Transforming Today Reshaping Tomorrow

Transcription

Transforming Today Reshaping Tomorrow
Transforming Today Reshaping Tomorrow
MISSION STATEMENT
The HealthCare Chaplaincy is a multifaith community of professionals from many cultures
dedicated to caring for persons in spirit, mind, and body.
We are committed to excellence and leadership in pastoral care, education, and research.
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
THE HEALTHCARE CHAPLAINCY ANNUAL REPORT 2006
Mission Statement
From the Chairman and the President & CEO
Transforming Today
Jackson Kytle, Ph.D.
The Rev. Dr. Sarah Fogg
The Rev. George Handzo
Rabbi Naomi Kalish
Al Hajji Imam Yusuf H. Hasan
Chaplains in Action
Reshaping Tomorrow
The Wholeness of Life Residence
A Roundtable Discussion
New Trustees
Treasurer’s Report
Financial Statements
Administrative Center
315 East 62nd Street, 4th Floor
New York, NY 10021-7767
Phone: 212-644-1111
Fax: 212-758-9959
Center for Pastoral Care, Education & Research
307 East 60th Street
New York, NY 10022-1505
Phone: 212-644-1111
Fax: 212-486-1440
www.healthcarechaplaincy.org
A Gathering of Friends
Gifts from Institutions
Gifts from Individuals
Hope & Remembrance Society
Board of Trustees
Life Trustees/President’s Advisory Council
Clinical Staff and Partners
2006 At-A-Glance
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TRANSFORMING TODAY RESHAPING TOMORROW
Transformation is a concept that
A REFLECTION FROM THE CHAIRMAN AND THE PRESIDENT & CEO
spirit-centered care within this new partner institution,
spans the domains of math and science,
a 407-bed community hospital that has been pro-
computer technology and literature, psychology
viding quality health care for the communities of
and law, music and linguistics. But for
Yonkers and southern Westchester since 1869.
The HealthCare Chaplaincy, transformation has
become a way of life.
In an effort to transform how pastoral care is
viewed and delivered throughout the United
Beginning in 1961 as a single-faith provider of
States, The Chaplaincy inaugurated a pastoral
chaplaincy services, through continuous reflection
care consulting service. With 29 years of successful
and strategic expansion, The HealthCare
experience on the staff of The HealthCare
Chaplaincy has transformed itself into a leading
Chaplaincy, the Rev. George Handzo, the program’s
voice in the professional fields of pastoral care,
director, will share some of the early accomplishments.
education, consulting, and research. In this
process, The Chaplaincy has become more centered,
Widening its reach, The Chaplaincy’s PlainViews
more confident, more flexible, and more able to
e-newsletter has continued to impact an increasingly
fulfill its core mission to care for people in spirit,
diverse professional audience, expanding its readership
mind, and body.
to nearly 8,000, with subscribers ministering on five
continents.
During its 45th anniversary year, The Chaplaincy’s
internal transformation accelerated. Jackson
While maintaining a strong commitment to its
Kytle, Ph.D., vice president for academic affairs,
historic clinical, education, and research partnerships
initiated a substantive assessment and expansion
with some of New York and Connecticut’s premier
of The Chaplaincy’s education and research programs,
healthcare institutions, The HealthCare Chaplaincy
paving the way for a boldly expanded research
is imagining new ways to ensure that spirituality
agenda and pioneering graduate-level pastoral
plays its proper and essential role in holistic
education programs focused on preparing the
health care.
most academically seasoned chaplain educators
in the United States.
We thank you, our benefactors and philanthropic
partners, our trustees and colleagues, for your
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The Chaplaincy has continued to broaden its clinical
indispensable roles in this continuous transformation
partnerships. In this report, the Rev. Dr. Sarah Fogg,
of The HealthCare Chaplaincy, and for the important
founding director of pastoral care at St. John’s
ways in which your sustained support will help us
Riverside Hospital, will discuss transformations in
to reshape tomorrow.
Lawrence J. Toal Chairman
Walter J. Smith, S. J. President and CEO
Annual Report 2006
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Australia
rican Methodist Episcopal
China
merican Baptist
Colombia
semblies of God
MISSION STATEMENT
England
America
ptist
Haiti community
The HealthCare Chaplaincy is a multifaith
Australiaof professionals from many cultures
ddhist
Africandedicated
Methodist
Episcopal
caring for persons inIndia
spirit, mind,
and body.
China
inese Church of the to
Nazarene
American Baptist
Iran Colombia
urch of GodWe are committed to excellence and
leadership in pastoral care, education, and research.
Assemblies of God
Israel
England
nservative Jewish
Baptist
JamaicaHaiti America
sciples of Christ
Buddhist
Korea India Australia
iscopal
African Methodist Episcopal
Chinese Church of the Nazarene
MexicoIran
China
angelical Covenant
American Baptist
Church of God
angelical Lutheran
Churchof
inGod
America NigeriaIsrael Colombia
Assemblies
Conservative Jewish
Pakistan
JamaicaEnglandAmerica
erfaith
Baptist
Disciples of Christ
Peru Korea Haiti
rean Presbyterian
Buddhist
Australia
Episcopal
Vietnam
Mexico India China
ennonite
Chinese Church of the Nazarene
Evangelical Covenant
ZambiaNigeriaIran
ssionary Baptist
Church of God
Colombia
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
PakistanIsrael England
odern Orthodox
Jewish
Conservative
Jewish
America
Interfaith
Jamaica
Peru
uslim
Disciples of Christ
Haiti Australia
Korean Presbyterian
VietnamKorea India China
ondenominational
Protestant
Episcopal
Mennonite
ZambiaMexico Iran Colombia
thodox Jewish Evangelical Covenant
Missionary Baptist
Nigeria Israel
ntecostal
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
England
Modern Orthodox Jewish
Pakistan
esbyterian
Interfaith
JamaicaHaiti
Muslim
Peru Korea
ogressive National
Baptist
Korean
Presbyterian
India
Nondenominational Protestant
Vietnam
constructionistMennonite
Jewish
MexicoIran
Orthodox Jewish
ZambiaNigeria
formed ChurchMissionary Baptist
Israel
Pentecostal
form Jewish Modern Orthodox Jewish
Pakistan
Jamaica
Presbyterian
man Catholic Muslim
Peru Korea
Progressive National Baptist
venth Day Adventist
Nondenominational Protestant
Vietnam
Mexico
Reconstructionist Jewish
itarian Universalist
Orthodox Jewish
ZambiaNigeria
Reformed Church
ited Church ofPentecostal
Christ
Pakistan
Reform Jewish
ited MethodistPresbyterian
Peru
Roman Catholic
Progressive National Baptist
Vietnam
Seventh Day Adventist
Reconstructionist Jewish
Zambia
Unitarian Universalist
Reformed Church
United Church of Christ
Reform Jewish
United Methodist
Roman Catholic
Seventh Day Adventist
The HealthCare Chaplaincy’s Clinical
Unitarian Universalist
Pastoral Education (CPE) program
United Church of Christ
attracts students of many different
United Methodist
faiths and home countries. As you
can see from the above list, 2006
was no exception.
Transforming Today
Accountability: It’s the single most important
driving force in higher education today. No longer is it
enough to say students are learning what we want them to
learn—you have to prove it.
In 2006, The Chaplaincy internalized this “don’t tell me,
show me” ethos to a greater extent than ever before, utilizing
our Spears Research Center to assess aptitude for spiritual
caregiving before and after a student’s Clinical Pastoral
Education (CPE) experience.
At the same time, we’ve discerned a need to broaden our
students’ education beyond current national standards, better
preparing them for the fast-changing arena of 21st century
healthcare.
Through research
we’ve discovered that
CPE helps students
improve their listening
skills, their “emotional
intelligence,” and their
ability to serve patients
of differing religious
and cultural traditions.
Jackson Kytle, Ph.D., is The Chaplaincy’s founding vice president for academic affairs. A progressive educator and administrator, Dr. Kytle has
served at leading educational institutions including Antioch College, Goddard College and, most recently, The New School in New York City.
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That’s why we’ve embarked on a fundamental revision of all
of our academic policies, curricula, and faculty requirements.
In fact, we’ve begun changing the entire educational delivery
model so that students benefit not from a single educator but
from many of our diverse faculty members, our senior clinical
staff and researchers, and healthcare professionals from other
fields.
Most importantly, we’ve revised and expanded the segment
of our program that focuses on our supervisors-in-training.
These “pastoral educators of tomorrow” will have a broader
academic frame of reference than the preceding generation,
with knowledge of research methods in the behavioral sciences,
theories of education, and spiritual development across the
life span. They’ll also get the pastoral counseling skills necessary
to treat patients over extended periods and, particularly, at
the end of life.
Tomorrow’s graduate pastoral educators will be poised to
educate not just chaplains, but also a variety of healthcare
professionals—individuals who want to integrate spiritcentered care into their own specialty areas and their
home institutions. Put another way, we’re not just asking
people to practice spirit-centered care, we’re showing
them how.
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Having a multifaith pastoral
care department sends a clear
signal to patients and staff alike
that the institution is not simply
focused on treating physical
disease, but rather the whole
patient: spirit, mind, and body.
The Rev. Dr. Sarah Fogg (left), founding pastoral care director at St. John’s Riverside Hospital in Yonkers, New York,
discusses patient care plans with the nurse care management team.
Vice President for Pastoral Care Leadership and Practice, the Rev. George Handzo is the lead force behind our
consultation and assessment service, designed to help hospitals and other organizations across the country build or
improve upon an existing multifaith pastoral care department. The Rev. Handzo has been with The Chaplaincy for
29 years and is a past president of the Association of Professional Chaplains, the largest association of pastoral
care professionals in North America.
The most important
There’s little dispute
part of my job is doing what chaplains have always done—walk with
patients and their grieving loved
ones as they struggle with what may
be the most difficult moment in their
lives. But another aspect of modern
chaplaincy is making sure that spiritual
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It’s not just about hiring
a chaplain for a particular
institution. It’s about
making sure patients and
staff get the spiritual and
emotional care they
need.
care doesn’t stop when I leave the
patient’s room. A truly patient-centered
approach means making sure that the
entire staff—including local community
clergy and trained lay volunteers—work
as a team to surround the patient in a
circle of care. It’s hard to fall when
you’re supported by so many caring
hands.
these days about the value of multifaith pastoral care in healthcare
settings. But many organizations
aren’t sure how to get an effective
spiritual care program off the ground.
Through our pastoral research initiatives and our Consulting Service, The
Chaplaincy can now share its
expertise in pastoral care program
development—honed over 46 years
of service in the New York area—with
a national audience. Like research,
consulting is an excellent tool for
sharing our model of evidence-based
pastoral care, and showing how it
can be integrated into a healthcare
organization.
Annual Report 2006
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I’m grateful to The
HealthCare Chaplaincy
for helping me take a
leading role educating
the next generation of
professional Jewish
chaplains.
Healing is about more
than just getting well
physically. It’s about
learning to see the
spiritual and emotional
value in what you’re
experiencing.
Rabbi Naomi Kalish is Educational Coordinator of The Chaplaincy’s Center for Studies in Jewish Pastoral Care. She also
supervises multifaith groups of Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) students at St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital Center.
My transformation
began when I took my first CPE program at The HealthCare Chaplaincy.
I’ve grown a lot since then, learning
first how to become a professional
chaplain and then—through the
supervisory training program—an
educator of pastoral care students.
I thank The Chaplaincy for guiding
me in my personal journey, and for
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helping transform the field of
Jewish theological education itself.
Because of The Chaplaincy and its
Center for Studies in Jewish
Pastoral Care, pastoral education is
becoming a regular part of Jewish
seminary education, and ordained
rabbis and cantors from across the
country are learning how to better
serve their congregants.
Al Hajji Imam Yusuf H. Hasan is a healthcare chaplain at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. A former student
in The Chaplaincy’s CPE program, Imam Hasan became the world’s first certified Muslim chaplain in 1996. He is an
acknowledged expert on the spiritual and emotional needs of Muslim patients in healthcare settings.
When cancer strikes,
the whole family is sent on a journey
it never asked to take. As a chaplain,
my job is to walk with the patient
and his or her loved ones, helping all
of them make the difficult journey
from despair to hope, even if the
medical outcome isn’t favorable.
That’s my job—to uplift, to gently
lead (and sometimes follow) so that
everyone affected by cancer can
make the transition from hopeless
to hopeful.
Annual Report 2006
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CHAPLAINS IN ACTION
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Rabbi Ralph Kreger, a staff chaplain at the Hospital for Special Surgery, comforts a
sick patient’s family member. Now in his tenth year with The HealthCare Chaplaincy,
Rabbi Kreger was formerly a student in our Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) program.
The Rev. Wilfredo Rodriguez, director of pastoral care at Lenox Hill Hospital, consults
with fellow hospital staff. A Lieutenant Commander in the U.S. Reserves, the Rev.
Rodriguez recently returned from his second tour of duty as a Marine chaplain at
the Camp Taqqadum Surgical Shock Trauma Unit in Iraq.
The Rev. Jo Clare Wilson ministers to a patient at Griffin Hospital in Derby,
Connecticut, where she serves as director of pastoral care and education. She is a
certified chaplain supervisor, providing CPE to many beginning chaplains each year
at Griffin.
The Rev. Alfred Kambaki, a chaplain educator serving at NYU Hospitals Center,
discusses a pastoral research question with research associate Kathleen Galek, Ph.D.
Dr. Galek was previously a Fellow in The Chaplaincy’s two-year Post-Doctoral
Research program, funded by the John Templeton Foundation. She and other
Chaplaincy research staff published 12 peer-reviewed studies in 2006, many in
collaboration with our chaplains and faculty members.
Annual Report 2006
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Reshaping Tomorrow
THE WHOLENESS OF LIFE RESIDENCE
Integrating Multifaith Spirit-Centered Care at the End of Life
Caring for the Whole Person
Environmentally Efficient
Green Roof System
The Wholeness of Life facility will offer residents at
the end of life a non-denominational but spiritually
fulfilling community, regardless of their faith, or
even if they have no religious background at all.
While receiving world-class medical care for their
bodies, residents will also be afforded many
opportunities to grow intellectually and spiritually.
Wholeness of Life Residence
Developing Spirit-Centered Care Leaders
The Center for Palliative Education will help medical
professionals, social workers, and others inside and
outside the clergical world learn the theory and
practice of spirit-centered patient care.
Medical Group Practice
Chaplaincy Offices
Each floor will be a micro-neighborhood for 10 residents.
The center area will be a common space for shared meals,
group activities, and visits from family and friends.
Serving Our New Community
Spears Research Center
The Chaplaincy will partner with the City of New
York to build a model pre-kindergarten-throughgrade-five school on the ground floor. This will
create learning opportunities for students and
residents alike.
Community Center
Pre-K to 5th Grade School
ARTIST’S RENDITION
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Annual Report 2006
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THE WHOLENESS
OF
LIFE RESIDENCE: A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
KATHLEEN M. FOLEY, M.D.
Attending Neurologist, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Professor of Neurology and Neurosurgery and Clinical Pharmacology,
Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Director of the Palliative Care Initiative Network, Public Health Program of
the Open Society Institute
Changing the way we care for the dying means—first
and foremost—educating new thought leaders in the healthcare profession. I don’t just mean physicians
but nurses, psychologists, social workers, chaplains, and executive administrative staff—anyone who
cares for the whole person at the end of life. The Wholeness of Life residence will be an international
destination for specialists in all of these areas—a place for them to learn a new paradigm of integrative
care that can be applied to their own institutions.
C. RONALD MACKENZIE, M.D.
Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine, Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Associate Attending Physician, Hospital for Special Surgery
For too long, physicians have been trained to look at death
as a failure rather than as part of the natural course of life. But incurable disease happens. Old age
happens. Death happens. When we are unable to cure, we need to apply better strategies for care,
which means no longer focusing just on disease and other biological processes but on the entire
individual. The Wholeness of Life residence will show medical professionals how to improve quality
of care for their most vulnerable patients.
ELIZABETH A. BALTZ
Former Senior Vice President, MasterCard International
HOWARD F. SHARFSTEIN, ESQ.
Partner, Schulte Roth & Zabel LLP
As a cancer survivor, I learned from the chaplains who treated me—a rabbi
and a Roman Catholic nun—that “religious diversity” is more than just a nice slogan. It’s a force
that can inspire us to reflect deeper on our faith. Based on my experience as a former patient and
current trustee of The Chaplaincy (and a student in its Clinical Pastoral Education program) I have
no doubt The Wholeness of Life residence will represent the multifaith model for spirit-centered,
end-of-life care in this country.
JEANNE LEE
Executive Vice President and COO,
The HealthCare Chaplaincy
I’ve spent most of my career in healthcare and The
Wholeness of Life residence is the most ambitious and rewarding project I’ve ever worked on.
The residence will be a true “living laboratory” where models for fuller, more spiritually centered
care at the end of life are practiced, taught, studied and refined.
PATRICK CHARMEL
President and CEO, Griffin Hospital
I have examined hundreds of business plans over the
The Wholeness of Life model is exciting because every
years. The very best of them marry a clear, creative vision of the future with a strong track record
of success with previous ventures. This describes The HealthCare Chaplaincy and its commitment
to create the Wholeness of Life residence. As a trustee, I have seen firsthand The Chaplaincy’s careful
research into the end-of-life care field, and their planning process to improve it. This organization
understands the healthcare arena and what the needs are.
aspect of its design will be geared toward spiritual and psychological care. Residents will form a community with one another, with the chaplains and medical staff, and with the local community. That’s
the kind of mutual support system that makes an institution a home. As the CEO of a hospital known
for its patient-centered approach, I’m confident this project will be a great benefit to its residents and
to the healthcare field at large.
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Annual Report 2006
19
NEW TRUSTEES
Claire Haaga Altman is executive
director at ReServe Elder Service, a
new non-profit organization that
matches skilled, educated retirees
with stipended volunteer opportunities in non-profit and government organizations. Claire is also
founder and chair of the
Woodycrest Extended Care
Network, an AIDS residential
health care facility. Until 2005,
Claire was president of Housing &
Services, Inc., a non-profit housing
corporation, which she founded.
Nicholas Haines is a director at The
Bromley Companies, a real estate
investment and management firm,
where he oversees property and
development site acquisitions and
divestitures. Nicholas previously
served as vice president of business
development at Vaultus, Inc., a
wireless software and consulting
company. Mr. Haines also served as
a founding member of the Direct
Investment Group at Merrill Lynch
and as an investment analyst at
Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.
Judith A. Lewittes is a consultant
specializing in fundraising and
board development for educational
institutes and nonprofits. Formerly
a vice president for development at
Vassar College, she was a member
of its senior administrative staff for
many years, serving under three
college presidents. Prior to
becoming chief fundraising officer,
she was the director of Vassar’s
Annual Fund. Judith’s extensive
volunteer and civic activities
include service on numerous nonprofit boards.
Hector V. Perez is a director at
PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) in
the Transaction Services Group.
Prior to this role, Hector was part
of PwC's Capital Markets Group,
serving clients in the alternative
investments industry. He is a
Certified Public Accountant in
New York State and serves as
national vice president of the
Association of Latino Professionals
in Finance and Accounting
(ALPFA).
T. Timothy Ryan is vice chairman,
Financial Institutions and
Governments, at JPMorgan Chase,
where he is a member of the firm's
senior leadership and serves on its
Investment Banking Coverage/M&A
Management Committee. Tim is a
director of The U.S.-Japan
Foundation, The Fund for American
Studies, the International Foundation
for Election Systems, and the
Mortgage Roundtable. He was formerly a director of the Resolution
Trust Corporation and the FDIC.
Jill Totenberg is president and CEO of
The Totenberg Group, a communications and marketing firm known for
implementing high-impact programs.
Jill specializes in corporate branding,
positioning, media relations, crisis
management, and internal communications. Prior to creating her firm, Jill
was senior vice president, public
affairs, for TD Waterhouse, vice president of marketing for CSC Index, and
vice president of worldwide communications for Gemini Consulting. She
is a board member of Project Health
and is a member of the Arthur Page
Society and the Wisemen.
Elizabeth A. Baltz is a global financial services executive. She spent
twenty years with MasterCard
International in a number of top
positions focusing on global business development, management
of top corporate divisions, and
providing leadership to financial
services executives around the
world. Elizabeth serves on boards
of several New York organizations
including Big Apple Greeter,
Financial Women’s Association,
and Ray of Light Foundation.
Gregory D. Kennedy is a managing
director in the Financial Institutions
Group at Credit Suisse in New York.
Greg manages the firm's relationships
with many large depository institution clients. Before becoming an
investment banker, Greg practiced
law at Sullivan & Cromwell. Greg is
an active alumnus of Stanford
University and Stanford Law School,
in recognition of which he was
awarded membership in, and an
Outstanding Achievement Award
from, the Stanford Associates. Greg is
also on the board of the not-for-profit
ArtsConnection in New York.
Deborah Miller is an entrepreneur
in the public and private sectors.
In 1994 she co-founded Children’s
Academies for Achievement, a
not-for-profit organization that
created The Samuel DeWitt
Proctor Academy, the first public
boarding school chartered in the
United States. Deborah previously
ran Panache Imports Ltd., which
consulted to the fashion and textile industries. She is a member of
the Trustees Council of Penn
Women and of the boards of Say
Yes to Education and the Adopt a
Dog Foundation.
Marcella Rosen is co-founder (with
her late husband, David Sacks) of
the Campus Truth Foundation, an
organization that combats intolerance on college campuses.
Marcella has held top positions in
advertising and internet companies. She was an executive vice
president of NW Ayer Inc., and
president of Trager-Rosen Inc.
Marcella is a director of the 92nd
St. Y, the Heschel School, and the
Hebrew Free Loan Society.
The Rev. Caroline Stacey has been
rector of St. Luke in the Fields
Episcopal Church, New York City,
since May 2005. Before arriving at
St. Luke’s, Mother Stacey was rector
of All Saints’ Church in East
Lansing, Michigan. Earlier, Mother
Stacey served at Trinity Church,
Wall Street, and Trinity on the
Green in New Haven,
Connecticut. She is on the Board
of Trustees at Berkeley Divinity
School at Yale, her alma mater.
Alex von Bidder is a managing
partner of The Four Seasons
Restaurant in New York City. For
over 30 years, Alex has been a
guiding force behind this legendary and world famous icon of
architecture and exquisite taste.
Alex is also a certified yoga teacher
and sailboat captain who co-leads
men’s retreats in Europe and
across the United States. He enjoys
teaching classes on creativity and
personal mastery at Columbia
University, and a course on modern manners at New York
University.
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Annual Report 2006
21
2002-2006 OPERATING RESULTS
TREASURER’S REPORT
(in thousands)
The HealthCare Chaplaincy maintains a strong balance
sheet, with audited results for 2006 reflecting an overall increase in
total net assets of $0.8 million. In the same year, there was a 17%
increase in funding from foundations and trusts, as well as vigorous
philanthropic support from trustees and other loyal benefactors. From this
secure financial position, The Chaplaincy has pursued ambitious programmatic
development in all of its core mission-driven areas: multifaith clinical pastoral
care, consulting, education, and research.
The Chaplaincy shepherded its fiscal resources with typically high
accountability and efficiency. Although 2006 was a year of planned
growth, transformation, and capacity building, The Chaplaincy maintained
an enviable track record in balancing the ratio of its program support to
overall administrative expenses.
The HealthCare Chaplaincy is a strategic, forward-thinking organization.
The encouragement, vision, and steadfast commitment of our benefactors
enables The Chaplaincy to advance the cause of multifaith pastoral care
locally, nationally, and internationally.
My fellow trustees join with me in thanking you for your significant contribution
to the continuing leadership role that The HealthCare Chaplaincy is exercising in
the professional fields of pastoral care, education, and research.
Hector V. Perez, C.P.A.
Treasurer
Net Assets 1998-2006 (in millions)
$35.1
35.0
“In 2006, 80 cents of every
dollar spent was allocated
in support of our multifaith programs in spiritual
care, education, research,
and consulting.”
$31.2
30.0
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
341.8
1,278.2
51.2
906.3
921.5
3,499.0
195.3
1,275.3
66.5
663.5
1,056.0
3,256.6
493.9
1,000.3
34.6
858.4
938.9
3,329.1
31.6
658.2
33.9
952.8
1,192.9
2,869.4
101.1
790.0
41.2
743.6
1,097.6
2,773.5
3,003.1
2,688.6
2,442.8
2,454.7
2,487.0
180.5
0.0
51.9
101.6
334.0
6,836.1
230.9
150.0
55.7
99.4
536.0
6,481.2
299.9
200.0
22.3
108.4
630.7
6,402.6
590.9
563.4
50.7
148.3
1,353.4
6,677.5
585.5
876.9
35.1
302.7
1,800.2
7,060.7
2,047.1
1,856.3
1,176.4
1,980.0
1,618.2
1,162.4
1,948.5
1,468.9
1,213.8
2,063.3
1,447.4
1,280.3
456.6
5,536.4
485.6
5,246.2
533.2
5,164.4
550.0
5,341.0
1,975.1
1,529.7
1,259.2
217.9
616.6
5,598.5
668.2
621.0
1,289.2
6,825.6
536.4
687.3
1,223.7
6,469.9
551.8
654.3
1,206.1
6,370.5
633.1
700.2
1,333.3
6,674.3
640.2
812.7
1,452.9
7,051.4
10.5
11.3
32.1
3.2
9.3
Support and Revenue
Contributions
Corporations
Foundations & Trusts
Religious Organizations
Individuals & Estates
Benefit (net of expenses)
Total Contributions
Service Income
Other Income
Investment Income from Restricted
Funds Utilized in Operations
Other Investment Income Utilized in Operations
Donated Goods & Services
Tuition, Student Fees, Miscellaneous
Total Other Income
Total Support and Revenue
Operating Expenses
Program Services
Patient/Family Care
Professional Education
Community Outreach
Wholeness of Life Center
Research
Total Program Services
Support Services
Administration (including depreciation)
Fundraising, Annual
Total Support Services
Total Expenses
Revenue (Under)/Over Expenses
25.0
$23.4
$20.8
20.0
15.0
$14.9
10.0
5.0
1998
22
2000
2002
2004
2006
Annual Report 2006
23
2002-2006 STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES
2002-2006 STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION
(in thousands)
(in thousands)
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
Contributions
Corporations
Foundations & Trusts
Religious Organizations
Individuals & Estates
Benefit (net of expenses)
Total Contributions
273.1
631.9
76.1
1,316.2
1,021.5
3,318.8
264.4
1,657.0
88.5
750.2
1,056.0
3,816.1
113.8
340.3
34.6
808.6
885.9
2,183.2
31.6
658.3
33.9
1,078.1
1,062.5
2,864.4
51.1
770.7
41.3
564.3
1,042.1
2,469.5
Service Income
2,960.9
2,666.3
2,420.1
2,454.7
2,473.3
Other Income
Investment Income Utilized
Investment Income Not Utilized in Operations
Tuition, Student Fees, Miscellaneous
Total Other Income
Total Support and Revenue
58.1
0.0
87.5
145.6
6,425.3
230.9
5,643.3
80.6
5,954.8
12,437.2
299.9
3,455.9
108.4
3,864.2
8,467.5
1,159.3
3,137.9
148.3
4,445.5
9,764.6
1,409.1
1,300.2
162.6
2,871.9
7,814.7
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
629.7
600.4
2,188.0
47.5
13,188.9
6,897.7
23,553.2
862.4
549.0
2,118.8
43.0
19,150.7
6,616.5
29,340.4
588.0
325.3
1924.9
55.7
22,224.6
6,246.3
31,364.8
649.4
548.9
2,222.0
52.2
25,122.1
5,946.6
34,541.2
1,045.4
377.9
2,200.3
41.6
26,118.0
5,612.3
35,395.5
151.4
151.4
120.4
120.4
150.1
150.1
236.3
236.3
327.2
327.2
6,897.7
6,616.5
6,246.3
5,946.6
5,612.3
Designated
Long-Term Investment
Capital Improvements Fund
Undesignated
Total Unrestricted Net Assets
4,902.8
864.0
2,520.0
15,184.5
8,774.6
1,469.9
1,334.0
18,195.0
11,131.6
1,769.4
819.8
19,967.1
12,680.4
1,769.4
1,022.6
21,419.0
12,387.7
2,772.1
795.0
21,567.1
Temporarily Restricted
Permanently Restricted
Total Net Assets
Total Liabilities and Net Assets
5,409.5
2,806.8
23,400.8
23,552.2
7,153.7
3,871.4
29,220.1
29,340.4
7,359.5
3,888.1
31,214.7
31,364.8
8,977.8
3,908.2
34,305.0
34,541.3
9,399.1
4,102.1
35.068.3
35,395.5
Support and Revenue
Assets
Liabilities and Net Assets
Operating Expenses
Program Services
Patient/Family Care
Professional Education
Community Outreach
Wholeness of Life Center
Research
Total Program Services
Support Services
Administration (including depreciation)
Fundraising, Annual
Total Support Services
Total Expenses
Change in Net Assets
Net Assets, Beginning of Year
Net Assets, End of Year
Cash and Cash Equivalents
Accrued Income Receivable
Pledges and Grants Receivable
Prepaid Expenses and Deposits
Investments
Land, Buildings and Equipment
Total Assets
2,050.4
1,852.9
1,176.4
1,996.5
1,618.2
1,293.9
2,003.3
1,466.7
1,264.8
2,063.3
1,447.4
1,280.3
456.6
5,536.3
485.6
5,394.1
533.2
5,268.0
550.0
5,341.0
1,975.1
1,529.7
1,259.2
217.9
616.6
5,598.5
668.2
621.0
1,289.2
6,825.5
536.4
687.3
1,223.7
6,617.9
551.6
653.3
1,204.1
6,472.9
633.1
700.2
1,333.3
6,674.3
640.2
812.7
1,452.9
7,051.4
-400.2
23,801.0
23,400.8
5,819.3
23,400.8
29,220.1
1,994.6
29,220.1
31,214.7
3,090.3
31,214.7
34,305.0
763.3
34,305.0
35,068.3
Liabilities
Accounts Payable and Accrued Expenses
Total Liabilities
Net Assets
Unrestricted
Net Investment in Land, Buildings,
and Equipment
Audited financial statements of The HealthCare Chaplaincy, Inc. are available by writing to The HealthCare Chaplaincy, Finance Department,
315 East 62nd Street, New York, NY 10021, or to the Department of State, Office of Charities Registration, Albany, NY 12331.
24
Annual Report 2006
25
A GATHERING OF FRIENDS: 2006 WHOLENESS OF LIFE AWARDS DINNER
Susan and Edgar Wachenheim III alongside Arlyn and Edward L. Gardner, 2005 Wholeness of Life honorees
Judy R. and trustee T. Timothy Ryan
Co-chair Richard E. Salomon, Community Honoree and Chaplaincy life trustee William G.
Spears, and co-chair Michael H. Steinhardt
Trustee Maria T. and William G. Spears, life trustee
Trustee Christopher C. Grisanti, Leisa S. Crane, Suzanne P. Fawbush, and former trustee
Charles G. Crane
Andrea and Robert R. Berger
26
Trustee Emanuel Chirico
Carol and Edward M. Dinan, president & CEO of
Lawrence Hospital Center
Trustee James E. Buckman and his wife, Nancy
Jackson Kytle, Ph.D., vice president, academic affairs; Barnaby Marsh, D.Phil., of the
John Templeton Foundation; and the Rev. George Handzo, vice president, pastoral care
leadership & practice
Trustee Rochelle Hirsch; Malcolm Thomson; trustee Judith A. Lewittes next to her husband, David;
trustee Diana S. Goldin beside her husband, Jay; trustee Ira Greenblatt and his wife, Linda (standing)
Carter J. and Gladys Dinkeloo
Annual Report 2006
27
GIFTS FROM INSTITUTIONS
$100,000 and Above
Fannie E. Rippel Foundation
Robertson Foundation
The Starr Foundation
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
William Randolph Hearst Foundations
$25,000 - $99,000
Anonymous
Altria Group, Inc.
The Brenner Family Foundation
Enpro International, Inc.
Goldman Sachs
The Hagedorn Fund
The Ambrose Monell Foundation
May and Samuel Rudin Family
Foundation, Inc.
Spears Grisanti & Brown LLC
The John Templeton Foundation
$10,000 - $24,999
Anonymous
Hospital for Special Surgery
The Leonard & Evelyn Lauder Foundation
The Lucius N. Littauer Foundation
Edward S. Moore Family Foundation
MetLife, Inc.
Morris Levinson Foundation
Morrison & Foerster
The Henry & Lucy Moses Fund
New York Hospital Queens
The New York Physicians Foundation, Inc.
Phillips-Van Heusen Corporation
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
St. Thomas Church Fifth Avenue
Alan B. Slifka Foundation, Inc.
The Taylor Companies
Tishman Speyer Properties, LP
The Winifred Masterson Burke Foundation
$5,000 - $9,999
Beth Israel Medical Center
The Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation, Inc.
The Burke Rehabilitation Hospital
Collegiate Church Corporation
Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church
Griffin Hospital
Lawrence Hospital Center
28
GIFTS FROM INDIVIDUALS
Lenox Hill Hospital
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Morgan Stanley Foundation
North Shore University Hospital
NYU Hospitals Center
Quinnipiac University
The Seth Sprague Educational and
Charitable Foundation
St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center
Sullivan & Cromwell
Vassar Brothers Medical Center
Winthrop-University Hospital
$2,500 - $4,999
Beck Foundation
Congregation Emanu-El of the City of
New York
Robert G. Hayhurst, Jr. Family Foundation
Marble Collegiate Church
Metzger-Price Fund, Inc.
The Picower Foundation
The James and Chantal Sheridan
Foundation
$1,000 - $2,499
J. Aron Charitable Foundation, Inc.
John R. and Dorothy D. Caples Fund
The Carwill Foundation
Congregation Or Zarua
The Constans Culver Foundation
DEARS Foundation, Inc.
Episcopal Diocese of New York
First American International Bank
The Hebrew Home for the Aged at
Riverdale
Heilbut, Rosenman, Radin & Cho
Dentists P.C.
The Peter T. Joseph Foundation
The Samuel J. & Ethel LeFrak
Charitable Trust
Leon Levy Foundation
The Vincent Mulford Foundation
New York Academy of Medicine
The Resource Foundation, Inc.
Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo & Associates
The Evelyn Sharp Foundation
St. Michael's Church
$999 and Below
Christ Church (United Methodist Women)
Church of the Heavenly Rest
Church of the Holy Family
Congregation Shearith Israel
The First Baptist Church
St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal
Church
Park Avenue United Methodist Church
Gifts In Kind
Preston Bailey
Jonathan G. Blattmachr
Cipriani
Foliage Gardens, Inc.
Heilbut, Rosenman, Radin & Cho
Dentists, P.C.
Heller Ehrman LLP
JPMorgan Private Bank
Mutual of America
Phillips-Van Heusen Corporation
Seward & Kissel LLP
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz
Sylvia Weinstock
Visionaries ($50,000+)
Anonymous
Elaine and Kenneth G. Langone
Susan and Jack Rudin
Laura Landro and Richard E. Salomon
Janet Prindle Seidler and
Charles J. Seidler, Jr.
Maria T. and William G. Spears
Judith and Michael H. Steinhardt
Partners in Healing
($25,000 - $49,999)
Anonymous
Regina Pitaro and Mario J. Gabelli
Nicholas Haines
Diana D. Torres and Frank J. Petrilli
Estate of Ayse Rosin
Sheila and Lawrence J. Toal
Susan and Edgar Wachenheim III
Sustainers of the Spirit
($17,500 - $24,999)
Nancy and James E. Buckman
Judith Rush and T. Timothy Ryan
Champions of Care
($10,000 - $17,499)
Anonymous
Estate of Janet C. Bosse
Robin and Marshall Cloyd
David F. DeLucia
Stephen M. DuBrul Jr.
Kathe and John S. Dyson
Judith and Anthony B. Evnin, Ph.D.
Charlotte M. Ford
Mary and Michael E. Gellert
Linda J. and Ira J. Greenblatt
Suzanne P. Fawbush
and Christopher C. Grisanti
Deborah Elizabeth and the Honorable
Thomas H. Kean
Ann and Thomas L. Kempner
Victoria S. Reese and Gregory D. Kennedy
Catherine and T. Michael Long
Miriam K. Moran
Beth Goldberg Nash and Joshua Nash
Catherine A. Rein
Catherine L. and Francis P. Rich
Lynn Rothstein, Ph.D.
Helen S. Tucker
Keepers of the Flame
($5,000 - $9,999)
Elizabeth A. Baltz
Patricia and Charles C. Baum
Anson Beard, Jr.
Marilyn and Richard Blair
Mary and David J. Callard
Susan and Alexander W. Casdin
Joanne and Emanuel Chirico
Kathryn Christensen
Lynn and Langdon Cook
Leisa S. and Charles G. Crane
Joan H. and Alfred C. DeCrane
Gladys and Carter J. Dinkeloo
Kathleen M. Foley, M.D.
and Charles T. Foley
Sharon and Tracy Fu
Arlyn and Edward L. Gardner
Robin L. and Peter A. Gish
Gretchen and Eugene P. Grisanti
Rochelle and David A. Hirsch
Lynn and John W. Johnson, Jr.
Maxine Isaacs and James A. Johnson
Jane and Charles Klein
Joann and R. Todd Lang
Jeanne and James W. Lee
Michele B. and Matthew M. Ludmer
Christy K. and John J. Mack
Catherine C. and Donald B. Marron
Lucy Flemming McGrath
Elizabeth M. and Thomas A. Renyi
Deborah and Charles M. Royce
Alan V. Schwartz
Kimberly W. and Thomas J. Sheridan
The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
Nelle Nugent and Jolyon F. Stern
Lorna and David H. Strassler
Sheryl and Daniel R. Tishman
Carolyn A. and the Rev. John D. Twiname
Anna and Alfred M. Vinton, Jr.
Sandra and Alex von Bidder
Judy Francis Zankel
Catherine Be Zoullas
Torch Bearers
($2,500 - $4,999)
Robert L. Cahill, Jr.
Mary Ann and Malcolm E. Cloyd
Lavonne and David A. Cowan
Therese Deierlein
Ruth D. and Robert E. Diefenbach
William W. Donnell
Katherine and William G. Gahagan
Itty and Spencer B. Hays
Margaret M. Hill
Anita M. Larsen
Anne Moore, M.D.
and Arnold L. Lisio, M.D.
Joanne Jaffin Mason and Douglas Mason
Ronay A. and Richard L. Menschel
Barbara and Edward Netter
Amy and Mitchell Radin
Marcella Rosen
Kathleen M. and Michael J. A. Smith
David E. Stutzman
Suzanne and Stephen H. Weiss
Lisa Woods
Christina and Donald Zacharia
Circle of Hope
($1,000 - $2,499)
Pamela and David Banker
Kay Brover and Arthur C. Bennett
Virginia Benzak
Andrea and Robert Berger
Stephen Bermas
Susan and James Breece
Vance Brown
Lyle S. and Warwick M. Carter, Jr.
Jean B. Case, M.D.
and David B. Case, M.D.
Donna S. and Derrick D. Cephas
Dawna and Donald B. Christian
Mary Sharp Cronson
Barbara T. and Benjamin J. Denihan, Jr.
Hanni Dinkeloo
Judith A. and Daniel J. Donahue
Christina E. Prunier and David A. Doss
Joan and Alvin H. Einbender
Catherine Y. and Harold B. Finn
Susan L. Fischer
Muffie and Desmond G. FitzGerald
Helen and Daniel M. FitzPatrick
Jill Totenberg and Brian Foreman
Alexander D. Forger
Jacquie and William T. Friedewald
Diana S. and Harrison J. Goldin
Candice and Terry W. Goodwin
Antonia and James Gorton
Linda J. Vester and Glenn H. Greenberg
Kathy and Alan C. Greenberg
Barbara and Edmund A. Hajim
Annual Report 2006
29
GIFTS FROM INDIVIDUALS
Ellen M. and James E. Hillman
Beth Holland
Valerie and Van Hubbard
Margaret Ann and Thomas S. Johnson
Anne Hale Johnson
Mary and Kenneth King
Alice and Alexander Kirschenbaum, M.D.
Francine and Samuel C. Klagsbrun, M.D.
Stephanie Krieger
Judith Pond Kudlow
and Lawrence Kudlow
Brenda and Burton Lehman
Mariana S. and Lawrence Leighton
Judith A. and David J. Lewittes
Christie C. Salomon and Richard Lombard
Silvia and Thomas P. Maginnis
Constantina and Robert McCabe
Kathleen McLaughlin-Jerge
Christina and Owen Morrissey
Joseph W. Mullen, Jr.
Suzanne C. and Thomas S. Murphy
Abby Simpson and Todd Mydland
Diane A. Nixon
Phyllis S. and David C. Oxman
Diane S. and Steven C. Parrish
Carmen and John Petts
Catherine S. and Thomas J. Pierce
Richard Reiss, Jr.
Julie M. and David P. Ricciardi
Jane and Kevin Roche
Sydney and E. Joshua Rosenkranz
Kathryn Beeby and Louis J. Scenti, Jr.
Nancy and Henry B. Schacht
Roberta and Raymond M. Schleicher
Jill and Howard F. Sharfstein
Karen and J.L. Nevill Smythe
Anna C. and David R. Steinhardt
Alfred Stillman III
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
Rebecca and Roy E. Weathers
Naomi Friedland-Wechsler
and Rabbi Harlan J. Wechsler
Mildred and George Weissman
Eunice and Mitchell Wonboy
Margaret and Erwin A. Zeuschner
Deborah A. and Nicholas B. Zoullas
Sherry Jacobson and Eugene I. Zuriff
30
$500 - $999
Anonymous (2)
Lilyan H. Affinito
Claire Haaga Altman
and Stan Altman, Ph.D.
Margaret and Edward H. Bragg, Jr.
Diana and Marc Chazaud
Julie P. Cho, D.M.D.
Margaret and Jeffrey Cianci
The Rev. Dr. John S. Damm
Peggy and Richard M. Danziger
Kathaleen M. Duffin
Joyia E. Fazelat, M.D.
and Ahad A. Fazelat, M.D.
Jean M. and Colin Fergus
Allan H. Glick
Aliette M. and Peter C. Goldmark
Mary F. Hassett
Harriet Huber
Carol and Abbott C. Jones
Marcia and James Kelly
Brian H. Kim
John J. Kindred III
Gayle K. Lee
Marian B. and Bernard P. Long
Betty and James R. Mitscher
Nancy Nielsen
Judith A. and James P. Owens, Jr.
Margaret Phelan Reed
Ralph U. Price
Suzanne and John H. Prunier, M.D.
Jo Ann Friedman
and Michael Rapaport
Mary Anne and Douglas Schwalbe
Gail P. and Samuel T. Telerico
Carol and Joel Thea
Susan H. and George J. Vojta
Joseph B. Walsh, M.D.
Julia and Laurie J. Warder
Denie and Frank A. Weil
Julian R. Williamson
Marcia S. Wilson
Kim A. White and Kurt J. Wolfgruber
$250 - $499
Gilda and Rabbi Marc D. Angel
Elizabeth and the Honorable
Edward G. Biester
Daryl F. and Joseph L. Boren
Carol Collins
Karen and David E. Cowan
Wendy and James Daras
Katherine Alfond and Joseph P. Donahue
Nina H. and James R. Donnelley
The Rev. Joseph J. Driscoll
Marilyn and Brian Ebzery
Annette and J. Donald Fairbanks
Richard E. Ford
Candice and John Frawley
Lueza and Bruce S. Gelb
Sandra Gering
Mary Jane and Frederick W. Gettler, Jr.
Irving S. Hamer, Jr., Ed.D.
Patricia and Richard Jacobs
Gina and Joseph E. Jannotta
Heather A. and Paul F. Jordan
Julia M. McNamara, Ph.D.
and Richard J. Lolatte
Dorothy L. and William F. McDonald
Sherry M. and Walter R. McDonald
Brenda and Tocher Mitchell
Marianne and Robert A. Morelli
Marjorie K. Nicodemus
Cheryl W. and Thomas H. O'Leary
Dorothy and Howard M. Pack
Muriel Palitz
Paul J. Powers, Jr.
Tracy Susan and John M. Pramenko, M.D.
Patricia R. and F. Herbert Prem
Paula L. and Leon Root, M.D.
Linda Dombrowsky
and Ronald Rosensweig
Carol Selle
Mari and Kenneth Share
Flora E. and G. Franklin South
Phyllis and Edward Toohey
Donald J. Toumey
and Paul (Loong Foo) Chan
Patrick J. Waide, Jr.
Ann Marie Wallace, Ph.D.
and Bernadette Wallace
Jane and Stuart Weitzman
Barbara H. West
Joyce C. Williams
Susan M. Fitzpatrick
and Thomas P. Wyman
Marion P. and Salvatore D. Zaffino
Jean and Arnold Zimmerman
$249 and Below
Anonymous (3)
Albert Alexander, Ph.D.
Isa and Paul Allersmeyer
Maire Allik
Johanna and Laurent Alpert
The Rev. Canon John Andrew, D.D.
Lucelle and Francis D. Auger
Velma and Ted J. Balestreri
Anne and Philip J. Bergan
Louise and Thilo H. Best
Betty G. Black
Jean K. and Christopher G. Boland
Watson F. Bosler
Dora and Russell Bourne
Pauline H. and Perry S. Boynton
Susan D. and Charles H. Boynton
Adrienne L. Brown
Alyce and Norman Cannon
Susan V. Cantrell
John G. Cartier
Dorothy M. and Ralph W. Chapman
Robin Colleran
Anne S. Connor
Robert A. and Elizabeth D. Contino
Gerald A. Conway, Jr.
Linda G. Conway
Mary Ellen Raftery
and the Honorable Michael A.
Corriero
Allison G. and Daniel J. Costarene
Patricia and Donald T. Coughlin
Evan Jay Crane
Louise S. and Robert E. Dailey
Anne P. R. Dean
Monica and Michael Dimino
Gilda and Generoso R. DiChiara
Marie and Joseph DiChiara
Jennifer and Paul J. Donahue
Ruth Drazen
Jane I. and Larry D. Droppa
Louise Dunn
Maria and Richard Dutmer
Elizabeth A. and James J. Ebzery
Margaret G. Eichorn
Christina J. Eldridge
Doris and Raymond Farrelly
Anne and Dwight W. Fawcett
Marian R. and Michael J. Foley
Elizabeth C. Forster
Donald J. Fowley
Sarah E. Friedewald, M.D.
and John J. Friedewald, M.D.
Ann FultonCurran
Alan K. Gage
Kathryn G. and Joseph F. Gagliardi
Marjorie A. Geiger
Anne H. Gerli
Marion M. and Roger Gilbert
Susan Habachy
Fran and Gary Haber
Patricia and Joseph Hamilton
Kathryn and Erik A. Hanson
Phyllis R. Hersch, Ph.D.
and Charles Hersch, Ph.D.
Phyllis and Joseph C. Hinsey
Sylvia W. Crouter and J.D. Hodgson
Margaret M. and Martin R. Hoffmann
Anne and G. Malcolm Holderness
Lesley B. and Joseph C. Hoopes
Fred Taylor Isquith
Susan J. Milamed and Jack L. Jacobs
The Rev. Dr. Martha R. Jacobs
and Patricia A. Yost
Rita and Leonard W. Jacobs
Dorothy R. and Bruce Johnson
Shirley C. and David T. Kearns
Michael Keenan
Rosalind and Sung-Hou Kim
Barbara M. and Walter G. Korntheuer
Betty Kranzdorf
Maureen and James Krinsley, M.D.
Judith M. and Harold L. Kulman, M.D.
Adrianne and Leon Lebensbaum
Naomi D. Leszkiewicz
Lisa and Daniel Levine
Edward Yin Liang, M.D.
Ruth and Robert J. Lindner
Patricia Luca
Rita Lynch
Robin Maitland
Betsy H. and Anthony P. Marshall
Florence Masek
Vera and Michael McEnroe
Sally and John J. McNally
Barbara and Pat Melotto
Anne and Kevin Mulvaney
Gladys T. and Edward H. Novitch
Herbert F. Oettgen, M.D.
Andrea J. and Patrick G. O'Neill
Janice and Roger Oresman
Cheryl A. Clarke and Larry Orrico
Helen Ouerbacker
Mary and Michael Pauley
Ann C. Pisano
F. Gadalla, M.D. and A. Potulicki
Ann L. and Edward W. Probert
Richard A. Quinby
Nancy C. and Richard F. Quinn
Sarah E. and James T. Rich
Jeanne B. and Lawrence M. Riegel
Maureen A. Relland, M.D.
and Robert R. Riggio, M.D.
Jill R. Roosevelt
Eleanor A. and John E. Rorer
Robert Rosenthal
Susan and Rabbi Robert Rubin
Suzanne and William Sales
Ruth S. and James P. Santos
Stanley J. Scher
Lynn and Homer D. Schoen
Kuniko Schulein-Steel
Arlene B. Schwartz
Judith F. Schwartz
Wendy S. and Richard M. Schwartz
Elizabeth J. Skudder
Bernice Slotnick
Suzanne T. Smart
Liliane and Jose Soriano
The Rev. Caroline M. Stacey
Patricia C. and Charles T. Stewart
Evelyn Sturhann
Sister Anne Tahaney, OP
Phillips Talbot
Robert J. Timberger
Kathy and the Honorable David R. Tobin
Anne and John R. Torell
Nicholas J. Tortorello
Patricia Koo Tsien
Elizabeth and Cope B. Walbridge
Sylvia and Benjamin Weinstock
Helga and John H. Weisburger
Josephine and Will Maitland Weiss
Helene and Francis M. Weld, M.D.
Christine L. Williams, M.D.,
and Gary M. Williams, M.D.
Ann L. Woodfield and Ralph E. Wood
L. Randall Yates
Theresa B. Zadrosny
Volunteers
J. Donald Fairbanks
Thomas J. Pierce
Annual Report 2006
31
IN HONOR OF
In 2006, the following individuals had
gifts designated in their honor by the
donors listed below.
IN MEMORY OF
Audrey Seidman
Marjorie A. Geiger
In honor of The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
The Rev. Canon John Andrew, D.D.
In honor of Sandra M. Boyd
Rabbi Marc D. Angel
Sara and Geoffrey C. Bible
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
Daryl F. and Joseph L. Boren
In honor of Ginny and James B. Creed
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
The Rev. Joseph J. Driscoll
In honor of Jack K. Eickhof
Joyia E. Fazelat, M.D.
Ralph U. Price
and Ahad A. Fazelat, M.D.
In honor of Susan L. Fischer
Sandra Gering
Robin Colleran
Mary Jane and Frederick W. Gettler, Jr.
Leisa S. and Charles G. Crane
Phyllis R. Hersch, Ph.D.
Ellen M. and James E. Hillman
and Charles Hersch, Ph.D.
Michael Keenan
Lynn and John W. Johnson, Jr.
Judith M. and Harold L. Kulman, M.D.
John J. Kindred III
Rita Lynch
Patricia Luca
Marianne and Robert A. Morelli
Eleanor A. and John E. Rorer
The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
Suzanne and John H. Prunier, M.D.
Maria T. and William G. Spears
Catherine L. and Francis P. Rich, Sr.
Sheila and Lawrence J. Toal
Sarah E. and James T. Rich
In honor of Rose A. Folliero
The Taylor Companies
DEARS Foundation, Inc.
Theresa B. Zadrosny
In honor of Ann FultonCurran
In honor of Maria T. and William G. Spears
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
Christie C. Salomon
In honor of Sister Elaine Goodell, P.B.V.M.
and Richard Lombard
Albert Alexander, Ph.D.
Rita Lynch
Stanley J. Scher
In honor of William G. Spears
Arlene B. Schwartz
Anonymous
Judith F. Schwartz
Pamela and David Banker
Patricia and Charles C. Baum
In honor of Margaret Ann and Thomas S. Johnson
Janice and Roger Oresman
Anson Beard, Jr.
Vance Brown
In honor of Catherine and T. Michael Long
Mary and David J. Callard
Sandra Gering
Susan and Alexander W. Casdin
In honor of Rita Lynch
Theresa B. Zadrosny
Mary Ann and Malcolm E. Cloyd
Robin and Marshall Cloyd
In honor of Robin Maitland
Josephine and Will Maitland Weiss
Lynn and Langdon Cook
Enpro International, Inc.
In honor of The Moss Family
Judith and Anthony B. Evnin, Ph.D.
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
Regina Pitaro and Mario J. Gabelli
In honor of Sister Mary Owen
Fred Taylor Isquith
Katherine and William G. Gahagan
In honor of Ralph A. Pici, M.D.
Mary and Michael E. Gellert
Vera and Michael McEnroe
Aliette M. and Peter C. Goldmark
In honor of Ralph U. Price
Antonia and James Gorton
Watson F. Bosler
Suzanne P. Fawbush
In honor of Margaret Phelan Reed
and Christopher C. Grisanti
Gretchen and Eugene P. Grisanti
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
In honor of Josie, Julian, Alex, Hollace, Jay,
Barbara and Edmund A. Hajim
Sarah and Spencer Robertson
Itty and Spencer B. Hays
Anne Hale Johnson
Beth, Julian, Blanche, Elizabeth
Carol and Abbott C. Jones
and Pell Williamson
32
In honor of
Deborah Elizabeth
and the Honorable Thomas H. Kean
Ann and Thomas L. Kempner
Jane and Charles Klein
Mariana S. and Lawrence Leighton
Lisa and Daniel Levine
Silvia and Thomas P. Maginnis
Constantina and Robert McCabe
Christina and Owen Morrissey
Morrison & Foerster
Beth Goldberg Nash
and Joshua Nash
Barbara and Edward Netter
Phyllis S. and David C. Oxman
Carmen and John Petts
Catherine S. and Thomas J. Pierce
Quinnipiac University
Richard Reiss, Jr.
Linda Dombrowsky
and Ronald Rosensweig
Deborah and Charles M. Royce
Laura Landro and Richard E. Salomon
Roberta and Raymond M. Schleicher
Spears Grisanti & Brown LLC
Lorna and David H. Strassler
Anna and Alfred M. Vinton, Jr.
Denie and Frank A. Weil
Mildred and George Weissman
Judy Francis Zankel
Catherine Be Zoullas
Deborah A. and Nicholas B. Zoullas
In honor of Rabbi Bonita E. Taylor
The Taylor Companies
In honor of B. Gayle Twiname
Margaret Phelan Reed
In honor of Carolyn A. and the Rev. John Twiname
Susan V. Cantrell
Candice and John Frawley
Dorothy R. and Bruce Johnson
Phyllis and Joseph C. Hinsey
Ruth S. and James P. Santos
Richard A. Quinby
Julia and Laurie J. Warder
In honor of Miriam and James D. Twiname, Jr.
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
In honor of Will Maitland Weiss
Robin Maitland
In honor of Alice Williams
Mary and Michael Pauley
In 2006, memorial gifts were made
by the donors listed below.
Viiu Allik
Maire Allik
In memory of Susan T. Auger
Lucelle and Francis D. Auger
In memory of Betty Berkowitz
Gladys T. and Edward H. Novitch
In memory of Carroll Bjornson
Andrea J. and Patrick G. O' Neill
In memory of Dr. Mary H. Boynton
Polly and Perry S. Boynton
Susan D. and Charles H. Boynton
In memory of Constance Twiname Briggs
Richard A. Quinby
In memory of John and Felicia Caporale
Ann C. Pisano
In memory of Thelma A. Dinkeloo
Gladys and Carter J. Dinkeloo
Hanni Dinkeloo
Judith A. and James P. Owens, Jr.
Jane Roche
Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo &
Associates
In memory of Mary Elizabeth Dombrowski
Tracy Susan and John M. Pramenko, M.D.
In memory of Dr. Sanford H. Eisenberg
Naomi D. Leszkiewicz
In memory of
Maude Fontana
Theresa B. Zadrosny
In memory of Kathleen B. Fowley
Donald J. Fowley
In memory of The Honorable Louis L. Friedman
Beth Holland
In memory of Rose and David Jacobs
Rita and Leonard W. Jacobs
In memory of Charles Jordan
Heather A. and Paul F. Jordan
In memory of Miriam Levy
Andrea and Robert Berger
In memory of Sol Lewis
Andrea and Robert Berger
In memory of John P. Lynch
Julia M. McNamara, Ph.D.
and Richard J. Lolatte
Rita Lynch
In memory of Anne Louise Maitland
Robin Maitland
In memory of William Masek
Florence Masek
In memory of Claire McLaughlin
Kathleen McLaughlin-Jerge
In memory of Virginia B. Mitchell
Brenda and Tocher Mitchell
In memory of Sonia Perelmutter
Gladys T. and Edward H. Novitch
In memory of Margaret Renahan
In memory of
Rita Lynch
Alfred Pisano
Heather A. and Paul F. Jordan
Barbara and Pat Melotto
Ann C. Pisano
In memory of Ruth Scheidecker
Phyllis and Edward Toohey
In memory of Paul A. Skudder, M.D.
Elizabeth J. Skudder
In memory of Eugenia W. and
P. Gordon B. Stillman
Monica and Michael Dimino
Alfred Stillmann III
In memory of The Rev. James L. Tahaney
Sister Anne Tahaney, OP
In memory of Thomas Taylor
The Taylor Companies
In memory of Elizabeth Ann Timberger
Robert J. Timberger
In memory of Vincent Trotta
Dorothy L. and William F. McDonald
In memory of K.C. Tsien
Sherry M. and Walter R. McDonald
Rosalind and Sung-Hou Kim
In memory of Polly Wee
Sharon and Tracy Fu
In memory of Michael Zadrosny
Rita Lynch
Theresa B. Zadrosny
In memory of
HOPE AND REMEMBRANCE SOCIETY
Anonymous
Ruth L. Cohen, Ph.D.
Lavonne and David A. Cowan
Leisa S. and Charles G. Crane
Marie and Peter J. DeLuca
Susan L. Fischer
Margaret M. Hill
Patricia Hill
Harriet Huber
Betty Kranzdorf
Muriel Palitz
Patricia R. and F. Herbert Prem, Jr.
Ralph U. Price
Margaret Phelan Reed
Jill and Howard F. Sharfstein
The Rev. Dr. Walter Smith, S.J.
Maria T. and William G. Spears
Sheila and Lawrence J. Toal
Patricia Koo Tsien
B. Gayle Twiname, Ph.D.
Carolyn A. and the Rev. John D. Twiname
Sherry Jacobson and Eugene I. Zuriff
The Hope and Remembrance Society includes donors who have made a
planned or deferred gift to The Chaplaincy. For more information on these and
other giving options, please visit our Website, www.healthcarechaplaincy.org.
Hope & Remembrance Society members
Jill and Howard F. Sharfstein.
Annual Report 2006
33
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Deborah Miller
The Rev. Caroline Stacey
William G. Spears
Edward D. Miller
Lawrence J. Toal, Chairman
Managing Director and President
Citigroup Trust
Founder and President
Panache Imports Ltd.
Rector
Church of St. Luke in the Fields
Principal
Spears Abacus Advisors LLC
Former President and CEO
AXA Financial, Inc.
Former Chairman, President & CEO
The Dime Savings Bank of New York, FSB
Kathleen M. Foley, M.D.
Amy Radin
David E. Stutzman
Carolyn A. Twiname
Mary O’Neil Mundinger, Dr. P.H.
Chief Innovation Officer
Global Consumer Group
Citigroup Inc.
Counsel
Seward and Kissel LLP
Former Co-President
The HealthCare Chaplaincy
Columbia University
Dean, School of Nursing
Marcella Rosen
Jill Totenberg
The Rev. John D. Twiname
Richard D. Parsons
President & CEO
The Totenberg Group
Former Co-President
The HealthCare Chaplaincy
Chairman & CEO
Time Warner Inc.
Rabbi Harlan J. Wechsler, D.D
Frank J. Petrilli
Rabbi
Congregation Or Zarua
President & CEO
Nexxar Group, Inc.
Officers
The Rev. Dr. Walter J. Smith, S.J.
President & CEO
Daniel M. FitzPatrick
Attending Neurologist
Professor of Neurology and
Neurosurgery and Clinical
Pharmacology, Weill Medical
College of Cornell University
Hector V. Perez, Treasurer
Director, Transaction Services Group
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Diana S. Goldin
Founder and President
Campus Truth Foundation
Consultant to non-profit institutions
E. Joshua Rosenkranz
Kathryn Christensen, Secretary
Professor, University of Nebraska, Lincoln,
College of Journalism and Mass
Communications
Ira J. Greenblatt
Attorney
Private Investor
Lynn Rothstein, Ph.D.
Christopher C. Grisanti
Trustees
Principal
Grisanti Brown & Partners LLC
Nicholas Haines
Clare Haaga Altman
Executive Director
ReServe Elder Service, Inc.
Principal
The Bromley Companies
Irving S. Hamer, Jr., Ed.D.
Elizabeth A. Baltz
Former Senior Vice President
MasterCard International
Executive Vice President
The Millenium Group
Rochelle Hirsch
James E. Buckman
Vice Chairman and General Counsel (Ret.)
Cendant Corporation
Partner
Heller Ehrman LLP
Founder and Chair
Creative Play School at Fifth Avenue
Synagogue, New York
Principal Gift Officer
UJA-Federation of New York
Alex von Bidder
Managing Partner
The Four Seasons Restaurant
Roy E. Weathers
Partner
Tax Financial Services,
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
T. Timothy Ryan
Vice Chairman
Financial Institutions & Government
JPMorgan Chase
Vice President and Senior Fiduciary Officer
JPMorgan Private Bank
David B. Case, M.D.
Executive Board Member
New York Physicians, LLP
Emanuel Chirico
CEO
Phillips-Van Heusen
Louis J. Scenti, Jr.
Edith C. Bjornson
John S. Chalsty
Stephen H. Weiss
Senior Vice President
Leadership and Learning
Lehman Brothers
The Rev. Dr. John S. Damm
Consultant
Alan V. Schwartz
Pastor Emeritus
Saint Peter's Church
President and CEO
Bernard Hodes Group
William W. Donnell
Julie P. Cho, D.M.D.
Partner
Heilbut, Rosenman, Radin, and Cho
34
Managing Director
Financial Institutions Group
Credit Suisse/First Boston
Former Partner
Neuberger Berman, LLC
Donald J. Keller
Howard F. Sharfstein
Samuel C. Klagsbrun, M.D.
Anita M. Larsen
Director
Media Relations, Unilever USA
Judith A. Lewittes
Consultant to non-profit institutions
Daniel R. Tishman
Life Trustees
Janet Prindle Seidler
Artist; Dean and Co-Founder
Harlem Studio of Art
John C. Beck
Chairman and CEO
Tishman Construction Corp
Gregory D. Kennedy
Judith Pond Kudlow
President’s Advisory Council
Chairman
Rudin Management Company, Inc.
Senior Partner
Beck, Mack and Oliver
Private Investor
Warwick M. Carter, Jr.
Jack Rudin
Partner
Schulte, Roth & Zabel LLP
Maria T. Spears
Senior Vice President,
Managing Director
Brown Harris Stevens
Private Investor
Medical Director
Four Winds Hospital
Charlotte Miller
Philanthropist
Ralph U. Price
Architect (Ret.)
Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associate
Chairman
Muirfield Capital Management
Managing Director
Neuberger Berman, LLC
The Rev. Dr. James H. Cooper
Suzanne Wright
Rector
Trinity Church, Wall Street
Co-Founder
Autism Speaks
John S. Dyson
Chairman
Milbrook Capital Management
Healthcare Advisory Council
Charlotte M. Ford
Dennis Dowling
Philanthropist/Author
Executive Director
North Shore University Hospital
Thomas S. Johnson
Chairman & CEO (Ret.)
GreenPoint Financial
Helene L. Kaplan
Of Counsel
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom
Gladys George
President & CEO
Lenox Hill Hospital
Harold E. Varmus, M.D.
President
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Martin Lipton
Senior Partner
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen and Katz
Annual Report 2006
35
CLINICAL STAFF & PARTNERS
Beth Israel Medical Center
Rabbi Nathan Goldberg
Rabbi Jacob Greenberg
Brookdale University
Hospital & Medical Center
The Rev. Carlos de la Peña
The Winifred Masterson
Burke Rehabilitation
Hospital
The Rev. Dr. John P. Bauman
Griffin Hospital
The Rev. Jo Clare Wilson
2006 AT-A-GLANCE
Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center
Chaplain Jane Mather
Elaine Goodell, P.B.V.M.
Al-Hajji Imam Yusuf H. Hasan
Rabbi Harry Rothstein
New York Hospital Queens
Rabbi David M. Keehn
Rosarine Quinn, C.S.J.
The Rev. Eun Joo Kim
NYU Hospitals Center
The Rev. Stephen Harding
The Rev. Alfred Kambaki
North Shore University Hospital
The Rev. Jon Overvold
Maureen Mitchell, R.S.M., D.Min.
Rabbi Daniel Coleman
PASTORAL CARE SERVICES
220,000
Patient Visits
EDUCATION
Students Enrolled in Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE)
Number of CPE courses, each requiring 400 hours of clinical and class time
150
157
RESEARCH
12
Peer-reviewed articles published
The Research Department publishes original studies on spirituality and health in national,
peer-reviewed journals. These journals span a number of professional disciplines such as
medicine, nursing, psychology, and pastoral care.
Some of the topics covered in 2006 include:
•
•
•
•
Spiritual care in advanced cancer patients
Hospital directors’ views of pastoral care
Belief in life after death and mental health
Clergy as a source of mental health assistance
• Measuring effectiveness of pastoral care with
patients’ family members
• Referral patterns to chaplains by doctors, nurses,
and other hospital staff
Please visit www.healthcarechaplaincy.org for more information on original HealthCare Chaplaincy research.
CONSULTING
St. John’s Riverside Hospital
The Rev. Dr. Sarah Fogg
Hospital for Special Surgery
Margaret T. Oettinger, O.P.
The Rev. Arnd Braun-Storck
Rabbi Ralph Kreger
Lawrence Hospital Center
The Rev. Simmons Gardner
Lenox Hill Hospital
The Rev. Wilfredo Rodriguez
Rabbi Ralph Kreger
36
St. Luke’s-Roosevelt
Hospital Center
The Rev. Peggy Muncie
Al-Hajji Imam Yusuf H. Hasan
Rabbi Naomi Kalish
Assessments and/or Consultations were conducted at:
•
•
•
•
Lewis-Gale Medical Center (VA)
Morristown Memorial Hospital (NJ)
Plaza Medical Center Fort Worth (TX)
JFK Medical Center (FL)
• St. Joseph’s Hospital Medical Center (AZ)
• St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital (TX)
• Texas Children’s Hospital (TX)
CLINICAL STAFF & FACULTY
Chaplains
Faculty
29
10
St. Mary’s Center
The Rev. Daniel Shenk
Winthrop-University Hospital
The Rev. Jill Bowden
The Rev. Megan Kelly
Entering its fourth year, The Chaplaincy-sponsored PlainViews e-newsletter reached nearly 8,000
subscribers in 2006. This bi-weekly communication engages chaplains, student chaplains, and other
spiritual care providers from many different faiths all over the globe.
Recent new subscribers come from countries such as Azerbaijan, Brazil, Germany, Latvia, and Malawi.
You can access PlainViews via our homepage, www.healthcarechaplaincy.org.
© 2007 The HealthCare Chaplaincy, Inc.
This report was manufactured on post-consumer recycled paper.
www.healthcarechaplaincy.org