Wisconsin Medicine Impact Stories
Life-changing stories have been coming out of UW Health and the UW School of Medicine and Public Health since the very beginning. Whether it’s providing a new lease on life to a patient, supporting a gifted medical student, or offering the hope of an innovative treatment to a family struggling with an illness, such stories impact us all. Here are just some of those inspiring stories.
You gave Scarlett hope
At just 2 ½ years old, Scarlett was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Even with the most aggressive treatment, it was likely the cancer would return, and it did. But a clinical trial only offered at UW Health Kids | Carbone Cancer Center at American Family Children’s Hospital is giving Scarlett hope.
You helped Ky breathe again
Three weeks shy of her 16th birthday, Ky landed in the emergency department with a severe lung infection from influenza A. While most teens recover, Ky would need new lungs. It was the beginning of a long road to recovery powered by a team of medical specialists at American Family Children’s Hospital and Ky’s determination to breathe on her own again.
Child Life provides comfort and care for Aiden and his family
Aiden Topper’s teddy bear and backpack are a special part of his medical care plan for severe pulmonary hypertension. Through play and fun, the specially-trained Child Life specialists and facility dog, Cola, made the transition to a new way of life a bit easier for both the active 3 ½ year old and his mom.
You ease the financial burden on families
Having a child in the hospital can have a huge financial impact on families, especially those who travel a distance for care. Gifts to the Patient and Family Fund are used by our social workers to provide extra support when needed.
Lung transplant recipient plays on thanks to organ donor
The hum of Dave Furumoto’s bagpipes is a welcome sound in his home once again.
Carbone Cancer Center marks 50 years of cancer innovation
Since 1973, UW Health | Carbone Cancer Center has remained at the forefront of life-saving discoveries as Wisconsin’s only NCI-designated comprehensive cancer center.
Help and Hope after the Loss of a Child
“Our goal at the Hope after Loss Clinic is to provide personalized care to each family and focus not only on their medical needs but also on their emotional needs,” shares Dr. Kristen Sharp, clinical associate professor in the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.
Donor Support Benefits Underserved Patients
“Financial support from donors makes it possible for MEDiC to purchase medical supplies and an interpreter phone line needed to properly care for patients,” says Kristi Jones, director of community service programs at the UW School of Medicine and Public Health. “Donor generosity allows us to provide the highest-quality care to all patients.”
A Family’s Fight against Pancreatic Cancer
“The communication with everyone at UW Health helped us feel connected to all the work that is taking place — it confirms we made the best decision in collaborating with UW Health to help sustain vital pancreatic cancer research.” — Diane Oglesby
Woman’s life changed thanks to innovative heart valve procedure
Holly Herlitzke was born with a congenital heart defect that caused her aortic valve to narrow over time. At UW Health, she learned she was the ideal candidate for the Ross procedure, which replaces a person’s damaged aortic value with their own pulmonary valve, then replaces the pulmonary valve with a deceased donor’s pulmonary valve.
Lab-grown retinal eye cells make successful connections
Retinal cells grown from stem cells can reach out and connect with neighbors, according to a new study, completing a “handshake” that may show the cells are ready for trials in humans with degenerative eye disorders.
Going the Extra Mile for Alzheimer’s Research
Fueled by a passion to help preserve memories, Wisconsinite David Adam is literally going the distance to help raise support and awareness for the UW Initiative to End Alzheimer’s. After losing his father and role model to vascular dementia in 2012, Adam took his love for cycling and rode across Canada to help gather funds for Alzheimer’s disease research and programs.
Supporting a New Generation of Physical Therapists
First-generation college student Ethan Taylor ’22, DPTx’25 enlisted in the military at 17 years old. With support from the Gunnery Sergeant Daniel Price Memorial Scholarship Fund, he joined the physical therapy program at the UW School of Medicine and Public Health, which offered him an inspiring and rewarding future.
Combatting Aggressive Breast Cancer through Vaccination
UW Health | Carbone Cancer Center is one of three research institutions in the U.S. selected to host a phase I clinical trial of a vaccine for triple-negative breast cancer patients at stages I-III. Dr. Eva Vivian was the first patient nationwide to begin the vaccine series.
Maintaining Positivity and Purpose
After her vacation was dampened by persistent back pain and other mounting symptoms, Susan Skiles knew something was seriously wrong. Following a successful surgery to remove her ovaries and sections of her large intestine and colon, Skiles decided she wanted to seek treatment elsewhere and focused her sites on UW Health | Carbone Cancer Center. With help from gynecologic cancer expert Dr. Ellen Hartenbach, Skiles recognized that she was exactly where she needed and wanted to be.
A Badger for Life
Wisconsinite Barnabas “Barni” Shiferaw ’22, MDx’26 has his sights set on a future of serving others in the medical field. Barni is the 2022–23 recipient of the Dean’s Academic Scholarship within the UW School of Medicine and Public Health — a fund created to support underrepresented medical students who are members of populations that are experiencing health disparities in the state.
New Lungs and Lease on Life
When 28-year-old lung transplant recipient Darlene Johnson walked out of University Hospital in August, 2022, she was not only defying the odds of a grueling 10-month medical nightmare, she was fulfilling a promise she’d made to herself when the possibility of leaving the hospital alive was anything but certain.
Honoring His Father’s Legacy
Dr. Nathaniel Chin turns his personal experience with Alzheimer’s Disease into work in research at the Wisconsin Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center and a new podcast, Dementia Matters.
A Cause Close to the Heart
George Fait was passionate about pediatric medicine. With seven grandsons and more than six decades of generosity toward UW–Madison, George rallied his three children and their spouses to focus their philanthropic sites on creating the George Fait Family Pediatric Specialty Clinics at the American Family Children’s Hospital.
Joelle’s heart is aglow, despite complex defect at birth
American Family Children’s Hospital is one of only a handful of centers across the country that have the capability to perform biventricular conversion – a three-surgery sequence for serious heart complications. After undergoing this highly specialized treatment, Joelle Devries is back home in Oklahoma chasing her siblings and enjoying life on the farm.