplinary team is specially founded in 1913 as the Dallas Baby trained in pediatrics to manage any Camp, we provided sick babies in our severe or life-threatening injury a community with the health resources child may face. and care they needed immediately. As the only pediatric Level I trauma

$30M

Generous supporters who’ve made transformative gifts toward the ER reimagination: The Carpenter Family Dallas Southwest Osteopathic Physicians Inc. The Hartland & Mackie Family Foundation Hoblitzelle Foundation Jordan Family Foundation

What else you need to know about our ER: rauma is the leading cause of death among children ages 14 and T younger. As the only pediatric Level I trauma center in North Texas, Children’s Medical Center Dallas is ready to handle severe or life-threatening injuries.

As a comprehensive regional resource for injuries, our Level I trauma center:

Katy and Kyle Miller

Has 24-hour, in-house general surgeons and prompt availability of other specialists, including: neurosurgery; ophthalmology; orthopedics; plastic and reconstructive surgery; and urology

Mr. and Mrs. John F. Scovell The Shelby Family Women's Auxiliary to Children's Medical Center Dallas

center in the area with a rising number of patient ER visits, we are often at capacity. Expansion and modernization are necessary to keep up with the ever-growing needs of our community. We must be ready to care for the children of tomorrow and the increasingly complex cases — from trauma to mental health. Our new ER will be completely modernized into two stories with an easily accessible, street-level entrance. In addition, the interior will be completely redesigned with the patient and family in mind. As the renovations progress over the next several years, patient rooms will be larger, more private and have state-of-the-art medical technology and equipment. As a private, nonprofit pediatric health system, we are seeking visionary philanthropic partners to reach our fundraising goal of $30 million.

Assesses quality of care on a regular basis Offers leadership in injury prevention Provides continuing education to trauma team members

To learn more about major giving opportunities, please email us at giving@childrens.com.

Works with UT Southwestern faculty to research new innovations in trauma care

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CURES

‘I knew it was the only way she was going to live’: Why this Michigan family turned to us as their daughter’s last hope

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he neurologist teasingly rubbed her hands together, warning Lylah they might feel cold as she leaned close to tap the palms of the 5-yearold’s hot pink-polished hands. “What about this one?” asked the doctor, tapping each of Lylah’s fingers on her left hand. “Can you feel this?” Lylah silently nodded, her eyes locked on the neurologist as she rested on a hospital bed. “What about this one?” the doctor asked again, this time tapping the fingers on Lylah’s right hand. She nodded once more. Lylah knows this pre-operation routine. She and her parents, Holly and Don, have spent most of her life making the trek from their Michigan home to Children’s Health — at first every other week, now every four months — for a new drug treatment to be injected into her spine. As a baby, Lylah was diagnosed with spinal muscular atrophy — a rare neuromuscular disorder. Her muscles are weak. She relies on a wheelchair and walker to move. She’s had to

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work to be able to hold her head up, sit on the edge of a bed and wiggle her hands and feet. Her parents largely credit the research treatment and the clinical team at Children’s Health for giving their daughter a chance at life. For Holly, Lylah’s survival depended on this drug research trial. And the treatment came at a time when the family was desperate for a glimmer of hope. “I knew it was the only way she was going to live,” Holly said. “And I knew if we didn’t get in, then that was it.”

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arch 21, 2014. Diagnosis day. Holly and Don don’t talk much about it anymore. “I kept feeling like it was a dream for the first couple of days,” Holly said. “It was like I was living in a nightmare — wake up, this isn’t real.” Spinal muscular atrophy is caused by a loss of specialized nerve cells, called motor neurons, located throughout the spinal cord and in the part of the brain that is connected to the brainstem. The loss of motor

neurons causes weakness and wasting of the muscles that children use for many activities like crawling, walking, sitting up and controlling their heads. Initially, doctors estimated Lylah had another six months to a year to live. The severity of the condition shocked Don and Holly. They had suspected something was wrong when Lylah was four months old and still weak, barely rolling her head from side to side and struggling to reach her arms up for her toys. She had difficulty sitting up and didn’t want to put any weight on her legs. “She was just limp,” Holly said. “We would call her a noodle.” But they never suspected a disease that could be fatal, in some cases. “We would not accept the diagnosis they gave us,” Don said. The family traveled across the country to other hospitals, hoping for a different opinion and for better news. Holly joined spinal muscular atrophy groups on social media,


which eventually led her to a website for their child,” Tammy said. with a list of clinical trials and a new “This is providing therapy for this study that was accepting babies rare disease when there was older than six months for the drug none before.” treatment Spinraza (Nusinersen), In the last several years, Tammy has which is now FDA-approved. seen babies like Lylah, whose arms The drug contains a molecule and legs could barely move, be able that increases the to sit up, play and talk. body’s ability to “We love Lylah the produce a protein way she is, but this gives called survival motor her a chance,” Don said neuron, which spinal of the research trial. muscular atrophy In the last several patients don’t years, Don and Holly produce enough of have seen Lylah hit — Don, Lylah's Dad and is essential for milestones they didn’t motor neuron health. think would be possible Research Coordinator Tammy after her diagnosis. Ramm currently oversees the study, Last year, she performed in her with more than a dozen patients at first ballet recital and played on a Children’s Health on this drug. baseball team (the Detroit Tigers “When we first opened the study, it are her favorite). She also started wasn’t FDA-approved. Families from kindergarten. And earlier this year, all over were calling, wanting to be with the help of a new walker, she able to participate in this treatment skated on the ice for the first time

“ We love Lylah the way she is, but this gives her a chance.”

like her older brother. “Children’s Health gave us hope for our child when we had no hope,” Holly said. “Coming here has changed her life.”

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nurse with a blue cap covering her hair wheeled Lylah down the hallway toward a set of double doors that led to the operating room, pausing by Don and Holly for a quick goodbye. Time for the next drug treatment dosage. Don rubbed Lylah’s arm, reassuring her the procedure would be quick. And Holly leaned over for a kiss on the cheek. “Bye, sweetie. We’ll see you soon,” she said, stroking Lylah’s silky blonde hair swept in a ponytail. The nurse gave Holly a reassuring smile as she wheeled the bed through the double doors. “We’ll take good care of her.”

Holly (right) and her husband, Don (left), largely credit a research treatment and the clinical team at Children's Health for giving their daughter, Lylah, a chance at life.

What you need to know about clinical research:

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hildren’s Medical Center Foundation is currently pursuing funding for clinical research. Donations to clinical research help fund ground-breaking discoveries through the Children’s Health Clinical Research Program as physicians and scientists seek to better understand the basis of diseases like cancers, and how to best treat them.

Clinical Research in 2019: More than 1,150 active studies Over 11,500 participating patients 55% increase since 2015 Operational funds to support clinical research have continued to decrease. The need continues to grow!

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Community

COMMUNITY

TeleBehavioral Health program doubles in size since its inception less than three years ago

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primary way to reduce the prevalence and severity of pediatric mental health issues is to identify and address them as early as possible. But mental health treatment is a complicated issue, compounded by social and cultural stigmas and limited access to health care. The problem is especially prevalent in Texas, which ranks last in the country for youth access to mental health care. As the number of mental health conditions for children and adolescents continues to rise, Children’s Health is taking significant steps to have a positive impact in the region through School-Based TeleBehavioral Health. Since 2017, the program has been increasing access to mental and behavioral health care to North Texas students.

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School-Based TeleBehavioral Health provides access to licensed behavioral professionals for students at participating schools to identify and resolve common behavioral health issues such as depression, anxiety, self-esteem issues and lack of coping skills through videoconference and telephonic referral at schools.

The program also provides training to school counselors, in-service training for school staff and parent educational presentations on behavioral health topics. Besides helping youth who struggle with behavioral health issues, the program increases access to care and decreases mental health-related school disruptions

and absenteeism. School-Based TeleBehavioral Health is currently available to students in more than 60 schools across 11 North Texas districts, as well as some private schools. While generous donors have been instrumental in advancing this program, support still is needed to help more children in our community.

TeleBehavioral Health Success Stories: The most powerful indicators of the program’s success are insights from students and counselors.

1. the behavioral health

A student referred to

program used the skills she learned to identify a friend who was struggling with thoughts of self-harm. The student convinced her friend to seek assistance for her safety.

2. who struggled with depression

A counselor referred a young woman

and identity issues to the program. The student would walk the halls with her head down and avoid eye contact. After she was successfully discharged from the program, the counselor said she was a different student, laughing with her friends in the hallways.

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CHILDREN’S RESEARCH INSTITUTE

2019 Year in Review

Scientists and physicians who work at Children’s Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern share the same determination to push the boundaries of knowledge and to discover new strategies for treating disease.

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ast year, researchers at Children’s Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern made significant strides in helping identify and treat children with rare genetic disorders and uncover new treatment options for blood cancer. The scientific community also recognized the dedication and tireless work of CRI researchers with two prestigious awards. New screening approach helps identify sources of rare genetic diseases in children Researchers in CRI’s Genetic and Metabolic Disease Program have developed a new approach to determine the causes of rare genetic diseases in children and identify treatment options faster than

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with traditional methods. The new approach, which only requires a few drops of blood from patients, combines DNA sequencing and a chemical analysis called metabolomics to identify the mutant genes that cause defective metabolic pathways. “We hope our new technique will increase the speed with which we can pinpoint the defective gene in patients evaluated in our clinics at Children’s Health,” said Dr. Ralph DeBerardinis, professor at CRI and the Department of Pediatrics at UT Southwestern. Inborn errors of metabolism are the largest subset of genetic diseases that affect children and are often the most difficult to identify. These inborn errors of metabolism prevent children from metabolizing or


breaking down the sugars, proteins and fats in In the last five years, researchers have identified food, resulting in permanent disability unless new disease genes, provided accurate diagnostic they are identified and treated information to families and, in a at a young age. few cases, helped patients find Researchers have already used better treatments tailored to “Our scientists and this new technique to identify their mutations. doctors work side-bythe gene responsible for a rare “Our scientists and doctors side to evaluate patients, IEM causing abnormal brain work side-by-side to evaluate learn about their diseases, development, seizures and patients, learn about their find new mutations severe metabolic acidosis in a diseases, find new mutations and think creatively patient at Children’s Health. and think creatively about about developing Dr. DeBerardinis credits the developing better treatments,” better treatments.” unique setup of the GMDP at CRI said Dr. DeBerardinis, a Robert — Dr. Ralph DeBerardinis for the discovery. He said with L. Moody, Sr. Faculty Scholar. the support of Children’s Health “Seeing patients in the clinic and UT Southwestern, he has keeps our research focused and been able to triple the size of the ensures we are asking the right clinical group and build a research program to questions. We are very excited about what we will handle human genomic and metabolomic data. learn in the next few years.”

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Last year year, researchers at CRI made significant strides in helping identify and treat children with rare genetic disorders and uncover new treatment options for blood cancer.

Continued Scientists uncover new treatment options for blood cancer Scientists in Dr. Jian Xu’s lab have discovered epigenetic changes — which determine when genes are turned on and off — that can rewire metabolism during blood cancer development. The findings open up several new potential therapeutic options for patients with a

Dr. Jian Xu

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progressive form of blood cancer known as myeloproliferative neoplasms. MPNs can strike at any age and currently have no cure. Additionally, some MPN patients are at risk of developing acute leukemias such as acute myeloid leukemia within 10 years of diagnosis. Treatment options for post-MPN leukemia patients are limited and conventional approaches fail to offer a long-term cure. “Currently, we do not understand how MPN progresses from a chronic disease to full-blown leukemia, which makes it hard to develop therapies to prevent disease progression and relapse,” said Dr. Xu, an assistant professor at CRI and the Department of Pediatrics at UT Southwestern. Researchers used a genetic mouse model that mimics progressive myelofibrosis and leukemic transformation — often seen in human MPNs — to link one of the most frequently mutated epigenetic factors in MPN patients (EZH2) to branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) metabolism. Unearthing this critical link led to the discovery that the enzyme BCAT1 plays an important role in helping leukemia grow and spread, and inhibiting it impaired the growth of leukemia cells. “These findings open up a new avenue of targeted therapies for patients with leukemia that we are excited to explore,” Dr. Xu said.


Dr. Jian Xu receives Leukemia & Lymphoma Society Scholar Award for blood cancer research Dr. Jian Xu received a Scholar Award from the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society in August 2019 for his research on childhood leukemia. The award, which is highly selective, funds earlystage investigators who have demonstrated a strong track record in blood cancer-related research. Dr. Xu and his lab will use this award to continue his research into myeloid leukemias such as acute myeloid leukemia, which remains one of the most difficult cancers to treat. The five-year survival rate for pediatric patients is 50%. And for adults, it is even lower. “Although we’ve improved the cure rates in other childhood cancers, there is a critical and unmet need for developing improved therapies to treat AML and other blood cancers,” Dr. Xu said. “This award will help our lab continue to study how cellular metabolism and epigenetic alterations control leukemia development, which is not well understood currently. Discovering the link could help us find potentially curative therapies for the treatment of affected patients.” Dr. Hao Zhu appointed to Wildenthal Professorship in Pediatric Research In October 2019, Dr. Hao Zhu, an assistant professor at CRI, became the inaugural holder of the Kern Wildenthal, M.D., Ph.D. Distinguished Professorship in Pediatric Research. Dr. Wildenthal, president emeritus, served as the second president of UT Southwestern from 19862008. Under his leadership, UT Southwestern

Dr. Hao Zhu

more than quintupled in size and emerged as one of the leading medical institutions in the world. “It is a particular honor for Hao to receive the Distinguished Professorship given the remarkable impact that Dr. Wildenthal had on both UT Southwestern and Children’s Health,” CRI Director Dr. Sean Morrison said. “Hao is a fitting choice because of the innovative way he is improving our understanding of the relationship between chronic tissue injury and cancer.” Since joining CRI in 2012, Dr. Zhu has spent his time studying the connection between liver regeneration and liver cancer in hopes that unmasking the role of different cell types in the liver could one day lead to averting cancer or improved treatments to fight chronic liver disease, which has a poor survival rate.

Scientists and physicians who work at Children’s Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern share the same determination to discover new strategies for treating disease.

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2019 FACES

OF

CHILDREN’S HEALTH

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t Children’s Health, our hospitals are filled with stories. We’ve shared a lot of them with you in the last year. You met Finley, who is deaf but thriving after cochlear implant surgery. You got to know Davion and the high school graduation day he wasn’t sure he’d live to see. And we introduced you to Zena, who is waiting on a heart as hers is failing. Our kids count on you to be there through their best and worst days. And for many of them, the journey isn’t over. Kids can do amazing things with a little help, and so can we. Your donations of time and money can make it possible for us to do what we do best.

Camila, 10 OSTEOSARCOMA

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amila dipped her brush in the palette, gliding it across a shimmery light blue shade. On her lap, she balanced a bag overflowing with powders and creams. Her sister, Madeline, closed her eyes, legs dangling over the arm of a plastic chair next to Camila’s wheelchair. Like a painter, Camila colored her sister’s eyelid in gentle but swift strokes, softly blowing when too

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much dust collected in the corners of her eyes. Camila’s aunt taught her how to apply blush to accentuate her cheekbones and eyeliner to brighten her eyes. But no one prepared Camila or her family on how to battle cancer. “Cancer is a real hard word for anybody. It’s a reality we were not ready to hear. There were days when we didn’t sleep, when we cried a lot. We asked God why,” Camila’s

mom, Patricia, said. “But for some reason, we were picked for this.” Clinicians at Children’s Health diagnosed Camila with osteosarcoma, after a cyst developed on her right leg and became increasingly painful. “We came to Children’s Health because we knew it was a good hospital that gives us a hug and treats us as if we are family the minute we come through the doors,” Patricia said.

Because the cancer had infected part of the bone in her right leg, clinicians at Children’s Health removed a section of her kneecap and implanted a rod, leaving a scar down her right leg. Patricia dreams of the day Camila will be able to walk again and zoom around the neighborhood on her bike. She had just learned how to ride a two-wheeler before her diagnosis.


Kids don’t want eating disorders. It is the perfect storm of factors that they and their parents didn’t create. — Dr. Andy McGarrahan

Ava, 18 ANOREXIA

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va kept her eyes down on the pegboard and the brown-haired dog taking shape with each plastic bead. The craft keeps her hands busy as the teenager talks about why she’s in psychologist Dr. Andy McGarrahan’s office this day. “I don’t want to only be thought of as ‘the anorexic girl,’” said Ava as she slowly filled in the pegboard dog outline at the Children’s Health Center for Pediatric Eating Disorders in Plano. The teenager with dark curly hair swooped into a high ponytail and gold hoop earrings

loves Broadway musicals (“‘Into the Woods’ is so cute!”); is obsessed with sharks; and has dreamed since elementary school of being a marine biologist. And like many people, she hasn’t always liked how she looks. But for Ava, it wasn’t just about dropping a few pounds. Food controlled her life. And a few years ago, her weight dropped so alarmingly low that she had to be hospitalized for a month at Children’s Health. Since then, she’s wrestled with challenging questions like her relationship with food and

what beauty means to her. “Some of the sessions can be really emotional. Every one of these is a reminder of taking one more step forward,” said Tiffany, Ava's mom. Eating disorders are not lifestyle choices but serious and sometimes fatal illnesses that cause severe disturbances to a person’s eating behaviors, thoughts and emotions. They can affect people of all ages, racial and ethnic backgrounds and genders, according to the National Institute of Mental Health. “People don’t understand that eating disorders are really based on fear,

anxiety, shame and guilt,” Dr. McGarrahan said. “Kids don’t want eating disorders. It is the perfect storm of factors that they and their parents didn’t create.” But Ava didn’t think finding help for her eating disorder would mean a hospital. She didn’t think recovery would take years. And on the first day at Children’s Health during mealtime, she cried. “I was crying because I didn’t want to eat this,” Ava said. “But also crying out of joy and relief because I was getting help, and maybe one day, I would be able to eat this.”

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I believe she’s getting the best care here in this moment than she could have anywhere else. — Kenda, Zena's mom

Zena, 4 HYPOPLASTIC LEFT HEART SYNDROME

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fternoon sunlight poured through the windows of their eighthfloor room, illuminating a “SHINE BRIGHT” banner in multicolored block letters. Underneath the window, a fleece blanket covered a green upholstered couch as a makeshift slipcover, and a rainbow bedspread draped over Elsa-studded “Frozen” sheets. “Welcome to our home,” said Kenda, mother of Zena. For six months, this Children’s Health hospital

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room adorned with cutouts of butterflies, hearts and unicorns has been a temporary home for Zena and Kenda. The room that overlooked the downtown Dallas skyline is where mom and daughter fell asleep at night. It’s where Kenda potty trained Zena and where Children’s Health therapy dogs visited and climbed in her bed. And this room, with its fluorescent lighting,

is where last year Kenda and Zena waited on a heart. Zena is now continuing her wait for a heart at home. “This is where my family is. It’s where our people are,” Kenda said of Children’s Health. “I believe she’s getting the best care here in this moment than she could have anywhere else.” A blue-eyed little girl who loves to talk, dance and sing, Zena is the youngest of Kenda’s six

living children and her heart is failing. Born with hypoplastic left heart syndrome — a birth defect that affects normal blood flow through the heart — Zena has been in and out of the hospital for about half her life. “Back home, back home, back home,” Zena said, wiggling in her chair at the hospital. “That’s right,” Kenda said. “When do you get to go back home?” “New heart,” Zena replied.


Making it to this day, I look at it like it’s a huge blessing. I’ve been through a lot. — Davion

Davion, 19 ACUTE MYELOID LEUKEMIA

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e wasn’t sure he’d live to see this day. A muggy Friday evening in late May, wearing a polyester blue gown over a shirt and tie, is not the stuff of teenage dreams. But this day was then-18year-old Davion’s dream. It was his high school graduation day. He’d fought for his life to not miss this moment: His name called over the microphone; his walk across the stage; his diploma.

A milestone passed in a few seconds. And he credits clinicians at Children’s Health that it was ever possible. “After my diagnosis, my thoughts were all over the place, and I would wonder ‘Am I going to make it to the next day?’” Davion said before his graduation from a Dallas ISD magnet school in 2019. “Making it to this day, I look at it like it’s a huge blessing. I’ve

been through a lot.” In 2018, Davion noticed a cyst on his lower back was slowly growing, not going away. Clinicians at Children’s Medical Center Dallas, the flagship hospital of Children’s Health, removed the cyst, but the wound didn’t heal. Davion developed a migraine that kept him up at night. His weight dropped about 70 pounds. His mom took him back to the hospital, where

he was diagnosed in February 2018 with acute myeloid leukemia. Davion was in and out of Children’s Health for six months while he received chemotherapy treatment, and was discharged in August 2018. He’s now a college student at the University of North Texas at Dallas, where he is pursuing a career as a nurse, and still regularly visits Children’s Health for appointments and treatment.

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I knew she’d be in really good hands at Children’s. They have some of the best surgeons in the world. — Madeline, Finley's mom

Finley, 5 AUDITORY NEUROPATHY

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he needed a few more pairs that fit together to complete the puzzle — a 24-piece box set that showed Minnie Mouse in a pink polka dot dress holding a microphone in the air. Finley leaned forward to grab a piece, her wavy-haired ponytails swinging toward her forehead and exposing the cochlear implants attached underneath. A puzzle master — as

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her parents call her — Finley began whizzing through puzzles shortly after she learned to walk. As a toddler, there was no noise to distract her. No sound of someone calling her name, a television show or song to shift her focus. Finley couldn’t hear those sounds because she is deaf. “We’d sang her a millionand-one songs trying to put her to bed or rock her to sleep at night, and she’d

never heard any of it,” said Madeline, Finley’s mom. “She’d never even heard us say, ‘I love you.’” Since Madeline and Finley’s dad, Steven, are hearing parents, they turned to cochlear implant surgery at Children’s Health to help Finley hear and speak. “I knew she’d be in really good hands at Children’s. They have some of the best surgeons in the world there,” Madeline said. Now, Finley uses a mix of

sign language and speech to communicate with her parents. She wears the cochlear implants most of the time, only removing them before bed and baths (unless her parents waterproof her “ears”). “Deaf children can do exactly what everyone else can do,” Madeline said. “Whatever she wants to be when she grows up, or do in life, we’re going to let her do it. She just might have to waterproof her ears first.”


Reagan, 13 & Leo, 8 SICKLE CELL DISEASE

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t was the bottom of the last inning in his baseball team’s championship game against their archrival. The score was tied. There were two outs, and the winning run was on third base. Then-9-year-old Reagan was the next up to bat. “You want to be a hero?” his coach asked him. Standing against the fence, his mom, Jaimee, closed her eyes, unable to watch. She knew her son ran slower than the other boys because lifelong pain

in his body had weakened his legs. Instead, she listened, holding her breath until she heard the crack of the bat, gasps from the crowd and an eruption of cheers as Reagan stepped safely onto first base and his teammate crossed home plate. Diagnosed with sickle cell disease as a newborn, Reagan has learned to live life in pain. His younger brother, Leo, also was diagnosed with the

genetic disease at birth. Since they were babies, the boys have sought treatment at Children’s Health to help manage the condition — the most common inherited blood disorder in the United States, affecting about 70,000 to 80,000 Americans. The brothers aren’t hooked up to machines; they’re not moaning in agony. But even though the disease is invisible,

the pain is real. “It’s nice to have Children’s Health as a place where the boys know they’re going to be taken seriously — because being believed is such a question mark for people living with sickle cell disease,” Jaimee said. Jaimee and her husband encourage the boys to live life as if they don’t have the disease — “life without limits” is their motto. “This is how they live life — they push through it,” Jaimee said.

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Betty Farnsworth ‘She felt like this was her hospital’: After her husband helped build Children’s Medical Center Dallas, Betty Farnsworth left legacy gift to Children’s Health.

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James Farnsworth at the 1967 opening of Children's Medical Center Dallas. Credit: The Dallas Morning News

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he sparkled. She could talk to anyone. And she couldn’t be pulled from a party before it was over. That’s how Nancy Long remembers her mother, Elizabeth “Betty” Farnsworth, who passed away Jan. 22, 2019, at the age of 92. “She was just a sparkly person,” Nancy said. “She always had a twinkle in her eye, and she always wore beautiful clothing. People knew her as the woman in the Chico clothing and all the jewelry.” So much jewelry that her family handed out her favorite necklaces and bracelets to Betty’s friends at the retirement home during her memorial service. A piece of Betty, her friends would tell Nancy as they held up their necklaces. But a bigger piece of Betty stands along Medical District Drive in Dallas. Married for more than six decades to James Farnsworth — former president of Children’s Medical Center Dallas — Betty was the woman by the side of the man who oversaw the building of the hospital. She left a planned estate gift of $100,000 to the James Farnsworth Endowment, which helps fund the James J. Farnsworth Health Career Scholarship Program at Children’s Health to financially support students planning careers in pediatric health care. “Education was a big deal to my parents,” said Nancy, as she flipped through old photos of her mom scattered on her kitchen table. There was one of Betty standing next to Nancy’s oldest daughter at her wedding. Another of Betty in a flowy, floor-length purple gown with James at their 40th wedding anniversary party.


“Without an education, my parents would have been farmers living in rural Oklahoma, and they wanted out of small-town America. They wanted to help others who had big dreams,” Nancy said. James and Betty met in high school before James joined the U.S. Army in 1943 and served during World War II. He asked Betty to marry him in a telegram (she didn’t keep the note) and were wedded shortly after he returned from war in 1946. The couple moved to Oklahoma City in 1948 for James’ engineering job, but he didn’t want to build bridges for the rest of his life.

So, they hitched a wooden cart to the back of their car and toted their few belongings to St. Louis, Mo., for James to pursue his master’s degree in hospital administration at Washington University in St. Louis. There, James and Betty bought a plastic table and chairs. They converted the wooden cart into a bookcase. “That was all they had, but they had great times,” Nancy said. “Their lives were full of laughter.” The Farnsworths relocated to Dallas when James was offered a hospital administration residency at Baylor University Medical Center and stayed when he was offered an assistant hospital administrator position. James became president of Children’s Medical Center in October 1954. During his more than three decades as president, he was tasked with bringing together several smaller hospitals to create the current Children’s Medical Center Dallas — what is now the flagship hospital of Children’s Health. “My brother and I had the mumps, so we had to sit in the car while mom was down with a crowd of doctors and administrators for the groundbreaking,” Nancy said. From the car, Nancy and her brother, Jim, could hear the tapping of little hammers against stakes

outlining the perimeter of where Children’s Medical Center Dallas would soon stand. Even after James passed away in 2008, Betty continued to attend Children’s Health events, including the annual Bradford Society luncheon that honors those who have named Children’s Medical Center Foundation as a beneficiary in their estate plans. Last year, Jim, his wife, Becky, and Nancy attended the event in Betty’s honor. “She felt like this was her hospital,” Nancy said. “When she met someone, she’d say, ‘I am James Farnsworth’s wife, and he built Children’s.’ She felt a big connection to having been part of that process and was proud of him.”

Join us in our mission and leave a legacy for future generations.

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ore than 50% of Americans pass away without making estate plans. When this happens, assets are distributed according to state laws where the person lived at the time of their death. This may not reflect your family’s best interests and will not allow for your philanthropic legacy. To help you take care of your loved ones and leave

the legacy you value, Children’s Health has partnered with FreeWill.com to help you create your will online at no cost.

Visit give.childrens.com/mywill to get started.

This information is general and may not apply to all individuals. It is not offered as legal or financial advice but is purely educational in nature.

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Volunteer Ladies ‘WE’RE MORE LIKE SISTERS’: MORE THAN TWO DECADES OF VOLUNTEERING TURNED THESE STRANGERS INTO BEST FRIENDS

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“We help take kids’ minds off of their pain, and it gives them that break they need,” Clara (left) said.

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h my goodness,” Dianne silently mouthed, as she shut the hospital room door gently behind her. She closed her eyes for a minute, savoring the moment like a decadent chocolatey dessert. “Clara, Clara,” she whispered excitedly as she gently squeezed her friend’s arm, a signal to her compadre to peek at the sleeping baby in the hospital crib one room over. “You just can’t help but fall in love,” Dianne said, as she searched the overloaded toy cart for a knitted blanket and plastic rattle. She dug past the dangling stuffed animal monkeys that Clara pushes like a shoe salesman. She scooted aside the plastic frog that records your voice when you push a button. And she reminded a curious parent “not to touch” the disinfected toys as they reached for a book on the toy cart. Best friends, the duo met volunteering at Children’s Health through the Assistance League of Dallas. “We help take kids’ minds off of their pain, and it gives them that break they need from the needles, from the IVs,” Clara said. “Amidst everything they’re going through, this is a bright spot.” The organization has supported Children’s Health through its Volunteer Services department for more than 50 years with volunteer teams wheeling carts of toys down hospital hallways, passing out coloring books, rattles and stuffed animals to some of North Texas’ sickest children. “It brings so much happiness to our hospital and to us, and speaks volumes about who you are and who our community in Dallas is that wants to give back,” said Susan Lakey, director of auxiliary services at Children's Health, during the organization’s 50th anniversary party last year. “You help us spread light, and we are so thrilled that we get to serve with you every day.” Strangers before they joined the Assistance League, these monthly volunteer shifts (followed by lunches of Mexican food) bonded a friendship between Clara and Dianne that has withstood decades and sent them and their husbands on adventures to Europe, Antarctica and


South Africa — where the duo got into their first fight over whose turn it was to eat the last barbecue potato chip. Clara will teasingly lean her head on Dianne’s shoulder. They can tell what the other is thinking with only a glance. And Dianne will warn Clara not to bite into a slice of cake with fluffy pink frosting before a photo. “We’re more like sisters,” Dianne said. “Sisters that love each other.” You can find them in their blue aprons and chunky walking sneakers wheeling their heavy toy cart down

the halls at Children’s Medical Center Dallas on the first Wednesdays of every month. Passing out free toys to patients like they’re the Santa Claus of Children’s Health. Clara and Dianne have been peddling this wheeling “fun cart” — as they call it — up and down the hospital’s hallways for more than two decades. They enter patient rooms with a soft knock followed by a gentle “Assistance League, would you like a toy?” as they nudge the door open. Once, when a baby was asleep in its crib and her mom was resting on the neighboring couch, Clara left a pink beanie and socks on the bedside table as a surprise. Another time, Dianne brought a stuffed white lamb and baby doll for 3-year-old Ella — who was being treated for neuroblastoma — to choose between. The decision (Ella opted for the stuffed animal) is a small choice in a day where much is out of the little girl’s control.

“For a moment, it doesn’t feel like she’s in the hospital,” Ella’s mom Abigail said. “They are a visit from someone who isn’t going to poke her or cause her pain.” But the work isn’t easy. Clara and Dianne have cried together in corners of the hospital, overwhelmed by the circumstances of the children and families they encounter on their route. They’ve prayed with parents at the foot of their children’s beds. “You don’t become tough under any circumstances. You don’t become callous to anything that happens here,” Dianne said. “You just know that it’s good for them, and it’s good for you.”

What you need to know about volunteering: O

ur volunteer program for adults spans across our three hospitals: Children’s Medical Center Dallas, Children’s Medical Center Plano and Our Children’s House. Volunteers, regardless of where they serve, must comply with the following requirements: Applicants must be at least 18 years of age and not currently enrolled in high school. Applicants may only apply to volunteer at one location. Applicants must commit to six consecutive months of service. Volunteers must commit to serving one three-hour or four-hour shift on the same day each week, or one three-hour or four-hour shift biweekly on weekends. Prospective volunteers also must complete an online assessment, interview, online training courses and a health check with Children’s Health Occupational Health and Wellness Department.

To learn more about volunteering at Children’s Health, visit childrens.com/get-involved/volunteer.

2019 VOLUNTEER

SERVICES BY THE NUMBERS

1,000

ADULT VOLUNTEERS

132,418 SERVICE HOURS

90

OLDEST VOLUNTEER

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or more than a century, families have turned to us to care for their children. Kids not just from North Texas but all over the country. At Children’s Health, we’re always learning and growing. However, at our core, we remain steadfastly devoted to one mission: To make life better for children. Children’s Health is the leading pediatric health care system in North Texas and one of the largest pediatric health care providers in the nation. A private, nonprofit organization, Children’s Health is anchored by two full-service hospitals and one specialty hospital. The system includes an extensive network offering virtual, urgent, primary, specialty care and more to children of North Texas and beyond. In addition, Children’s Health is affiliated with UT Southwestern, while also serving as the official pediatric teaching hospital for the medical school. This means access to a world-renowned medical faculty and transformative biomedical research.

KEY FACTS ABOUT CHILDREN’S HEALTH Patient Encounters Per Main Location

451,970 DALLAS

150,263 PLANO

845

OUR CHILDREN’S HOUSE

Total Patients Seen

276,885 26

7,856 Employees


26,644 Surgeries

50+

11

Pediatric Specialty and Subspecialty Programs

601 Licensed Beds

158,448 Ancillary Visits

353,575

Facility Therapy Dogs

30+

Volunteer Therapy Dogs

Outpatient Visits

$45.1 Million

$175.7 Million $3.8 Billion Gross Revenue

Community BeneďŹ ts*

Charity Care**

*2018 data

**Retail value of charity care

172,690

Total Emergency Room Visits

120,587 DALLAS

Numbers as of Dec. 31, 2019, unless otherwise noted.

52,103 PLANO

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Y

ou have many choices about where to invest your time and money. And we’re honored every time you choose Children’s Health. Throughout the year, we host a variety of events and campaigns in support of our primary goal to make life better for children. Below are highlights from 2019 that celebrate how your support helped make a difference in our patients’ lives.

2019 RECAP

RED BALLOON RUN & RIDE

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ith more than $7.5 million raised in nine years, the Alliance Data Red Balloon Run & Ride hosted by Passion for Children’s has been an incredible source of funding for Children’s Health. The 2019 event raised $865,000 from nearly 2,000 donors and 13 sponsors. Patient families, Children’s Health employees and community members joined together to form 204 teams, designating programs and services like medical camps, research and the emergency room renovation to benefit from their fundraising.

$865,214

TOTAL FUNDS RAISED

4,655

REGISTERED PARTICIPANTS

204 TEAMS

665

VOLUNTEERS

1,986 DONORS

13

SPONSORS

RED BALLOON CHILDREN HELPING CHILDREN TENNIS TOURNAMENT

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ore than 375 youth tennis players raised their rackets and raised funds at the Red Balloon Children Helping Children Tennis Tournament last fall. Fundraising totaled more than $85,000 at the 29th annual event, with $3.4 million raised to date for the Pauline Allen Gill Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders. The USTA-sanctioned event hosted 750 attendees and 95 volunteers for 1,200 sets of tennis, kid-friendly activities and a silent auction.

$85,000 RAISED

750

ATTENDEES

Learn more at childrens.com/tennis.

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375

YOUTH TENNIS PLAYERS

1,200

SETS OF TENNIS


CAPE DAY

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atman and Robin. Woody and Buzz Lightyear. Our patients and you. Whether fighting evil, fighting to get home or fighting illness and injury, great sidekicks are critical to every superhero’s mission. In a show of superhuman support, the community rallied together for Cape Day, presented by Bank of Texas, on Nov. 7 to celebrate the bravery and courage of patients at Children’s Health. In its second year, more than 17,000 capes were distributed across North Texas to our patients and their siblings. Learn more about getting involved at childrens.com/capeday.

BOO YARD SIGN CHALLENGE

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or our patients, treatment sometimes means missing special moments like Halloween. The Boo Yard Sign Challenge raises funds to provide kids a Halloween treat during their hospital stay. Supported by Neighborhood Credit Union and Women’s Auxiliaries, the initiative had more than 400 unique donors and 1,200 signs sold in its second year.

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2019 RECAP

NORTH TEXAS GIVING DAY

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orth Texas Giving Day is an 18-hour communitywide giving day where nonprofits across North Texas raise awareness and funds for their organization. In 2019, we featured the stories of Finley, Camila and Davion, who are all past or current patients of Children’s Health. Each patient is a superhero in their own way, fighting and overcoming diagnoses to reach milestones such as riding a bike, hearing “I love you” for the first time and graduating high school. As a part of the giving day, we hosted eight employee parties throughout the hospital system at our Dallas and Plano campuses, encouraging our Children’s Health team members to give back in support of the area most meaningful to them. From these efforts, and because of our generous donors across North Texas, Children’s Health finished No. 2 on the leaderboard, raising over $700,000 from 1,002 donors.

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ON THE LEADERBOARD

1,002

$700,000+

DONORS

30

No. 2

HOURS

FUNDS RAISED


GIVING TUESDAY

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iving Tuesday is a 24-hour, nationwide giving day where nonprofits can raise awareness and funds for their organization. In 2019, we featured the story of our patient Ava (18, right), who found her way through the “perfect storm” to overcome an eating disorder with support from Children’s Health staff at the Center for Pediatric Eating Disorders at Children’s Medical Center Plano. Because of Ava’s inspiring story and our generous donors across the nation, we finished No. 2 on the local leaderboard and raised over $86,000 from 251 donors.

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251

HOURS

DONORS

$86,000

TOTAL FUNDS RAISED

Learn more about Giving Tuesday by visiting childrens.com/givingtuesday.

“WE CHOOSE CHILDREN’S” EMPLOYEE GIVING CAMPAIGN

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ur team members are the heart and soul of Children’s Health and, for the second year, they eagerly embraced the “We Choose Children’s” employee campaign to help us fulfill our mission to make life better for children. The initiative gives employees the opportunity to give back to any department or program. Last year, our employees generously gave more than $368,000 to help our patients.

2nd YEAR

$368,000 TOTAL FUNDS RAISED

Learn more about our employee giving program by visiting wechoosechildrens.com.

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2019 RECAP

CHILDREN’S MIRACLE NETWORK

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or almost 30 years, Children’s Health has been a Children’s Miracle Network Hospital, operating as the local beneficiary for 40 national fundraising partners in North Texas. In 2019, these partners raised almost $3 million through point-of-sale and other fundraising campaigns.

PANDA EXPRESS

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fter a standout fundraising year in 2018, Panda Express became the fastestgrowing Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals partner nationwide. In 2019, the company continued to grow their fundraising through point-of-sale register asks and employee giving, with more than $650,000 in support of Children’s Health. This put their lifetime giving to Children’s Health at more than $1 million. The driving force is their commitment to bringing hope to children by supporting programs that improve a child’s emotional, physical, mental and spiritual well-being.

$650,000 RAISED IN 2019

$1,000,000+ LIFETIME GIVING

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EXTRA LIFE

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xtra Life unites thousands of gamers around the world to play games in support of their local Children's Miracle Network Hospital. In North Texas, Extra Life participants play to support the patients treated at Children’s Health. In 2019, the Extra Life program at Children’s Health had a record-breaking year with more than $102,000 raised by teams, companies and individuals like Kristen Miller, who was a patient at Children’s Health when she was 7 years old. Kristen has supported the hospital system through Extra Life for 10 years, raising more than $6,500 last year. In 2019, professional esports team Complexity Gaming partnered with Extra Life, joining a game of Madden with patients at Children’s Health and inviting patients to play Fortnite with professional esport athletes at

their performance center. The Play it Forward Esports Tournament, hosted by Balanced Media Technology, raised almost $6,000 and earned both groups the Collaboration Award from Extra Life. Microsoft employees from locations at NorthPark Center, Stonebriar Centre and Las Colinas tapped into their passion for Extra Life through their employee giving program, which matches employees’ volunteer hours with a gift to their charity of choice. Employees hosted Extra Life Game Days; made no-sew blankets and busy books for patients; hosted a back-to-school drive at Children’s Medical Center Plano; and volunteered monthly at Children’s Medical Center Dallas. Donations from Microsoft for employee volunteer hours totaled more than $16,000.

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From left: Women’s Auxiliary Governing Board members and presidents Lindsey Miller, Lauren Swann, Joa Muns and Tracy Tomson present the Women’s Auxiliary’s 2019 gift to Children’s Health.

The Women’s Auxiliary to Children’s Medical Center Members of the Women’s Auxiliary to Children’s Medical Center raised more than $850,000 in 2019, totaling their support to more than $22 million in fundraising dollars for Children’s Health throughout their 57 years. The more than 850 members of the Women’s Auxiliary raise funds and serve as advocates and volunteers at Children’s Medical Center Dallas and Plano campuses. In the early years, members assisted staff in admitting patients, delivered samples to the lab and founded and operated the Children’s Corner Gift Shop — still a favorite stop for patient families and team members. The Auxiliary’s heartfelt support of Children’s Health is evident throughout the year as members serve families meals during

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the holidays, deliver snack baskets to critical care waiting areas and distribute essential items to families experiencing unexpected hospitalizations. In addition to serving as volunteers, Auxiliary members host signature fundraisers that have become annual traditions in the community, such as the highly anticipated Breakfast with Santa Spectacular and Santa’s Workshop. Signature spring events include Family Night at Six Flags and the Legacy of Love Benefit &

Fashion Show. Funds raised by the Women’s Auxiliary support lifesaving medical equipment and critical program areas, including Family Support Services, research and intensive care. The Women’s Auxiliary was established in 1962 by combining the auxiliaries from the precursors of the modern-day Children’s Medical Center: Bradford Memorial Hospital for Babies, Children’s Hospital of Texas and Richard Freeman Memorial Clinic. For membership information, visit childrensauxiliary.org.


WOMEN’S AUXILIARY DALLAS CHAPTER

WOMEN’S AUXILIARY PLANO CHAPTER

EXECUTIVE BOARD

EXECUTIVE BOARD

Board of Directors | 2019-2020 Lindsey Miller Kristin Mitchell Amy Altizer Andi Lemme Carol Piering Christi Leinart Lauren Swann

President President-Elect Treasurer Treasurer-Elect Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Parliamentarian

Board of Directors | 2019-2020 Tracy Tomson Joan Smith Brenda Harrell Jean Callison Pam Wohlers Lori Antonioli Joa Muns

President President-Elect Treasurer Treasurer-Elect Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Parliamentarian

STANDING COMMITTEE CHAIRS

STANDING COMMITTEE CHAIRS

Lauren Swann Kristin Mitchell Elisabeth McHugh Joanna Clarke Annie Fernandez Nikki Kapioltas Alexa Spears Amy Ayik Joanna Clarke Neha Gaitonde Elizabeth Post Gita Shah Whitney Strauss Sally Dutter Monica Egert Smith Stacey Stoller Katie Walters Jessica Barnett Megan Filgo Natalie Lesikar Amy Lobner Stephanie Berry Nancy Scripps Sally Dutter Monica Egert Smith Ginny Searcy Allison Methvin Kim Quinn Mollie Shelby Jamie Singer

Joa Muns Joan Smith Christel Morrison Donna Ivy Kelly Noonan Leslie Newman Beth Webb Heather Lothes Michelle Pisciotta Christel Morrison Nannette Pirek Kathy Schell Kay Anthony Jennifer Johnson Karyn Driscoll Elyse Graver Beth Vasil Tracy Wallner Alice Brumback Diane Danks Jenny Woods

Advisory Advocacy Communications/Newsletter Deck the Halls Deck the Halls Deck the Halls-Elect Deck the Halls-Elect Family Support Family Support Family Support Family Support Family Support Family Support Gifts Gifts Hospitality Hospitality Membership Membership Membership Membership Mother’s Day Weekend Dinner Mother’s Day Weekend Dinner New Year’s Eve Dinner New Year’s Eve Dinner Nominating Public Relations Special Events Staff Appreciation Staff Appreciation

FUNDRAISING COMMITTEE CHAIRS Claire Baker Missy Finger Julie Hagen Lisa Leet Andrea Nayfa Aphrodite Paulos Lizzie Bailey Meredith McBee Christine Flanagan Jessica Slaven Haylie Crouch Jennifer Knox Holly Lawrence Lillian Richey Jill C. Bee Becky Lacour Brittany Glendenning Nicole Brewer Shelley Moore Lara Gaither Shannon Williams

BOO Yard Sign Challenge BOO Yard Sign Challenge Breakfast with Santa Spectacular Breakfast with Santa Spectacular Breakfast with Santa Spectacular Breakfast with Santa Spectacular Change for Children’s Change for Children’s Children’s Toy Closet Children’s Toy Closet Family Night at Six Flags Family Night at Six Flags Family Night at Six Flags Family Night at Six Flags Gift Shop Gift Shop Gift Shop Treasurer Holiday Cards Holiday Cards Sundaes on Sunday Sundaes on Sunday

MEMBERS-AT-LARGE Paige Andrews Julie Bagley Lindsay Billingsley Christine Cook Marie Crowe Christina Durovich Chelsea Duvall Gini Florer Cate Ford

Advisory Advocacy Communications Deck the Halls Deck the Halls-Elect* Graphic Design* Hospitality Membership Membership Newsletter Nominating Patient Support Patient Support Blanket Coordinator* Patient Support Blanket Coordinator* Patient/Family Support Cart Coordinator* Patient Support Hospital Party Coordinator* Patient Support Hospital Party Coordinator* Staff Appreciation Staff Appreciation Basket Coordinator* Staff Appreciation/Holiday Gift Wrap Coordinator* Staff Appreciation/Holiday Gift Wrap Coordinator*

FUNDRAISING COMMITTEE CHAIRS Joyce Logan Amanda Konersmann Sheri Steele Jenna Maynard Heather Webb Caren Zepeda Allison Doyle Auburn Pope René Neely Donna Watkins Jennifer Tinsman Diane Hopson Sharon Yager

BOO Yard Sign Challenge Change for Children’s Change for Children’s Legacy of Love Benefit & Fashion Show Legacy of Love Benefit & Fashion Show Legacy of Love Benefit & Fashion Show-Elect* Red Balloon Run & Ride Santa’s Workshop Santa’s Workshop-Elect* Santa’s Workshop-Elect* Special Events Sponsor Development Sponsor Development

*Ex-officio, non-voting members of the Board of Directors

Legacy of Love Benefit & Fashion Show

Santa’s Workshop

Family Night at Six Flags

Breakfast with Santa Spectacular

Carolyn Lane Katherine Lewis Layne Pitzer Amy Prestidge Lisa Rocchio Bryanna Roop Kacy Tolleson Samantha Wortley


Changemakers for Children’s Changemakers for Children’s is a group of high school students who fundraise and advocate for the cause of Children’s Health. Equipped with a toolkit of fundraising and leadership skills and a passion to make life better for children, Changemakers make an impact in their high schools and among their friends, while learning leadership and fundraising skills and raising awareness for Children’s Health. In 2019, Changemakers donated their time and efforts to volunteer

for Children’s Health at weekend play sessions in the Child Life Kid Zone and Sundaes on Sunday at American Girl. During the holidays, a group of Changemakers assembled a toy drive and donated over 50 toys for Child Life Specialists to hand out to patients on Christmas Day. Last year, several Changemakers finished their

fundraising efforts through letter campaigns, community field days and tutoring. Because of their hard work and enthusiastic support, the group raised more than $7,000 to donate to the Child Life Program, which provides education and advocacy and helps make the treatment setting more kid-friendly to more than 40,000 children each year.

MEMBERS Emma Gueorguieva & Sophia Fernandes 2018-2019 Co-Chairs Sai Sarnala & Anika Kapoor 2019-2020 Co-Chairs

A former patient family shares their story with Changemakers for Children's.

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Ady Lagisetty Aman Kapoor Andrew Summers Anika Kapoor Ashley Eakin Ava Heppner Brynn Price Caleb Warfield Carson Hart Charlie Barker Charlie Terrell

Ellie Estes Emily Shankar Emma Tanner Ethan Williams Isabel Agbassi Jalini Balasubramaniam Leah Harris Lily Allen Nimra Hamid Patricia Sharon Pavani Surendra Paxton Anderson Ramsey Watkins Sai Sarnala Shivani Ramkumar Shivi Sharma Shriya Bhat Shruti Edara Vibha Kolathaya


The One Society The One Society, a group of young professionals supporting Children’s Health, fulfilled their mission of engaging and fostering young leaders to make life better for children with philanthropic, educational, fundraising, volunteer and social opportunities throughout the year. In 2019, members of The One Society raised over $12,000 for their beneficiary — gene-therapy research overseen by Dr. Berge A. Minassian, a pediatric neurologist who practices at Children’s Health and leads its Neurosciences Center. The program is trailblazing a series of clinical trials

for rare neurological diseases that occur when a single missing gene in a patient’s DNA is packaged into a harmless virus and delivered to the patient’s brain cells. Funds were raised through events such as the Annual Crawfish Boil, Red Balloon Run & Ride, Quiz for a

Cause and Night in White — the group’s signature event. The One Society includes 90 members who also gave of their time by volunteering in the Child Life Zone and Carnival for a Cure, where members spent time with Children’s Health patients and families.

EXECUTIVE BOARD MEMBERS Sami Williams President

Katelynn Wilms Event Chair

Jovelyn Castellanos Vice President

Heather Murray Volunteer Chair

Alex Martins Treasurer

Emily Petty Membership

In 2019, members of The One Society raised over $12,000 for gene therapy research.

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BOARD CHILDREN’S HEALTH BOARD MEMBERS

Children’s Health welcomes new board members appointed in 2019.

CHRISTIE CARTER Children’s Medical Center Foundation Board

Christie Carter is a former nonprofit executive who dedicates her time to making Dallas a better community, especially for children. Along with her many philanthropic endeavors throughout the Dallas community, she currently serves on several boards, including Dallas CASA, Salvation Army Advisory Board and the Dallas Chamber Symphony. In 2016, she was the chair of the Crystal Charity Ball. Christie was born and raised in Dallas. She is a graduate of Texas A&M University with a bachelor’s degree in business administration.

REBECCA EGELSTON CASO Chair, Children’s Medical Center Foundation Board;

Children’s Health System of Texas Board; Children’s Medical Center Plano Operating Division Board; Ex Officio, Children’s Medical Center Dallas Operating Division Board Rebecca Egelston Caso is the new chairman of the board of directors of Children’s Medical Center Foundation. The real estate planning attorney is a philanthropist who has been involved with area nonprofits for 25 years. Caso’s connection to Children’s Medical Center Dallas goes back to her time volunteering there as a teenager. Most recently, she has served on the foundation’s board and executive committee for five years. She is also on the Children’s Medical Center Plano Operating Division Board of Directors and was president of Women’s Auxiliary to Children’s Medical Center Plano. As a certified facilitator, Caso helps nonprofits grow and strategize for the future. She also specializes in leadership training for women. In addition to her role as president of Egelston Realty Inc., Caso has served with a number of agencies and organizations, including Governor’s Victims’ Services Coalition, Governor’s Criminal Justice Division Strategic Planning Task Force, United Way of Metropolitan Dallas, Plano ISD Education Foundation Board of Directors and Junior League of Collin County. Caso has received the Citizen of the Year and the Distinguished Leadership Award from the Plano Chamber of Commerce. She also was named to the Top Ten Women of Collin County, among other awards.

LISA GUERRERO Children’s Medical Center Plano Operating Division Board

Lisa Guerrero currently serves as chief operations officer of American Communities LLC, a real estate company engaged in the acquisition, development and management of communities in metropolitan areas. As a longtime supporter of Children’s Health, Guerrero has been a Children’s Medical Center Dallas Associates Board member since 2016, Quality Committee member since 2016 and lifetime member of the Plano Women’s Auxiliary. Guerrero attended Pepperdine University.

JOE JOUVENAL Children’s Medical Center Foundation Board

Joe Jouvenal serves as regional president of McCarthy Building Companies Inc. There, he leads management and operations for project sites across Texas and the Southeast with a focus on health care, corporate and municipal market sectors, and infrastructure projects. With over 20 years of experience in construction, he began his career with McCarthy as a project engineer in the Southeast, moving up to superintendent, manager and director before assuming his current role. Joe combines this field expertise with strong leadership and a collaborative approach to assist his clients. He is an active advocate for industry and workforce development and spends time supporting a variety of community organizations in Texas. Joe received his bachelor's degree in civil engineering from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

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VENKAT KONDALA Children’s Medical Center Dallas Associates Board

Venkat Kondala is a forward-thinking information technology leader who currently serves as chief technology officer for Opargo and TriDot Triathlon Training. He has extensive experience in web application development, mobile application development, global connectivity initiatives, systems development, project management, legacy application upgrades, financial analysis and operations planning. Kondala received his Executive MBA from the Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University and is fluent in three languages: English, Hindi and Telugu.

TRACY LAROSILIERE Children’s Medical Center Plano Operating Division Board

Tracy LaRosiliere is a marketing professional who built her career at Frito-Lay. Working with numerous Frito-Lay brands, she was responsible for shaping Frito-Lay’s healthier snacks strategy and new product development pipeline, growing healthier snacks to a $1 billion portfolio. LaRosiliere is a lifetime member of Girl Scouts of America Inc. and received her MBA from the University of Michigan and bachelor's degree from Colgate University. LaRosiliere is the wife of Plano Mayor Harry LaRosiliere.

KEN LEAR Children’s Medical Center Dallas Associates Board

Ken Lear is the vice president of real estate operations for AT&T and holds an enterprise-wide executive leadership responsibility for implementing domestic real estate strategy and operations. Lear has a passion for volunteering in North Texas and is currently active with Big Brothers Big Sisters Lone Star and Omega Gents Youth Mentoring. He received his MBA from Saint Mary’s College in California and a bachelor's degree in engineering technology from Grambling State University in Louisiana.

CHRISTINE (CHRIS) REGIS Children’s Medical Center Dallas Associates Board

Christine (Chris) Regis serves as the chief business and financial officer at Southern Methodist University. Through supervision of seven direct reports, she oversees a wide range of administrative functions supporting the university’s academic mission. Regis joined SMU in September 2007 from the University of California system, where she served as assistant vice president for Administrative Services. She is a certified public accountant, earned a bachelor's degree in accounting from New Mexico State University and an MBA from Western New Mexico University. Regis has served as a United Way volunteer and Community Impact grant panelist. She was a recipient of the Texas Diversity Council Most Powerful and Influential Women of Texas Award in April 2018.

AMANDA SHUFELDT Children’s Medical Center Foundation Board

Amanda Shufeldt is an attorney and active contributor to the Dallas community. A native of Little Rock, Ark., Amanda moved to Dallas in 2003 to attend graduate school at Southern Methodist University. After obtaining her JD/MBA from SMU, Amanda remained in Dallas to practice law. Prior to moving to Dallas, Amanda attended Vanderbilt University, where she obtained her bachelor's degree in political science. While at SMU, Amanda met her husband Charlie Shufeldt. They have three daughters who attend The Hockaday School, The Lamplighter School and The da Vinci School. Amanda enjoys volunteering at her children’s schools and serving the community in various capacities. She is recognized for her involvement on the Dallas Museum of Art Board of Trustees, Texas Ballet Theater Board of Governors, The Cary Council Steering Committee, The Crystal Charity Ball Committee, Cattle Barons Ball Committee, Executive Board of the Hockaday Parents Association and the Junior League of Dallas.

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2019 PHILANTHROPY

HIGHLIGHTS / BENEFACTORS

As a nonprofit, your support of Children’s Health helps us do more than provide medical care. You help us make life better for children. We are grateful every year for the organizations and individuals who choose Children’s Health and support our mission.

THREE-YEAR AVERAGES (2017-2019)

■ Corporation: $3,536,206.18 ■ Estates: $10,102,081.25 ■ Foundations: $3,331,686.15 ■ Individuals: $28,396,805.30 ■ Other Organizations: $4,621,198.22

TOTAL: $49,987,977.10 When it comes to fundraising, we focus on the long game. We know that success isn’t measured in one year, but in consistent, steady gains toward our goal to be the cause of choice in the North Texas community. Because of you, in the last few years, we have made major strides in lifesaving research to find

cures; expanded programs and facilities to provide advanced care and treatment; and improved the health and wellness of kids throughout our community. But just like our kids, we have big dreams. We want to keep growing, learning, innovating and delivering the best care in the world to our patients. And we can’t do it alone.

Planned Giving

C

reating your own legacy of giving allows you to make a gift that will provide continued momentum for Children’s Health to conduct internationally recognized research; educate the next generation of medical scientists, clinicians and health care providers; and deliver patient care through nearly 1 million patient visits annually.

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There are a variety of ways to carry on your legacy and access beneficial tax strategies through giving to the work at Children's Health, including: ■ Beneficiary Designation of Retirement Plans

■ DAF Grants and

Beneficiary Designations

■ Bequests

■ IRA Rollovers

■ Charitable Gift Annuities

■ Life Insurance

■ Charitable Remainder Trusts

■ Retained Life Estate

■ Charitable Lead Trusts

■ Stocks and Securities

If you have questions or want to know more, contact Nicola Lawrence, director of planned giving, at 214-456-5050 or nicola.lawrence@childrens.com.


2019 GIFTS Children’s Medical Center Foundation is grateful for the gifts and support provided by our generous donors.

The following lists include all gifts and pledges of $1,000 or more that were received cumulatively between January 1 and December 31, 2019, plus all lifetime benefactors (those individuals, corporations, foundations and organizations that have given or pledged $1 million or more cumulatively as either one

large donation or a series of contributions). Every effort has been made to ensure that this list is as accurate as possible, but inevitably some errors or omissions may have occurred. We would appreciate receiving corrections, comments or questions. Please contact the Foundation at 214-456-8360.

LIFETIME BENEFACTORS $1,000,000 OR MORE GIVEN OR PLEDGED CUMULATIVELY AS OF DEC. 31, 2019

Jerome T. Abbott and Patricia Flood Abbott Family Foundation Alliance Data Andrea-Mennen Family Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Andrea Anonymous (9) Emy Lou and Jerry Baldridge/Baldridge Foundation Balfour Beatty Construction Bank of America William and Angela Barrett Fund Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Beecherl Jr. The Benefit Store Inc. The Bezalel Fund, a donor-advised account administered by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation at Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program Mr. and Mrs. Gene H. Bishop Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Bowman Peggy and H.R. “Bum” Bright Capital One Bank The Carpenter Family W.W. Caruth Jr. Foundation at Communities Foundation of Texas Children's Cancer Fund Communities Foundation of Texas Constantin Foundation Corner Store Corrigan-Goddard Foundation Credit Unions for Kids Crow Holdings/Mr. and Mrs. Harlan R. Crow/Mr. and Mrs. Stuart M. Crow/ Mr. Trammell S. Crow/Margaret Crow Crystal Charity Ball The Dallas Foundation Dallas Southwest Osteopathic Physicians Inc. Wirt Davis II Dean Foods Foundation/Dean Foods Company Robert and Nancy Dedman Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Dedman Jr./ Nancy Dedman The Elsie & Marvin Dekelboum Family Foundation Inc. DeWitt Walker Trust Mr. and Mrs. John R. Eagle Dr. and Mrs. Henry Estess Jr. Molly and Jeremy Fernandes Mary C. Fisher E.E. Fogelson and Greer Garson Fogelson Charitable Foundation Gayden Family Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. William K. Gayden/ Hunter Williams Family R.B. George Pauline Allen Gill Foundation Cecil and Ida Green Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Green Humanitarian Foundation/Grottoes of North America Ute Schwarz Haberecht and Rolf R. Haberecht Patrick and Beatrice Haggerty Foundation Hamon Charitable Foundation Nancy B. Hamon Mary L. Harding

The Hartland & Mackie Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hartstein Hawn Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Jody Hawn/Mr. and Mrs. Douglas M. Kelley Hillcrest Foundation, Bank of America, N.A., Co-Trustee Hoblitzelle Foundation Margaret W. and King W. Hopkins Denny and Joyce Houlihan Josephine Hughes Sterling Foundation Hyundai Hope on Wheels Jordan Family Foundation Mark and Marcia King/MMK Foundation Kohl's Cares Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. LaManna III Frank A. Larson Adele B. Lee Mr. and Mrs. C.S. Lee Lincoln Property Company Anne J. Logan Lupe Murchison Foundation Estate of Bulah M. Luse J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation Inc. Marriott International Inc. The Meadows Foundation Dorothy H. and Paul P. Middleton Mr. and Mrs. David B. Miller/The David B. Miller Family Foundation Katy and Kyle Miller Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Montgomery Moody Foundation Ivor O'Connor Morgan Trust Harry S. Moss Heart Trust, Bank of America, N.A., Trustee Dr. William B. Neaves and Rev. Priscilla W. Neaves Neiman Marcus Once Upon A Time ... B.B. Owen Trust Panda Restaurant Group Passion for Children's/Red Balloon Run & Ride Perot Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. H. Ross Perot Sr. The Pfeil Foundation/Kelly and David Pfeil Estate of Temple Phinney Pogue Foundation Mr. B. Jack Pogue Pollock Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence S. Pollock III/ Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Pollock/Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Pollock Estate of Hobert Price Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey L. Price RE/MAX LLC The Rees-Jones Foundation Eddith G. Reynolds Trust RGK Foundation Dr. George (Robbie) and Lynore Robinson Roten Family Trust Rudman Family

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2019 GIFTS LIFETIME BENEFACTORS CONTINUED

Mr. and Mrs. John F. Scovell Debbie and Ric Scripps Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Seay Sr. Mrs. George E. Seay Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Shelby Mr. and Mrs. L. Randall Shelby Mr. and Mrs. Patrick B. Shelby Harold Simmons Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Simmons Stemmons Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Heinz K. Simon Dr. Bob and Jean Smith Foundation Solomon Trust Mr. and Mrs. James E. Sowell Carolyn and Mark Speese Nadine B. Tanner Betty J.F. Terrell Texas Instruments Foundation

Texas Stampede Inc. Tom Thumb Albertson's United Way of Metropolitan Dallas Vanberg Family Foundation Margaret Bright Vonder Hoya Walmart and Sam's Club Mr. Arlton H. White J.L. Williams Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Joel T. Williams III Joanie and Johnny Williams Mrs. Jonell H. Williams Wipe Out Kids' Cancer Inc. Mildred Wyatt-Wold and Ivor P. Wold Women's Auxiliary to Children's Medical Center Dallas Women's Auxiliary to Children's Medical Center Plano Dr. and Mrs. A. Gordon Worsham

2019 GIFTS CHILDREN’S MEDICAL CENTER FOUNDATION IS GRATEFUL FOR THE GIFTS AND SUPPORT PROVIDED BY OUR GENEROUS DONORS.

GIFTS OF $1,000,000 AND ABOVE Alliance Data The Bezalel Fund, a donor advised account administered by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation at Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program Children's Cancer Fund Communities Foundation of Texas Hamon Charitable Foundation Pogue Foundation Estate of Hobert Price Jr. The Rees-Jones Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Shelby Mr. and Mrs. L. Randall Shelby Mr. and Mrs. Patrick B. Shelby Mr. Arlton H. White GIFTS OF $250,000 – $999,999 Anonymous (2) Estate of Gene Bishop The Carpenter Family W.W. Caruth Jr. Foundation Fund at Communities Foundation of Texas The Dallas Foundation The Elsie & Marvin Dekelboum Family Foundation Inc. Mr. and Mrs. John R. Eagle Molly and Jeremy Fernandes The G Family Foundation/ Ronny & Lisa Guerrero The Hartland & Mackie Family Foundation

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Hoblitzelle Foundation Hyundai Hope on Wheels Kohl's Cares Mr. and Mrs. C.S. Lee Mr. and Mrs. David B. Miller/ The David B. Miller Family Foundation Katy and Kyle Miller Once Upon A Time ... Panda Restaurant Group Passion for Children's/ Red Balloon Run & Ride Eddith G. Reynolds Trust Mr. John R. Sewell Mr. and Mrs. Frank O. Sloan Josephine Hughes Sterling Foundation United Way of Metropolitan Dallas Walmart and Sam's Club Mr. and Mrs. Joel T. Williams III Women's Auxiliary to Children's Medical Center Dallas GIFTS OF $100,000 – $249,999 Ace Hardware Corporation Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J. Bogen Circle K Constantin Foundation Dallas Southwest Osteopathic Physicians Inc. DPR Construction Estate of Dawn M. Drouillard/ Mr. Richard J. Drouillard Estate of Elizabeth Farnsworth Extra Life Mr. and Mrs. David L. Fields

Gayden Family Foundation/ Mr. and Mrs. William K. Gayden/Hunter Williams Family Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund Patrick and Beatrice Haggerty Foundation HighGround Trust Company Mr. Noble Hurley Ms. Margaret C. Kelsey Mark and Marcia King/ MMK Foundation Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. LaManna III La-Z-Boy Lupe Murchison Foundation The M.O.B. Family Foundation Marriott International Inc. Metrocrest Hospital Authority Fund of The Dallas Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John P. Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. William A. Montgomery Jr. Ivor O'Connor Morgan Trust Pollock Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence S. Pollock III/Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Pollock/Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Pollock Mr. and Mrs. Wade R. Rosenberg Mr. and Mrs. John F. Scovell Debbie and Ric Scripps Mr. and Mrs. Ellis M. Skinner II Carolyn and Mark Speese Spirit Halloween Superstores LLC Mr. and Mrs. David M. Stinnett Targets for Christ/The Armstrong Family

The Armstrong Company Ms. Sandra K. Turner The Gil & Dody Weaver Foundation/Bill and Katie Weaver Charitable Trust Women's Auxiliary to Children's Medical Center Plano GIFTS OF $25,000 – $99,999 Carol and Steven Aaron/Aaron Family Philanthropic Fund of the Dallas Jewish Community Foundation Mr. and Mrs. A. Jayson Adair/ The Adair Foundation Amazon American Airlines Credit Union America's Charities Anonymous (6) Greg and Ashley Arnold Ms. Marilyn Hussman Augur/ The Marilyn Augur Family Foundation The Theodore & Beulah Beasley Foundation Inc. Ms. Jill C. Bee/Philip Theodore Bee Charitable Trust Benevity Community Impact Fund Brennan Bolin Fund of Communities Foundation of Texas Temple Hoyne Buell Foundation The Cain Foundation CEFCO Pat and Gill Clements Foundation

Dr. and Mrs. Donald R. Cochran Community Auctions Corrigan-Goddard Foundation The David M. Crowley Foundation Clayton Dabney Foundation for Kids with Cancer Dairy Queen Jill and Michael Dardick Family Arthur Vining Davis Foundations Delta Dental Community Care Foundation Driven Brands Sue Siddons DuVall El Rio Grande Latin Market Estate of Homer J. Kirby Kyle Ferguson GiveGab Inc. W.B. and Ellen Gordon Stuart Trust Granite Properties Mr. and Mrs. Richard Greco Mr. and Mrs. Barry E. Hancock Hawn Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Jody Hawn/Mr. and Mrs. Douglas M. Kelley The Heffernan Family The Hoglund Foundation/ Mr. and Mrs. Forrest E. Hoglund/Kristi Robinson/ Kelly Compton Rusty and John Jaggers Junior League of Dallas Inc. Kershaw Foundation KidneyTexas Inc. Mrs. Jane L. Korba Harlan B. and Amy B. Korenvaes Family Foundation Lesley Family Foundation


Hattie Mae Lesley Foundation Mr. Joseph D. Lesley Craig & Carrie Levering Charitable Foundation/Mr. And Mrs. Craig R. Levering Michael D. Loehr and Tina Loehr Love's Travel Stops Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lunceford Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Luttmer The Mary Kay Family Foundation McCarthy Building Companies Mr. and Mrs. Dalton McGaha K.K. Meisenbach Fund of Communities Foundation of Texas Charla and Mark Miller Mindy's Hope Foundation Mr. and Mrs. N. Malone Mitchell III Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Montgomery The Robert E. Motley and Morynne Hopson Motley Surgical Assistance Fund of The Dallas Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Burk C. Murchison Neighborhood Credit Union The Marilyn & Sonny Oates Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. William D. Oates Mr. W. Hunter Oates B.B. Owen Trust Party City Lucile W. and George R. Pattullo Fund of The Dallas Foundation Paulos Foundation PetSmart Charities Piñon Foundation RE/MAX of Texas Dr. George (Robbie) Robinson Ms. Kristan H. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Ryan T. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Andrew S. Rosen Schwab Charitable Fund Stephen M. Seay Foundation Inc. Silicon Valley Community Foundation The Harry and Estelle Soicher Foundation Southwest Airlines Ms. Mersina P. Stubbs Roy & Christine Sturgis Charitable Trust Texas Irish Foundation Truman Arnold Companies/ Mr. and Mrs. Greg Arnold Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Truitt Jr. Kim Vaughan Marnie and Kern Wildenthal Mr. and Mrs. Mark S. Zale/ William & Sylvia Zale Foundation GIFTS OF $10,000 – $24,999 Jerome T. Abbott and Patricia Flood Abbott Family Foundation AGC of Texas

Air Performance Service Inc. American Endowment Foundation Mr. Chuck Anderson Anonymous (5) Associated General Contractors of Texas Ayco Charitable Foundation Tom and Nancy Baker Bank of America Bank of Texas Barbara Wallace and Kelly King Charitable Foundation Trust BBVA Compass Foundation Bellevue Foundation Mr. and Mrs. David T. Berry Mr. and Mrs. George H. Billingsley/Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Billingsley/ Billingsley Company Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Blackledge Mr. Timothy B. Boobar Susan Strauss Breen Family Foundation Tucker and Gina Bridwell Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Brooks Mason Brown Family Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Mason C. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Tom Burns Mr. and Mrs. Stephen W. Butt Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Byerly Mr. and Mrs. Gordon C. Cameron Michael and Kay Campbell Capital for Kids Capital One Bank Mrs. Ouida A. Capps Mr. and Mrs. Ron W. Capps Keith and Kathleen Cargill CDW Corp. Central Market - HEB Mr. and Mrs. David P. Chasey Donna S. and Robert A. Chereck Mr. and Mrs. Moe Chigani Child's Play Charity Brent E. Christopher City Electric Supply Mr. and Mrs. J. Greg Clark Serena and Tom Connelly Credit Unions for Kids Critical Health Solutions Michael and Kathryn Crow Natalie D. Cryer Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brooks Cullum Jr. The Dabney Family Dallas Father of the Year Awards Luncheon Dallas Jewish Community Foundation Mr. and Mrs. William D. Darling Mr. David A. Davidson Pilar H. Davies Mallory A. Davies Mr. and Mrs. John S. Delatour DIFFA Dallas Mrs. Michael T. Dimmitt Christina and Chris Durovich Estate of Louise Oliver Estate of Miriam G. Star Ms. Gloria Eulich/The Eulich Family Foundation Evans Avengers Foundation

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gene Evans/Roy Gene and Pamela Evans Foundation Mandy and Chase Evans The Event Studio Mrs. Gail Ewing FedEx Freight Mr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Ford Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Frey United Way of Tri-State Leo & Rhea Fay Fruhman Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Joe E. Goldman Mr. and Mrs. Randy Garrett Genesys Telecommunications Laboratories Inc. Global Alliance for Behavioral Health and Social Justice Gold Network of East Texas The Ryan Goldblatt Foundation Inc. Goldman, Sachs & Co. Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel P. Goncalves Mr. and Mrs. Lou J. Grabowsky The Grainger Foundation Grand Homes Dian Graves Owen Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Gupta Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth M. Hamlett Jr. Heart of Gold Foundation Kate and Hunter Henry Drs. Beverly and James Herring Highland Capital Management Hilltop Securities Mr. and Mrs. H. Lee Hobson Holmes Murphy & Associates Denny and Joyce Houlihan IPA Foundation J.P. Morgan Charitable Giving Fund JE Dunn Construction Gene and Jerry Jones Family Foundation Charlie and Kai Kai Josephs Kenzie's House Mr. and Mrs. J. Peter Kline/ Kline Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Seth M. Koschak Labora Group Inc. Joyce and Larry Lacerte Lantern Family Foundation Mr. Charles R. “Chuck” Lathem LeHigh Hanson Inc. Jordan Family Foundation Ms. Gayla A. Perkins and Mr. Carlos Lopez Mr. and Mrs. Bill Loughborough Mr. and Mrs. Matthew F. Luth Charles and Louise Marsh Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Matthews Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin D. McAndrew McLane Company Inc. The Meadows Foundation Mr. and Mrs. David Michel Mr. and Mrs. Bruce H. Morgan Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Alan K. Motsenbocker

Move For Miles Childhood Cancer Foundation The Betty and James Muns Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Steve Nagel Network for Good Dr. and Mrs. Hisashi Nikaidoh Mr. and Mrs. Matthew T. Nunley Mr. and Mrs. Kevin O'Brien Occidental Chemical Corporation Gage Overton Memorial Fund Mr. and Mrs. Duffy Oyster/ Duffy and Tina Oyster Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Patrick Ms. Melissa Hamilton and Mr. Peter C. Perialas Mr. and Mrs. David K. Peters The Pfeil Foundation/Kelly and David Pfeil The PKU Foundation Plano Sunrise Rotary Foundation Plano Tennis Center Natalie S. Potter Mr. and Mrs. Harvey L. Price Regency Centers Rent A Center Inc. Mr. and Mrs. David J. Richards Champaben Sangani Charitable Trust Mr. and Mrs. Pete Schenkel Ryan Seacrest Foundation Mr. and Mrs. John R. Sears Jr. Mary Kay and Brett Sheldon Sheraton Dallas Hotel The Bob Simmons Family Mr. and Mrs. Denis G. Simon Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey O. Smith Patricia D. Snider and Anne Snider Reece Southern Methodist University Dance Marathon Mr. Horace M. Staggs Mrs. Miriam G. Star Mrs. Christine A. Starzyk Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Clint Sumrow Pam and Ken Sumrow Tartaglino Richards Family Foundation The Children's Circus Project The D10 Mr. Joseph C. Thompson Jr./ The Florida Company Inc./ Thank Heaven Foundation Torch Relay Dr. and Mrs. Ray Tsai United Way of Greater Atlanta Inc. CometTHON Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Van de Ven Garry and Kim Waldrum Ms. Jimmy E. Westcott WFAA-TV Channel 8 Whataburger Stacey and Randall Wilkins Mr. and Mrs. Craig Wohlers Mr. and Mrs. Jack O. Woodworth Jr. Ms. Melissa Wright Mr. and Mrs. Alan Yamaoka

YourCause - Corporate Employee Giving Programs Pepsico Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Zacheis GIFTS OF $2,500 – $9,999 AdvoCare International L.P. Aflac Robert and Patti Aisner Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld L.L.P. American Textile Recycling Service Inc. Dr. Martha A. Anderson Angels in Tropical Shirts Angiel Electrical Construction Corporation Anonymous (4) Architectural Security Group Ms. Kim J. Askew AT&T United Way/Employee Giving Campaign Billie and Bill Aylesworth Mr. and Mrs. Girish Bachani Mr. Peter J. Baiocco Balanced Media Technology Emy Lou and Jerry Baldridge/Baldridge Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Ray A. Balestri Balfour Beatty Construction Mr. and Mrs. Gussie J. Ballew/ Ballew Foundation City of Canton EDC, Chamber of Commerce, Visitors Bureau, BalloonFest Board Bank of America United Way Campaign Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Bartholow Dr. Anne R. Bavier and Mr. Robert N. Bavier Baxter International Inc. The Beck Group Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Beecherl Mr. and Mrs. James P. Benson Mr. and Mrs. Rhett Bentley Kim and Rick Besse Best Nest Pediatrics Mr. and Mrs. Tyler S. Bethea Ms. Diane L. Knape and Mr. David W. Biegler Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Bieler The Bixby Family BKM Total Office of Texas LLC Mr. and Mrs. Gus Blass Foundation Trust Cordelia and Tom Boone/ The Boone Foundation Mr. Luis Bordes Mr. Patrick Brandt Stephanie M. Brant Brasfield & Gorrie Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Brecheen Sandy Brennan Bridgevue Energy Services Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Briggs Mr. and Mrs. Henri L. Bromberg III Mr. and Mrs. John Buerkert Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Buford Mr. Thomas M. Burt Caddis Healthcare Real Estate Cadence McShane

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2019 GIFTS CONTINUED Mrs. Kathy Cameron Rev. William T. Campbell Capital Title of Texas and Willow Bend Mortgage Company Corporation The Honorable and Mrs. John J. Carona Carpenter Family Fund Fran and Bill Carter Mr. and Mrs. George P. Caruth Rebecca and Christopher Caso The Catholic Foundation Keely and Bill Cawley CBRE Chamberlin Roofing & Waterproofing The Ruth Cheatham Foundation Cherokee Crossroads Inc. ChopShop Holdings LLC Elloine M. Clark College of Healthcare Information Management Executives CougarThon Common Ground Games Community Foundation of the Chattahoochee Valley Inc. Complexity Gaming Contran Corporation Control Tech Supply Corgan Associates Inc. Costello Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Jeff T. Courtwright Mrs. Kerry Silver and Mr. Jim Cowen Berry R. Cox Family Foundation CrossFit Isorropia Mr. and Mrs. Harlan R. Crow Cruisers Club of Red Oak Ms. Allison P. Cunningham Lawrence B. Dale Family Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence B. Dale Dallas Children's Charities Dallas Fort Worth Acura Dealers Dallas Tennis Association Mrs. Melanie Daughtery Mr. and Mrs. Larry Davis Joe M. and Doris R. Dealey Family Foundation Dell Employee Giving Program DHD Films Mr. Marco Diaz Ms. Sharitty Diaz Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Digges Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Doffing Mr. David J. Douglas Mr. and Mrs. David Doyle Mr. and Mrs. Steven H. Durham Mr. and Mrs. William C. Duvall E2 Optics Mr. and Mrs. Randall M. Ebner Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Elverum Estate of Marita Hardcastle Mrs. Sandra Estess Dr. Melanie T. Eubanks ExxonMobil Corporation/ ExxonMobil Foundation Facebook

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Maureen and Mike Farmer Mr. and Mrs. John C. Farris Ms. Kaylee Faulkner Mrs. Mary Clare Finney Mr. and Mrs. Mark L. Francis Mr. Kenneth Friedrich GameStop Coach and Mrs. Jason C. Garrett Mr. and Mrs. John W. Garrett Jr. General Mills Foundation Gensler Kinga & David Evans Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Gipson Mr. Bart Goodwin Got3 Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Stephen M. Gray Great Clips Greater Horizons Mr. and Mrs. Paul Greilich Kelly and Steven Gruber Guns & Hoses Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Satish Gupta Mr. and Mrs. Steve A. Hall Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Halsell Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thornton I. Hardie III Mr. and Mrs. Bob D. Harrison Holly Hassmann Ms. Joyce E. Hauerwas HBS Inc. HDR Architecture Hegi Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Billy D. Henry The Henry Dallas HFF Hilti North America HKS Architects The Hoak Foundation Nancy and Jim Hoak Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Hollweg Hoops for Autism Mr. and Mrs. James T. Hopper Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hubbard Lupton Huckin Family Fund Mr. and Mrs. William P. Hull Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gregory W. Hunt Mrs. Norma K. Hunt IBM Employee Services Center Infinity Pharmacy Solutions In-N-Out Burger Foundation Innova Group IHOP Restaurant Mr. Donald N. Isaacson ISN Software Corporation John Newcombe Tennis Ranch Johnson Controls Inc. Jeanne R. Johnson Foundation/ Jeanne R. Johnson Jones Lang LaSalle Kevin Phillip Jones Legacy Trust Ms. Nancy E. Perot and Mr. Rod C. Jones Mr. Ronnie Jones Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jouvenal JP Morgan Chase Foundation Matching Gift & Volunteer Program

Fannie and Stephen Kahn Charitable Foundation Dr. Helen Kaporis and Dr. Aris Tsiakos Sadie Keller Foundation Mr. and Mrs. R.D. Kelly Kendra Scott Kimley Horn Inc. KingsIsle Entertainment Mr. Charles Koetting Rhonda Koetting Amy and Mark Kovac KPMG LLP Ms. Sabrina Lamb and Mr. Steven Albitz Jodi and Michael Landon Lanehart Electrical Contractors LP Lantower Residential Mr. and Mrs. Warren R. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Greg Leet Les Femmes du Monde Life Time Fitness Lincoln Property Company Infinity Personal Training Mr. Will Long Mr. and Mrs. Timothy W. Looney Louis N. Cassett Foundation Luck Family Foundation Mr. William Macdonald Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Maher Main Event Entertainment Mr. and Mrs. Michael Malone Dr. and Mrs. Michael A. Mantas Ms. Amy B. Tucker and Mr. Paul J. Masschelin Jill and Bill McClung Sharon and Mike McCullough Mr. and Mrs. William S. McIntyre IV/Shirley & William S. McIntyre Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. McNamara McNarosa Fund McVeigh Global Meetings and Events LLC Medcore Partners Medline MI Charitable Foundation MI Windows and Doors Micaela's Army Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Scott K. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Walton S. Miller Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mogabgab Mr. Javier Montemayor Mrs. Dian B. Moore Mr. and Mrs. James A. Moore Jr. Kay Y. Moran/James D. & Kay Y. Moran Foundation Harry S. Moss Foundation Andee Allen Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Myers The National Christian Foundation Real Property Inc. In Memory of Rett Nearburg Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Neely II Mr. and Mrs. William G. Niederstadt Mrs. Elizabeth Norwood Novartis Pharmaceuticals Mr. and Mrs. Erle A. Nye Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Olney Connie and Chris O'Neill

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Oristano Mr. and Mrs. P. Scott Ozanus Page Mr. and Mrs. Stacy Palmatary Mr. and Mrs. Robb Parks The Partnership Foundation Mr. David R. Peacock Pediatric Associates of Dallas Pediatric Home Healthcare LLC Perkins+Will Architects Perot Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. H. Ross Perot Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael C. Petty Anne Harmony Glaze-Pittet Mr. and Mrs. Starr L. Pitzer Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin P. Pogue Pogue Grandkids Mr. and Mrs. Loyd W. Powell Jr. Premier Communications PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP Mrs. J. Philip Pringle The Purple Balloon Foundation Ralph Lauren Corporation RBFCU Raymond James Charitable Endowment Fund RE/MAX Landmark Red Bull North America Mr. and Mrs. Scott W. Reed Ms. Dotti P. Reeder Renaissance Dallas Hotel Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin J. Retta Ms. Faustina Richardson The Ridgemont Commercial Construction Riseman Development Company, Nancy and Bill Riseman and Harriet Reisman-Snyder Mr. Mark Ritchie Ms. Stephanie Roark Robins & Morton Mr. and Mrs. John Rocchio Mr. and Mrs. Randy Rowland Rowlett Lions Club RREAF Holdings Mr. and Mrs. Frank S. Ryburn Ms. Sylvia E. Cespedes and Mr. Hernan J.F. Saenz III Santeka Mr. and Mrs. Todd Savage Mr. and Mrs. John R. Schmidt Drs. Rachel Rucket-Schmidt & Jason Schmidt Mr. and Mrs. Mark Schmitmeyer Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Schoof Scout Energy Partners Dr. and Mrs. John F. Scovell III SCP Foundation Shake Shack The Honorable Florence M. Shapiro and Mr. Howard Shapiro Ms. Lisa C. Shearin George A. and Nancy P. Shutt Foundation/ Mrs. Nancy P. Shutt Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Silverman Eric Singer Skanska USA Skiles Group

Smith Seckman Reid Ms. Cameron Smith Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Smith Mr. Nicholas A. Smith SmithGroup JJR Mr. and Mrs. Douglas B. Smock Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smyers Dr. Jacqueline Solis and Mr. Miguel E. Solis Marianne D. Sondak Mr. Tom Spivey Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Staubach Frances and Joel Steinberg Mr. and Mrs. Brad A. Stephens Durham Family Foundation Dr. and Mrs. William F. Stiles Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. Stouffer Ms. Elizabeth Stratton Mr. and Mrs. Allen Sunderji Superscapes Supreme Systems Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. Swartz Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Swartzendruber Mr. Ghousuddin Syed Paul F. and Debra Brennan Tagg TDIndustries TeamConnor Childhood Cancer Foundation Jeanne N. Nightingale-Teresi and Mark Teresi Dr. Stacy L. and Mr. Samuel Terry Texas AirSystems Inc. Texas Instruments Foundation The Demo Company Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Thoele The Love Life Foundation Mrs. Ann D. Thomas Thompson & Knight LLP/ Thompson & Knight Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Steven W. Tomson Carol & Gifford Touchstone Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Tubb Jr. Mr. Michael S. Turner United Way of Bergen County United Way of Kaufman County Value Management Group LLC Mr. and Mrs. Peter Van Dyke/ Van Dyke Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Richard Voliva Mr. and Mrs. James F. Wagley Wall High School Mr. and Mrs. Alan Walne Walter P. Moore Jean H. and John T. Walter Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce E. Wartell Mr. and Mrs. Larry G. Washington Watters Creek Wealth Management Jennifer B. Whaley, M.D., and Andrew B. Whaley The Whiting-Turner Contracting Company WHR Architects Inc. Mr. James C. Wiggans Mr. Jeremy Williams Robert S. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Brian K. Wing


Winstead PC Mr. and Mrs. Kevin M. Winters Wolo Boutique Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Woolley Dr. and Mrs. A. Gordon Worsham Ms. Laura L. Worsham Mr. and Mrs. Erik D. Yohe YourCause Paying Agent for Corporate Giving YourCause LLC Trustee for Texas Instruments Incorporated GIFTS OF $1,000 – $2,499 Mr. and Mrs. Ben Abbott Ackley Custom Homes Dr. Susan K. Adler Ms. Shari Agatstein Airjet Network Solutions Mr. Chris Akeroyd Catherine and Robert Allday and Family Mr. Brad Allen Carol C. Allen Mr. Clarence W. Allen Jr. Ally Financial Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Khader Altaf American Restoration LLC Andrea-Mennen Family Foundation/Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Andrea Mr. and Mrs. Adam Annaccone Anonymous (2) AOS Engineering LLC April Building Services and Granite Properties Ms. Christelle Broize and Mr. Abhinay Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Arnett Pamela K. Arora Mr. and Mrs. Douglas E. Ashby Miguel Atkins Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Atkins III Mr. and Mrs. Travis P. Baldwin Mr. and Mrs. Mark C. Bane Bank of America Charitable Foundation Mr. Javier Barboza Barry's Bootcamp Fitzhugh Location Mr. and Mrs. Barry Batchelor Batson-Cook Construction Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals Inc. Marlene S. Bean Mrs. Jean C. Beasley Mr. and Mrs. Lanny Beaty Ben G. Barnett Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bennett David L. and Sheila Davis Beuerlein Mr. and Mrs. Randall E. Biery Cindy Bird Black Box Mr. and Mrs. Steven L. Blasnik Mr. Henry Bodek Dr. Jo Ellen Bogert Boka Powell LLC Betsy Cullum Bolin Mr. and Mrs. Warren B. Bonham Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts

The Boston Consulting Group Dr. Katrina M. Bradford and Mr. Steven D. Bradford Mr. and Mrs. Luke Brandenberg Jennifer Bridges Mr. and Mrs. Marion L. Brockette Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. Lawrence Brown Drs. Christine and George Buchanan Mr. and Mrs. Kali Buhariwalla Ms. Gwen Buhmann Deborah A. Bunn Business Furniture Installation.com Ms. Mireille Buser Mr. and Mrs. John B. Butler Dr. Stephanie I. Byerly Ms. Gwendolyn J. Campbell Mr. Dean M. Cannon Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cantu Ms. Lindsey Carroll Jeffrey A. Carter Foundation/ Mr. Jeffrey A. Carter Mr. and Mrs. Larry W. Carter Catalyst Corporate Federal Credit Union Mr. and Mrs. Sid Cates Mr. and Mrs. Joe Don Cavender Cedar Creek American Legion, Auxiliary Post 310 Charities Aid Foundation of America Ms. Mary Chen Chick-fil-A Mr. and Mrs. Troy W. Childers Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cicherski Mr. Randy Cimorelli Circle Cardiovascular Imaging City Wide Building Services Mr. Andrew O. Clancy Mr. Barry Clark Mrs. Dorothy L. Clark Mr. Mark Cohen Mr. Curtis Cole Shirley Coleman James M. Collins Foundation Mr. and Mrs. William M. Collins Drs. Jennifer and Shandon Colter Convergint Technologies Mr. and Mrs. John H. Cooper Mr. and Mrs. William R. Cooper Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Copley Jr. Brendy A. Corley Catherine A. Corrigan Fund Ms. Elma Cortinas Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Cothrum Ms. Ann Marie Cowdrey Mr. and Mrs. Scott A. Cross Mr. and Mrs. David W. Crowe Mr. and Mrs. Dan R. Cullum Ms. Elizabeth A. Cummins Mr. and Mrs. Christopher B. Curran CustomInk.com Dan Miller Air-Conditioning Co. Inc. Datum Engineers Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Daulton Dr. Ryan Davies

Mr. and Mrs. John D. Davis Ms. Kirsten Stanton and Mr. Matthew Davis Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Dawson Denbury Resources Ms. Kelly DiBlasi Ms. Kelly Dilodovico Mr. and Mrs. Jeff A. Disque Michael L. Douglas Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Douglas Mr. and Mrs. M. Fred Duewall Mr. and Mrs. Trey Dunlap Mr. and Mrs. W. Byron Dunn Mr. and Mrs. George Dutter Jr. Ms. Brenda Paulsen and Mr. Douglas Duwe Mr. and Mrs. William Dyer Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Eastin Rosa and Brian Eckert Mr. and Mrs. Mike J. Edge Mr. Ratna S. Elaprolu Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. Eleazer Dr. Stephanie H. and Philip R. Elmore Mr. and Mrs. William M. Elvey Mr. and Mrs. Ted Emrich EnCap Investments L.P. Enterprise Holdings Foundation Dansby and Jonathan Erwin Mr. Blake H. Estess Mr. and Mrs. Cole Evans Mr. and Mrs. Douglas R. Evans Mr. and Mrs. H. Craig Evans Ms. Linda P. Evans Eventbrite Bill and Carla Fahey George and Wanda Farr Mr. Nick Fickau Flagship Research Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis M. Foglia Forman Foundation Fox Rothschild LLP Mr. and Mrs. Brad Foxman Mr. and Mrs. James B. Francis III Mark and Amanda Francis Mr. and Mrs. James D. Frary Mr. and Mrs. Jason Fraser George Galanis Mr. Blewett Gardner Jane Gardner Gerber/Taylor Management Company Mr. and Mrs. Gregory T. Giannini Mr. and Mrs. James A. Gibbs Dr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Gilman Girl Scout Troop #6796 GO Federal Credit Union Go! Toys & Games Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Gold GoNoodle Mr. and Mrs. Rutledge A. Gordon Dr. and Mrs. Randall B. Graham Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Graham Scott Graham Mr. and Mrs. Willard Grande Armand D Graves Dr. and Mrs. H.G. Green Mr. and Mrs. Paul Grein Ruth Griesser Mr. and Mrs. Guy Griffeth Mr. and Mrs. James R. Griffin Michelle and Brian Gross

Drs. Lyndsey A. and Davinder S. Grover Mr. Christopher Guice Mr. Jamal Guio J.M. Haggar Jr. Family Foundation Ms. Julie Hall-Barrow Mr. Faisal Halum Mr. and Mrs. Dennis K. Hamm Hanover Property Co. Ms. Debbie Harrelson Linda and Byron Harris Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Harshaw Mr. and Mrs. Milton L. Hassell HEAD Penn Racquet Sports Mr. and Mrs. John B. Hedrick Sr. Keith Heier, M.D.- OrthoTexas Ms. Amanda Hendrick Mrs. Sharon Henson Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Herman Mr. and Mrs. Shane T. Hernandez Dealey and David Herndon Mr. Daryl Herzog Mr. Glenham Heymans Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Q. Hoang Hockaday Middle School Ms. Gwendolyn Hogans Mr. and Mrs. Craig E. Holmes Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Holt Ms. Stacy Hood Hope From Art Mr. and Mrs. James Hopson Jr. Hospice and Palliative Credentialing Center Mr. and Mrs. Jerry M. Huffman Mr. and Mrs. Timothy D. Hughes Mrs. Caroline L. Hunt Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H. Hunt Ms. D'Audrey Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Amir Hussain Mr. Tony Illig Lauren and Alex Inman IPPSA Midcities/DFW Mr. and Mrs. David P. Jablinski Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery Jackson The Honorable and Mrs. Lee F. Jackson Kristen and Isaac Jaffe Mr. and Mrs. John P. Jansky Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Greg S. Jaynes Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey L. Jensen Mr. and Mrs. M. Nicholas Jent Jesuit College Preparatory School of Dallas Mr. Randal Johns Page and Elisabeth Johnson Fund of Communities Foundation of Texas Ms. Willie L. Johnson Mr. Garrett Jolley Mr. Ron K. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Jordan Mr. and Mrs. Al W. Josephs JPMorgan Chase Foundation Jupiter MLP Mr. and Mrs. Jonathon C. Juracek Louise W. Kahn Fund of The Dallas Foundation Kathryn and Jim Francis Foundation KDC Real Estate Development and Investments

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Keiser Mr. and Mrs. Matt Kellogg Mr. and Mrs. Corey L. Kerstetter Keystone Southwest Insurance Agency Inc. Jane du Pont and Barron U. Kidd Family Fund of The Dallas Foundation Kids Helping Kids Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Kirksey Jr. Dawn Knight Mr. and Mrs. Jim Knox Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Konen Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Kotter Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kuchta Mr. and Mrs. Josh C. Ladd Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Lafitte Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. Landen The Hon. and Mrs. Olin B. Lane Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Lanzillo III Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Larson Mr. and Mrs. Jon Lauck Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Laughlin Frank & Kathleen Lauinger Family Fund Laurie and Todd Platt Family Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. David Lautzenheiser Smocked Auctions Norma L. Leavitt Mr. and Mrs. John B. Lederer Mr. and Mrs. David Lee Mr. and Mrs. Hin Wai Henry Lee Mr. and Mrs. Jason Lewis Mr. Stephen Liddell Lighting Connection Dr. Kirsten Fischer-Lindahl Little Denmark Foundation Little Elm Investment Co. Mr. and Mrs. Clauspeter Litz Mr. and Mrs. Adam M. Logan Mr. and Mrs. Bruce C. Lollar Long Cove on Cedar Creek Lake Ms. Nadia Loudon Mr. and Mrs. John Lusk Mr. and Mrs. Prem Luthra Dr. Lottye Brodsky and Dr. Bobby Lyle Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. MacDowell Dr. Willis C. Maddrey Irene Mahlke Mr. and Mrs. Alex Marchetti Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Markell Murphy & Theresa Markham Mr. and Mrs. JW Marshall Mr. Dwight Martin Mr. and Mrs. David F. Martineau Mr. Russell Mason Ms. Deb Maxey Mr. and Mrs. Heath May Mr. and Mrs. Todd McCulloch Andy McElroy Dr. and Mrs. Andrew G. McGarrahan Mr. and Mrs. Scott McGinnis Mrs. Ginger McGinnis William and Shirley McGinnis Fund Nancy Meier Meier Properties

45


2019 GIFTS CONTINUED Mr. and Mrs. J. Kenneth Menges Jr. Dr. Christopher G. Menzies Ms. Elizabeth Mesker Mr. Will Messer Mr. Ben Miller Keri Miller Mr. and Mrs. Justin M. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Gary W. Millican MOA Staffing Mr. and Mrs. Dean Moor Shelley and Pete Moore Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Moore Mr. Matthew P. Moore Morgan Stanley Global Impact Funding Trust Inc. Dr. and Mrs. Rustin Morse Mr. Vincenzo Mosca Mrs. Jon Mosle Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jose A. Motta Ms. Dani Muckleroy Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Muehlenbeck Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Muñoz Sandy Nachman Mr. Jack Christopher Najork/ Najork Family Foundation National Marrow Donor Program National Philanthropic Trust Navias Family Foundation/ Mr. and Mrs. Louis K. Navias Nexius Amy T. Ng North Dallas Veterinary Hospital Community Foundation of North Texas Northern Trust Charitable Giving Program Dr. and Mrs. Jack J. Novak Mr. and Mrs. Dirk Nowitzki Mr. and Mrs. Mark L. Nunneley Mr. and Mrs. Rick Ochterbeck Mr. and Mrs. Peter O'Donnell Jr. Mr. John Oleon The One Society Ms. Laran O'Neill OrthoTexas Ms. Melissa Orwig Mr. Jim O'Shaughnessy Mr. Frank Packard-Reed Dr. and Mrs. Ivor P. Page Paragon Roofing Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Parilla Mr. and Mrs. John Paris Mr. William Parker Kirit S. Patel Pershing LLC Mr. and Mrs. Christopher W. Peterie Mr. Chuong H. Pham Mr. and Mrs. Rick Pickard Dr. and Mrs. John Pickens Mr. and Mrs. Michael K. Pickens Mr. and Mrs. Dan Pier Layne Pitzer and Joan Eleazer/Briggs Freeman Platinum Parking Mr. and Mrs. Todd L. Platt Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Podleski Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Pogue Ms. Rosie Poling Brynn Price

46

Dr. Deborah R. Price Ruth E. Price Print-To-Suit Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Prinz Mr. and Mrs. Maurice E. Purnell Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Terry D. Quinn Mr. and Mrs. William F. Quinn Krista and Jeremiah Radandt Donna and Gary Rahn Mary Stewart Ramsey Family Charitable Fund of the North Texas Community Foundation Linda and Mel Ray Anne and Robert Raymond Mr. and Mrs. Alan H. Raynor Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Reddick Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy Reiter Mrs. Alex Renna Mr. and Mrs. Cody M. Reynolds Mr. David Rhodes Mr. and Mrs. James Rhodes Mary E. Richey Mr. Drew Roberson Mr. Anthony Roberts Mrs. Ruth E. Robinson Mr. Phil Roden Rodgers Dermatology Dr. and Mrs. Timothy G. Rodgers Mrs. Jenna Rome Mr. and Mrs. Elliott M. Roosevelt Jr. The Rosewood Corporation/ The Rosewood Foundation Ms. Annadele H. Ross Mr. Jeff S. Rowan Mr. and Mrs. Ron Rowden Mr. and Mrs. Mike Rowlett Mr. and Mrs. Noel Ruddick Mr. and Mrs. Blake Russell Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Russell Mr. and Mrs. Jason Sacher Mr. Joseph A. Salgado Mr. Benigno Salinas 8 & 40 Dallas County Salon 108 Mr. Ken Sanders Mr. and Mrs. Adam Saphier Mr. and Mrs. Matthew G. Scarborough Carol and Skipp Schauer Sue Schell Mr. and Mrs. Owen Scheurich Mr. and Mrs. David A. Schmidt Kaye Schmidt The Alan & Mardie Schoellkopf Fund Randy B. Schuster Schwob Building Company Mr. and Mrs. Michael Sciascia Mr. and Mrs. Ryan R. Scripps Mr. and Mrs. David J. Scullin Mr. Ray Sedey Ms. Victoria Bychok Seitz Jo Karen Selman Mr. and Mrs. Bill F. Selvidge Mr. Michael Semon Mr. Fabian Serralta Ms. Beth Shallcross Kevin Shea Kimberly E. Short Mr. Carlo Silvestri Mr. and Mrs. Morris Simmons

Mr. Mitchell Simon Theresa and Michael Sinacola Family Nancy E. Sisler Mr. Juzar Sitabkhan Ms. Amy Six-Means Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Skinner Sky Ranch Peter P. and Bonnie B. Smith Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Berkley J. Smith Ms. Donna S. Smith Ms. Monica Egert Smith Ms. Margaret A. Snyder Socialite Pink Ms. Kimberly Sporich Mr. and Mrs. Joe H. Staley Jr. Mrs. Melva Stanfield Mr. and Mrs. Bill Starkey Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald G. Steinhart Mr. and Mrs. Todd B. Stoller Mrs. Kathleen Lauzon and Dr. William R. Strand Strobel Prosthetics and Orthotics John and Barbara Stuart Sulphur River Exploration Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Craig B. Sunderman SWA Consulting Engineers Greg Swalwell Mr. and Mrs. Sean Sweeney Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Whitsett Mike Taylor TechKnowledge Consulting Corporation Mr. and Mrs. Jay E. Tenney Terracon Texas Motorplex Texas Presbyterian Foundation Mr. and Mrs. L. Sanders Thompson Mrs. Kathleen Thorson TIG Real Estate Services Inc. Mr. Raymond M. Timpanelli Tolleson Wealth Management Mr. and Mrs. J. Carter Tolleson Jr. Mr. Charles Tomiello Dr. Elizabeth M. Tomlin and Mr. Jake Tomlin Melissa D. Tonn, MD/OccMD Group Mrs. Dorothy C. Torbert Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Towles Transwestern Commercial Services Trinity Episcopal School Mr. and Mrs. Brad Troutman Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Trubitt The T-Shirt Shoppe Tubular Synergy Group LP Tucker Foundation Ms. Sylvia Tucker United Networks of America United Way of Metropolitan Chicago Brenda K. Urbanczyk Utility Trailer of Dallas Inc. Mr. Joseph Varghese Mr. and Mrs. John A. Vassallo Lisa K. Bork and Jeffrey J. Vawrinek Verint

Danusadevi Vijayakumar Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Villalobos Mr. and Mrs. Anthony W. Villani Visit Plano W4 Consulting LLC Mr. and Mrs. Daryl O. Walker Vanessa and Larry Walls Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. David Walter Mr. Scott Wang Ms. Pema Wangzome Mrs. Rechea Ward Mr. Bradley Warford Mr. and Mrs. James D. Watkins Mr. and Mrs. Douglas G. Watts Whitney M. Watts Mr. and Mrs. Brad Webb Mr. and Mrs. David Webb Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Weitzman Mr. and Mrs. Cam S. Welch Lisa and Jeff Wellen Weva Properties LTD White Rock and Town North Lions Club Ms. Deborah White Mr. and Mrs. Bryan J. Wick B.C. Williams Bakery Service Inc. Mr. Greg Williams Mr. and Mrs. Hiawatha Williams Mr. and Mrs. J. Bowman Williams Todd and Abby Williams Adrienne C. Willie Ms. Katie Woodall Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Woodall Mr. and Mrs. James B. Woods Jr. Mrs. Christy Wooten WP Electric & Communications Mr. and Mrs. Steve Yeager Mr. and Mrs. John M. Yeaman Sally Young YourCause LLC Trustee for Alliance Data Systems Inc YourCause LLC Trustee for Wells Fargo Mrs. Dora Zapata Eric and Katina Zepp Mr. and Mrs. Mark Ziemianski Ms. Misty Zimmerman Ms. Marsha Zuver


THE BRADFORD SOCIETY

The Bradford Society recognizes those who embrace the mission and work of Children’s Health by naming Children’s Medical Center Foundation as a beneficiary in their personal financial and estate plans.

Carol and Steve Aaron

Dawn M. Drouillard*

Ruth E. Adler*

John W. Duckett*

Vernon E. Alexander*

Christina and Chris Durovich

Alpha P. Baird* Nancy and Tom Baker John E. Barthel*

Lynn and Mark Oristano

Betty J. Terrell*

Tina and Duffy Oyster

Margaret Thompson*

Mr. and Mrs. Hans Kunz

Maurine Pearson*

Maxine E. Thompson*

Fay J. Ebeling*

Joyce Conwin Lang*

Mr. and Mrs. Judson C.

Phelo M. Thompson*

Frances and David

Katherine R. Lang*

Eisenberg

Virginia C.* and Edward J.* Kremer

Phillips

Joyce and Bennett Tibbs

Annie E. Langdon*

Alison A. Phipps

Jennifer J. Tissing*

Anella Slaughter Bauer*

John Ergas

Beth and Britt Langford

Jean and Mack Pogue

Eleanor W. Tranchin*

Miriam M. Beecherl*

Betty L.* and James J.*

Louise* and Charles R.

Natalie S. Potter

Margaret* and Victor A.

Lindsay and George H. Billingsley

Farnsworth

Lathem

Deborah R. Price

Trubitt

Wanda and George Farr

Amelia Hodges Lay*

Lanell and Harvey L. Price

Sandra K. Turner

Kathryne and Gene* Bishop

Barbara* and Leo* Fields

Adele B. Lee*

Hobert Price Jr.*

Angela and Doug Vanderslice

A. Wade Black

Olga and Chester A. Fischer

Carolyn and C.S. Lee

Ruth and J. Philip* Pringle

Percy N. Vinther*

Zona Blackwood*

Mary C. Fisher*

Helen L. and George A.*

Donna and Gary R. Rahn

Margaret Bright Vonder Hoya

Edward J. Bob*

Greer G* and E.E.* Fogelson

Margaret and Jackson Lee

Doris Voss*

Jacqueline* and Richard C.

Roberta Forbes*

Darrell D. Logan*

Frances Freeman*

Carol and William R. Lorenz

Carole A. Bragg

Johnny Gebauer*

Billy Eddings Lucas II*

Frank W. Bray

Maurice W. Genseke*

Bulah M. Luse*

Ellis B. Reed Jr.*

Lisa and Jeff Wellen

Marie-Agnes Bray*

R.B. George*

Wanda Lyday*

Patty and Ben Retta

Jo Ann Wells*

Hazel Broughton*

Leatha K. Gilchrist*

Fredrick G. Lyde

Eddith G. Reynolds*

Martha Ruth Wheeler*

Betty G. Brown

Maidie B. Goddard*

Jed Mace*

Shirley and Peter W. Roberts

Nancy* and Arlton H. White

Laura Lu* and David D.*

Gloria B. Graham

Kay and Dennis Magill

Sallie J. Roberts*

Gail White

Judy Grant

Stanley Marcus*

Hazel L. Robertson*

Lewis Whitlock*

David D. Bruton Jr.*

Ida M. Green*

Raymond Marlow*

Joey and Greg Robertson

Madeleine Whitten*

Dovie Lamora Bryant*

George J. Gunther*

Gerda V. Marx*

Lynore* and George (Robbie)

Marnie and Kern Wildenthal

J.M. Burkett*

Ute Schwarz and Rolf R.

Cleo George McClure*

Bowman

Bruton Sr.

Clarlyn* and Victor* Bychok

Haberecht

Linskie

Raley

Irene H.* and Earnest G.*

Janet Lauderdale and

Wadel

Thomas Rayburn

Joan N. Weil

Robinson

Howard N. Wilder*

Sharon and Mike McCullough

Janice and Richard* Rogers

Joanie* and Johnny* Williams

Shirley P.* and William W.*

Marie J. Rose*

Mildred Wyatt-Wold* and

Ardella V. Campbell*

Steve P. Hagemann

Bennye Caraway*

Lucille M. Hahnel*

Nodine Carroll*

Nancy B. Hamon*

Marilyn D. McJimsey

Joseph A. Salgado

Laura M. and Blair P. Woodall

Fran and Bill Carter

Louise H. Hanaway

Melanie Medanich

Norma Schaefer*

Sudie* and A. Gordon

Eva and Larry W. Carter

Mary L. Harding*

Lydia M. Meierding*

Carol and Skipp Schauer

Mary Lee Casey*

Sandra L. Harrington

Morgan Hill Metz*

Beverley Schey

Hallie M. Young

James P. Caston*

Marlys L. and John W. Harris

Dorothy H.* and Paul P*

Eric G. Schroeder*

Clarence E. Zigenbein*

Donna S. and Robert A.

Gretchen A. and Edward J.

Chereck

Middleton

Lilian R. Ruebeck

Lisa M. Milonovich*

Sarah M.* and Charles E.* Seay

Beverly and James Herring

Sarah R. Mitchell*

Catherine Seles

Brent E. Christopher

Eunice Hertenstein*

Frankie E.* and John D.

John R. Sewell

Kathryn and Andrew J.

Kimberly E. Hoagwood

Montgomery S. Halcuit Moore Jr.*

Cindy Brinker Simmons

Sue and Bill Cicherski

Pamela and Oscar C. Hollis

Paula and James A. Moore Jr.

Ruth L. Sneed*

Dorothy Clark

Margaret W. Hopkins*

Elizabeth and Gary C.

Beverly Speegle*

Pauline L. Combs*

Rebecca R. Horner

Joyce and John Conroy

Joyce and Denny Houlihan

Marie H. Moses*

David Stayer*

Kathy and Michael Crow

Mrs. A. Bryce Huguenin*

Jan and Marc Myers

Georgia Stephenson

Dorothy R. Cullum*

Jane* and Noble* Hurley

Sandy Kahn Nachman

Louise Milligan Storm*

Alice M. Cunningham*

Dora L. Jenkins*

Priscilla W.* and William B.

Sally Seay Stout*

Shelby and Scott Dabney

Darlene E. Johnson*

Neaves

Juanita C. Dale

Jeanne R. Johnson*

Noreen Nicol*

Bill and Priscilla Darling

Harvey D. Jones

Sylvia S. Nijhoff*

Maria Surgeon*

Doris R.* and Joe M.* Dealey

Lucile Christian Kennemer*

Lynn and Hisashi Nikaidoh

Eric M. Swanson

Catherine* and L. Sprague*

Marcia and Mark King

Louise S. Norwood*

Alta* and James* Sweeney

Homer J. Kirby*

Louise Leriche Oliver*

Nancy T. Swenson*

Patricia and Robert Doffing

Sheri and Robert J. Kowalski

Nancy and Jack Oliver

Florence Szczepanski*

Della C. and Grady A.* Dozier

Cynthia and David Krause

Henry Oppenheimer*

Camille Taylor*

de Camp

Worsham

*Deceased

Brian Shaw*

Jennifer S. Holder

Morchower

Ivor P. Wold*

Debbie and Ric Scripps

E.P. Childers*

Cicherski

Heffernan

McGinnis

Miriam G. Star*

Elizabeth M. and Stephen G. Suellentrop

As of Feb. 13, 2020.

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WOMEN'S AUXILIARY / LIFETIME MEMBERS 2019-2020 DALLAS LIFETIME Carol Aaron Tracy Aaron Tammi Abney Kara Adam Gigi Allen Carly Allen-Martin JoAnn Altenau Nancy Anderson Marilyn Augur Julie Bagley Clara Bahner Susan Bailey Betty Baird Kloe Barcus Kyra Barnett Angie Barrett Courtney Barrow Cyndi Bassel Meg Beaird Martha Lou Beaird Patricia Beckett Jill C. Bee Priscilla Berry Carol Beveridge Lindsay Billingsley Kathy Bishop Laura Blackman Ragan Blackmon Sue Blackwell Sarah Blumenschein Cordelia Boone Tara Bozman Maura Bradshaw Peggy Braecklein Jennifer Bridges Nancy Briggs Terri Brittingham Angie Clayton Brown Beth Brown Susan Brown Tracey Brown Charlotte Browning Paula Bruton Teresa Bryant Lauren Byrd Nancy Byrd Christie Cahoon Danna Campbell Mohler Carlson Emily Carrigan Tonya Carroll Stephanie Carvell Laura Chavoya Tracy Cheatham Gail Cheney Charlotte Clark Elloine Clark Sarah Clark Joanna Clarke Brenda Cockerell Anne Coke Serena Cole Anne-Louise Collins Judy Collins-Kirkpatrick Heather Cooper Ann Corrigan Katy Corrigan Mary C Corrigan Maura Costello Carla Courtwright Donna Cowman Erin Nealy Cox Terri Cox Amy Simmons Crafton Martha Crites Stacy Crouch Kathy Crow Kathy C. Crow Mollie Crow Sandra Cude Lucky Cullum

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Marty Curtis Jessica Dalton Michelle de la Valdene Ann Delatour Jodi DeSerrano Emily Deutscher Jennifer Dickerson Jennifer Dix Kimberly Dodson Dana Donahoe Janie Douglass Jana Dransfield Shireen Duck Christina Durovich Sally Dutter Chelsea Duvall Jennifer Eagle Diana Edelman Kathryn Etcheverry Leigh Fahr Michelle Fail Jennifer Farnell George Farr Wanda Farr Susan Farris Pamela Field Elizabeth Figari Megan Filgo Mary Clare Finney Anne Fisher Michelle Fitzenhagen Christine Flanagan Gini Florer Stephanie Arnold Floyd Martha Fordyce Lisa Fosmark Amanda Francis Christine Frary Dana French Denise Fuller Heather Furniss Kim Gatlin Mary Lou Gibbons Judy Gibbs Jenney Gillikin Janie Gilmore Kristi Gittins Lori Glanzer Carol Glasgow Betty Godwin Martina Goff Carol Goglia Linda Golden Lori Golin-Kerner Toppy Goolsby Nancy Gottsacker Melissa Graham Jane Greene Shelley Gregg Susan Grier Holly Griggs Jayne Grimes Whitney Grogan Dawn Grove Lyndsey Grover Gina Grove-Smith Patricia Gum Leah Haberer MaryAnna Hall Randi Halsell Janie Hamner Sally Hanna Elaine Harman Linda Harris Holly Hassmann Dianne Hawkins M.T. Helland Liz Helton Cheryl Henry Ann Henson Rose Heppner Allison Hicks Luann Hicks Lyda Hill

Amy Hofland Sally Holmes Audra Hopper Michelle Hopper Kamm Howie Carol Huckin Mary Huddleston Anne Hudson Cindy Huey Cindy Hughes Caroline L. Hunt Kyle Hunt Tavia Hunt Heidi Imhof Margaret Jackson Melanie Jackson Laurie Johansen Amanda Johnson Beth Johnson Ann Jones Tiffany Jones Carole Jordan Trish Judson Kate Juett Tricia Kanewske Nikki Kapioltas Cayce Kemp Deanie Kepler Jennifer Kirksey Jennifer Knox Megan Kobler Susan Kohler Amy Kovac Tracey Kozmetsky Lisa Kroencke Kara Kull Peggy La Font Becky Lacour Kimberley Lanio Caitlin Laughlin Linda Laughlin Merriellin Lehner Christi Leinart Muffin Lemak Allison Lent Katherine Lewis Jenny Lichty Melanie Lillard Elaine Lindh Jean Liu Amy Lobner Michelle Lockhart Vivian Lombardi Sarah Losinger Insha Luthra Rebecca Lutz Dawn Lynn Sandye Mailandt Charlene Marsh Christina Marshall Carol Mason Meredith McBee Becky McCamey Laura McCoy Rosemary McCoy Pleasant McCulloch Paige McDaniel Cindy McGeoch Mary Elise McGowan Polly McKeithen Lois McKown Elizabeth McMillan Jodi McShan Margharita Mercado Leslie Merrick Deborah Michel Maryann Mihalopoulos Katy Miller Carolyn Miller Jennifer Miller Lindsey Miller Melanie Miller Paula Miltenberger Paige Mims

Josephine Mitchell Kristin Mitchell Liz Modory Nancy Monning Mary Montgomery Dian Moore Lisa Moore Shelley Moore Cherry Morris Paula Mosle Anna Moss Kate Mote Susan Muller Florence Mullins Kay Murphy Jan Myers Kathleen Neely Laura Neely Maggie Neely Devon Nelson Amy Newman Shirley Newsom Jennifer Niccol Lynn Nikaidoh Tammy Novak Taryn Novak Jessica Nowitzki Lauri Nye Anne-Marie Oliver Nancy O'Neil Connie O'Neill Valerie Orgera-Phillips Honey Owen Lori Anne Page Betty Park Allison Parks Pam Petty Heidi Pickens Kenney Pickens Kacy Pierce Carol Piering Laurie Platt Donna Plunket Peggy Pollock Becky Pond Sandra Porter Lindy Pottinger Michal Powell Pat Prestidge Ruth Price Diane Purnell Eleanor Putman Kim Quinn Devin Rambie Robbie Raphael Kim Raymond Debbie Raynor Chris Redden Anne Reed Anne Reeder Carol Reeder Christie Reniger Suzy Rhodes Sharon Richards Carol Riddick Melissa Rieman Sarah Roberts Gwen Robertson Lisa Rocchio Diana Rodgers Sonya Rodrigue Frances Rogers Carol Ronchetti Bryanna Roop Kristy Rorschach Jill Rowlett Jennifer Royall Margot Ruebel Missy Ryan Emily Sacher Karee Sampson Sue Sandford Susie Sandstrom Bernadette Schaeffler

Lee Schaufele Kara Schlueter Penny Schmidt Diane Scovell Debbie Scripps Nancy Scripps Ginny Searcy Lynn Sears Deedee Selner Maureen Shafer Melanie Shaffer Bonnie Shelby Mollie Shelby Mary Kay Sheldon Mary Alice Shepherd Karen Shuttee Connie Sigel Sandye Silvera Susan Simmons Alisha Sinacola Alicia Slay Anna Small Nicole Small Beth Smith Cameron Smith Monica Egert Smith Waverly Smith Debbie Snell Michelle Sosnoskie Cissie Sparkman Alexa Spears Marianne Staubach Salle Stemmons Caitlin Stinnett Stacey Stoller Mary Kay Story Diana Strauss Venise Stuart Mersina Stubbs Samantha Suchala Heather Sudbury Laura Sullivan Peggy Sutcliffe Lauren Swann Kara Swanson Jane Switzer Mindy Taylor Ellen Terry Kathryne Tessem Jessica Thackston Kay Theis Callie Thomas Cathy Thompson Debbie Tolleson Kacy Tolleson Marilyn Toomey Carol Touchstone Bebe Triplett Karla Trusler Kimberly Trykoski Tamareh Tuma Amy Turner Courtney Underwood Melissa Utley Angie Vaughan KerensaVest Jessica Wadkins Sherwood Wagner Donese Walker Beth Wallace Joni Walne Libby Walter Mi Jung Warner Heather Washburne Susie Watson Wanda Webb Marilyn Weber Sarah Weinberg Jimmy Westcott Nicole Wheeler Brenda White Sally Wightman Emily Willding Beth Williams

Kirsa Williams Stacey Williams Kendall Wilson Candace Winslow Susan Wolcott Cayla Woodruff Nina Works Angie Worthen Kimberly Yamanouchi Amy Zicarelli Denise Zulick

PLANO LIFETIME Susan Abernethy Lara Ashmore Stephanie Barnes Carrie Benson Denise Bickel Wendy Blackwell Sandy Brennan Donna Bryant Karla Bryant Jean Callison Cece Campanini Nora Carter Rebecca Egelston Caso Traci Chrisman Phyllis Cole Laura Curran Betsy deVenny Allison Doyle Lucy Edling Wendy Engibous Wanda Farr Nina Felt Dawn Gall Pamela Grant-Clark Lisa Guerrero Sherie Hammett Holly Hassmann Stephanie Hilburn Diane Hopson Joyce Houlihan Ronelle Ianace Patricia Johnson Mindy Lefevre Nicki Loper Marilyn Mahoney Kathy Manack Downie Mathis Jenni McGaha Christi Mitchell Joa Muns Kimberly Nelon Lisa Norton Mary O'Hanlon Belinda Orland Linda Paulk Ashleigh Pogue Nicole Powell Marlo Pulliam Lisa Raskin Abby Ray Traci Redding Carol Schauer Kathy Schell Theresa Sinacola Colleen Smith Joan Smith Sheri Steele Jenny Stutler April Tate Tracy Tomson Ruthie Vander Lugt Sherrie Varrichio Lisa Viguet Beth Webb Nancy Welwood Allison Whitfield Pam Wohlers Sharon Yager Tina Young


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