Washington University And Duke Receive $50 Million Each For Medical Initiatives
Duke University and Washington University in St. Louis have each reported receiving $50 million gifts this week in support of advanced medical care. Washington University announced on December 12 that Andrew Taylor and his wife, Barbara, had made a $50 million gift to the university’s neurosurgery department. In recognition of the gift, the department has been renamed the Taylor Family Department of Neurosurgery. The gift was made out of gratitude for the medical care Andrew Taylor recently received from neurosurgeons at Washington University. Mr. Taylor is the executive chairman of Enterprise Mobility, the global car rental and transportation company based in St.Louis.
WashU ranks No. 2 in nation for NIH funding
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis received $683 million in research funding from the National Institutes of Health this year, making it the second-largest recipient of the federal health funds in the nation for the second straight year. The funding comes in the same year the university opened its $616 million Jeffrey T. Fort Neuroscience Research Building, a recently completed $165 million six-floor expansion of the Steven & Susan Lipstein BJC Institute of Health at Barnes Jewish Hospital, and its new $280 million Siteman Cancer Center building on Forest Park Ave.
Enterprise’s Taylors donate $50 million to WashU School of Medicine’s neurosurgery department
Enterprise Mobility Executive Chairman Andy Taylor and his wife, Barbara Taylor, have donated $50 million to Washington University School of Medicine’s neurosurgery department, the university announced Thursday. The department rebranded late last month as the Taylor Family Department of Neurosurgery. The donation from the Taylors is aimed at recruiting and retaining top physicians and researchers to drive innovation in brain tumor studies, spinal surgery and neurotechnology. Washington University said the Taylor’s donation was inspired by Andy Taylor’s own treatment and recovery experience at the Washington University School of Medicine.
Taylors give $50M to Washington University
Enterprise Mobility Chairman Andrew Taylor and his wife, Barbara Taylor, have gifted $50 million to Washington University’s neurosurgery department, which is being renamed the Taylor Family Department of Neurosurgery. The donation will assist the department with recruiting and retaining physicians and researchers to help drive innovation in brain tumor research, spinal surgery and neurotechnology, according to a university spokesperson.
Gratitude inspires generous support for WashU Medicine’s neurosurgery department
Andrew Taylor, an emeritus trustee of Washington University in St. Louis, and his wife, Barbara, have made a $50 million gift to WashU Medicine’s neurosurgery department to enhance groundbreaking research, innovative patient care and the training of the next generation of neurosurgery leaders. In recognition of the Taylors’ generosity, the department has been named the Taylor Family Department of Neurosurgery. “This gift marks a new era in the history of innovative science and compassionate healing at WashU Medicine,” said Chancellor Andrew D. Martin. “Andrew and Barbara’s generosity is further strengthening the department’s research infrastructure and helping WashU Medicine deliver world-class, life-changing care right here in St. Louis, while also providing life-saving innovations to the world. Their investment in new discoveries and treatments will give many more families reasons to feel grateful for decades to come.”
WashU Medicine reaches all-time high in NIH funding
In a testament to the quality and national competitiveness of biomedical research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, the school secured $683 million in research funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in federal fiscal year 2024 – a record high for WashU Medicine and an affirmation of its leadership in shaping the future of medicine. WashU Medicine’s NIH-funding success acts as a magnet for the brightest minds in medicine, drawing top-tier scientists, physicians and students from around the world to work and train at WashU Medicine. This influx of talent fosters collaborations with biotech and pharmaceutical companies, driving further medical advancements and spurring local and regional economic growth.
Black St. Louisans have been saving their family histories. Now the Smithsonian is helping
Staff from the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture spent weeks in St. Louis this fall to help Black people find their ancestors using online genealogy tools and preserve family history with digital techniques. Joyce Huston, a blues recording artist who goes by the name Lady J, brought her family memories to Wash U and to the Missouri History Museum so her family stories could help inspire other Black St. Louisans to consider their family archives as treasures that should be viewed by many instead of boxed away in storage.
Starting anew: WashU’s Empower program helps educated refugees tackle language, career hurdles
In May 2024, the School of Continuing & Professional Studies (CAPS) at Washington University in St. Louis launched Empower, the first no-cost program of its kind designed specifically for educated refugees. The 26-week program gives students the next-level English and professional skills they need to find jobs that match their talents and training. It also provides career coaching and an opportunity to earn a CAPS certificate in health care, data analytics, project management and other high-demand fields at no cost.
From Classroom to City Hall: Brown School students gain hands-on policy experience
Students from Washington University’s Brown School recently took their classroom lessons to the frontlines of local policy, offering public testimony on a bill aimed at expanding non-traditional housing options in the City of St. Louis. Their participation was part of the “Domestic Social and Economic Development Policy” course, designed to give students real-world experience in legislative advocacy and policymaking.
Nine Weeks to Impact: New Program Prepares St. Louis Nonprofit Leaders
Shortly before Thanksgiving, sixteen leaders from non-profits across the St. Louis region gathered with their families to celebrate a unique milestone—the completion of a new professional credit program created through a partnership between WashU Continuing & Professional Studies (CAPS) and the United Way of Greater St. Louis. The Fundamentals of Nonprofit Management Professional Certificate program was designed to equip regional non-profit leaders with essential training in three key pillars of organizational success: management, finances, and human resources.