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Seton

Fund

SUMMER 2014

the

STORIES OF HEALING AND HOPE FROM THE SETON FUND

Medicine is really a repertoire art


you learn by what you encounter.
TOM CAVEN, M.D., VICE PRESIDENT, MEDICAL AFFAIRS,

MEDICAL PIONEERS
HEADING TO AUSTIN
IF YOU BUILD IT, THEY WILL COME.
In this issue, The Seton Fund Newsletter continues its series on the components of a teaching hospital
and what benefits will come to Austin, thanks to philanthropic support of Seton. This issue explores
clinical research and its role in the future of care.

he 1989 film Field of Dreams left a phrase in our vernacular, If you


build it, they will come. They were talking about building a baseball
diamond for legendary Chicago Black Sox players. Seton has something entirely different in mindbuilding a modern, new teaching
hospital that will attract top doctors from across the country. And, they are coming.
Meet Dr. Steven Warach, a neurologist, National Institutes of Health (NIH)
investigator, Seton Healthcare Family chief science officer and executive director
of the Seton/UT Southwestern Clinical Research Institute.

UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER BRACKENRIDGE

This is a rare opportunity, and I wanted to be a part of it, said Dr. Warach,
who worked in Washington, D.C. as an NIH senior investigator, with a focus on
stroke research, since 1999. Something remarkable and extraordinary is about
to happen in Austin in terms of medical science. Seton Medical Center at The
University of Texas, the research institute and Dell Medical School will transform
Austin into a major hub for medical innovation and invention.
For the past three years, Dr. Warach, whose position was endowed through a
generous grant from The Cain Foundation, has been recruiting clinical scholars to join
the Austin faculty and creating the infrastructure to support a robust research program.
Our research office has started working with UT Austins research office to
harmonize our procedures, he explained. Theres a big advantage to the teaching
hospital and the medical school growing up together.

PUSHING HEALTH CARE FORWARD


Teaching hospitals, along with medical schools, are the scientific platform for
pushing health care forward through discovery of new treatments and cures. The
first live polio vaccine, intensive care unit for newborns, and pediatric heart transplant were pioneered at teaching hospitals.
Dr. Warach explains that without research, medicine would be static. Any advances
in medicine are not born out of intuition but achieved through research.

This research, with this


technology, gives Austin absolute
state-of-the-art stroke care.

His goal is to have Seton conducting studies that will change lives on the day they
are publisheddiscoveries that will result in immediate improvements, across the
clinical spectrum, that help whole populations.

FOR THE GREATER GOOD


Research improves care for everyone. Theres definitely a greater good aspect to it.
I see it as another expression of Setons mission to improve the health of all those we
serve. We are not only committed to practicing at the highest standard of care,
but also must strivethrough researchto raise that standard of care even higher.

Renowned stroke researcher Steven Warach, MD, and the "super power" 3T MRI at Seton Medical Center Austin

Medical education at Seton

[CONTINUED ON PAGE 4]

The Seton Fund

L E T T E R

F R O M

T H E

C H A I R M A N

board of trustees 20132014

Dan Herd
chair man
Pam Giblin
vice chair man
Jolynn Free
treasurer
Sister Catherine Brown, D.C.
Donna Carter
Scott Dunaway
Sister Gertrude Levy, D.C.
Greg Meserole
Pat Oles
Hal Peterson
Sam S. Roberts, III, M.D.
Clint Small
Timothy C. Taylor
Judy Trabulsi
Ben Vaughan, III
Mike Vollman
Chris Von Dohlen
senior staff leadership

Kenneth L. Gladish, Ph.D.


president & ceo, seton foundations

THE MISSION
MOVES FORWARD
IN THE WORDS OF SISTER GERTRUDE, things are changing, but it will be good. She shared this
reassurance in response to the Daughters of Charitys announced departure from Austin. Like so many Seton
supporters, I will miss her and her colleagues. But her simple and confident statement gives us strong direction:
keep up the good work.
Weve got a great opportunity in front of us, some would say a once-in-a-generation opportunity, to forever
change delivery of health care in Austin. Many think that health care as a system has lost its way. The Daughters,
who need it.
To get there, we need you. The capital campaign for Seton Medical Center at The University of Texas, the

life trustees

Daughters, then you care about the success of this campaign. I encourage you to give generously in support

Mary Anderson Abell


Robert E. Askew, M.D.
Carolyn Curtis
Charmaine Denius
Andrew Elliott, Jr.
Luci Baines Johnson
Bishop John McCarthy
Allan Shivers, Jr.

of our $50 million philanthropic goal.

primary training site for Dell Medical School students, is gaining momentum. If you support the mission of the

This new teaching hospital, in partnership with Dell Medical School, will create a pipeline of new doctors and
attract top clinical researchers. It will also be home to newly discovered treatments and cures.
With your support, we will transform the health of our city.
Keep up the good work.

Pete Winstead, Chair


seton medical center at the university of texas
Susan Dunaway, President
elizabeth ann seton board
Dan Graham, Chair
the fifty

Dan Herd

Rebecca Davis, President


seton development board

Chairman

In her new home in Evansville, Sister Gertrude will serve as a volunteer at St. Marys Hospital and minister in a retirement community
for Daughters of Charity. It will be a happy reunion there as her
sister, Muriel, who is also a Daughter of Charity, lives at that same
retirement facility.

Sister Gertrudes legacy in Austin began in 1972 at the old Seton


Hospital after being missioned here to work in the newly created
fundraising department and help with public relations.
The gift that changed her life, and set the stage for the next 40
years, came from a man who wanted to donate to the hospital as
an anniversary present for his wife. That gift of $5,000 in 1972,
comparable to $30,000 today, cemented her drive to do all she could
to help Seton care for the sick, poor, and vulnerable.
Through her work, even bigger gifts were on the horizon. In 1977,
Sister Gertrude and the fundraising office were tasked with raising
$1.5 million to build a new regional neonatal intensive care unit, the
first of its kind in Central Texas. With the help of the Seton Development
Board, they met the goal in only eight months.
To honor her, the Sr. Gertrude Levy Endowment was established
on her 80th birthday in 1999. Its a wonderful legacy. Its difficult
to leave Seton, but the endowment is one thing that makes me feel
satisfied about leavingknowing that the poor will be taken care of
going forward.

Through Sisters quiet leadership over the years, Seton associates,


friends and donors have been blessed to experience first-hand what
it means to live the mission. Though the miles may separate us,
Sister Gertrude remains close in the hearts of all whose lives she
touched. The Seton Fund is eternally grateful for her many years
with us and her powerful example of life in service to others.

Its in your hands now and it


will be good. sister gertrude levy

Last year, earnings from the endowment helped provide much-needed


supplies and education for patients with diabetes at the Seton Community
Health Centers. The galas for the Seton Development Board and the
Elizabeth Ann Seton Board both raise money for Sister Gertrudes
endowment.

Ross Rathgeber, Chair


seton league house
Julie Shannon, Chair
the seton forum
THE SETON FUND supports the Daughters of Charity
health care mission in Central Texas by raising funds
for these Seton facilities: Seton Medical Center Austin,
University Medical Center Brackenridge, Seton Shoal
Creek Hospital, Seton Kozmetsky Community Health
Center, Seton McCarthy Community Health Center,
Seton Topfer Community Health Center, Seton League
House, Seton Cove and Seton Medical Center at
The University of Texas.

mission of Seton will last. Its in your hands now and it will be good.
It will be good.

T HE SETON FUND CELEBRATES SISTER GERTRUDE LEVY


as she transitions to her new role in Evansville, Indiana. For 40 years,
Sister Gertrude has been an integral part of the Seton Healthcare
Family, especially The Seton Fund.

in action and voice, have helped define a Seton solution to ensure the right care will always be available to all

Charles Scarborough
executive director, the seton fund

community volunteer leadership

A TRIBUTE TO SISTER GERTRUDE


AND A LEGACY OF CARING

Sister leaves behind a powerful legacy of caring for the poor and
vulnerable. And though she says goodbye to Seton, she has faith in
the future.

Contents
Medical Pioneers Heading to Austin.................................................................... 1
A Tribute to Sister Gertrude................................................................................... 3
Dr. Buchanan Addresses Vatican Academy....................................................... 5

Ive heard people say when the Daughters are gone, things wont be
the same, she said. That is true. Nothing is ever the same, but the

Look What You Did................................................................................................... 6


Make Your Will Known............................................................................................. 7
Leading the Mission ................................................................................................ 7
Mark Your Calendars................................................................................................ 7
Glorias Story ............................................................................................................. 8
Seton Breast Care Center .............................................................. Special Insert

SUMMER 2014

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DR. ROBERT BUCHANAN ADDRESSES VATICAN ACADEMY


LEADS TALK ON DEMENTIA AND ALZHEIMERS DISEASE

AN AUDIENCE WITH THE POPE IS A RARITY; MEETING THREE


POPES IN ONE LIFE TIME RARER STILL, BUT SETONS DR. ROBERT
BUCHANAN DID JUST THAT.

Rendering of a patient room

[CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1]

Watch a fly-around video of Seton Medical Center at


The University of Texas at setonfund.org/newhospital.

Current Research at Seton

AUSTIN NEW HUB FOR MEDICAL INNOVATION


Austin is already seeing the benefits of expanded research efforts. When Dr.
Warach moved here, he brought his highly regarded, NIH-funded stroke research with him. The study focuses on the use of advanced magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) methods to diagnose and treat stroke as early as possible.

485 active clinical studies


187 clinical investigators
Range of topics runs the gamut, from cystic fibrosis to cardiology to
trauma. There are 37 neurology studies and 23 breast cancer/breast health
studies underway.

Seton has invested in this goal. Two state-of-the-art MRIs that will enhance
care and support groundbreaking stroke research, as well as cardiology and
oncology research, have been installed at Seton Medical Center Austin. This
effort will be funded, in part, through the fundraising efforts and support of
the Seton Development Board.

Research, A Nice Shot in Arm for Austin

The intersection of Setons new teaching hospital, Dell Medical School, and new
research opportunities will create new jobs and economic prosperity for Austin.

The MAGNETOM Skyra 3T (3 Tesla) MRI and the MAGNETOM Aera


1.5T MRI make Seton Medical Center Austin a leader in diagnostic imaging
and a key player in the future of care. The 3T, the highest powered MRI
available, provides the most detailed view of the anatomy and function of the
brain, and at a quicker speed. Speed of diagnosis and treatment is a key factor
in a persons ability to recover from a stroke.

The first step to good medicine is diagnosis, said Dr. Warach. I can only
think of a handful of 3T MRIs in the world that are located in an emergency
department, like here at Seton Medical Center Austin. This research, with this
technology, gives Austin absolute state-of-the-art stroke care.

15,000 new permanent, full-time jobs (direct and indirect) will be


created in the local economy
60% of new jobs will be middle-skill jobs that are vital to a
healthy economy
$2 billion in annual spending (direct and indirect) will be pumped
into local economy
(source: TXP, Inc)

As the worlds population ages and lives longer, more people will experience
Alzheimers and other ailments. The challenge is that seniors can feel like a
burden and worry about who will take care of them, Buchanan said.

Buchanan, chief of functional and restorative neurosurgery and neuroscience at


the Seton Brain and Spine Institute, recently traveled to the Vatican to provide
insights and information on dementia and cognitive impairment, particularly in
older people with Alzheimers disease.

Dr. Buchanan believes caring for those who are elderly and vulnerable is an expression
of our faith. Working at Seton is a calling for me, a calling of spirituality and
faith, he said. I am grateful to the Daughters of Charity whose work here has been
nothing short of miraculous.
Their guidance and lasting
example have prepared those
of us at Seton to continue
their work, and that, for me, is
an honor.

Buchanan believes he was chosen as a presenter at the Pontifical Academy for Lifes
20th Assembly because of his training in neurosurgery, psychiatry and neuroscience
research, bringing a broader and deeper perspective to the subject. Buchanan is one
of only 12 American members of the Academy.
He noted that biomedical sciences have improved the quality and length of life
through advancements in prevention and treatment of diseases of heart, lung and
other organ systems. However, because of the inherent complexities of brain science,
there has been a lag in neuroscience advancements.

Seton Soundbites on Medical Education and Research


Im one of the 16 Emergency Medicine residents at
Seton. Austin is such an enriching place to learn and
grow that we all hope to practice within the community one day. Setons mission enables me to provide
compassionate care to anyone who walks through
our ER doors regardless of social or economic background. That mission, paired with a culture of excelling in our field, is personally rewarding.

Homegrown Innovation

Down the road, Dr. Warach envisions creating focused research institutes,
within Setons and UT Austins research enterprise, for neurosciences, population
health and cardiology, among others. There is nationwide interest in what
transpires. Im getting many calls from top-notch physicians who want to be
part of the next big thing here in Austin, said Dr. Warach.

New research will spur tremendous growth in the life sciences sector, including
biotech, pharmaceuticals, and medical devices. Growth in local life sciences
start-up companies will further diversify Austins technology focus beyond
hardware and software companies.




HOW YOU CAN HELP

You can help bring the vision of a modern, new teaching


hospital to life in Austin, with your gift to support construction
of Seton Medical Center at The University of Texas. To find
out more about the $50M campaign to transform care, visit
setonfund.org/newhospital or contact the Seton Fund campaign
office at 512-324-7990, setonfund@seton.org.

Austin is already a player from a purely high


tech standpoint. Common sense says that
with a medical school and teaching hospital
coming, more biotech is coming, too. The end
game is not only new treatments but also new
innovations to repair our health care system.

Austins 200+ life sciences companies will finally have a robust pool of
local clinical partners to test and commercialize innovations.
Growth of life sciences companies will result in 2,100 new permanent jobs.
$340 million in new economic activity will be generated by the life
sciences sector.
(source: TXP, Inc)
Jaron Santelli, MD

Mike Millard, Executive Director

Chief Resident of Emergency Medicine


University Medical Center Brackenridge

Innovation, Technology and Research


Seton Healthcare Family

SUMMER 2014

T H E S E TO N F U N D N E W S L E T T E R W W W. S E T O N F U N D .O R G

LOOK WHAT YOU DID


Seton Development Board Gala
Seton Development Board President and Gala Co-Chairs pose with Seton Leadership as
they present a check to The Seton Fund for $402,876. Funds will support behavioral and
mental health telemedicine equipment and program needs, the new Breast Care Center at
Seton Medical Center Austin and the Sister Gerturde Levy Endowment for the Poor.

We must never lose sight of where we came from, for it


charts the course of who and what we will become.
DAVID PRINGLE,

Make Your
Will Known

PICTURED RIGHT Lucy Weber, Kate Henderson, Charley Scarborough, Tracey Bury, Sister Gertrude Levy, and Reenie Collins.

ITS A RARE OPPORTUNITY to give a gift that lasts

The Elizabeth Ann Seton Board EASB Live! Gala

beyond your lifetime to care for others and to offer

The Elizabeth Ann Seton Board hosted the record-setting EASB Live! Gala, Saturday,
April 12, raising more than $700,000 net to benefit the Seton Community Health
Centers and the Sister Gertrude Levy Endowment for the Poor. Guests enjoyed a
casual evening under the stars, with catering by 34th Street Caf, an incredible
auction, a live performance by Robert Earl Keen, an after-party featuring DJ Hear
No Evil, and late-night fare by P.Terrys and Stinsons Bistro. A special thank you to
our 2014 Gala Co-Chairs, Stephanie Jastrow and Lindsey Majors, and to Elizabeth
Ann Seton Board President Martha Dyess, for hosting this spectacular event.

hope to those yet to be born. A gift through your will

PICTURED LEFT 2014 EASB Gala Co-Chairs Lindsey Majors and Stephanie Jastrow and 2014 EASB President

Martha Small Dyess.

or estate plan is a simple way to make a meaningful


and lasting gift to the Seton Healthcare Family. If you
would like more information on estate planning or need
sample language for making a charitable bequest, please
contact Betty Hewell, senior director of development,
at 512-324-3302. If you have already put Seton in your
estate plans or IRA, or listed Seton as an insurance beneficiary, please let us know so we can acknowledge your

Brackenridge Development Council Luncheon


The Brackenridge Development Council hosted its 8th annual luncheon on Thursday,
April 17. With almost 500 people in attendance, the luncheon honored Pete Winstead
for his leadership and vision to transform the health and prosperity of our city. The
Future of Care luncheon officially launched the $50M campaign and raised more
than $620,000 for construction and equipment for Setons new teaching hospital,
Seton Medical Center at The University of Texas. To view the event video or make
a gift, visit setonfund.org/newhospital.
PICTURED RIGHT Jess Garza, Pete Winstead, Gary Farmer, and Sen. Kirk Watson at the 2014 Future of Care Luncheon.

gift appropriately.

TO GIVE TO SETON THROUGH YOUR WILL, PLEASE INCLUDE


THIS LANGUAGE:

I hereby direct $

(or percent of my

residual estate) in cash, securities or

Sunset Celebration on the Waterfront


Lakeway Associates of Seton hosted a fun-filled Sunset Celebration cocktail party and fundraiser
on Sunday, April 27, at the Lakeway waterfront home of Maria Aydam. Through gifts from
donors like you, $25,000 was raised to benefit renovations and improvements at Seton Shoal
Creek Hospital. This was also a wonderful celebration of Lakeway Associates 30th anniversary
in support of mental health services, said Event Chair Sally Barto. Co-Chair Doris Burson added,
Mental illness knows no geographic boundaries. Residents of our area who seek help for acute
mental health issues or substance abuse are likely to be referred to Seton Shoal Creek.
PICTURED LEFT Lakeway Associates board of directors, l. to r.: Doris Burson, Sally Barto, Jackie Elliott, Jean Hennagin, Billye Lynn Ratliff,

other property to The Seton Fund, Austin,


Texas. This gift shall be for the further
benefit of

vice president for mission integration

LEADING
THE MISSION

s the Daughters of Charity depart Central Texas


this year and entrust Setons mission to lay leaders,
a new vice president for mission integration has
joined the Seton Healthcare Family to help ensure it continues
the Daughters 112-year legacy.
Fortunately, David Pringle has a record of success in this
regard. He managed a similar transition in Florida during the
past five years.
The keys to a successful transition are building on the foundations of those who had the vision
to create this ministry, said Pringle, who served as executive vice president for mission integration at
St. Vincents Healthcare in Jacksonville. We must never lose sight of where we came from, for it
charts the course of who and what we will become.
Pringle will help lead matters related to biomedical and organizational ethics and spiritual and pastoral
care. He also will help foster community relationships to meet our growing communitys needs.
Pringle looks forward to meeting with Seton associates, donors and volunteers as he settles into his
new role. I am delighted to be among those who serve the Austin community as part of the healing
team at Seton.

MARK YOUR CALENDARS


OCTOBER 19, 2014 Seton Development Board Gala
Four Seasons Hotel Austin
Gala Co-Chairs: Melanie Fish & Erika Herndon; Seton Development Board President: Rebecca Davis
Proceeds will benefit construction and equipment for state-of-the-art imaging for medical research and
patient care at Seton Medical Center Austin, as well as the Sister Gertrude Levy Endowment for the Poor.
For sponsorships or more information, contact Morgan Thomsen at methomsen@seton.org or 512-324-3394.

OCTOBER 25, 2014 The Fifty Event

[facility or program] and shall be used to


[purpose].

Brazos Hall
Superheroes, Villians & Sidekicks
This costume-themed party will benefit construction and equipment for Setons new teaching hospital,
Seton Medical Center at The University of Texas. For sponsorships or more information, contact Susan Hewlitt
at schewlitt@seton.org or 512-324-3275, or visit setonfund.org/2014-Fiftyevent.

Pat Evans, Kim Nearburg and Barbara Bembry.

SUMMER 2014

T H E S E TO N F U N D N E W S L E T T E R W W W. S E T O N F U N D .O R G

3 THINGS

YOU CAN DO TODAY!


1 Go online to www.setonfund.org/newhospital and make

a tax deductible gift to help build Seton Medical Center at


The University of Texas. Your gift will bring more doctors
and more specialized care to meet the needs of a growing
population in Central Texas.

SETON BREAST CARE CENTER

The Seton Fund of


The Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul
1201 West 38th Street
Austin, TX 78705-1056

OPENS ITS DOORS

2 Give a gift that lasts beyond your lifetime. Contact Betty


Hewell, Seton Fund senior director of development, at
512-324-3302 to learn more about how estate planning can
protect the ones you love and offer hope and healing to
future generations.

3 Continue the traditions and values of

the Daughters of Charity who have been


caring for our community since 1902 by
joining The Seton 1902 Society. For more information, go to
www.setonfund.org.

Seton Breast Care Center Steering


Committee members and Seton
leaders cutting the ribbon to herald
the opening of the new Seton Breast
Care Center at Seton Medical Center
Austin.

WE NEED YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS! To receive occasional

email updates about The Seton Fund activities, including


information on Seton Medical Center at The University of Texas,
please send your email address to setonfund@seton.org.

Left to right:
Candace Partridge, Lisa Youngblood,
Linda Lotz, Dr. Debra Patt, Robyn
Sperling, Marcia Levy, Susan Lubin,
Valerie Newberg, Nancy Zimmerman,
Susan Epstein and Sandy Miller.

Follow us on Facebook!
To update your address, send an email to setonfund@seton.org,
send a fax to 512-324-1989, or call 512-324-1990.

YOUR SUPPORT WILL HELP

TRANSFORM HEALTH CARE

loria Chapa knows Austin. She loves Austin.


From her first breath at University Medical
Center Brackenridge to 30 years of service
at UT Austin, shes embraced her community. Now,
in a unique way, her community is embracing her.
Gloria is sickthe kind of sick that has taken
away whats dear. Due to uncontrolled diabetes,
memory loss, and liver disease, she is disabled. I hate
not being able to work. I learned that when you work
honest, you walk with pride.
Glorias doctor referred her to Seton Total Health
Partners, an innovative program that is transforming
how care is provided, while improving outcomes and
lowering costs. Her Seton care team, including her
health promoter Katherine Edmondson (pictured far
right) and dietitian Rosimeiry Jamalabad (pictured
left), regularly visit Gloria in her home.
We come into their homes and provide the care
and education they need to stay healthy and out of
the hospitallike nutrition counseling, diabetes edu-

Not pictured: Committee members


Liza Soklove, Jan Barfield and Candy
Rogers.

GLORIA'S STORY
cation, medical check-ups and community resources,
explained Rosimeiry. Gloria is learning to take control
of her own health.
Katherine sees Gloria each week and attends her
doctors appointments, helping navigate her care and
manage her medications. Its all about helping Gloria
find small victories, each day, in improving her health.
Its working. Gloria has changed her diet, lowered
her blood pressure and maintained her blood sugar
levels, which improves her memory. By staying on
course, going back to work is a real possibility.
Seton, Central Health and Dell Medical School
are partnering to create new models of carecare
that meets individual needs at the right time and right
place. You can support a healthier future for Austin
by supporting the campaign to build Seton Medical
Center at The University of Texas. For more information, contact the Seton Fund campaign office at
512-324-7990 or visit setonfund.org/newhospital.

DUE TO THE HARD WORK AND GENEROSITY OF MANY, we are very excited to announce that the Seton Breast Care Center is open

and seeing patients! Thank you for your donations which were so integral in making this dream a reality. You have truly made a difference in our
community by helping Seton provide this state-of-the-art technology in a relaxed spa-like facility designed around patient comfort and care. The
center offers a multi-disciplinary approach to providing personalized treatment and support to patients and their loved ones.
The Seton Breast Care Center is available to those seeking preventative care as well as those with a breast cancer diagnosis. We offer screening
mammograms and bone density scans, and have a resource library with computers and printed information about health and wellness related to
breast care, in addition to breast cancer-related resources. Remember: women 40 and over should schedule mammograms annually.

Call to schedule an appointment:

Lead donors and top Seton Pink Army fundraisers joined Seton clinical staff and the Seton Breast Care Center
steering committee and leadership to officially herald the opening of the new center at a special celebration
reception held February 27. Guests enjoyed wine and hors doeuvres, a brief program, the unveiling of donor
signage, and private tours. What a momentous occasion for celebration!

IMAGING SCHEDULING

512.324.1199
BREAST CARE CENTER

512.324.1025
Grateful patient Gloria Chapa with her care team.

THE SETON FUND NEWSLETTER is published twice each year for donors and friends of the Seton Fund. The newsletter is designed by Bucko Design. Photography by George Brainard, James Debth ,Ginny B, Jim Lincoln, David Rackley,
Mark Swendner and Mary Pat Waldron. Your feedback and suggestions are welcome at jhbiggart@seton.org. For more information about supporting Seton through a gift to the Seton Fund, call 512-324-1990 or visit www.setonfund.org.

For more information about the Seton Breast Care Center go to: Seton.net, click on Medical Services, and under
Specialty Centers select Seton Breast Care Center.

LYMPHEDEMA SCHEDULING

512-324-1025 option 4

SETON BREAST CARE CENTER


SUMMER 2014

Plaque dedications were


recently held in honor of our
very generous Breast Care
Center donors.

PICTURED BELOW (LEFT TO RIGHT) Susan and Craig Lubin (The Susan and Craig Lubin Welcome Center was made possible

by a special gift from the Michael and Susan Dell Foundation); Louise Berndt and Joslyn Dobson (The Louise Berndt Boutique was
provided through a special gift from the Sean, Joslyn, Sean-Karl and Johanna Grace Dobson Foundation); Bill Dickson with Susan
Lubin (The ultrasound room was made possible through a gift from Bill Dickson in memory of his sister, Elizabeth Dickson Brennan).

PICTURED BELOW (LEFT TO RIGHT) Kelly Redding, Barbara Paul and Beth Rinke representing their family at the Nurse Navigators

Office, made possible by a gift from Barbara and Carl Paul in honor of their daughters, Beth, Kelly and Marnie; Andrea McWilliams
in front of the screening lounge that was given through the generosity of Andrea and Dean McWilliams; Bobby and Susan Epstein
(pictured) joined Paddy and Barry Epstein, and Sally and Burt Evans, to provide two patient consult lounges in memory of Jeanne
Burnstein.

PICTURED BELOW (LEFT TO RIGHT) Lisa and Wes Youngblood at the plaque dedication of the Staff Lounge and Conference Room made possible through their

generosity; Darryl Tocker, executive director of the Tocker Foundation, in the Resource Library generously donated by the Tocker Foundation in honor of Dr. Brooke
Sheldon; Nancy and Bruce Zimmerman in front of one of the two rooms they generously donated, the Medical Directors Office and the Staff Work Room.

In honor of their incredible vision


and fundraising leadership as the
Seton Breast Care Center Capital
Campaign co-chairs, which helped
make this center a reality for our
community, an endowment has
been created to honor Marcia Levy
and Susan Lubin. Proceeds from
this endowment benefit the new
Seton Breast Care Center.
www.setonfund.org/give/
marcia-levy-susan-lubin-endowment

SETON BREAST CARE CENTER


T H E S E TO N F U N D N E W S L E T T E R W W W. S E T O N F U N D . O R G

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