Gifts at Work

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gifts at work

School of Medicine on Virginia Commonwealth University’s Medical College of Virginia Campus

Sight-Saving

Surgery Triggers

fall 2011

Gift

New Home for the

Medical School In mid-November, the steel work was completed on the MCV Campus’ new medical education center. Reaching 12 stories into the sky, the building has been crafted to house the most significant renovation to the school’s curriculum seen in 30 years. new approaches to training physicians. With a focus on team-based, clinically-driven problem solving, the building will house flexible, small-group learning studios and a leading edge Center for Human Simulation and Patient Safety. Just as importantly, this new facility will allow us to help meet the projected physician shortage by accommodating an increase in class size from 200 to 250, increasing the total medical student body to 1,000. Last spring, the facility won a vote of confidence from grateful patients and community leaders James W. and Frances G. McGlothlin. Gov. Bob McDonnell was on hand for the announcement of the couple’s $25-million gift made in honor of Dr. Harold Young, who is professor and founding chair of the Department of Neurosurgery. In recognition of the gift — one of the largest in the university’s history — the new facility will be named the James W. and Frances G. McGlothlin Medical Education Center. A donor wall in the lobby will display the names of alumni and friends whose generosity is vital to the building’s success.

As teacher and friend to thousands of students in the School of Medicine for nearly 30 years, Linda Costanzo, Ph.D., professor emerita of physiology and biophysics, suddenly found herself in a new role: patient. “I noticed that my vision was distorted and thought I should get my glasses checked,” she remembered. “Weeks went by before I learned that something was terribly, terribly wrong.” Enter Ali Tabassian, M.D., Ph.D., a former student from the Class of 1990, who performed surgery to correct a macular hole in her left eye. Dr. Costanzo and her husband Richard Costanzo, Ph.D., professor of physiology and biophysics, were so grateful for his skillful intervention that they decided to honor him by making a gift to the new Medical Education Center in his name, “as a small gesture of gratitude for this sight-saving surgery and the kindness he demonstrated at every turn.” From Tabassian’s view, “I was speechless. But this gift speaks http://go.vcu.edu/GiftsAtWork volumes about the Costanzos’ commitment to the school.”

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I’m a huge believer in giving back.

As physician-in-chief of the University of Maryland’s R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, Tom Scalea, M’78, oversees the nation’s first and only integrated trauma hospital. Treating nearly 8,000 of the Baltimore region’s most badly injured and critically ill people every year, the Shock Trauma Center is also the pre-deployment training ground for U.S. military doctors, nurses and special operations medics. Earlier this year, Dr. Scalea presented grand rounds on the MCV Campus and learned of the building campaign for the new James W. and Frances G. McGlothlin Medical Education Center. Impressed with the future of medical education at the School of Medicine, he made a $100,000 gift.

“MCV defined who it was I was going to become,” said Dr. Scalea. “I was very lucky. It was the four best years of my life without question. When I had the opportunity to give back to the institution that allowed me to do this great work, my answer wasn’t ‘yes’ or ‘no’, but ‘how much?’ I was happy to help, and I hope it’s not the last gift.”

Reunion Giving Hits New High With hundreds of MD alumni returning to campus to celebrate, Reunion Weekend saw attendance increase by 21 percent last spring. Along the way, alumni set a record-breaking mark of $2.6 million in Reunion giving, with the Class of 1961 leading the way for the medical education building now under construction. Three classes took on special Reunion projects, and others threw their support behind the Annual Fund.

Courtesy of the R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center, University of Mayland

In this building, the school’s faculty will pioneer

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http://go.vcu.edu/GiftsAtWork


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