Foundation president, Harvey Fineberg, and chairman emeritus and co-founder, Gordon Moore, discuss the Statement of Founders’ Intent with staff.
In her The Informed Patient column, Wall Street Journal reporter, Laura Landro, covers four patient care program grantees focused on redesigning care in the ICU to make them safer and more human. Johns Hopkins, University of California at San Francisco, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Brigham and Women's Hospital share how they are are making respectful treatment of patients and families a priority.
Read the full article here.
Share
Thank you for sharing.
If you know someone who is interested in this field or what we are doing at the foundation, pass it along.
Let’s stay in touch. Sign up to keep informed of what is happening in our program areas and around the foundation.
Stay tuned. We look forward to sharing more.
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
$6,721,883
44 months
Optimizing ICU Safety through Patient Engagement, System Science and Information Technology
Nov 2013
Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Center for Patient Safety Research and Practice
$1,985,875
29 months
Transforming the Acute Care and Oncology Environment
Jul 2013
Johns Hopkins University, Armstrong Institute
$457,000
12 months
Planning Grant to support Acute Care/ICU Multi-center Feasibility Study
Mar 2012
$9,372,943
24 months
Intensive Care Unit (ICU)/Acute Care Multi-site Demonstration Project
Aug 2012
$2,209,619
10 months
Implementation and Evaluation of Project Emerge
Aug 2014
University of California, San Francisco, Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care
$397,848
Planning and Implementation of Project EMERGE at UCSF
Jun 2013
$999,996
6 months
UCSF Interim Implementation Grant
Mar 2014