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Our core purpose: Make people healthy (Sounds simple, doesn’t it? It’s not.)

Our core purpose: Make people healthy - Emory …€¦ · Our core purpose: Make people healthy ... • Genetics: Sharon Grantham ... Our mission: the 3 things we do every day 1

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Our core purpose:Make people healthy(Sounds simple, doesn’t it? It’s not.)

It takes a village

• Surgery/Emory Transplant Center: Julie Earnhart

• Vaccine Center: Alex Brown

• Winship Cancer Institute: Vicki Riedl, Jennifer Daly, Lindsay Wachter

• Alumni: Heather Pharris, Lisa Tillman,

Rachel Donnelly

• Biomedical Engineering: Molly Croft

• Clinical Programs: Brook Brown

• Eye Center: David Woolf

• Neurology: Suzanne Baker

• Orthopaedics: Susan House

• Pediatrics: Sarah Batts

• School of Medicine: Maggi McKay, Leigh Hurt

• The big picture – Leigh Hurt & Maggi McKay

• SOM Alumni: They’re everywhere!– Heather Pharris

• Center for Health in Aging: Becauseeveryone gets old (if they’re lucky) –Margaret Lesesne

• The Children’s Center: Where our cutestpatients go – Sarah Batts

• Q & A: Ask us a Q. We’ll give you an A.

Caring for generations:matters of life and death

Are you this cute?We think you are.

A few of the scary thingsone hopes to avoid

• Winship Cancer Institute: Vicki Riedel & Jennifer Daly• Department of Surgery/Emory Transplant Center: Julie Earnhart• Neurology: Suzanne Baker• Genetics: Sharon Grantham• Q & A: Your chance to stump the panel!

Scary disease Scary surgery Just plain scaryScary diagnosis

A warranty for someof your parts

• Eye Center: David Woolf

• Orthopaedics: Susan House

• Vaccine Center/Infectious Disease: Alex Brown

• Cardiology, Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine: Leigh & Maggi

• Biomedical Engineering: Molly Croft

• 2012: What’s Possible – Turning Wealth Into Public Good: Leigh & Maggi

• Q & A: Ask to see the fine print!

Our mission: the 3 thingswe do every day

1. Teaching

2. Research

3. Patient care

Our program is big!

• Local

• Statewide

• National

• International

• Interplanetary!

Collaboration is key to:

• exceeding our program goals

• making our donors proud

• making our mothers proud (Hi mom!)

Just the facts

We train:• 1 of every 5 physicians in Georgia

• > 462 medical students each year

• > 1,000 residents & fellows in 74 accreditedprograms each year

There’s more!

• premier research institute

• > $276 million in federal awards, 2005

• #19 in NIH dollars

• fastest-growing recipient of NIH awards

• pioneering treatment and research

Really smartresearchers

Wait! There’s more

We are• ranked nation’s finest for biomedical research

We get• 48 applicants for each first-year slot

We have• > 60 MD/PhD students in 40 NIH programs

• 365 students in 5 allied health programs

• a PA program ranked #3 in U.S.

We rock!• If we may say so ourselves

More more more!

• Faculty: 1,953 full-time, 969volunteers

• Patients: > 4.2 million visitseach year at seven owned ora liated teaching hospitals

• Physicians: 85% of Grady HealthSystems, one of region’s largestand busiest

• Charity care: > $66 million eachyear; $20 million at Grady

We’re building for the futureof medical education. Join us!

Opening summer 2007

• 165,000 square feet

• wireless computer network

• extensive space for simulation

• state-of-the-art dissection lab

• exam rooms with video cameras

• classrooms

• meeting rooms

• lecture halls

Goals & gift opportunities

Working goal: $500+ million

• Endowed chairs

& professorships

• Scholarships

• Endowed funds

• Expendable funds

• Research facilities

• Medical education building

Ada Lee and Pete Correll co-chair theSchool of Medicine campaign

Our alumni are the best

We’re everywhere!

• 14,812 alumni worldwide

• That’s 16% of all Emory alumni

Our breakdown:

• Medical school alumni: 5,188

• Residents/fellows: 9,317

It’s a matter of degrees

We don’t let just anyone in:

• 48 applications for each first-yearposition

• MCAT scores + GPAs highest to date

• 98% pass National Board Exam on firsttry

• residencies in Georgia and 23 otherstates; nearly half in primary care

Been to the doctor lately?(You probably noticed an Emory diploma whilewaiting in your little gown.)

1 in 5 Georgia physicians trained at Emory

• doctors’ o ces

• Emory University Hospital

• The Emory Clinic

• Emory Crawford Long

• Grady Memorial Hospital

• Veterans A airs Medical Center

• Emory Children’s Center

Total Scholarships Awarded 2004-05

$0

$2,000,000

$4,000,000

$6,000,000

$8,000,000

$10,000,000

$12,000,000

$14,000,000

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As of Aug. 31:

• 83 endowed

scholarships

• 13 endowed

fellowships

Excellence is expensive

School of Medicine tuition: $36,000 per year

That’s a lot of ramen noodles

Average Debt 2004-05

$0

$20,000

$40,000

$60,000

$80,000

$100,000

$120,000

$140,000

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Don’t let thishappento someoneyou love

Our biggest goal for alumni(Can you guess?)

Scholarships!

• Expendable scholarships• Goal: $1 million

• Endowed scholarships• Goal: $1 gazillion!

Photo from actual gazillion dollar bill (rarely seen)

Our second biggest goal

We need a new building! Don’t you think?Goal:$55 million

Those are big goals.How will we meet them?

• Help from the dean

• More programs

• Fabulous reunion classes

• Direct mail

• Annual fund

• We’ll come to your house!

Life is a journey, not adestination (Emory is a destination)

We can expect to live 30 years longerthan our great grandparents. TheCenter for Health in Aging seeks toanswer:

• how and why do our bodies age?

• what causes pain, memory loss,depression?

• how can we maintain health andwellness?

The Hilton sisters(Paris & Nicky), ca. 2070

What does healthy aginglook like?

Good example:Gene Sarazan, 97

Good example:Lila Denmark, 103

Bad example:Nick Nolte, 65

So what’s our point?

• Center for Health in Aging est. January 2001

• interdisciplinary

• research, training, education, patient care

• helping people age well

More good examples!

Just a few numbers

• 26 NIH research projects

• 57 clinical trials

• 24 faculty

• ranked 16 in US News & WorldReport

• 1 of 7 NIH-designated centers of excellence

• Wesley Woods, nation’s only dedicated acute carehospital for elderly

Some of the work we do

Patient care• 1 of nation’s 5 largest clinical programs• 20 physician + 4 PhD faculty• Park Springs continuing care (a liate program)

Teaching• interdisciplinary training + community education

Research• Research Registry on Aging• 1 of 7 with two major “center of excellence” grants• 1 of 2 housing an a liate of American Federation for Aging Research

Goals & gift opportunities

Working goal: $6 million

• Endowed chairs• Endowed professorships• Scholarships• Expendable funds• Global aging facility

Emory Pediatrics:Little lives in special hands

Pose this way for your next driver’s license photo!

Emory Pediatricsis committed to:

• education of future pediatric leaders

• discoveries that improve children’s lives

• comprehensive, compassionate care for

patients and familiesFuture foodcritic for NYT

A few things youshould know about us

• 190 faculty & 26 fellows

• 21 divisions

• hundreds of clinical trials

• dozens of multi-site

clinical trials

• strong residency program

• national awards and honors

• strategic alliances

• patient visits

Wildly successful CEO who gets own show and fires Donald Trump on national TV

Here’s what we o er:

• new research avenues

• new treatment methods

• new hope and healing

• free checking

Botanist, karateblack belt, speakerof six languages

Here are our departments

• Pulmonology

• Hematology/oncology

• Cystic fibrosis

• Nephrology

• Neonatology

• Gastroenterology

• Infectious diseases

• Advanced diagnostics

• Housewares

• Bed & bath

Olympic swimmer

Two important truths

1. Our families entrust uswith their greatest treasure,their children.

2. Our young patientsdeserve nothing less thanworld class care.

Famous artist

Dentist,playwright

Philanthropy is essential(n. 1. love of giving generously to Emory)

• Attract and retain

• Prepare tomorrow’s leaders

• From beaker to bedside

• Outstanding patient careBeaker

Bedside

Our destination

• New research building

• Endowed residency program

• Endowed division chiefs

• Endowed fellowships

Imagine the possibilities

“100 years from now, it won’t matter what kind ofcar I drove, the kind of house I lived in, or how muchmoney was in my bank account. What will matter is thefact that I made a di erence in the life of a child.”