Spirits Hearts - Calvary Hospital

Transcription

Spirits Hearts - Calvary Hospital
Calvary Hospital
2013 Annual Report
Hearts
Open
Spirits
St r o n g
For 115 years,
Calvary Hospital’s mission has been
to care for adult advanced cancer patients at the very end of their
lives. We are the country’s only fully accredited acute care hospital
dedicated to the needs of this special group.
We know how difficult this time can be for the patients and
their families. They will only make this journey once. Calvary
partners with the family hand-in-hand to take this journey together
– we don’t abandon them when they need us most.
It is a privilege and an honor for us to be part of this journey.
All of our employees approach their responsibilities with their
hearts open and spirits strong. We are very blessed that this
outlook permeates every single aspect of Calvary. This annual report
will illustrate how much this philosophy affects us every single day.
Contents
12 Calvary Fund, Inc. Report
1Message from the Chairman
of the Board and President
18 Calvary Holding Company, Inc.
Description of Organization
2 Why Calvary?
3 The Inpatient Experience
4 The Gold Standard in Patient Care
7 Pastoral Care
4 Brooklyn Satellite
8 Therapeutic Recreation
19 Calvary Holding Company, Inc.
Combined Statements
of Operations and
Changes in Net Assets
9 Bereavement Support
We continue to expand
our Bereavement Support
Groups for Adults, Teens,
and Children.
10 Palliative Care Institute
10Volunteers
5Calvary@Home
See the foldout on page 13
for details regarding The
Dawn Greene Hospice at
Mary Manning Walsh Home.
6 Family-Centric Patient Care
11Message from the Executive
Medical Director
20 Calvary Hospital, Inc.
Statements of Operations
21 Calvary Hospital, Inc.
Staff and Affiliations
Message from the Chairman of the Board and President
As we enter our 115th year, Calvary Hospital has much to be
proud of. Regardless of how the American healthcare system
continues to evolve, one thing remains constant – the dedication
of our employees. Whether they work at our Bronx campus,
Brooklyn Satellite, or provide Home Care and Home Hospice in
people’s homes, our employees approach their responsibilities
with their hearts open and spirits strong. This outlook
permeates every aspect of Calvary.
We know that at this difficult time, families entrust the care
of their loved ones to us; Calvary does not take this responsibility
lightly. It takes special people to care for patients with advanced
cancer. As many family members have told us, we partner with
them hand-in-hand to take this journey together – we don’t
abandon them when they need us most. Calvary employees
provide a sanctuary for patients and families at this sacred time.
We work together to ensure that the last moments in life for the
patients are what they and their families would like them to be.
This year, Calvary marked several milestones:
• We cared for more than 5,785 patients and families. Our
200-bed Bronx campus and our 25-bed satellite at Lutheran
Medical Center in Brooklyn served 2,955 inpatients; hospice
and home care served 2,385 patients throughout the greater
New York area; and 445 patients sought help at our Center
for Curative and Palliative Wound Care.
• In 2013, the Calvary Fund reported that $12,497,225 in gifts
and pledges was raised for Calvary’s unique mission. Included in
this total was a singular gift of $4,000,000 made to ArchCare,
for the benefit of Calvary Hospital by The Jerome L. Greene
Foundation, to name the Dawn Greene Hospice at Mary
Manning Walsh Home. The hospice, under the supervision
of Calvary@Home, will allow people to receive an inpatient
level of care in Manhattan.
• The NYS Department of Health gave Calvary permission to expand
our Home Care program for the first time into Brooklyn, Staten
Island, Rockland and Putnam Counties, and all of Manhattan.
• Our 10th Annual Trusts & Estates conference attracted a record
325 attendees, comprised of New York State’s leading estate
planning attorneys.
• Our collaboration with Yeshiva University for the observant
Jewish community continues to flourish. The YU Rabbinic Panel
visited Calvary and we conducted a ribbon cutting of our Kosher
Hospitality Room and Shabbos Lounge.
• In memory of former Medical Director Dr. James E. Cimino, who
served Calvary faithfully for more than 50 years, the Hospital
established the James E. and Dorothy A. Cimino Award. The
inaugural honoree was Cathy Kalinski, RN, BSN, CWON, who
was recognized for her devoted care, kindness, and compassion,
to patients at the end of life.
Thomas J. Fahey, Jr., MD (left) and Frank A. Calamari
• Calvary Hospital and Calvary@Home received full accreditation
by The Joint Commission, an unbroken record since our first
evaluation more than 23 years ago.
We could not have accomplished this without the continued
guidance of Dr. Michael J. Brescia. We celebrated his 50 years at
Calvary at our annual Spring Donor Reception at the New York
Botanical Garden.
Our program in Brooklyn continues to grow. We care for
inpatients at our Brooklyn Satellite, provide home care and hospice
through Calvary@Home, and offer free weekly bereavement support
program for adults, children, and teens in downtown Brooklyn.
Through our collaboration with the National Cancer Institute
(NCI), and the Middle East Cancer Consortium (MECC), Calvary
hosted visitors from throughout the world who traveled thousands
of miles roundtrip to learn the Calvary model of palliative care.
We raised more than $1 million at our Annual Awards Gala,
making it one of the most successful in our history. The Fund
welcomed new board member William W. Wilson, while the
Hospital Board welcomed Reverend Eric P. Cruz. We know they
will bring their dedication and special talents to the Fund and
Hospital Board deliberations.
All of us, from the Board of Directors, Administration, Nursing,
Medicine, support staff, and volunteers, are proud to be able to
make our patients and their families as physically, spiritually and
emotionally comfortable as possible. We appreciate the privilege
of caring for those most in need of our care, at a most difficult
time of their lives.
Thomas J. Fahey, Jr., MD
Chairman, Calvary Hospital Board
Frank A. Calamari
President and Chief Executive Officer
1
Calvary’s mission
– to care for the physical,
psychological and spiritual needs of adult advanced cancer
patients and their families – is just as relevant today as it was in
1899, the year that the Hospital was founded in New York City.
Since then, we have served tens of thousands of patients
and their families with a diverse array of services. These include:
inpatient care in the Bronx and Brooklyn; home care and
home hospice; bereavement support groups in the Bronx
and Brooklyn for adults, children, and teens; and the care of
complex wounds at our Bronx campus.
Why Calvary?
We are a community
When patients are admitted to our Bronx campus, Brooklyn Satellite at Lutheran
dedicated to providing
Medical Center, or Calvary@Home, they discover a few important things.
patient care from the
heart. We are here to
care for your loved
one – and you. There
is nothing we would
rather do.
Calvary is about life. We know that however long we care for patients, it is
our responsibility to manage their pain and symptoms and make each day as
comfortable as possible for them. While they’re under our care, we address
their physical, emotional, and spiritual needs with all the resources that we have
at our fingertips.
We won’t abandon our patient or their families. Once they’re admitted,
patients become part of one loving family of compassionate care. This is the first
and only time that they will be making this journey. In partnership with the family,
we will make this special journey hand-in-hand with them. We will keep the family
informed at all times, engage them in making decisions that are best for the patient,
and tell them what will happen next. We don’t leave the family out of the picture.
Families are so important at Calvary, we have an entire department
devoted to their care. Calvary will do whatever we can to lessen the stress level
for the entire family.
2
The Inpatient Experience
Calvary cares for inpatients at our 200-bed facility in the Bronx and at our 25-bed
Brooklyn Satellite at Lutheran Medical Center. Our goal is to get patients settled
and comfortable in their rooms as quickly as possible, on the day they arrive.
With one exception, each patient has a private room and bathroom. Telephone
and TV service are provided at no charge. Patients can select their meals from a
daily menu. However, the Nutritional Services department is happy to accommodate
special requests. We realize that certain foods may evoke very happy memories.
Our staff has often tracked down specific dishes, or recipes, all in their desire to
bring some joy to a patient.
We encourage family members to decorate the patients’ rooms with personal
touches that will comfort and soothe their loved ones. We also try to find out all the
little ways that we can make our patients feel at home. It might be as simple as a
favorite dessert, music, or religious customs. Whatever it is, Calvary employees are
always happy to go the extra mile to make a patient happy.
Families
entrust their
loved ones to us;
Calvary employees
do not take this responsibility
lightly. It is our privilege and
honor to make this one-time
journey together with our
patients and their families.
Within the first few hours, our patients meet the entire team that will care for
them during the stay. This includes their doctor, nurse, cancer care technician, family
care practitioner (social worker), spiritual care provider, and dietitian.
At Calvary, social workers are called family care practitioners. This title more
accurately describes the important role these team members play for our patients
and families. The family care practitioner helps to identify what support the
family needs and to ensure that they get it. This is the person family members are
encouraged to contact whenever any issue arises.
Family members often take on the caregiver role selflessly for years. When
their loved one becomes a patient at Calvary Hospital, we relieve family members
of that role. We allow them to simply become a family member again, to spend
whatever quality time is left with the patient.
3
The Gold Standard in Patient Care
Calvary surrounds people with tender loving care. Whether it’s hugging our patients,
staying with them all night, or updating family members regularly on their loved ones,
Calvary employees understand the importance of what they do each and every day.
Our Nursing Department, comprised of registered nurses, nurse practitioners, and
cancer care technicians, is an important reason why Calvary is world-renowned for
its patient care. Whether they have spent their entire career at Calvary or came to us
after working at other hospitals, our nurses want to be here caring for our patients.
She went out of her way to accommodate my mother’s wishes and
our entire family. The nurse made sure that my mother’s last moments
in life were what we wanted it to be. – Comment about a Calvary Nurse
A key ingredient of “Calvary Care” is our unique cancer care technician (CCT)
program. Established more than 50 years ago, this rigorous six-month training
program has produced hundreds of outstanding CCTs with the necessary skills to
help people with advanced cancer achieve the best possible quality of life.
Unlike other hospitals, we encourage visitors at any time – human as well as pets.
People who wish to stay over may do so in the patient’s room or in several rooms on the
premises – at no charge. We understand that when a loved one is near the end of life,
making it easy for family and friends to visit is a simple yet important thing to offer.
Our Brooklyn Satellite
Patients and families
at our Brooklyn
Satellite receive the
same excellent care as
the people we care for
at our Bronx campus.
In 2001, Calvary opened a 25-bed Satellite at Lutheran Medical Center – the first
“hospital within a hospital” in New York State. Since then, Calvary has truly become
a part of the fabric of New York City’s most populous borough.
To date, we have cared for approximately 5,000 inpatients and their families;
brought our unique care to thousands of home care and hospice patients; provided
bereavement support to dozens of adults, children, and teenagers; and educated many
people on how to obtain quality end-of-life care for themselves and their loved ones.
Whether a patient is at our Bronx or Brooklyn facility, or receiving our signature
care in the comfort of home, they get the same high-level care that Calvary is renowned
for around the world.
4
Calvary@Home
Calvary opened a Certified Home Health Agency more than 25 years ago to
provide care for patients in their homes. It added home hospice services in 1998
and nursing home hospice in 2002. Today, under Calvary@Home, our home
care, home hospice, and nursing home hospice serve more than 2,350 patients
annually in the metropolitan New York area.
Just as we do with our inpatients, the Calvary@Home staff makes the journey
hand-in-hand with our patients and their families. We work as a team and
support the family members by teaching them how to care for the patient.
When our father died at home, we called our Calvary hospice nurse
right away. She got out of the shower and rushed to our home
Calvary brings compassionate
within 20 minutes. She didn’t abandon us when we needed her most.
home care and hospice to
thousands of patients each
– Daughter of a Home Hospice patient
year throughout the greater
Through Calvary@Home, we offer comprehensive home care and hospice
New York area.
services to patients at home who are suffering from advanced cancer or other
chronic and acute terminal illnesses. Calvary offers home care in all five boroughs
as well as Westchester, Rockland and Putnam counties; and hospice services in
the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan, Nassau, Westchester and Rockland
counties. We also offer hospice services in more than 30 nursing homes in Brooklyn,
Manhattan, the Bronx and Westchester, Rockland, and Nassau counties.
In 2014, under the supervision of Calvary@Home, we will open the 10-bed
Dawn Greene Hospice at Mary Manning Walsh Home that will provide an inpatient
level of care for a select number of patients in Manhattan.
Calvary’s innovative Palliative Care services for Home Care patients continue
to provide our patients with pain and symptom management, assistance with
advance care planning, and psychosocial support.
Calvary
offers a continuity of care that no
other New York area hospice can provide. Our home
care staff is cross-trained to provide hospice care as well.
When our home care patients need hospice, it comforts
them to know they can rely on the same Calvary nurse,
social worker, and home health aide to continue providing
them with excellent care.
5
Family-Centric Patient Care
Each year, Calvary is privileged to care for thousands of adult patients.
PHOTO
to come
Every person’s journey is unique and challenging in its own way. By the time
they arrive at the Hospital or are admitted to Calvary@Home, patients and families
often are anxious, afraid, or even angry. There’s often a transition period before
they realize that the new goal is one of “palliative care,” i.e., making the patient
feel comfortable and free from the pain often associated with advanced cancer.
Many people view palliative care as “lesser” care because it’s not curative.
At Calvary, the opposite is true. There’s actually a greater level of care provided
because we focus on patients and families. In fact, our physicians and nurses spend
a great deal of their time and energy caring for family members during their loved
one’s stay with us.
Since 2004, Calvary’s
Family Care Center
(FCC) has served
thousands of adults
and children. It offers
family members a respite from the
emotional turmoil that can exist on
the patient floors, the opportunity
to check email, read a newspaper,
get a manicure or a cup of coffee,
or simply to gather their thoughts.
The Hospital will celebrate the
FCC’s 10th anniversary in 2014.
To reflect the importance that Social Workers play in the lives of our patients and
their families, this department is more accurately named, Family Care. Our social
workers are family care practitioners. Each has a Master’s degree in Social Work and
advanced end-of-life training. They choose to be here, working with people in one
of the most intimate and difficult times in the life of any family.
No other hospital puts the time and effort into caring for the family
that we do.
6
Many people in the
Orthodox Jewish
community
are not aware that they can receive excellent end-of-life care
in accordance with Jewish law (halakha). Two years ago,
Calvary collaborated with Yeshiva University’s affiliated
Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (RIETS) to
provide rabbinic consultation to observant families about
this important issue. Our goal was to arm people with the
tools they needed to make the right end-of-life decisions
for themselves and their families. Thanks to extensive
media coverage and outreach efforts with key Orthodox
synagogues, there is much more awareness of Calvary’s care
and services in the Orthodox community than ever before.
Pastoral Care
Since it was founded in 1899, Calvary has always welcomed patients of all
faith traditions. Today, we serve a religiously and ethnically diverse population of
patients and families. Whatever a patient’s spiritual needs are, the Hospital is able
and willing to help them.
Thirty full-time spiritual care providers are available seven days a week to care
for the spiritual needs of patients and families. For inpatients, they lead regularly
scheduled worship services at our multi-faith chapel in the Bronx, visit the Brooklyn
Campus regularly, and provide individual counseling. They also perform sacraments
and other religious rituals. A Spanish-speaking ministry is available upon request.
Spiritual care providers – including Rabbis – are also dedicated to caring for the
spiritual needs of Calvary@Home patients and families.
Three Rabbis care for hundreds of Jewish inpatients each year. In addition to
kosher food, Jewish patients and their families can expect a daily visit from a Rabbi,
food from an expanded Kosher Hospitality Room, Shabbos Lounge, Kabbalat
Shabbat service, and celebrations of all major holidays.
Calvary offers an accredited 20-week, 400-hour
Clinical Pastoral Education (CPE) Program, the country’s
only such program that provides students with hands-on
experience with terminally ill patients. We also host an
Calvary has always welcomed
patients of all faith traditions.
We create a sacred space
for every patient and family
that we care for. Our spiritual
care providers are available
wherever and whenever our
patients need us – seven days
a week.
annual Pastoral Care Day to share our expertise with
the interfaith community.
7
Therapeutic Recreation
At Calvary, we consider it our duty to help our patients enjoy what time they have
left and to understand why we say that Calvary is the place “where life continues.”
Every day, there is a hospital activity planned especially for patients. Activities
may include ceramics, flower arranging, bingo, or music. For many patients, these
activities may help them capture a glimpse of what their lives used to be like
before their illness progressed. We know that whatever activities they choose to
attend, our patients get a lot of joy and comfort from therapeutic recreation.
Therapeutic Recreation coordinates a monthly visit by Juilliard students, a
monthly patient birthday party, barbecues on the Hospital terrace, and the annual
Café Noel holiday party in December. Café Noel gives
patients and families precious time together at the
end of the year.
Calvary patients and visitors
enjoy a daily recreational
activity that brings joy and
comfort to all.
8
We stand in awe of the humanity, courage,
heroism, joy that happens every day in the
Hospital and in Home Hospice.
Bereavement Support
Calvary first began offering bereavement support groups more than 20 years ago
for the families of our patients. Today, more than a dozen groups meet at least
once a week. The adult groups are organized by one’s relationship to the deceased
– i.e. spouses, adult child, parent, sibling, etc. There is even a group specifically for
men and one entirely in Spanish.
Our children’s bereavement program includes:
• “Precious Moments” groups – for children ages 6-12;
• Teen support groups – for ages 13-17; and
• A week-long summer day camp (Calvary’s Camp Compass®) that allows
children to remember the family member they lost, and also to have fun.
Calvary even offers an on-site bereavement support group – during the day
– at an elementary school in Brooklyn. This is the first time ever in the NYC
education system.
To date our adult and
children’s bereavement support
services have benefited
Our bereavement support
thousands of people. Adults
services are open to the
and children do not need to
community and are available
have a Calvary connection in
at no charge.
order to participate in our free
bereavement support groups.
Calvary shares its bereavement expertise in several ways.
We offer an annual 10-week bereavement course that
“Mentors through Mourning”
attracts a diverse audience of professionals from healthcare,
education, and social service fields, and a four-week
course.
Each year, Calvary also acts as a host site for the Hospice
Foundation of America teleconference and offers an expert
panel immediately following the televised event.
9
Palliative Care Institute
In 1985, the Hospital established the Palliative Care Institute to help educate health
care professionals about how to provide the best end-of-life care to patients. Since
then, it has welcomed thousands of physicians, nurses, social workers, and other
health care professionals from dozens of countries for visits ranging from a few days
to six months.
In 2004, the PCI opened the Center for Curative and Palliative Wound Care.
Under a team of experienced wound care doctors, nurses, and technicians, Calvary’s
wound care center has become one of the largest and most effective centers
dedicated to wound care in the New York area. It will mark its first decade in 2014.
In 2005, the NIH’s National Cancer Institute designated Calvary “an international
leader in palliative care” and invited us to participate in the Middle East Cancer
Consortium (MECC). Comprised of the national ministries of health from Egypt,
Turkey, Israel, Cyprus, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority, MECC members have
visited Calvary regularly in the last few years.
Annual visitors to the PCI include health care professionals from coast-to-coast
To date, healthcare professionals
as well as 800 students from every medical school in the greater New York area.
from more than 30 countries have
The students, who come here for visits ranging from one day to semester-long
traveled to the Bronx to learn the
weekly visits, include EMT (emergency medical technician) trainees from the New
Calvary model of palliative care.
York Fire Department.
Volunteers
Calvary’s reputation for the best end-of-life care would not be possible without
the hundreds of dedicated people who volunteer regularly for us. Volunteers at
the Bronx or Brooklyn campus often transport patients, assist at mealtime, sit with
anxious patients, and help with bereavement calls to family and friends. Volunteers
with Calvary@Home can often be found providing companionship to our patients
and offering a respite to their caregivers.
Many volunteers are fluent in several languages or have knowledge of different
cultural practices. These skills are a huge plus for a place like Calvary that accepts
patients of every religious and ethnic background.
To support our unique mission with a tax-deductible gift to the
Calvary Fund or to sign up for our e-newsletter, visit our website,
www.calvaryhospital.org, or call 718-518-2077.
10
Message from the Executive Medical Director
Over fifty years ago, I walked into the House of Calvary
located in the South Bronx to assist on a voluntary basis with
the management of complex medical issues associated with
desperately challenged patients and families.
At that time, we had a significant group of children,
not only with malignancies, but a multitude of congenital
anomalies which required enormous energy to have any
acceptable outcome.
What was of particular interest was the large group of
Orthodox Jewish children who suffered from neurologic
degenerative disease associated with the slow and progressive
descent into comatose states from which there could be no
retrieval in this world.
The reason for the unusual number of Orthodox children
Michael J. Brescia, MD with his family
centered upon the issue of care. Since many of these children
would develop large bed sores, it was found that this
On many weekends, our staff would wrap some of the
complication did not occur at Calvary because the children
babies along with their favorite toys, place them in bassinets,
were constantly carried in the arms of the Sisters and staff,
and put them in my car so they could come to my home for
resulting in preservation of the skin and the decrease in the
the weekend and immerse themselves in the environs of my
number of neurologic symptoms, including seizures, possibly
own children. This became a very popular weekend event for
because of the constant touch and massage in their lives
my children.
at Calvary.
Along with the large number of neurological diseases in
I still can hear them. I still can see them.
There, in the midst of patients with huge unspeakable failed
children that came to Calvary arrived a new group who had
cancers, were children who must have fallen from heaven and
non-development of arms and legs. Trunkal body parts, including
to whom I will always be grateful.
the head, were normal, but the long bones of the arms and legs
The medical program has grown in its intensity since those
never developed. These were the Thalidomide babies whose
years and become internationally renowned. The children have
mothers had been given an anti-nausea medication during the
long since gone.
first trimester of pregnancy. The House of Calvary had become
the first inpatient hospice for children that I am aware of.
Young men with florid Kaposi’s Sarcoma lesions were
admitted suffering from the disease which became known
After so many years, this early Orthodox community has
returned to Calvary Hospital and its home care with a new vitality
including special recognition of all the religious requirements and
special Shabbos lounge and suite.
as AIDS. To this day, Calvary treats terminal AIDS disease.
It became my custom during this time to carry the children
in my arms during rounds because in a powerful way, I felt
connected to a God whom I had never seen nor understood,
Michael J. Brescia, MD
but allowed me to enter the Grace of the Divine.
Executive Medical Director
11
The Calvary Fund Report
In 2013, $12,497,225 in gifts and pledges was raised for the mission of Calvary Hospital.
Included in the total is a singular gift of $4,000,000 made to ArchCare for the benefit
of Calvary Hospital, by the Jerome L. Greene Foundation, to name the Dawn Greene
Hospice at Mary Manning Walsh Home. It was Mrs. Greene’s dream to bring Calvary
Hospital’s inpatient care to Manhattan. We are grateful to Mrs. Greene’s daughter,
Christina McInerney, President of the Jerome L. Greene Foundation, who is carrying
out her mother’s wishes through this magnificent gift.
Steven J. Golub
Individuals
Gifts of $10,000 or more
Anonymous
Alan Ascher
Connie J. Attanasio
Joseph Bruckenstein
Mary Carden Murray
Stephen C. Garst
Steven J. Golub
Carlos M. Hernandez
Claire M. Ludwig
Patricia L. Maher
William F. McCormack
Edwin J. McNaboe
Louise M. Parent
Dr. Marc & Elaine Prager
Paul I. Rosenberg
Richard & Margaret Santulli
Robert J. Schiavone
Dennis M. & Susan Schneider
Isabelle Sherlock
Theodore Stanley
Adele Stern
Anne Coté Taylor
Lucy R. Waletzky, MD
Stratford C. Wallace
Individuals
Gifts of $5,000 – $9,999
Rose Angelicola
Patrick A. Burns
Christopher Cawley
Joseph L. Demarzo
Eileen A. Dennin
Marjorie Doniger
12
George R. Fay
Mary Louise Formato, MD
Diane F. Giacalone
Cindy F. Golden
Andrew F. Hanson
Henry J. Humphreys
Harry Hutzler
Theodore J. Jadick
Michael F. Kearney
John Lynch
Hamish Maxwell
William M. McLaughlin
Angelo P. Morra
Salvatore Pranzo
Teresa Rachiele
Sal Randazzo
Thomas Regan
Henry Riordan
Richard Rosen
Ben-Zion Smilchensky
George B. Stoms
Gerald C. Tobin
John J. Tumelty
Patrick B. Woods
Individuals
Gifts of $1,000 – $4,999
Richard H. Addy
Arun Adya
Anthony M. Agnello
Gertrude L. Agoglia
Elisa Alcabes
Philip Alcabes
Gladys Alvarez
In his letter to Ms. McInerney thanking her for the Foundation’s beneficence, Frank A. Calamari,
Calvary’s President, wrote, “Our deepest thanks to you for your most thoughtful leadership
in making it possible to bring the finest comprehensive, compassionate end-of-life care to
Manhattan. Your extraordinary gift truly inspires us to provide the best care to those patients
and their loved ones who turn to us at a most difficult time.”
As 2013 ended, we were approached by the leadership of The Rogosin Institute, one of
the world’s foremost research and treatment centers for kidney-related diseases, to participate
in research focusing on a novel treatment for colorectal cancer. Through a grant of $320,000
from The Rogosin Institute, Calvary is participating in this promising research, under the auspices
of the Palliative Care Institute, our research and teaching arm.
We offer a sincere thank you to all who helped advance our mission through their generous
giving. Your gifts enabled us to serve nearly 6,000 patients, their families, and their friends
across our continuum of care. “Whether you include Calvary in your philanthropy year after year,
or if you gave to Calvary for the first time, you have our deepest thanks,” Mr. Golub said. “In a
shifting healthcare environment, your generosity offers the assurance that Calvary will continue
to serve all who seek our unique, outstanding care.”
Sheldon Amster
Rudolph R. Amuso
Jordan Anger
Angelo Charles Annunziato
Sanita Annunziato
Julia C. Apotheker
Charles J. Arduini
Reverend Chris J. Aridas
Shirley Aronow Margolis
Ersen Arseven
Joseph F. Azara
George V. Babakian
Margot K. Baldwin
Catherine E. Bambrick
Mary Barbero
Reina Barcan
Walter M. Barnard
Lawrence Barone
Theresa Barracca
Alfred C. Bartolomeo
Wiktor Bednarz
Irene Bellus
Judith E. Belsky
George Benczak
Marilyn S. Benta
Beatrice P. Berger
Stephen Berger
Diane Berkowitz
Robert Bernikow
Stella Berny
John & Beverly Bertsch
John Blum
Theodore Blumenthal
Roy Boelstler
Virginia Bonaro
Arjen Boorsma
Charles L. Booth, Jr.
Patrick J. Brosnan
James Brown
Mark S. Brown
Bernadette Bucher-Glasse
Joseph T. Buckley
Steven E. Buckwald
Stephen A. Burke
Donna C. Burke
Rafael Caban
Lola Calcagno
Robert H. Caldwell
Marijane Camilleri
RoseMarie Campbell
Ronald Candrea
James Cannon
George Capsis
Matthew Carbone
Stephen A. Carlino
Mary M. Carolan
Maurice Carroll
Madeline M. Carroll
Edward J. Casey
Frank Castagna
Adele Cato
Joseph M. Cestone
Yvonne Y. F. Chan
Deirdre Cherry
Constance Chille
Peter J. Cirolia
Marie M. Citarella
Eugene V. Clark
Griffith X. Clarke
Kenneth S. Clemons
Frank L. Colavito
Barbara Cole
Claire Condon
Nancy Contus
Joseph W. Cooney
Geraldine Cooney
Elaine Corcillo
Fay Dawes Couyoumjan
Donald C. Culkin
Gerald J. Cullen
Norma Cummings
Robert J. Cummins
Joan M. Cunningham
Claudius M. Dacon
Grace Daddario
Edward A. Daly
John A. D’Amato
Edward P. Dancy
Michael Daniel
Anthony E. Davis
Elizabeth De Cuevas
Ronald R. De Rubeis
Barbara & John A. Decina
Trudi Dedonato
Joseph Deglomini
Randolph Del Franco
Robert Delaney
Reena Raggi Denton
Margaret A. Devine
David N. Dinkins
Elizabeth DiPalma
Catherine F. Donohue
George T. Donahue
James G. Donegan
Elizabeth P. Donlon
Aaron B. Donner
Edward Drayton
Christopher Driscoll
Daria S. Dudarevitch
James H. Duffy
Kathleen Eberle
David & Beth Edwards
Bernard Egan, Jr.
Heyward Ehrlich
Ellen Emery
Dr. Thomas J. &
Eleanor K. Fahey, Jr.
Ann T. Fanizzi
Ronald Farese
Antonia Farruggio
Bernard Feeney
Dolores M. Fernandez
Theresa & Annie Ferraioli
Thomas G. Ferrara
Patricia Ferrari
Henry J. Ferrero
John J. Fiore
Ellen Sue Fisher
Maryanne Fitzmaurice
Bernard M. Fitzpatrick
Jeffrey Flanagan
Kenneth A. Forde, MD
Charles A. Forma
Marsha Foskey
Mary P. Franco
Richard D. Freedman
Susan T. Friberg
Janet M. Frieary
Thank You to Our Donors
The donor listing acknowledges gifts and pledge payments of $1,000
Mrs. Greene’s Legacy Continues
or more received by Calvary during the period January 1, 2013 through
In 2013, the Jerome L. Greene
December 31, 2013. We regret that space limitations did not allow us to list
Foundation committed $4 million,
every gift received, but assure you that every donation, of every size, has
contributed to the benefit of our patients and their families. Thank you all
for your generosity.
If we have made an error in spelling or omitted your name, please
accept our apology and call the Calvary Fund office at 718-518-2077 so
that the error can be corrected.
to name The Dawn Greene
Hospice at Mary Manning Walsh
Home. Mrs. Greene, together with
her husband, Jerome L. Greene,
were generous philanthropists
who supported many of New
York City’s foremost health, cultural, and educational
The Fund Board welcomed William W. Wilson as its newest Director. Mr. Wilson is
President and CEO of the Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company of New York. He is a longtime
supporter of Calvary’s mission, who served as a member of Calvary’s Chairman’s
Council prior to becoming a Fund Board Director.
We continued to expand our presence on the Internet by using e-philanthropy
to communicate with our donors and friends. Calvary Life, our e-newsletter, is
now e-mailed to more than 22,000 individuals. “E-philanthropy is becoming an
increasingly important component of our overall development strategy, in order
to raise awareness of our mission and programs of care,” Mr. Golub said.
institutions. Mrs. Greene was dedicated to Calvary’s
mission of compassionate, comprehensive palliative and
end-of-life care. When she died in 2010, Mrs. Greene
left a historic bequest of $5 million to Calvary.
Mrs. Greene’s daughter, Christina McInerney, who
became President and CEO of the Jerome L. Greene
Foundation upon her mother’s death, championed
the new inpatient hospice at the earliest stages of its
development. The Dawn Greene Hospice, which is on
target to open in summer 2014, will be a fitting tribute
to Mrs. Greene, and to the Foundation’s continuing
dedication to our patients and their loved ones.
The Dawn Greene Hospice
See this special foldout for details.
Richard Fried
Georgia Gaines
Vincent Galantino
John A. Gallagher
Rose Marie T. Gambino
Clare C. Garetano
John A. Gargan
Camille Gargiulo
Rocco Garrio
Susan & Leonard Garry
Robert W. Garthwait
Susan Gaum
Robert Ghiradella
Gillespie Family
Ellen Gleeson
Leola Glover
Karen Gold
Michael Golden
Morris Goldman
Cathy N. Goldstein
Paul Golinski
Evelyn M. Gorman
Thomas Gormley
Barbara Gottlieb
William F. Grant
Arlene M. Grauer
Gloria Greene
Adeline Guerin
James J. Hagan
Alice I. Hall
Mimi Halpern
John A. Hammerle
Steve Hammerman
John A. Hanson
Anne L. Hart
Laurie Hathorn
Devry L. Hawkins
Nancy L. Hayward
Bruce M. Helwig
William Henry
Andrew J. Hernon
Estella Hewett
David A. Hirsch
Warren Hochberg
Timothy Hodgdon
Elizabeth A. Hogan
William Howe
Gregory Humenesky
Aurelia Ion
Christopher Jacobs
Debra Jaret
Irene Jedrlinic
Monica Jerussi
Cleveland Johnson
Gerardine M. Johnson
William J. Jordan
Rita Kalish
Janet Kalish
Linda A. Karam
Nora M. Kardian
Roland N. Karlen
Gary M. Karlitz
Victoria C. Katibah
Rudolph Kats
John F. Keane
Maureen B. Keating
Steve Kellner
John Kelly
John J. Kelly
Frank Kelty
Richard Kennan
James J. Kennedy
Edith B. Kicinski
Michael Kiernan
James Kilkenny
Karen King
Donald Kopal
Alan W. Kornberg
Kevin J. Kuntz
Saul J. Kupferberg
Fredda Kwitman
Wayne & Nancy Lang
Norman E. Leeds
Teresa J. Levine
John & Roseanne Loughnane
Charles Lundy
Adam Lustig
Katherine P. Macari
Jo-Ann Maggio
William M. Major
Ann T. Mara
Dorothy Marks
Beverly Philip Mazze
Robert H. Mc Cormick
William P. McCaughey
Edward F. McDermott
Mary Jane McGahan
Constance B. McGillicuddy
F. James McGilloway
Manya McKenna
John J. McKevitt
Elizabeth G. McPartland
James E. McQuade
Thomas T. Meyer
Steven Mills
Kitellen Milo
Nina Miness
Joseph Mitola
Donald F. Mooney
Theresa E. Moore
Carl Morales
Margaret P. Moran
Sean P. Moyles
James J. Mulvihill
Kathleen Murnion
Donald V. Murray
Ann I Murray
Cindy Ellen Nelson
William P. Neuberger
Marian Nixon
Raymond Nobiletti
Winifred E. Nussbaum
Joanne O’Brien
John O’Brien
Daniel J. O’Brien
Jane T. O’Connor
Nancy J. O’Connor
William B. O’Keefe
Joan O’Malley
Daniel J. O’Riordan
Norma Pane
Lawrence G. Pape
Timothy M. Paul
Paul F. Peranio
Frances Pergamo
Richard R. Perna
Dorothy Perry
Judy E. Persise
Gregory P. Peterson
Felix M. Petrillo
Aleksandr Pevzner
Edgar A. Pimentel
Peter A. Piscitelli
Joseph D. Pizzurro
Joseph Platt
Leonard Polonsky
Austin J. Power
Rose Prezioso
Kenneth W. Price
George B. Prince
Anthony Puccio
Michael Puglisi
Anne P. Quinn
Salvatore Ragonese
H. Lewis Rapaport
Mark Reibeisen
Phyllis H. Remy
Frances A. Resheske
Delia Reyes
Paul N. Ritzcovan
Anne J. Robinson
Bernice Robinson
Michael J. Roche
Joan M. Roche
Thomas Roche
Allan Roman
Mauro Romita
Yale Rosen
Samuel Rosenberg
Ellen & Ron Roxby
David Russin
Danielle Russo
Robert Ryall
Ann Ryan
Pasqual Sacchetti
Robert A. Sachs
Maxwell Saffian
William Saich
Jeffrey Salkin
Raymond J. Santagata
Peter Santoro
Gennaro Saporito
Mary B. Sayers
Anthony M. Saytanides
Kenneth F. Scharfenberg
Anna E. Scheer
Charles Scheidt
Gerard Schiebel
Renay Schlereth
John E. Schlitt
Mary C. Scholz
Robert P. Schroter
Andrew Schwartz
Margaret Schwartz
Michael M. Scimeca
Alan D. Seget
William R. Serpe
Ian Shand
Justin Shapiro
Philip Shapiro
Brian W. Shea
Barbara Sheridan
Nancy A. Shopkorn
Robert H. Siegel
Helen Siembab
Mario Simeone
Michael J. A. Smith
13
Rendering of The Dawn Greene Hospice
The Dawn Greene Hospice
In 2013, Calvary began construction on the 10-bed Dawn Greene
Hospice, located on the fifteenth floor of Mary Manning Walsh
Home (MMW) on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. This facility, to be
opened in summer 2014, will address the need for appropriate,
comprehensive palliative care in Manhattan for patients with end-stage
illnesses, and serve people who cannot be cared for at home for
various reasons. Calvary’s partnership with MMW brings together
two mission-driven organizations, both dedicated to providing quality
care for vulnerable populations. This partnership is part of a larger
strategic plan to serve increasing numbers of Manhattan residents
across our continuum, which includes home care, home hospice,
inpatient hospice, and bereavement support.
Rendering of the Nursing Station
Rendering of a Patient Room
2013 Leadership Gifts
Calvary received a number of other generous leadership gifts in 2013, including:
$300,000from Newman’s Own Foundation, for bereavement support for young children and
teens, including Calvary’s Camp Compass®.
$250,000 from Faye and Steven J. Golub to name the Nursing Station at The Dawn Greene Hospice.
$190,000 from the RTS Family Foundation, for wound care for inpatients, and to support the
Center for Curative and Palliative Wound Care.
$125,000 from the Altman Foundation for the innovative palliative home care program of
Calvary@Home.
By purchasing a leaf on the Hospital’s
Tree of Life, people may remember
their loved ones and support Calvary’s
unique mission.
$100,000 from the Pat Cairo Family Foundation, for the care of our patients and families.
Through 2013, the Pat Cairo Family Foundation has given the magnificent total of
$1,540,000 for Calvary’s programs of care.
$100,000 from the David Berg Foundation, to support expanded outreach to New York’s Jewish
community, and for special services for Orthodox Jewish families of our patients.
Calvary’s direct communications program, an extremely important part of our overall external
relations activities, raised nearly $2,000,000 from close to 40,000 donors. We thank everyone
who responded to our appeals throughout the year.
Our special donor leadership group, the Storrs Society, named for Calvary’s founder,
recognizes individuals who are annual donors of $1,000 or more. We now count more than
565 individuals as Storrs Society members.
In 2013, we received a total of $2,193,626 from 38 estates. These special planned gifts
provide the Hospital with crucial support and reflect the foresight and thoughtfulness of
numerous patients, families, and friends. It is a credit to the hard work of our Professional
Advisors Council (PAC), a group of trusts and estates specialists (see list, page 16), who help
us identify new financial resources. The bequests we receive every year enable us to maintain
the high standards that characterize Calvary’s exceptional palliative care. Gerald C. Tobin, Esq.
is Chairman of the Professional Advisors Council and Vice Chair of the Calvary Fund.
Charles T. Smith
Karen Smith
Beatrice K. Sparling
Robert E. Spatt
Beatrice Spillane
Joseph M. Spillane
Gilbert Steinman
George Stewart
Mary C. Strong
Shakti Sutriasa
Florence C. Sweeney
Virginia L. Swift
Mary E. Tangney
Ellen Lu Taylor
Edmund & Diane Taylor
Alessandra Tocco
Valerie Tootle
William X. Tracy
John M. Trani
Joseph G. Tucci
Nancy Underwood
Luis Uriondo
Michael Valva
Louise R. Varnas
Ramakanta Velagala
Arthur J. Voute
Dorothy A. Wade
Florence Walker
William F. Wallace
Mary Wardell
Bridget P. Warner
Alan W. Weber
Donald A. Weber
Donald R. Weber
14
Arlene F. Weberg
Marilyn A. Werner
Arthur Weyrauch
Mary Whalen
Stephen J. Whelan
Kathleen A. Whitley
Stanley J. Wiegand
Scott Willoughby
Peter M. Wright
Ketly Wright
Gerald Yass
Wai Man Yeung
Rose Carmen Zanca
Jeanne E. Zunich
Foundations &
Organizations
Gifts of $10,000 or more
Anonymous Foundation
G. A. Ackermann
Memorial Fund
Altman Foundation
Rose M. Badgeley Residuary
Charitable Trust
David Berg Foundation
Bloomberg Philanthropies
Irving T. Bush Foundation
The Pat Cairo Family
Foundation
Calvary Hospital Circle
of Friends
Catholic Institute of the
Food Industry
Catholic Charities of the
Archdiocese of New York
Circle of Hope Cancer
Foundation
G. L. Connolly Foundation
The Dreitzer Foundation
Charles Engelhard Foundation
Barbara Epstein Foundation
Jerome L. Greene Foundation
Hagedorn Fund
Y.C. Ho/Helen and Michael
Chiang Foundation
Hugoton Foundation
Laurie Kayden Foundation
Sarita Kenedy East
Foundation Inc.
Knights of Columbus,
New York Chapter
Koch Foundation
The Kurr Foundation
George Link, Jr.
Charitable Trust
George Link, Jr. Foundation
Lupin Foundation
Ambrose Monell Foundation
Newman’s Own Foundation
The Rogosin Institute
Billy Rose Foundation
RTS Family Foundation
Fan Fox & Leslie R.
Samuels Foundation
SaraMar Charitable Fund
Sarah I. Schieffelin
Residuary Trust
Charles and Mildred
Schnurmacher Foundation
Robert Mize & Isa White
Trimble Family Foundation
University Diagnostic
Medical Imaging, Inc.
Wasily Family Foundation
Charles R. & Winifred R.
Weber Foundation
Foundations &
Organizations
Gifts of $5,000 – $9,999
Bill and Ann Bresnan
Foundation
Brae Burn Country Club, Inc.
Thomas & Agnes Carvel
Foundation
Knights of Columbus,
#4521, Mary Queen
of Peace Council
Kupferberg Foundation
Bertha and Isaac Liberman
Foundation
Long Island Metropolitan
Lacrosse Foundation
Lucille & Paul Maslin
Foundation
Moses L. Parshelsky
Foundation
United Hospital Fund of
New York
United Way of New York City
The Miles Hodsdon Vernon
Foundation
Foundations &
Organizations
Gifts of $1,000 – $4,999
American Legion Auxiliary
American Legion, Leonard
Hawkins Post #156
Associated Health Foundation
Beirne Foundation
Ida Bernstein Memorial
League
Catholic Communal Fund
Concannon Family
Foundation
Congregation Kahal
Adas Yisroel
D’Aloia Family Foundation
Joe & Helen Darion
Foundation
Dear Little Dollies
Dorothy Della Calce
Private Foundation
Dworman Foundation, Inc.
Robert & Gail Edelstein
Foundation
Einstein Cancer Fund, Inc.
Thomas and Jeanne Elmezzi
Private Foundation
Josephine M. Fanizzi
Memorial Fund
Maurice & Carol Feinberg
Family Foundation
Feuerring Foundation
Friends of Maureen Fargione
Ruth and Jack Glantz
Family Foundation
Goldie Anna Charitable Trust
Burton & Sarina Gwirtzman
Foundation
John Hung Foundation
Immaculate Conception
Church
Jana Foundation
Kapiloff Foundation
Nancy & John Kelly
Family Foundation
Elroy & Terry Krumholz
Foundation
Max & Selma Kupferberg
Family Foundation
Joseph & Katherine Macari
Foundation
The Maggie and Waggie
Foundation
Mathis Pfohl Foundation
Metzger-Price Fund
New York City Transit
Authority
Norman M. Morris
Foundation
The Opportunity Foundation
Price Family Foundation
Retired Detectives of the
Police Department
Bela and Catharine Schick
Foundation
Dr. Morris Smoller Social
Service Fund
Sobel Family Foundation
St. Francis College
$600,000Bequest from the estate of Jane P. Donlon, for the general care programs and
services of the Hospital.
$250,000Bequest from the estate of Elizabeth M. Ruppert, for the general care programs and
services of the Hospital.
$154,166Bequest from the estate of Patrick J. Fegan, for the general care programs and
services of the Hospital.
$148,368Bequest from the estate of Francis P. Burdo, for the general care programs and
services of the Hospital.
The Professional Advisors Council was more active than ever in 2013. The PAC sponsored
its Annual Planned Giving Donor Reception, held at Christie’s on April 10, 2013. Tash Perrin,
Christie’s Senior Vice President, Senior Director, Chairman’s Office, welcomed guests.
Mr. Calamari provided a summary of Calvary’s extensive programs of care for patients and
families. Mr. Calamari introduced Diana Bramham, Christie’s Specialist in 19th Century
European Art, who reviewed the evening’s featured art exhibition, entitled “Encountering
the Orient: Masterworks from The Dahesh Museum of Art.” Mr. Golub thanked the Christie’s
staff for their generous hospitality. He also noted the need to strengthen Calvary’s endowment
in order to safeguard the Hospital’s future. More than 150 donors and friends attended, and
viewed rare treasures, including ancient manuscripts, sculptures, and paintings. The program
concluded with a reception in Christie’s Board Room.
Brown Brothers Harriman Trust Company, N.A., underwrote a networking reception
on November 12, for young professionals in estate planning, at the Yale Club. PAC member
Kristin Ashman, Esq., Senior Vice President, New York Regional Trust Head for Brown Brothers
Harriman, chaired the event, with Hon. Renee R. Roth, former New York County Surrogate,
serving as keynote speaker. Judge Roth is Of Counsel to McLaughlin & Stern LLP, and is a
member of the New York State Joint Commission on Public Ethics. She is also Chair of the
Surrogate’s Court Advisory Committee for the Office of Court Administration.
Vidda Foundation
Irwin Weiner Foundation
Ann Eden Woodward
Foundation
Corporations
Gifts of $10,000 or more
Johnson & Johnson
Corporations
Gifts of $5,000 – $9,999
ADP
IBM
NBC Studios
Corporations
Gifts of $1,000 – $4,999
American Express
Foundation
Barnes & Noble
Bentley Motor Group
Country Bank
Farrauto Berman & Slater
Goldman Sachs & Co.
Laurino & Laurino
Merck
Milbank Tweed Hadley
& McCloy LLP
Miller Proctor Nickolas
Mutual of America
Pfizer
Pitney Bowes
Ridgewood Savings Bank
Schuyler Hill Funeral Home
Time Warner
Yonkers Paving Concepts
Estates
Estate of Rose H. Accardi
Estate of Hector Alfonso
Estate of Muriel Allinson
Estate of Francis Burdo
Estate of Sophia Burns
Estate of Mary A. Carre
Estate of Audrey Canty
Estate of Jane P. Donlon
Estate of Rita Muriel
Dougherty
Estate of James Dowdall
Estate of Eugene Driscoll
Estate of Agatha C. Droste
Estate of Donald M.
Endebrock
Estate of Patrick J. Fegan
Estate of Isabel Rose Fine
Estate of Thomas R. Foy
Estate of C. Evelyn Greene
Estate of Catherine Guillory
Estate of Dorothy Hammer
Estate of Ann Hanson
Estate of William J. Hill
Estate of Elizabeth Manning
Estate of Jack Marcus
Estate of Johanna Marx
Estate of Yvonne H.
McDonald
Estate of Thomas E.
McManus
Estate of Mary T. McPhillips
Estate of Howard C. Morgan
Estate of Judith Mortenson
Estate of Nora E. O’Neill
Estate of Genevieve B.
O’Rourke
Estate of Helen Rehr
Estate of Celia D. Rumsey
Estate of Elizabeth M.
Ruppert
Estate of Geraldine
Santangelo
Estate of Diana Schmidt
Estate of Henry Shepard
Estate of Rosalind Tyler
Awards Gala
Gifts of $10,000 or more
American Express Company
Archcare
Bank of America
Barclays Capital
Bloomberg
Boies, Schiller & Flexner, LLP
The Boston Consulting Group
Mary & William Buckley
Centerview Partners, LLC
Steven & Alexandra Cohen
Foundation
Credit Suisse
Frank A. D’Amelio
Deloitte LLP
Ernst & Young, LLP
Farrell Media Group
Barbara & Terence J. Gallagher
Goldman Sachs & Co.
Faye & Steven J. Golub
Claire & Carlos M. Hernandez
Innisfree M&A Incorporated
Krasdale
JPMorgan Chase & Co.
KPMG, LLP
Lazard
Loop Capital
Eugene & Carol Ludwig
and Promontory
Financial Group, LLC
The Max Group, LLC
Paul Meister
Morgan Stanley
Claire & Joseph Morrow
Mutual of America
Nine West and
The Jones Group
Louise M. Parent &
John P. Casaly
Pfizer, Inc.
PriceWaterhouseCoopers, LLP
The May & Samuel Rudin
Family Foundation
Alan & Nancy Schwartz
Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom, LLP
Sterling National Bank
Anne Coté Taylor
Awards Gala
Gifts of $5,000 – $9,999
John K. Castle
EMC Corporation
Glenmede Trust
Company, N.A.
Humana Foundation
Johnson & Johnson Family
of Companies
Calvary hosted its 10th Annual Trusts and
Estates Conference in New York City on
September 17, 2013. The invitation-only
event attracted more than 325 of New
York’s most experienced trusts and estates
attorneys. A distinguished panel focused
on the “Ethical Considerations in Executing
an Exit Strategy – Issues Faced by the Trusts
and Estates Practitioner.”
Bonnie J. Loeb
McKinsey & Company
Minerals Technologies, Inc
New York Medical College
Nancy & Fred Poses
Robert Price
Protiviti
Kathleen & Stratford Wallace
Awards Gala
Gifts of $1,000 – $4,999
Accenture
The Advance Realty
Foundation, Inc.
Barr & Barr Inc.
Bleakley Platt & Schmidt LLP
Bollinger Insurance
Calvary Hospital Medical Staff
Clifton Budd & DeMaria, LLP
Mitchell Cohen
Joseph L. DeMarzo
DePalma Productions, LLC
Barbara & John A. Decina
Future Value Associates, Ltd.
Gabrielli Truck
Genserve Inc.
GNYHA Ventures, Inc.
Swati & David Grayson
Jeffrey Greene
Greenlight Capital
Susan Grossman
Francis C. Gunther & Perkins
Eastman Architects
HCE LLC
Joanne & Henry J. Humphreys
Kelley Drye & Warren LLP
Carol Sutton Lewis &
William M. Lewis
Eileen H. & E. Barry Lyon
M&T Bank
Martin Clearwater & Bell LLP
Maverick Capital Charities
Montgomery McCraken
Mrs. John F. McGillicuddy
Diahn & Tom McGrath
New York Hospital Queens
Nicholson & Galloway Inc.
Colleen V. O’Neill
Paccar Parts
Jane Payne
Pepsi Cola Bottling Company
of New York Inc.
Planned Protection
Consultants
Peter J. Puglese
Robert A. Quinn
Ridgewood Savings Bank
David Rockefeller
Stephen C. Sellin
Sharath Sharma
Carolyn Slaski
Sunshine Sachs & Associates
Mark Tennant
Laura & Gerald C. Tobin
Transervice Lease Corp.
Michael D. Tusiani
Charles G. Ward
Whittier & Associates Inc.
15
Calvary Hospital’s 30th Annual Awards
Gala raised more than $1 million to benefit
programs and services for advanced cancer
patients and their families. Pictured left
to right: Steven J. Golub, Chairman of the
Calvary Fund Board of Directors; Thomas
J. Fahey Jr., MD, Chairman of the Board of
Directors, Calvary Hospital; Frank A. D’Amelio
(Honoree); Frank A. Calamari, President &
CEO, Calvary Hospital; and John Gambling,
host of “The John Gambling Show” and
New York radio legend.
Golf and Tennis Classic
Golf and Tennis Classic
Gifts of $10,000 or more
Gifts of $1,000 – $4,999
Bedford International
Mario Belardino
The Berberich Family
GNYHA Ventures, Inc.
The Purdy Family
Risk Management Planning
Group, Inc.
Simone Healthcare
Real Estate
WOR Radio
AAA Best Auto Body, Inc.
Allied Beverage Corp.
Henry H. Alpert
Louis Annunziata
William and Mary Buckley
Foundation
Roger V. Cappucci
Citywide Mobile Response
Corporation
Clifton Budd & Demaria, LLP
Joseph R. Curto
EME Consulting
Engineering Group
Benedict J. Fargione
Future Value Associates, Ltd.
Hamilton Cavanaugh &
Associates, Inc.
Harmon & Associates, Inc.
JL Consulting LLC
Kohler Distributing Company
Scott La Rue
Eileen H. & E. Barry Lyon
Manhattan Beer Distributors
Michael McNamara
Micromem
Miller Proctor Nickolas, Inc.
Montefiore Medical Center
Joseph L. Nunziata
Protiviti
Ruby Wines, Inc.
Anthony L. Sacco
Alan D. Seget
Amit & Carla Sikdar
Golf and Tennis Classic
Gifts of $5,000 – $9999
Ameriprise Financial
Centerlight Health System
Emblem Health
Empire General Contracting
KPMG, LLP
Medline Industries
Meridian Risk/Rosol
Agency, Inc.
Mutual of America
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company
of New York, Inc.
Sanitation Salvage
Sterling National Bank
William J. Tully Foundation
16
The PAC sponsored Calvary’s Tenth Annual Trusts and Estates Conference, entitled,
“Ethics for Breakfast: The Ethical Considerations in Executing an Exit Strategy – Issues Faced by
the Trusts and Estates Practitioner.” Held at the Roosevelt Hotel in Manhattan on September
17, this continuing legal education seminar drew an audience of more than 325 professionals.
Mr. Calamari welcomed everyone and expressed his gratitude to the PAC for their support, and
for sustaining this special program over the past decade.
The program featured a panel presentation moderated by Hon. Nora S. Anderson, Surrogate,
New York County, and including panelists: Steven R. Finkelstein, Esq., Partner, Finkelstein &
Virga, P.C., and Counsel to the Public Administrator of the County of New York; Barbara S.
Gillers, Esq., Adjunct Professor of Law, New York University School of Law; and Eric W. Penzer,
Esq., Partner, Farrell Fritz, P.C.
PAC member Michael M. Mariani, Esq., Managing Director, Deputy General Trust Counsel,
and Director of Trust and Estate Services, Fiduciary Trust Company International, and Chair of
the Conference, thanked the program’s generous sponsors (see list below).
To formally recognize those who have informed us of a bequest or other gift to Calvary as
part of their estate planning, the Hospital has established the Society of 1899. Individuals can
join the Society of 1899 in a number of ways, including leaving a bequest in a will and making
other planned and deferred gifts. As of December 31, the Society of 1899 had a total of 176
members (see list, p. 17).
Approximately 400 people attended Calvary’s Thirtieth Annual Awards Gala, held at
The Pierre on June 4. The event raised more than $1 million. We are deeply grateful to the
Awards Gala Co-Chairs, Journal Co-Chairs, and the Calvary Fund and Calvary Hospital Boards
for their tireless efforts in making this event a great success.
Mr. Golub presented the Calvary Medal to Frank A. D’Amelio, Executive Vice President,
Business Operations, and Chief Financial Officer of Pfizer Inc. John R. Gambling, host of
Rusty Staub Foundation, Inc.
Villa Barone
Walton Press
Westchester Collision and
Recovery Group
Yonkers Paving Concepts
Attorney
Conference Gifts
Founding Sponsor
Gifts of $3,000 or more
Fiduciary Trust Company
International
Sponsor
Gifts of $3,000
Withum Smith and Brown, PC
Friends
Gifts of $1,500
Bonhams
Brown Brothers Harriman
Trust Company, N. A.
Christie’s
Doyle New York
Empire Valuation
Consultants, LLC
Future Value Associates, Ltd.
Glenmede Trust
Company, N.A.
Katz, Sapper &
Miller, LLP, CPA
Marcum LLP
Northern Trust
Sotheby’s
Exhibitors
Gifts of $550
Appraisers & Planners Inc.
Atlantic Private Trust
Wealth Management
BNY Mellon Wealth
Management
Ernst & Young
FMV Opinions, Inc.
Heritage Auctions
Key Private Bank
Management Planning, Inc.
Roland Antiques
South Dakota Trust
Company LLC
The Private Client Reserve,
US Bank
Thomson Reuters
Wells Fargo
Gift in Kind
Trusts & Estates Magazine
Professional Advisors Council
The Calvary Hospital Professional Advisors Council
(PAC) was established in 2001 to assist the Board of
Directors and the staff of the Hospital to secure the
financial support required to operate the nation’s only
acute care hospital dedicated solely to the palli­ative
care of adult advanced cancer patients. PAC members
are volunteers from the legal, investment, accounting,
insurance, and banking professions.
Chairman
Gerald C. Tobin, Esq.
Vice Chairman
Colleen F. Carew, Esq.
Vice Chairman
Andrea Hyde, Esq.
Kristin J. Ashman, Esq.
Bonnie Brennan
John T. Brophy
Ronni G. Davidowitz, Esq.
Keith C. Dolin
Thomas G. Ferrara
Robert M. Freedman, Esq.
Magdalen Gaynor, Esq.
Charles F. Gibbs, Esq.
Paul Golinski, Esq.
Rorrie Gregorio
Charles J. Groppe, Esq.
Arlene Harris, Esq.
Edward D. Heben, CPA
Gerard F. Joyce, Jr., Esq.
Stanley S. Leffler, Esq.
Mary Ellen Manley, Esq.
Michael M. Mariani, Esq.
Lawrence F. McGovern, Esq.
Diahn W. McGrath, Esq.
Daniel J. McSwiggan, Esq.
Lee Miller, Esq.
Charles J. Ogeka, Esq.
Timothy M. Paul, Esq.
Victoria Richardson
Paul I. Rosenberg, Esq.
Eileen Caulfield
Schwab, Esq.
Alan D. Seget, Esq.
Erin Gilmore Smith, Esq.
Michael J.A. Smith
Frank W. Streng, Esq.
Joseph A. Tarantino
Wayne L. Warnken, Esq.
Michael R. Weaver, Esq.
“The John Gambling Show” and New York radio legend, served as Master of Ceremonies,
and introduced Mr. Calamari and Thomas J. Fahey, Jr., MD, Chairman, Calvary Hospital, who
welcomed guests. Tenor Michael Amante provided the evening’s entertainment.
Calvary’s 25th Annual Golf & Tennis Classic drew more than 300 participants on August
5. As they enjoyed beautiful weather and the challenging Brae Burn and Century courses,
participants raised more than $220,000 for the Hospital’s programs of care. Following rounds
of golf and tennis, attendees enjoyed a live auction, celebrity show, and delicious buffet dinner.
The event, in memory of former Fund Board Chairman and Hospital Board Member Dennis
E. Berberich, honored Mario Belardino, President, Bedford International, Wine Importers.
Proceeds from the tennis portion of the outing were donated to the Dennis E. Berberich
Cancer Care Technician Scholarship Fund. The 2013 recipient was Loren DeRosa.
Calvary’s Annual Donor Appreciation Reception took place at the New York Botanical
Garden on May 8. More than 300 guests toured the Conservatory and Garden grounds and
enjoyed a cocktail reception. Guests received a Lucite paperweight etched with an image of
the Compatior statue. Speakers included Mr. Calamari, Dr. Brescia, Dr. Fahey, and Vincent J.
Spinelli, Executive Vice President of the Calvary Fund.
The 2013 Reception included a celebration of Dr. Brescia’s 50th year at Calvary Hospital.
Dr. Brescia reminisced about his myriad experiences at the Hospital, and he paid tribute to
the thousands of patients he has cared for through his half-century of service and leadership.
His family and colleagues gave him a rousing ovation in appreciation of all he has done to
advance Calvary’s mission of compassion and excellence.
We are grateful to our longstanding friends, as well as those who joined us for the first
time last year, in endorsing and supporting Calvary care – care that means compassion,
respect for the dignity of every patient, and non-abandonment of patients and families.
Dr. Michael J. Brescia addressed guests at
Calvary’s 11th Annual Donor Appreciation
Reception at the New York Botanical
Garden in May. Hospital leadership and
staff gathered at the picturesque site
to honor more than 300 dedicated and
generous donors, and to celebrate
Dr. Brescia’s 50th anniversary at Calvary.
To support our unique mission with a
tax-deductible gift to the Calvary Fund
or to sign up for our e-newsletter, visit
our website, www.calvaryhospital.org,
or call 718-518-2077.
The Society of 1899
Calvary established The Society of 1899 to honor individuals
who have made a bequest or deferred gift to the Hospital.
Rose H. Accardi
Rose Angelicola
Dorothy Altman
Philip Arena
Connie J. Attanasio
Thomas H. Bacon
Leo & Lore Baer
Carolina Barón
Elizabeth Bertoldo
Claudia Brigman
Thomas E. Buckley
William & Mary Buckley
Mrs. Edward Burke
Frank A. Calamari
Lola Calcagno
Louis A. Caputo, Jr.
Joan Cargulia
Madeline Carroll
Linda Terrasi Cezanne
Mrs. Walter F. Clyne
Faye Dawes Couyoumjan
Joan M. Cunningham
Margaret Cremmins
Robert J. Crimmins
Diane Darrow
Lorena DeFilippis
Eileen Dennin
Ronald R. De Rubeis
Carmen J. DeSimone
Ray Marie Di Lieto
James & Carol R. Di Lorenzo
Joyce M. Dolan
Aaron Donner
Stuart D. Edwards
Grace Ehrler
Ellen Emery
Mary T. Fahy
Ann Fanizzi
Thomas G. Ferrara
Lydia Figueroa
Stephano Filberti
Mr. & Mrs. J.F. Fine
Mary Fittig
Mary E. Flynn
Claire A. Fordrung
Mary Louise Formato, MD
James J. Fox
Mary Price Franco
Richard D. Freedman
Cynthia Gagen
Vincent Galantino
Joann Galdi
Clare C. Garetano
John A. Gargan
Magdalen Gaynor, Esq.
Carol Gentile, Esq.
Lynn Geras
Susan Gernert
Martin Gold
Carmelo Gonzalez
Barbara G. Gottlieb
Jane Mack Gould
Arlene Graci
Mary Graci
Dawn M. Greene
Armand Greenhall
Ehler O. Gregory
Susan Grossman
Catherine Guillory
Laurie Hathorn
Harriet Huber
Eliezer & Sherry Hyman
Linda A. Karam
Edith P. Klarmann
Joanne M. Knetge
Terence Kreider
Don & Karen La Rocca
Amelia Lehmann
Armando Leone
Edward & Barbara-Ann
Levine, PhD
Marcia Levine
Lucille Lew
Ellen Lukas
Jack & Gloria Maloney
Anthony Roy Mangione, PhD
Mr. & Mrs. Jack Marcus
Mary Mauger
William A. McKenna, Jr.
Elizabeth McPartland
Mrs. Lorraine A. MeLora
In honor of Hy Miller
& Ruth Mesard
Janine Metz
Marian Metzger
Clara Mayer
Roseann Mincieli
Margaret P. Moran
Christina Mullarkey
William G. Mulligan
James J. Mulvihill
Ruth L. Nelson
Madeline Newbauer
Barbara O’Brien
Kathleen O’Connor
Margaret O’Connor
Mrs. James O’Rourke
John Palisi
Mr. & Mrs. Parkin
Marion Patton
Marie Rita Porcello
Marc Prager, MD
Lucille Prudente
Christiane R. Quinif
Mario J. Recchi
Jane M. Roeser
Lillian Rosen
Catherine Sabino
Joan Salb
Gloria Santino
Marie Santora
Blanche J. Scheib
Aaron Schottenfeld, MD
& Mattie Schottenfeld
Mary J. Seele
Helen G. Semo
Jane Shaw
Catherine Smolich
Carol A. Sonnessa
Vincent J. Spinelli
Elliot J. Stamler
Ingrid & Reinhold Stehle
Lucie Grant Steinmann
Adele Stern
Terry Sullivan
Gerald C. Tobin, Esq.
Joanne Tolley
Nancy Underwood
Marie E. Wahn
Edith Winston
Edwin D. Wood
Isabella Zambrano
37 anonymous members
17
Calvary Holding Company, Inc.
Description of Organization
profit corporation organized under Section 402 of the Not-For-
Calvary Holding
Company, Inc.
Board of Directors
Profit Corporation Law of the State of New York. The Company
Thomas J. Fahey, Jr., MD
is exempt from Federal income tax under the provisions of the
Chairman
Internal Revenue Code as an organization described in Section
Karl P. Adler, MD
Organization
Calvary Holding Company, Inc. (the “Company”) is a not-for-
501( c )( 3 ). The purpose of the Company is to engage in
charitable, scientific and medical activities to support the Calvary
Hospital, Inc. (the “Hospital”) and its affiliated organizations
which are exempt under Section 501( c )( 3 ) of the Internal
Revenue Code. ArchCare, a not-for-profit corporation, is the
sole corporate member of the Company and the Hospital.
Principles of Combination
The combined financial statements include the accounts of the
following organizations of which the Company is the sole
corporate member:
• Calvary Fund, Inc. (the “Fund”) is a not-for-profit corporation
exempt from Federal income tax under Section 501( c )( 3 ) of
the Internal Revenue Code. The Fund’s purpose is to solicit,
accept, and receive real and personal property and to collect
income therefrom to be applied exclusively for any healthrelated char­itable organization or corporation affiliated with
the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York. However, the
current and historical intent has been to provide exclusive
support to the Hospital.
• Calvary Palliative Care Network, L.L.C. (the “Network”) is
a limited liability company that advises, consults, as well as
provides administrative and management services to physicians,
including professional groups and independent practice
associations, hospitals, and other healthcare providers. The
Network is the sole member of Calvary Network Independent
Practice Association, L.L.C., an inactive entity. The Network
became inactive effective January 1, 2001.
Manfred Altstadt
John P. Bertsch
Associate Directors
Frank A. Calamari
Michael J. Brescia, MD
Calvary Fund, Inc.
Board of Directors
Steven J. Golub
Chairman
John A. Decina
Mary K. Buckley
Steven J. Golub
Ernesto L. Butcher*
Benedict J. Fargione
Calvary Hospital, Inc.
Board of Directors
Terence Gallagher**
Timothy Cardinal Dolan
Henry J. Humphreys
Archdiocese of New York
Theodore Jadick
Honorary Chairman
Kenneth Krasne
Thomas J. Fahey, Jr., MD
Nicholas D. Mastronardi
Chairman
Manfred Altstadt
John P. Bertsch
Rev. Eric P. Cruz
John A. Decina
Joseph L. DeMarzo
Thomas G. Ferrara
Terence Gallagher
Steven J. Golub
Edward D. Heben
Carlos M. Hernandez
William A. McKenna, Jr.
Eileen T. Nugent, Esq.
Louise M. Parent, Esq.
Al Roker
Dennis M. Schneider
Joseph A. Tarantino
Olga Luz Tirado
Gerald C. Tobin, Esq.
Paul E. Travers
William W. Wilson
Scott LaRue
Chairman’s Council
Rena M. Murtha, RN
Daniel J. Ashley
Amit Sikdar
Joseph G. Cairo, Jr.
Joseph A. Tarantino
John Castle
Anne Coté Taylor
Frank A. D’Amelio
John J. Conheeney
Larry Norton, MD
Director Emeritus
Robert Price
In addition, primarily because it is under common management
Paul R. Provost
with the above organizations, the Hospital is included in the
Stratford Corbett Wallace
combined financial statements. The Hospital is a not-for-profit
specialty hospital that provides services for the care of terminally
ill cancer patients. The Hospital, which is operated in connection
with the Archdiocese of New York, is exempt from Federal income
tax under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
Intercompany transactions and amounts have been eliminated.
18
* Deceased May 2014
**Director Emeritus
Calvary Holding Company, Inc.
Combined Statements of Operations and Changes in Net Assets
For the Years Ended December 31, 2013 and 2012
20132012
Revenues, Gains, and Other Support:
Net patient service revenue (after contractual allowances and discounts)
Provision for uncollectible accounts receivable Net patient service revenue, net of provision for uncollectible accounts receivable
$100,772,600
$101,966,000
(909,800)
(754,500)
99,862,800
101,211,500
Investment income
1,326,300
1,273,600
Net realized gains on investments 5,545,600
1,750,500
Contributions
6,893,6007,157,200
Special event revenue
877,500
990,800
Special event costs
(498,700)
(517,500)
Other operating revenue
644,600
691,900
114,651,700
112,558,000
Total revenues, gains, and other support
Expenses:
Salaries
58,201,80059,290,800
Employee benefits
20,880,100
24,409,500
Supplies and other
28,096,700
26,963,600
Archdiocesan pension plan withdrawal fee
Depreciation, leases, and equipment rental Fund raising expenses
Total expenses
—
21,163,300
4,353,400
4,213,900
956,400
1,063,200
112,488,400
137,104,300
Revenues, Gains and Other Support Over (Under) Expenses2,163,300
Change in Net Unrealized Gains and (Losses) on Investments2,317,200
(24,546,300)
3,560,000
Pension-Related Adjustments
8,607,000(897,200)
Increase (Decrease) in Net Assets
13,087,500(21,883,500)
Net Assets, Beginning of year
36,954,40058,837,900
Net Assets, End of year
$ 50,041,900
$ 36,954,400
The above financial data is extracted from the Calvary Holding Company, Inc.’s audited full financial statements.
The Calvary Holding Company, Inc.’s audited financial statements, including related footnotes, are available upon request.
19
Calvary Hospital, Inc.
Statements of Operations
For the Years Ended December 31, 2013 and 2012
20132012
Revenues:
Net patient service revenue (after contractual allowances and discounts)
$100,772,600
$101,966,000
(909,800)
(754,500)
99,862,800
101,211,500
1,685,100
1,842,000
767,000
813,100
102,314,900
103,866,600
Provision for uncollectible accounts receivable
Net patient service revenue, net of provision for uncollectible accounts receivable
Net assets released from restrictions — operations
Other revenue Total revenues
Expenses:
Salaries
57,467,40058,569,300
Employee benefits
20,675,900
24,140,600
Supplies and other
27,770,000
26,653,500
Depreciation, leases, and equipment rental
4,353,400
4,213,900
Archdiocesan pension plan withdrawal fee
—
20,965,600
110,266,700
134,542,900
Total expenses
Operating Loss (7,951,800)(30,676,300)
Nonoperating Gains — Net:
Unrestricted gifts and bequests
4,658,800
5,308,300
805,300
724,500
4,634,500
1,160,800
10,098,600
7,193,600
Investment income
Net realized gains and losses on investments
Total nonoperating gains — net
Revenues and Nonoperating Gains — Net (Under) Over Expenses2,146,800
(23,482,700)
Other Changes in Unrestricted Net Assets:
Change in net unrealized gains (losses) on investments
Pension-related adjustments
(36,100)
1,876,700
8,575,500
(859,300)
(15,000)
(153,000)
Transfer between entities
Net assets released from restrictions for capital acquisitions
Increase (Decrease) in Unrestricted Net Assets
—
3,324,400
$ 10,671,200
$ (19,293,900)
The above financial data is extracted from the Hospital’s audited full financial statements.
The Hospital’s audited financial statements, including related footnotes, are available upon request.
20
Calvary Hospital, Inc.
Staff and Affiliations
Senior Management Staff
Medical Staff
Memberships
Frank A. Calamari
Michael J. Brescia, MD
•
President & Chief Executive Officer
Robert A. Brescia, MD
Michael J. Brescia, MD
Alma Carrington, MD
Senior Vice President &
Executive Medical Director
Christopher P. Comfort, MD
Robert A. Brescia, MD
Director, Palliative Care Institute
Christopher P. Comfort, MD
Written and Edited by: Barbara J. Nitzberg
Design: Allyn Bacher, Bruce Withers Graphic Design, Inc.
Photography: Robert DePalma, Barbara Hansen, John Vecchiolla
Medical Director
Gail Chrzanowski, MD
•
Bronx Chamber of Commerce
•
Eric Goldman, MD
•
Catholic Health Association
emorial Sloan-Kettering
M
Cancer Center
Devmani Jaitly, MD
•
reater New York
G
Hospital Association
•
•
ome Care Association
H
of New York
etropolitan State University
M
(Web WOCN) Nursing
Education Program
• Middle East Cancer
•
ospice & Palliative Care
H
Association of New York State
• Montefiore Einstein Center
•
ational Home Care
N
Association
•
Montefiore Medical Center
ount Sinai School of
M
Medicine
Maria Lief, MD
Irina Makarevich, MD
Rachelle Parker, MD
Sreenivasa Patibandla, MD
Executive Assistant/
Governing Board Liaison
Margaret Squillace, MD
Andrew Greco
Neda Vodenitcharova, MD
Licensed By
State of New York
Vice President for Hospital
Patient Care Services
Department of Health
Assistant Administrator of
Environment of Care
Corporate Compliance Officer
Michael T. Troncone
Vice President, Human Resources
Accredited By
The Joint Commission
College of American
Pathologists
Beneficiary Of
United Hospital Fund
Calvary Fund, Inc.
ational Hospice &
N
Palliative Care Organization
•
Y Organization of Nurse
N
Executives (NYONE)
•
ational Association
N
of Catholic Chaplains
•
ational Association
N
of Jewish Chaplains
Affiliations
•
delphi University School
A
of Social Work
•
National Cancer Institute
•
New York Medical College
•
lbert Einstein College of
A
Medicine/Yeshiva University
•
ew York Theological
N
Seminary
•
ssociation for Death
A
Education and Counseling
•
NYU School of Social Work
•
•
ssociation of
A
Professional Chaplains
P ace University Graduate
School
•
•
rooklyn College
B
Graduate School
Queensborough
Community College
•
Rockland Community College
•
The College of New Rochelle
•
•
olumbia University College
C
of Physicians and Surgeons
S t. John’s University
Graduate School
•
•
olumbia University
C
School of Social Work
S UNY Downstate Medical
Center College of Medicine
•
•
Dominican College
•
Emory University
eill Medical College
W
of Cornell/NewYorkPresbyterian Hospital
•
arrisburg Area-WOC
H
Nursing Educational Associates
•
Winthrop University Hospital
•
igashi Sapporo Hospital
H
(Japan)
Calvary Hospital, Inc.
Mary Ann Gulla
President
Vincent J. Spinelli
Executive Vice President
for Cancer Care
•
Andrew Zaretsky, MD
Circle of Friends
Auxiliary
Consortium
•
Allan Swerdloff, MD
Margaret M. Pelkowski, RN
Anthony J. Taranto
Lenox Hill Hospital
Perihan El Shanawany, MD
Susan Garry
Vice President &
Chief Operating Officer
•
ercy College Graduate
M
School
Vera Miller, MD
Richard J. Kutilek
ssociation for Clinical
A
Pastoral Education
J amaica Hospital
Medical Center
•
Vice President for
Community Patient Services
Executive Secretary
•
rooklyn Chamber
B
of Commerce
Rekha Mehta, MD
Jenny Jassey
International Psycho-Oncology
Society (IPOS)
•
Nancy S. D’Agostino, RN, MSN
Vice President &
Chief Financial Officer
•
•
cademy of Nutrition
A
& Dietetics
•
•
unter College School
H
of Social Work
International Work Group
on Death, Dying &
Bereavement (IWG)
Calvary Hospital is
a member of ArchCare
Brooklyn Satellite,
25-bed unit, located in
Lutheran Medical Center
Calvary Hospital, Inc.
1740 Eastchester Road, Bronx, NY 10461
tel 718.518.2000
fax 718.518.2674
Calvary Hospital, Brooklyn Satellite
150 55th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11220
tel 718.630.6666
fax 718.630.6680
Visit our website at www.calvaryhospital.org