Perspective 1, 2011 REVISED for WEB.indd

Perspective
Number 1, 2011
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Menninger
Menninger chief of staff heads largest psychiatric organization in the world
Menninger Chief of Staff John Oldham, MD (at podium), was sworn in as president of the American Psychiatric
Association (APA) in Hawaii in May. The APA, the largest psychiatric organization in the world, has 38,000 members.
On hand to introduce Dr. Oldham was Stuart Yudofsky, MD, left, chair of the Menninger Department of Psychiatry
& Behavioral Sciences. Please see story on Page 11.
2
Volume 41, Number 1, 2011
Menninger
Perspective
Menninger Perspective is published
for donors to Menninger, a nonprofit
psychiatric center for treatment,
research and professional education.
Communications may be sent to:
The Menninger Clinic Foundation
2801 Gessner Drive
Houston, Texas 77080-2503
800-288-3950
MenningerClinic.com
©Copyright 2011
The Menninger Clinic Foundation
(ISSN 0025-9292), an equal
opportunity institution
Illustrations
n Cover: David Kapp, Square Crowd,
2009. Collection of Barbara Nessim &
Jules Demchick, Courtesy of Tibor de
Nagy Gallery, New York.
n Back cover: James Tormey,
Opening. Courtesy of Zenith
Gallery, Washington, D.C.:
www.zenithgallery.com
Contents
4 The Epicenter progresses,
as an opportunity arises
We are in one of the
most productive times in
the history of Menninger.
11 Chief of staff leads
largest psychiatric group
John Oldham, MD, MS, took
office in May as head of the
38,000-member American
Psychiatric Association.
6 Writing stories to find
sources of pain, joy
Few of us ever get a chance
to sit down and take a stab at
putting our life story on paper.
9 Finding a path to living
The Pathfinder program gives
clients skills that will help them
transition into community life.
10 Research designed to crack
12 Luncheon raises $550,000
Menninger’s celebration of
breaking ground at The
Epicenter and other highlights
were generously supported.
13 Glance around
14 Boards of Directors
15 Roll of Honor
mysteries, glean evidence
The vast majority of Menninger
research is funded through gifts
from philanthropic donors.
Editor: Roger Verdon
Fine arts consultant:
Steven Diamond
n Unless otherwise noted, patient
stories featured in Menninger
Perspective are composites and are
used for illustrative purposes only.
Printed on recycled paper
3
The Epicenter progresses,
as an opportunity arises
By Ian Aitken
President and Chief Executive Officer
The Menninger Clinic
We are in one of the most productive
times in the history of Menninger.
In recent months, we have held our
groundbreaking ceremony for The
Mental Health Epicenter and staged a
luncheon to celebrate that event. The
luncheon raised more than $550,000
for community services.
Our chief of staff John Oldham,
MD, MS, was installed as the president
of the 38,000-member American
Psychiatric Association. We continue
to take a leadership role and expand our
community mental health care programs opening Pathfinder, a step-down
treatment program that helps adults
achieve independent living skills.
Our research is surging ahead, our
trainees are receiving the best educational experience of their lives and we
continue to successfully treat patients.
The Mabee Foundation grant
Now, our immediate goal, second only
to treating our patients, is successfully
qualifying for the J.E. & L.E. Mabee
Foundation $1 million challenge grant
to help us build The Epicenter. We
only have until October to complete
raising $4 million to earn this $1 million incentive. That would be a great
return on your investment.
Constructing a special place
At the outset of our Miracles in Mind
capital campaign, we said The Epicenter would be a special place, the center
of the nation’s mental health sciences.
We believe The Epicenter, so close
4
Ian Aitken
as it is to the Texas Medical Center,
the largest complex of its kind, puts
Menninger patients, clinicians and
researchers near virtually any necessary medical expertise.
We believe proximity will contribute to creating a robust mental
health research environment, attracting other collaborations and mental
health partnerships that will benefit
patients at all levels of treatment.
Understanding the brain
It takes great courage to be honest
about mental illness when it strikes, as
it will for one in four Americans. We
cannot afford to complicate the recov-
ery by remaining silent and sustaining
the stigma that persists throughout
society.
We must encourage all members of
our national community to address
the issue of mental illness openly and
honestly and help those afflicted to
access treatment as early as possible.
Early treatment for cuts to our skin
prevents infection. Like the ailments
of the body, the brain responds to
early treatment.
Dr. Oldham tells us,“Twenty
percent of patients who visit their
primary care doctor have diagnosable
psychiatric disorders. And 50 percent
of those visits are for problems like
stress symptoms, poor sleep, fatigue,
headaches, yet we continue to act as
though mental illness has no affect on
physical illness.”
Our future efforts at The Epicenter
will narrow this divide.
Take steps toward Mabee challenge
How do we get there? We take steps,
one foot in front of the other, just as
our Founders did.
Attaining the Mabee challenge
grant is a big step, a generous gesture
from a respected foundation that
has made enormous contributions to
healthcare.
Your generous donation will
sustain this whirlwind of productivity
that continues–even in these challenging times–moving Menninger
forward.
Dr. Walt Menninger toured the construction site in April and praised the
progress of the building project, which is due for completion in 2012.
At least 900 trees, some 30 feet tall
like this one above, will be planted
on the initial 23 acres occupied by the
hospital.
As a fire precaution, inner building beams and trusses are made of steel instead
of wood. The facility is being constructed to stand for 100 years.
By June, the Commons Building was taking shape. The Epicenter will have
24-hour security, a 10-foot tall wooden fence around the perimeter and covered
walkways between buildings.
The footprint of The Epicenter
measures about 50 acres; 23 acres are
devoted to The Menninger Clinic.
5
Writing stories to find
sources of pain, joy
Few of us ever get a chance to
sit down and take a stab at
putting our life story on paper.
One of the treatment tools used by
patients in Menninger’s Professional
in Crisis (PIC) Program is biographical writing. The form offers a way
to concentrate the attention of these
overachieving professionals. Writing helps them explore how they feel
about themselves and others, emotional insights that have often eluded
them as they pursued success.
PIC treats men and women in
business ownership, upper management, medicine, sports, law,
entertainment, education and other
high-performance fields who are
experiencing difficulty managing
their career and relationships because
of psychiatric disorder, addiction,
demands and stressors.
“In this professional population we
often see people who have overdeveloped parts of themselves and underdeveloped parts of themselves,” said
Michael Groat, PhD, director of PIC.
“For example, a brilliant business man
or woman can manage 1,000 different
employees and business deals yet find
it difficult to identify and talk about
their feelings.”
Writing about yourself and your
innermost thoughts proffers the
chance that inner reflection will
empower patients to change the
direction of their future the way an
author changes the outcome of a
story, Dr. Groat said.
The bigger story
“I encourage our patients to think
about this character they are writing
about in light of their lineage so that
places this character within a context
of a larger story,” Dr. Groat said. “A
6
Groat
Allen
story that includes a culture, a story
that includes a family, a story that
might include a tribe …”
“One of the things we want to do
here at Menninger—in addition to
supplying people with an accurate
psychological diagnosis that may be
major depression, major anxiety disorder or a substance abuse disorder—is
interpret their depression, their anxiety,
their substance abuse in light of this
larger story. How does that depression
make sense in light of a larger story?
So there is an interpretive action that
we provide and we invite patients to
collaborate with us to make sense out
of it. Data is data until you interpret it,
so we take all the raw facts and urge
you to interpret.”
The goal is mentalizing
The narrative exercise is an opportunity for self-examination, which
is at the heart of mentalizing, a
fundamental key that makes psychotherapy, or talk therapy, work. At
The Menninger Clinic, clinicians find
the language of mentalizing a helpful
communication framework in individual, family and group therapy, encouraging patients to “see themselves
from the outside and see others from
the inside,” said British psychiatrist
Jeremy Holmes, MD.
Mentalizing is a pillar of mental
health and the focus of evidencebased research at Menninger, an
effort to improve treatment and to
better understand the psychology of
the human mind.
“Mentalizing requires attention
and takes mental effort; it’s a form of
mindfulness, that is, being mindful
of what others are thinking and
feeling as well as being mindful of
your own thoughts and feelings,”
said Jon Allen, PhD, who oversees
narrative therapy sessions with Dr.
Groat. “Thus mentalizing is similar
to empathy. But mentalizing goes
beyond empathizing, because it also
includes awareness of your own state
of mind—empathizing with yourself.”
How does this work?
Few patients imagine themselves as
super heroes or fantasy figures. Most
write a sober reflection of who they
are or think they are without the
flourish or embellishments of the
genre novelist.
Patients readily take to the task
and create compelling sketches. A
vignette presented by Drs. Groat and
Allen illustrates the exercise:
One sketch was completed by a woman who described herself as Sisyphus,
the king from Greek mythology who
was punished by being compelled to
roll an immense boulder up a hill,
only to watch it roll back down, and
to repeat this throughout eternity. The
character was described as hopeless,
burdened by low self-esteem and
stuck. The group leaders, with the
consent of the patient, invited other
patients to reflect with them on what
this character sketch signified about
the author of the narrative. The entire
group now mentalized about the character and the patient who presented
(See Sisyphus, page 7)
For supermom,
perfectionism
isn’t enough
Editor’s note: Below and on the
following page are character sketches
that reveal the challenges two patients
face. Understanding the perceived
details of their own lives and how
others view them begins to establish
trust and understanding and constructs
a foundation for therapeutic recovery.
My character, Suzanne, is energetic
and extremely motivated. A lead partner in her law firm, Suzanne juggles it
all. She serves as a corporate attorney
for a large pharmaceutical company,
sits on the board of several local nonprofits, and is an editor for a leading
law journal.
Her colleagues are often in awe of
her stamina and determination, even
if they might worry about her burning
out. In her personal life, she demonstrates an amazing commitment to
‘She feels like she is
caught in a hamster
wheel, and can’t
get off.’
her family and church. Along with
her husband, a district attorney, she
takes her kids to all of their games and
practices, leads a woman’s group at
the local diocese and volunteers at the
local homeless shelter. She is also an
avid runner and gets up each morning
to prepare for some of the many road
races she enters each year.
To say my character is busy is
like saying bees like honey—they go
together. The only problem, however,
is that Suzanne is often tense. A longtime sufferer of panic attacks and
generalized anxiety—she worries all
the time and has a hard time relaxing.
She worries about how things
will go and feels overly responsible
for what happens around her. If her
husband struggles with fatigue, she
worries she wasn’t supportive enough.
She constantly worries about doing
right and living a moral life. A lot of
her friends tell her she is perfectionistic and encourage her to relax. But she
can’t. She ends up feeling like a failure
if she lets up. It is either that things go
splendidly or she blames herself for
not working hard enough. She feels
like she is caught in a hamster wheel
and can’t get off.
Her husband tells her she is trying
to be superwoman. The thing is, for
Suzanne, anything less than “super”
feels like she is selling out and not
reaching her full potential. So, on she
goes, trying to juggle it all.
The problem is, striving so hard to
do it all caught up with her. She is now
burnt out and so depressed she can’t
do anything. That is how she ended up
here.
(Sisyphus, continued)
it. While her struggles with depression
continued, the patient’s sense of
authorship of this narrative opened
up more mental space to explore her
dilemma around being stuck. She pursued this theme further in individual
psychotherapy, using the Sisyphus
character sketch developed in the
group as a metaphor to unpack with
her therapist.
“One of our Menninger values is
hope,” said Dr. Groat. “When people
can imagine and envision, they can
create in their mind the possibility
of a different future for themselves.
There’s hope in that. Karl Menninger
wrote about that—hope.”
If you can write a sketch about
your life, can you take command of
that life and begin to write a different ending? That is the lesson of the
exercise, giving professionals a new
path to change.
7
Fatal flaws take a toll: trapped, doomed and hopeless
My character, Bob, a middle-aged
man of 48, faces challenges that any
normal human being might buckle
under.
My wife of 28 years is calling it
quits, tired of my bouts of depression,
my habit of drinking too much and
compulsive work. She tells me I have
missed nearly every important day
of the family, like my kid’s birthdays,
my anniversary and my 18-year-old
daughter’s graduation from high
school.
As a trauma surgeon, I have lived
most of my life in the hospital, at the
beck and call of those who end up in
car wrecks, mishandled chainsaws
and lawnmowers, and some of the
most gruesome damage the body can
sustain.
You might say that I have been
drawn to trauma since I was a kid. I
witnessed my mother beaten severely
when my father was in a drunken
tirade and I feared for her life. I feared
for my mine, too, but I was fast and
able to outrun my overweight salesman father. He was a good man most
of the time; when he drank, however,
he became vile. His searing criticism
8
scarred me, and I felt perpetually inadequate even though I was one of the
top students all throughout school.
Classmates called me driven and
ambitious. I knew from an early age I
wanted to be a doctor and I dedicated
my energies to becoming a physician.
I have a hunch though that excelling in
school calmed my terrible fears of really being a puny kid. I was short and
didn’t have the strength and stamina
other boys had, like my older brother
John who was a football star. At least
in school I could shine.
Now I feel trapped, doomed and
hopeless. I have fought chronic feelings of worthlessness and shame my
whole life. Although I have saved
many lives, and have earned many
honors for my work, I still feel like a
sham. If people only knew how badly
I felt about myself and only knew how
illegitimate I really feel.
I can pass as a hell of a lot more
successful than I believe myself to be.
What kind of man fails his family and
his wife? The thing is, I don’t know
how to stop. I feel compelled to work
and it is frankly the place where I am
most comfortable. Get me in the OR
(operating room) and I know my way
around. Put me into the world of complex feelings, intimate relationships,
and I feel like a stupid, clumsy kid.
I shut down emotionally as a kid
and I really never learned how to be an
emotionally expressive human being.
I am devastated my wife is leaving me,
but I can’t really show how badly I feel.
All I can really do is be depressed
and drink a lot. I came here because
the department chair of surgery has
been worried about me. He told me
I needed help or he might have to
remove me from service.
Co-workers said I was really withdrawn and aloof, and distant with
patients and families. Some of them
have complained about my bedside
manner, noting that I seem disinterested and uncaring.
The thing is though, I feel like a
walking cripple. I feel like I have flaws
that won’t ever change and are slowly
killing me—I have lost my wife. Will
I lose my career next? Then I would
have nothing.
Finding a
path to
living
The new Pathfinder program
gives clients skills that will help
them transition into community life.
The road to recovery from mental
illness rarely takes a straight path.
Once Scott completed his treatment
for depression and substance abuse, he
felt ready to apply his newly learned
skills in the real world. Yet it had been
months since he was employed. He
remained anxious meeting new people
and his social functioning was of an
ongoing concern. It had been years
since he had to cook for himself. He
needed more time in a safe, secure and
positive environment to try out his insights and skills and to concentrate on
acquiring a few new ones for building
a rewarding and meaningful life.
Pathfinder builds experience
Menninger’s new three-to-six
months-long service is the Pathfinder
community integration program, a
transitional living experience that offers opportunities to apply the lessons
learned in inpatient care while building successful experiences in recovery
from mental illness and/or addiction.
Adults are supported in their path
to gaining independence and returning
to a healthy life by continuing to build
insight, develop skills and support in
the local community.
The Pathfinder staff is excited to
provide opportunities to turn insight
into action by finding meaningful living, learning, working and social roles
in a safe environment.
Programming helps patients with:
n Life skills
n Vocational skills and supported
employment
n Interpersonal skills
n Supportive education
n Recreation and leisure skills
n Wellness
Participants live together in offcampus apartment homes, attend
daytime programs at Menninger and
receive support and coaching 24 hours
per day. Mini-internships enable
individuals to focus on career development and functioning while processing and practicing enhanced insight
and coping strategies.
The program focuses on key areas
of individual development: living,
learning, working and socializing.
While they hone skills, participants
are given safety and structure that will
move them toward independence.
Finding the right direction
Individuals who want to apply for
employment, for example, may have
anxieties that would be reduced by the
company of a staff member or by role
playing through interviews.
“Pathfinder intends to raise an
individual’s self-esteem and to set
reasonable expectations that are
achievable,” said Mary Oxford, PhD,
program director.
Dr. Oxford is familiar with the needs
of adults. She worked for five years with
adult patients in the Hope Program.
Pathfinder clients will apply therapeutic concepts to such situations as
dealing with living in an apartment,
keeping appointments and enjoying a
trip to the local gym.
“A person who struggles with
details may not be able to perform an
accountant’s duties,” Dr. Oxford said.
In that case, said Senior
Rehabilitation Specialist Brad Kennedy, “We want to get that individual
headed in a direction that feels more
natural.”
9
Research projects designed to
crack mysteries, glean evidence
The vast majority of Menninger
research is funded through gifts
from philanthropic donors.
effectiveness during the teen’s stay and
after discharge. Results help to shape
better treatments.
Research shapes and re-shapes therapeutic approaches used at Menninger
in its treatment programs, information that is made available to others
through publications, scholarly papers and presentations by Menninger
staff members.
Research projects aim to learn new
information and improve treatment.
Specific Menninger projects include:
Suicide prevention
In this research program we are evaluating the effectiveness of the Collaborative Assessment and Management of
Suicide (CAMS) system in the inpatient
or hospital treatment of adults with
current or recent suicidal thoughts
and attempts. Early results show significant decreases in suicide-relevant
indicators during six- to eight-week
treatment stays at Menninger.
Evaluating treatment
Adults admitted to three of The
Clinic’s specialty programs are invited
to participate in outcomes research to
evaluate the effectiveness of treatment
during their hospitalization and after
discharge. The assessment includes
psychiatric interviews, as well as a battery of self-reported information.
*Gifts at work
This information forms a sophisticated platform for the development
and implementation of future highimpact research studies.
Additionally, once approved by
the Institutional Review Board, which
oversees research at Baylor College
of Medicine and Menninger, plans
will go forward to engage all patients
in genetic testing and neuorimaging
evaluations using functional magnetic
resonance imaging.
Adolescents
Similar to the adult outcomes project,
all children and adolescents admitted to The Clinic may volunteer to
participate in evaluating the treatment
10
Nursing research
This research program examines The
Clinic’s data and practices related to
ensuring the safety of our inpatients.
Through the evidence-based scholars
program, a senior nurse trains, mentors and supervises research projects
of nursing trainees.
DSM-5 field trial
Menninger, in partnership with the
Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Administration Medical Center and Baylor
College of Medicine, is among 11 sites
conducting field trials of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders (DSM-5), psychiatry’s next
edition of its treatment and diagnostic
reference guide to disorders.
This is a large-scale national effort
funded by the American Psychiatric
Association to evaluate the proposed
diagnostic criteria for psychiatric
disorders. Specifically, we are studying
major depressive disorder, borderline
personality disorder, posttraumatic
stress disorder, alcohol use disorders
and mild traumatic brain injury.
At all of the field trial sites, clinicians
will evaluate new and existing patients
at different stages of treatment using
the proposed diagnostic criteria and
assessments. All patients participating
will receive information about the trial
and must give their consent. None of
the patients will have their identities
revealed in the results of the studies.
The field trial results will help further refine the DSM-5 criteria before its
release in May 2013.
Eating disorders research
Parallel to the adult outcomes project ,
all identified adult inpatients with eating disorders are invited to participate
in a study to evaluate effectiveness of
disorders treatment during hospitalization and after discharge. The eating
disorders track is designed to support
patients who have a co-existing eating
disorder or whose eating-disorder
behaviors have resurfaced during inpatient treatment for mental illness.
Clinical trials research
This project focuses clinical trials and
mental health service delivery research
in a variety of medical and mental
health settings to improve treatment
for people with depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
Funding is from the U.S. Department
of Veteran Affairs (VA), Department of
Defense and other federal agencies.
The overarching goal of this
research is to expand knowledge of
community violence in rural areas,
improve services and examine the impact of traumatic exposure on a range
of relevant mental health, health and
economic variables in veterans with
military trauma and civilians engaged
in violent trauma with others.
For example, Chris Frueh, PhD,
Menninger’s director of clinical research
and a noted expert on posttraumatic
stress disorder, is a co-investigator on a
project funded in part by the VA aimed
at earlier identification of combatrelated PTSD.
* Funded by Menninger donors
Menninger chief of staff takes charge of
world’s largest psychiatric organization
Editor’s note: Menninger Senior Vice
President and Chief of Staff John Oldham, MD, MS, took office in May as
head of the prestigious 38,000 member
American Psychiatric Association
(APA). He is Executive Vice Chair for
Clinical Affairs and Development and
Professor, Menninger Department of
Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine. Following are
excerpts from Dr. Oldham’s address to
APA members outlining his goals for
his year as president.
Psychiatry belongs in the house
of medicine.
In my view, there is no controversy
here. Evidence for the mainstream
medical nature of brain disorders is
abundant and persuasive. People
with major depressive disorder frequently have co-occurring psychiatric
disorders such as an alcohol or other
substance abuse disorder or a personality disorder.
Further complicating the picture
is the frequent presence of cardiac
disease, hypertension or diabetes. It
is critical that psychiatrists partner
effectively with our colleagues in
primary care and family medicine and
with colleagues in other specialties.
We must not be the only ones recognizing that there is no health without
mental health.
Our patients have a right to quality
treatment.
In the world of health care, patients
have many rights that must be carefully respected, monitored and protected.
They have the right to be heard, to receive full access to culturally sensitive
and unbiased care and to be treated
with dignity and respect. And patients
have the right to choose whether to
accept or decline recommended treatment. However, advocates seldom
some patients a longer stay in the hospital will be more helpful and cost-effective in the long run, and I for one do
believe that, then we need to marshal
the evidence and get on a soap box.
When the economy falters and money gets tighter, clinicians and researchers must stand side by side to defend
continued support for the very research
that will not only save us money in the
long run, but will continue to improve
the outcomes of our patients in need.
John M. Oldham, MD, MS
argue in support of a patient’s right to
receive quality treatment.
Fragmented care is not quality care.
Here too, we have a lot of work to
do. When the average length of stay
n most acute psychiatric hospitals is
five or six days, or even less, the goals
of inpatient treatment are to keep patients safe, to adjust their medications
and, perhaps, give them a breather
from stressful circumstances. All too
often, however, information is sketchy
or incomplete. While we do our best
to make the system we’ve got do its
best for our patients, we need to lobby
hard in support of quality, evidencebased, integrated treatment.
Research and education provide best
blueprint for a strong future.
We are witnessing an explosion of
knowledge about the brain, generating new ways to prevent and treat
brain disorders. We must be eloquent
ambassadors bringing this information
to our patients and their families, to
our medical colleagues, to insurance
companies, and to our legislators and
policymakers. If we believe that for
I am fortunate to work at The Menninger Clinic, a landmark institution
founded decades ago by some of the
leading visionaries of our field. In
1953, those founders—C.F. Menninger, Karl Menninger and Will Menninger prepared a document about the
future of The Menninger Clinic.
They advocated that “only scientific medicine of the highest standards
should be practiced” and that “two
heads are better than one, and perhaps three better than two,” and that
“teamwork is essential to the best
practice of the complicated science
of medicine.”
They added that the work “has
been and … always should be ‘patientcentered.’” These words of advice are
as fresh and vital today as they were
almost 60 years ago. I believe that the
American Psychiatric Association is
one of the greatest teams in the world
of medicine.
We need the best integrated teamwork we can muster in order to make
progress together for our field, for
our profession, but most of all for the
patients we care for. I look forward to
the coming year.
11
More than 500 Menninger supporters gathered to celebrate the groundbreaking of The Epicenter. Luncheon guests
included, left to right: Ann Trammell, Dale Miller, Judy Britton, Marilyn Andrews and Lettie Knapp, all of Houston.
Luncheon raises $550,000
Menninger’s April 21 Breaking New
Ground Luncheon raised more than
$550,000. The event sold out weeks in
advance, with more than 500 attending the event in support of mental
health at Houston’s River Oaks
Country Club.
“With our move to The Epicenter we
will bring the best treatment, the best
science and the best education to one
place where all patients can benefit,”
said Ian Aitken, president and chief
executive officer. “Our hope for the
luncheon was that we inspired the
participants to join in our vision of
mental health for all Americans.
“We must encourage all communities to
address the issue of mental illness openly
and honestly and help those afflicted to
access treatment as early as possible.”
Honor was a privilege
Mr. Aitken said philanthropist and
luncheon chairperson Beth Robertson’s appeal to support The Menninger Clinic, and the privilege of
honoring longtime supporter and
Menninger Clinic Board Vice Chair
Philip Burguières were key factors in
12
Ian Aitken, left,
and Beth Robertson presented
luncheon
honoree Philip
Burguières with a
replica of The
Vital Balance
sculpture. The
sculpture is
named after Dr.
Karl Menninger’s
book of the same
title.
the luncheon’s enormous success.
The luncheon celebrated groundbreaking at The Mental Health
Epicenter, Menninger’s future international headquarters. Proceeds will
support the expansion of communitybased services at The Gathering Place,
Windsor Village United Methodist
Church and three of Texas Children’s
Pediatric Assiociates’ clinics.
In his remarks, Mr. Burguières observed that Menninger had amassed
many effective treatment tools when
it operated in Topeka and has added a
few more since relocating to Houston.
Moving to The Epicenter, he said,
would increase its abilities tenfold.
Glance
around
Ellis
Frueh
Kosten
Suicide prevention project
shows treatment advances
Dr. Kosten helping nation’s
veterans in military study
Patients exposed to suicide prevention
measures at Menninger showed significant decreases in suicide-relevant
indicators during six-to-eight week
treatment stays at Menninger, initial
research findings indicate.
Menninger Director of Psychology
Thomas Ellis, PsyD, ABPP, presented
his preliminary results from Menninger’s suicide research at the 44th
annual conference of the American
Association of Suicidology April 15 in
Portland, Ore.
Dr. Ellis reported that Menninger’s
approach to working with suicidal
patients, called Collaborative
Assessment and Management of Suicidality or CAMS, “was successfully
adapted to an inpatient setting with
high acceptance among patients and
staff and successful dissemination via
skills training.”
Acclaimed addictionologist Thomas
Kosten, MD, the Jay H. Waggoner
Endowed Chair in the Menninger
Department of Psychiatry &
Behavioral Sciences at Baylor
College of Medicine, has been selected
to serve on the Institute of Medicine’s
Committee on Prevention,
Diagnosis, Treatment and Management of Substance Use Disorders in
the U.S. Armed Forces.The committee’s role is to improve mental health
among veterans.
Dr. Kosten works with veterans
at the Michael E. DeBakey Veterans
Administration Medical Center on
innovations in treating addiction. He
developed a series of groundbreaking
vaccines, including a cocaine vaccine to treat addiction and adapted
the drug buprenmorphine for opiate
dependence, which has overtaken
marijuana as the drug of choice for
adolescents.
Dr. Frueh presents to corrections
officers gathered at Rutgers
Menninger Director of Clinical
Research Chris Frueh, PhD, gave
an invited presentation at Rutgers
University to correction officers from
across New Jersey.
The title of the talk, “Balancing
control-based supervision with empathy and respect: A trauma-informed
approach,” was part of an all-day
workshop on effectively supervising
clients with mental illnesses.
The Gathering Place recently held an
art festival that included members’
paintings and drawings.
Donation sparks arts festival
at The Gathering Place
A gift of art supplies from Alice
Burguières to The Gathering Place
inspired an art festival in April that
engaged the interest and participation of 100 members and guests. Mrs.
Burguières is the wife of Clinic Board
Vice Chair Philip Burguières.
The Gathering Place is Menninger’s
psychosocial clubhouse for adults
who struggle with mental illness. The
donation encouraged members to express themselves in a host of creative
ways. The event celebrated art, poetry,
writing and music by members and
was accompanied by healthy snacks.
The organization serves about 400
adult members.
Next, The Gathering Place plans to
hold a summer international festival.
Chief of staff named to
Best Doctors in U.S. list
John M. Oldham, MD, MS, Menninger senior vice president and chief
of staff, was selected for inclusion by a
peer-review survey in the Best Doctors
in America® 2011-2012 database.
The database contains almost 7,000
physicians in the United States.
13
Boards of Directors
Directors of The Menninger Clinic Board
John McKelvey
Chair
Leawood, KS
Alberta B. Blecke
Miami, FL
Philip J. Burguières
Vice Chair
Houston, TX
Jerry R. Grammer, PhD
Austin, TX
Maureen Hackett
Houston, TX
Judson W. Robinson III
Houston, TX
Harvey Kurzweil
Vice Chair
New York, NY
Norman C. Schultz
Vice Chair
Yountville, CA
Richard L. Munich, MD
New York, NY
Marc J. Shapiro
Houston, TX
Anand Pandya, MD
Los Angeles, CA
Robert C. Wilson III
Chair
The Menninger Clinic Foundation
Houston, TX
Elizabeth C. Poster, PhD, RN, FAAN
Arlington, TX
William J. Resnick, MD, MBA
West Hollywood, CA
Emeritus
Wayne H. Holtzman, PhD
Austin, TX
Directors of The Menninger Clinic Foundation Board
Lisa M. Foronda
Houston, TX
Susan S. Peake
Houston, TX
Jerry R. Grammer, PhD
Austin, TX
Bradley I. Raffle
Houston, TX
Michael E. Hanson Jr.
Houston, TX
H.E. “Gene” Rainbolt
Oklahoma City, OK
Saranne Abbott
Houston, TX
William J. Hughes
Houston, TX
The Rev. Dr. Douglas Richnow
Houston, TX
Alan I. Abramson
Malibu, CA
Lisa Kennedy
Houston, TX
Barbara M. Robertson
Houston, TX
T. Craig Benson
Austin, TX
John C. Kerr
San Antonio, TX
Corbin J. Robertson Jr.
Houston, TX
Bruce E. Bloom, JD, DDS
Chicago, IL
Peter D. Kinnear
Tomball, TX
Franelle B. Rogers
Houston, TX
Pastor Kirbyjon H. Caldwell
Houston, TX
Molly H. LaFauci
Houston, TX
Sally G. Schillaci
Houston, TX
Nacy Corbet
Houston, TX
Carole W. Looke
Houston, TX
Orgena L. Singleton
Pearland, TX
Annette T. Edens, PhD
Houston,TX
Poppi Massey
Houston, TX
Betty S. Tutor
Houston, TX
Elaine W. Finger
Houston, TX
Louis B. Paine Jr.
Houston, TX
Jesse Viner, MD
Evanston, IL
Robert C. Wilson III
Chair
Houston, TX
14
Roll of Honor 2010
We appreciate you
As always, we thank Menninger’s
generous donors for supporting work that
advances the field of psychiatry.
This publication is a combination of
Menninger Perspective and Roll of Honor.
Menninger Development
2801 Gessner Drive
Houston, TX 77280-9045
n 800-288-3950
n 713-333-3320
n [email protected]
Menninger is a nonprofit corporation. The Internal
Revenue Service has designated Menninger as a
qualified 501 (c)(3)charitable organization.
Roll of Honor 2010
Roll of Honor
Menninger publishes Roll of Honor once a year. The
listing of names is strictly for the purpose of acknowledgment by Menninger and any other use is unauthorized.
Construction of The Mental Health Epicenter began in
Roll of Honor records gifts received from January 1,
November 2010. By June, treatment living areas like this
through December 31, 2010.
one were taking shape.
Although every effort has been made to ensure the
completeness and accuracy of Roll of Honor, errors may
occur. If you wish to report an error, please contact:
23 Members
24 Associate members
27 Foundations, corporations
and organizations
Contents
16 Miracles in Mind million dollar donors
16 All other Miracles in Mind donors
20 Benefactors/ Tower Council/ Founders’ Council
21 President’s Council
21 Sponsors
27 Estate gifts
28 The Menninger Heritage Society
30 In honor
31 In memory
33 Menninger giving by the numbers
34 The Clinic by the numbers
22 Patrons
15
Miracles in Mind
million dollar donors
Roll of Honor 2010
Miracles in Mind million dollar donors have contributed
gifts of $1,000,000 or more to our capital campaign for the
construction of The Mental Health Epicenter.
Joan and Stanford Alexander
The Brown Foundation Inc.
Burguières Family Foundation
The Cullen Foundation
The Cullen Trust for Health Care
The Cullen Trust for Higher Education
The William Stamps Farish Fund
Hackett Family Foundation
The Robert & Janice McNair Foundation
The John M. O’Quinn Foundation
Resnick Family Foundation Inc.
Barbara and Corbin Robertson
Mr. and Mrs. Donald N. Test Jr.
in honor of William and Henry Test
Ann G. Trammel Fund
Walter Oil & Gas Corporation Charitable Fund
and C. James and Carole Walter Looke Family Fund
The William and Marie Wise Family Foundation
All other Miracles in Mind
donors throughout the campaign
5 Anonymous
Brenda and Alan Abramson and Family
Ruth Davis and Ian Aitken
Albert and Margaret Alkek Foundation
J. Allen
Dr. and Mrs. Jon Allen
Mr. Richard K. Allen
Judy Ley and Robert H. Allen
Mr. Alan Altman
Miguel and Ana Licet Amaro
Amegy Bank of Texas
Barbara J. Amelio
Jan and Denny Anderson
Ms. Karen L. Anderson
Ms. Nicole Anderson
Marilyn and Bolivar Andrews
Ms. Sue Anschutz-Rodgers
Miriam Arnold, PhD
Eden A. Arquero, RN
Ms. Philippa Ashford, RN
Jeffery S. Atwater, DMin
Terry and Sara Rini Aversa
Mr. Jose Ayala
Mr. and Mrs. Bovaleem Azzouz
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Back
16
Ms. Diane L. Bailey
Mr. and Mrs. F. Kenneth Bailey
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Baker III
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Balaban
Ms. Andrea P. Baldwin-Benjamin
Susan M. Bankston, BSN, RN
Dr. and Mrs. Thröstur Björgvinsson
Mrs. Terri L. Barrera
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Barrow
Donna M. Barton
Mr. and Mrs. Theo B. Bean Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Beard
Stephen and Michele Beck-von-Peccoz
Ms. Alison Beebe
Ms. Melony L. Bell
Mr. and Mrs. Ben D. Bergeron
Teresa Bernardez, MD
Ms. Carolyn D. Bernell
Ms. Krystal N. Black
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Blake
Ms. Claudia Blakemore
Efrain Bleiberg, MD
Lynn Bodenhamer
Kate Bolen-Lourie and Adam Lourie
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Bonneville Jr.
Mr. Sawyer Bonsib
Ms. Sherry Booker
Ms. Reyna M. Bouchard-Kilp
Ms. Tara M. Branscomb
Allyson E. Brase
David G. Brehan
Mr. Joshua W. Bridges
Nancy Brier-Liesmann, LMSW, MFT
Mrs. Gwynne C. Brooks
Mrs. Monica M. Brown-Broussard
Ms. Sylvia Y. Bruce
The Rev. Carl F. Buechner
and Mrs. Judith F. Buechner
The Bugas Fund
Ms. Kristina Bullard
Mr. Jim L. Bunch
Mr. Paul F. Burmeister
Regan M. Burrows, RN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Bursch
Brian Butler, RN, MSN
Lee Caballero
Ms. Elena L. Calderon
Ms. Sandra R. Cano
Bettina Cardus, MD
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Carr Jr.
The Honorable and Mrs. James E. Carter Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Caton
Katherine E. Causey
Mrs. Colette Clarke
Mr. Wesley A. Clayton
Miracles in Mind
Roll of Honor 2010
Jack and Candy Clevenger
Carol Coats, RN, CARN
Mrs. Carol P. Colby
Ms. Peggy J. Coleman
Ms. Virginia L. Coleman
Collins Holding Company
Danielle L. Collins, BS, RN
Maribeth W. Collins
Mrs. Carole B. Colson
Ms. Juanice M. Colwell
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd and Elizabeth Conaway
Ms. Lillian L. Conway
Mrs. Angela K. Crawford
Mrs. Beverly K. Crichton
Stephanie Cunningham
Ms. Kebebe S. Dancy
Mr. Ronald A. Dancy
Ms. Jelani C. Daniel
Ms. Kelly Daniel
Deborah David, RN
Joyce E. Davidson, MD
Noblet Davidson, LCSW
Ms. Jennie L. Davis
Ken W. Davis Foundation
Mr. Larry D. Davis
Mrs. Marilyn J. Davis
Rozanna Davis
Ronald Ray Dawson
Patricia Daza, PhD
Mr. Dalton Dehart
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Dejesus
Chaplain Salvador R. del Mundo Jr.
Larry and Brenda Denoyer
Mr. William S. Devine
Devon Energy Corporation
Nancy Diacon
Ms. Patricia K. Dobbs
Mr. and Mrs. Cody Dolan
Mr. and Mrs. Neil S. Donaldson
Ms. Shirley A. Druggan
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. DuBois Jr.
Duke Energy Foundation
Ms. Lisa E. Duke
The Lillian H. & C.W. Duncan Foundation
Rhonda and Lynn Durham Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Edelman
The Margaret and James A. Elkins Jr. Foundation
Ms. Pamela J. Elliott
Ms. Lee Ann K. Elvig
Terrie Emel
Mrs. Patricia H. Enmon
Barbara Ervin and Enita Torres
Ms. Honey E. Estapa
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Etchinson
Mr. Eddie J. Evans Jr.
Leanne D. Farkas
Theresa Fassihi, PhD
Mr. and Mrs. Hill A. Feinberg
John and Barbara Fibiger
Ms. Peggy Fiedler
Ms. Rachel A. Fife
Jerry and Nanette Finger Foundation
Marvy and Elaine Finger
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Finkenstaedt
Ray C. Fish Foundation
Jim Flack, MD
Ms. Yoalma E. Flores
The Fondren Foundation
Susan and Jim Fordice
Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Forkin
Ms. Kimberly A. Fountain
Ms. Melissa D. Fouts
Mr. James P. Fox
Janis Fenwick Fox
Diana Freeland
Ms. Allison Gabbard
Gayle Garland
Dr. Nancy Gary and Mr. Samuel Gary
Brenda Garza
GE Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Shawn Gee
Mr. and Mrs. Robin C. Gibbs
Goldman Sachs & Co.
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Goldsmith
Liz Golmon
Pat Golmon and Julie Johnson
Amy Gonzalez
Mr. Jason K. Goode
Dr. and Mrs. Jerry R. Grammer
Ms. Joan Granlund
Linda H. Green, RN, MSN
Mr. Rodney W. Green
Van and Pam Greene
Julie Wagner Gregg and Alex Gregg
Ms. Meg Griffin, MSW
Mr. Phillip C. Griffin Jr.
Ms. Belinda R. Gutierrez
Hamill Foundation
George and Mary Josephine Hamman Foundation
Ms. Robin Haroian
Mr. Christopher A. Harris
Mr. Bill Harris
John Hart Jr., MS
Ms. Suzanne M. Hartt
Dr. Edythe Harvey
Mr. Gary A. Haskins
Ms. Nancy J. Heagney
17
Roll of Honor 2010
Miracles in Mind
Mrs. Tara M. Heavner
Susan Heffelfinger, PhD
C. Heinly
Ms. Dee G. Henderson, RN-BC, MSN
Ms. Elizabeth L. Hernandez
Ms. Cynthia R. Hervey
Mr. Thomas T. Hill
Dr. and Mrs. Wayne H. Holtzman
Mary and Carl Holvik
Ms. Judy L. Hood
Dr. and Mrs. John A. Hoogstra
Ms. Nancy L. Houser
Ms. Janet M. Howard
The Rev. Kern Huff and Mrs. Rebecca Huff
Dr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Hutchison
Ms. JaQuoia R. Jackson
Carl Jacobs Foundation
Mr. Greg M. Jacobs
Ms. Debbie D. Janis
Mr. and Mrs. Terry L. Janis
Loyd and Rebecca Jensen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Jewell
Mr. Lupe A. Jimenez
Ms. Adriana Johnson
Mr. Daniel R. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh W. Johnson Jr.
Elizabeth Winston Jones and Sam Jones
Lucy Rosenberry Jones
Ms. Pamela H. Jones, MSW, LCSW
Ms. Elise Judkins
Mr. Mohammad E. Karim
Nick Katko
Ms. Melinda H. Keezer
Mr. Bradley H. Kennedy
Mimi and Rob Kerr
Lt. Col. Daniel W. King and Dr. Bonnie M. King
Carolyn Dineen King
Mr. and Mrs. Peter D. Kinnear
Ms. Lari L. Kiple
Kenneth J. Klein and Family
Mrs. Jo Ann Klemmer, MA
Ms. Tina N. Klotz
Ms. Pia A. Knighton
Ms. Carla Knobloch
Mr. Russell R. Knott
Dr. and Mrs. Steven Kornguth
Harvey Kurzweil
Ms. Unlandia M. Kyle
The Kayser Foundation
Donna Lamb
Ms. Kristi Lashute, RD
18
Ms. Patti A. Lees
Mr. and Mrs. Barney LeJeune
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Leupold
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Leverette
Jo Ann and Gary Levering
Lisa Lewis, PhD
Vee Ellen Lewis
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Libbey
Julie Liskowski, LPC-I
Camille Lloyd, PhD
Ms. Cynthia A. Lloyd
Lockton Companies, LLC - Kansas City Division
Ms. Elizabeth H. Love
Vicki J. Lovin
Mr. Harry Lucas Jr.
Marilyn Graves Lummis
M.D. Anderson Foundation
Mrs. Diana T. MacArthur
Mrs. Brittnee M. MacIntyre
Dr. Lawrence Maher Jr.
Michael J. Mann, MSW, LCSW, and Steven L. Mason
Ms. Shelli Manning
Christopher D. Martin, MD
Lisa D. Martin, LCDC
Mrs. Alexandra M. Martindale
Dr. and Mrs. Milton L. Masur
Mrs. Julia J. Matthews
Virginia McAfee
Ms. M. C. McCabe
Ms. Jamie K. McCright
Martha McCrory, MS, CPRP
Brenda K. McDonald
Noelle McDonald, PhD
Patricia A. McElliott, MSW
John F. McGovern, DO
Sandra and Adams McHenry
John and Carolyn McKelvey
Laura McKenna
Diane McMaster
Mary Q. McParland, PhD, and Mr. James T. McParland
Joyce McWilliams, BSN, RN
Mr. Clarence M. McWright
Mr. Devon E. Melby
W. Walter Menninger, MD
Dr. and Mrs. William L. Menninger, PhD
Mr. Kent B. Mickelson
Ms. Melissa A. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Miller
Kevin Monser
Thomas and Alberta Monts
Andrew and Shawna Morris
Ms. Beulah Moses
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Mueller Sr.
The Mundell Family Fund
Richard L. Munich, MD, and Adrienne A. Munich, PhD
Miracles in Mind
Roll of Honor 2010
James Murphy and Kathrin Bohr
Carol C. Nadelson, MD
Gary L. Napier, MS, EdS, ARNP
Mrs. Verna Napier
Monty and Susan Nelson
Dr. David Ness
Gertrude B. Nielsen Charitable Trust
Dr. and Mrs. Flynn O’Malley, PhD
Ms. Ginger E. O’Neal
Mr. John J. O’Neill III
Natalie and Charles O’Roark
Mr. Gregory K. Odom
Sylvan and Ann Oestreicher Foundation Inc.
Walker and Anita Ogden
John M. Oldham, MD
Ms. Anissa L. Orr
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Oswald
Mr. Derrick W. Owings
Sandra Padgett
Nancy Palyo, RN, BS
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Passauer
Ms. Sheetal Patel
Susie Peake
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Penland
Sandra and Rogelio Perez Jr.
Christi Peters, BSN, RN
Mr. and Mrs. Tom C. Peters
Donald and Jo Anne Petersen Fund
Mr. Gerald A. Peterson
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm G. Pettigrew
Chelsey Philipp
Doug and Puddie Pitcock in memory of their daughter
Edward Poa, MD
Ms. Katina Pontikes
Pamela Poole, MT-BC, CPRP
Ms. Janice L. Poplack, LCSW
Mr. and Mrs. Jake Powell
Dana Powell, PhD
Mrs. Ruthann Pozez
The Prentice Foundation Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph L. Pullin
Ms. Margaret M. Pung
Mr. Tim Reed
LaShenda Reese
Peta-gay Chen Rhinehart
Anne Barnett Rhodes
Mr. Jeremy A. Rickmon
Segundo Robert-Ibarra, MD
Nancy E. Robertson, RN
Regina Rogers
Mr. Charles W. Rosenberry II
Ms. Robin Rossi
Ginny and David Russell
Lynn Sanders
Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Sanders
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Sanford
Mr. Stephen S. Sanger
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Saxe
Brenda L. Schiavone, MSN, RN, CNAA
Bronwyn and Ron Schielke
Michael Schmidt
Ms. Linda L. Schrey
Norman C. Schultz
Mr. Chuck Sears
Mary Catherine and Brad Sears
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A. Seger
Lorna R. Shabo
Shadywood Foundation
Marc Shapiro
Pamela Shirk
Ms. Saharah Shrout
Mr. Nathan Siebert
John D. Singer
Terri Singer
Ms. Susan L. Siphron
Ms. Monyce S. Slocum
Mrs. Cherida C. Smith
Vivian L. Smith Foundation
Ms. Patricia L. Smith-Hart
Mr. and Mrs. William S. Snider
Mr. Vitou So
Mr. and Mrs. Mark V. Spencer
Whitney Stacy
Terrilynn Steele, RN, MSN
Ms. Annabelle Stevens
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stinus
Strake Foundation
Mr. Michael Strickler
Gina Sullivan
Ms. Sheila Sutton
Ms. Kathryn Swanson
Brandon D. Sylvester
Judith Taggart, RN
Mrs. Grace D. Talkington
Ms. Mary M. Taylor, LCSW
Tellepsen Family
Ms. Lydia B. Test
Ms. Jennifer Thomas
Ms. Rosemary Thornton
Mr. and Mrs. Mark D. Tischler
Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Tong
Peter G. Traber, MD
Ms. Sylvia Trigg
Nancy Trowbridge
Ms. Virginia Z. Trux
Ms. Eve Tschetter
Cristina Turcich
19
Miracles in Mind
C.F. Menninger Society
Roll of Honor 2010
(Menninger’s 2010 annual fund)
Mr. Nicolas Valadez
Mr. Kurt J. Van Wagenen
Mr. and Mrs. John K. Vanier
Susan Vaughan Foundation Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Verdon
Mr. and Mrs. Arv Vilutis
Ms. Alice L. Waites
Mrs. Angela Waligura
Mrs. Khalila A. Walker
Mr. Berry Wall
Mr. John R. Wallace
Robert S. Wallerstein, MD
Ms. Laurie Wallin
Mr. Robert W. Waring
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory and Catherine Weaver
Robin and Chris Webb
Ms. Sarah Webb
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Welker
Mrs. Loise H. Wessendorff
Mr. and Mrs. Gail T. Whitcomb
LaSonya R. White
Mark White, RN
Ms. Natalie B. Wilhite
Harvey Williams, PhD
Laurel Williams
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Wilson III
Ms. Nicole Wish
Durf Wood and Deborah Henderson
Mr. and Mrs. Jean M. Worsham
Donna Yi, MD, and Robert Hunter, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yohr
Dr. Stuart and Dr. Beth K. Yudofsky, MD
Ms. Sally Zahner
Mr. Fernando P. Zapata
Benefactors
Benefactors of the C.F. Menninger Society
make gifts of $10,000 or more.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Burguières
Marvy and Elaine Finger
Poppi Massey
Barbara and Corbin Robertson
Norman C. Schultz
Marc Shapiro
Tower Council
Tower Council members of the C.F. Menninger Society
make gifts of $5,000 or more.
1 Anonymous
Brenda and Alan Abramson
Martha Bersch
Ms. Nancy J. Corbet and Mr. Charles S. Willits
Mr. and Mrs. Russell M. Frankel
Beverly and Harold Friedman Fund of the
Houston Jewish Community Foundation
Mrs. Elizabeth S. Guenzel
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hughes
Ms. Lisa Kennedy
Mr. and Mrs. D. Patrick McCelvey
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher N. O’Sullivan
Donald and Jo Anne Petersen Fund
H.E. “Gene” Rainbolt
Regina Rogers
Ms. Louisa S. Sarofim
Ann Trammell
1215 Fund of the Jewish Community
Foundation of Greater Kansas City
Mrs. Jess B. Tutor
Founders’ Council
The Founders’ Council honors Drs. C.F, Karl and William
Menninger. Founders’ Council members of the
C.F. Menninger Society make gifts of $2,500 or more.
Bruno and Margaret Jonikas
Mrs. Phyllis L. Kossoff
Mrs. Elizabeth Y. Leckenby
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Mueller Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Clive M. Runnells
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Wilson III
20
Sponsors
President’s Council members of the C.F. Menninger Society
make gifts of $1,000 or more.
Sponsors of the C.F. Menninger Society make
gifts of $500 or more.
3 Anonymous
Ruth Davis and Ian Aitken
Joan and Stanford Alexander
Mr. and Mrs. K. Tucker Andersen
Dana Estee Anderson
Lawrence E. Anderson
Dr. Linda B. Andrews and Mr. Richard Andrews
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Baker III
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Beard
John H. Campbell
Mr. and Mrs. T. Jay Collins
Ms. Bonnie Cord and Mr. Stephen Melton
Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Corrigan Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Crandall
Leslie Barry Davidson and W. Robins Brice
Ms. Nancy G. Dickenson
Ms. Ellen Feldman
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar F. Foreman Jr.
Mr. Robert B. Gordon
Ms. Rebecca R. Grant
Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Hanson Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Hays III
Mr. and Mrs. Gary G. Jacobs
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kane
John C. Kerr
Mrs. Lois J. Kilmer
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory A. Kozmetsky
Mr. and Mrs. Abner F. Levine
John A. Menninger, MD, and Claire Zilber, MD
W. Walter Menninger, MD
Shea and Christine Morenz
Chris Nunes
Ms. Sarah R. Petersen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Ravenscroft
The Rev. Douglas Richnow and
Mrs. Angela Richnow
Ms. Wilhelmina E. Robertson
Ms. Peggy Rosenberry
Dr. and Mrs. George A. Schaub
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Schillaci
Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood Schwartz
Mary Catherine and Brad Sears
Mr. Carl W. Stern and Ms. Holly Hayes
Diana Strassmann and Jeff Smisek
Mrs. Sue T. Whitfield
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Williams
1 Anonymous
Marian M. Adams, MD
Alsdorf Foundation
Dianna and Joe Barber
Berta and James Blecke
Jill and Dave Bockorny
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene H. Dewhurst
Gertrude E. Ennis
Mrs. Rosemary H. Evans
Mrs. Anne F. Farish
John and Barbara Fibiger
Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Francis
The Reverend Thomas E. Gallenbach
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Christopher Gilbert
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Haas
Dr. and Mrs. John A. Hoogstra
V. Stewart and Connie Jose
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver D. Kingsley Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman V. Kinsey
Mrs. Marjorie E. Kniep
Mr. and Mrs. David J. Kroeze
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Lee
Mr. Richard A. Lenon
Joan B. Malick, PhD
Mr. Stephen A. Massad
Jack E. Maxwell
Weston Milliken
Mr. Robert J. Opdyke
Anand Pandya, MD
Anne Barnett Rhodes
Ms. Franelle Rogers
Mrs. Sybil F. Roos
Mr. and Mrs. David H. Rosenberg
Derry and Wendy Seldin
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph O. Susholtz
Mrs. Dorothy K. Vallier
Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Ward
Mr. and Mrs. Kane C. Weiner
Mr. and Mrs. Lee R. Wells Jr.
Harvey Williams, PhD
Roll of Honor 2010
President’s Council
21
Patrons
Roll of Honor 2010
Patrons of the C.F. Menninger Society make
gifts of $250 or more.
1 Anonymous
Dr. Raphael Adler
Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Allgood
Terry and Sara Rini Aversa
Mr. and Mrs. F. Kenneth Bailey
Marcella Baird, MSW
Dr. and Mrs. James E. Baker, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle F. Barnes
Mrs. Cynthia T. Barnett
Charles Beck, MD, and Ea P. Beck, PhD
Mr. Peter A. Benoliel and Mrs. Willo Carey
The Reverend Bernard Blasich
Ms. Chree Boydstun
Mr. Stephen Brice
Dr. and Mrs. Harry R. Brickman
Ms. Margaret D. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Vern R. Campbell
Charles and Kathleen Cannon
Ms. Lana L. Carlton
Ms. Jan Carson
Letty Casazza
Dr. Maria I. Choe and Mr. Byung Choe
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald F. Clark
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Coleman Jr.
Frances A. Connelly
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Cummins Jr.
Richard A. Donnenwirth
Mr. and Mrs. George DuBois
Anette T. Edens, PhD
Tom and Clara Ellis
Dr. Ermaleen B. Etter and Mr. Owen B. Etter
Dr. Kelli Cohen Fein and Mr. Martin J. Fein
Mr. Henry C. Gibson Jr.
Erin Hamilton and David Brice
Mrs. Ruth Hannes
Mr. John Kennedy Harrison
Betsy Hornberger
Ms. Carolyn R. Jakopin
Mr. Brian R. James
Donald L. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Raleigh W. Johnson Jr.
Chinhui Juhn and Eddie R. Allen III
Mrs. Roma R. Kempe
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Kern
Mrs. Esther Kramer
Stephen and Marilyn Kramer
James O. Lide
Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Lindemann
Mr. Steven J. Livengood
22
Ms. Jani Lopez
Mr. Barry Mandel
Jennifer Martinez
Mr. and Mrs. Vidal G. Martinez
Christina Jameson McCurtain, MSW
Mike E. McCurtain, MSW
Mr. Kent B. Mickelson
Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Mischer Jr.
Ruth R. Money
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Mundell
Ms. Esther R. Munshine
Kathrin Bohr and James C. Murphy, PhD
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Nydick
Mr. Austin M. O’Toole
Mrs. Elisheva Parker
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm G. Pettigrew
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Ratcliff
L. Mark Russakoff, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Silbergh
Richard C. Simons, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Murray R. Socolof
Vivian M. Wise
Dr. Elizabeth A. Witt
Mr. and Mrs. David Wood
Mr. William G. Woodford
Members
Members of the C.F. Menninger Society make
contributions of $125 or more.
Roll of Honor 2010
6 Anonymous
Mr. Warren R. Allen
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel J. Alves
Mr. Robert G. Armstrong
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Arnold
Mrs. Leslie Bachelor
Ms. Virginia C. Ballard
Ms. Carol Barden
Dr. and Mrs. Reuben J. Bareis
Father Michael G. Barrett
Mr. and Mrs. E.V. Benjamin III
Ms. Maureen Boyd
Wander Braga, MD
Gordon W. Braudaway
Dr. Dianne A. Brehmer and Mr. Douglas Bailey
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh W. Bridgford
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Burgess
Mr. and Mrs. Neil M. Bush
Mr. Gordon G. Campbell
Dr. and Mrs. Edmundo Centena
Dr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Click
Mr. and Mrs. Boyd B. Covey
Mrs. Beverly K. Crichton
Miriam A. Cunningham
Ms. Janet E. Davis
Dr. and Mrs. Antonio de la Maza
Mrs. Ivelisse Garcia De Rodriguez
Dr. and Mrs. C.D. Delery Jr.
Kathleen M. Dennish
Mrs. Frances A. Dillingham
Alice and Bob Dillon
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dinerstein
Dorothy Dodge
Dr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Dundon
Ms. Elizabeth S. Farish
Dr. and Mrs. Walter F. Farr
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Frank Faust
Mr. and Mrs. James G. Ferguson
Ronald K. Filippi, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fillipoff
Mrs. Sarah M. Fisher
Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Florence, MD
Mr. Kim Foard
Susan and Jim Fordice
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Francisco
Stasia Frank-Powers
Dr. Norman Frankel and Mrs. Frankel
Mr. and Mrs. David E.K. Frischkorn Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Frohlich
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gendel
Carolyn Gibbs
Ms. Audrey Grant
Van and Pam Greene
Julie Wagner Gregg and Alex Gregg
Ricardo Grillo-Paris, MD, FAAP
Mariah Chisholm Hasker
Emilie G. Haugh
Mrs. Rosemary P. Henrion
Jack R. Hicks Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael A. Hoffman
Dr. Tomas and Dr. Joan C. Holmlund, DMD
Mary and Carl Holvik
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Howe III
Mr. Vester T. Hughes Jr.
Ms. Sheila A. Hunt
Mr. Charles B. Hyman
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Jordan
Ms. Linda G. Josserand
Dr. Samar A. Kadi
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Kavanagh
The Rev. Eugene Kidder, CGP, MDiv, AAPC,
and Mrs. Barbara Kidder
Mr. and Mrs. Melvyn N. Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Allan R. Kmetz
Ms. Carolyn Kneese
Ms. Carla Knobloch
Mrs. Geraldine Kunstadter
Mr. and Mrs. Ulyesse LeGrange
Mr. and Mrs. Nathan L. Lentz
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Leonard
Roland Levy, LMHC
Maggie Lopez Potts
Vicki J. Lovin
Mr. L. Alan Lowry
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Mach
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mahon
Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Marsh
Ms. L. Martin
Craig T. Mason
Mr. and Mrs. Jack McCrary
Sandra and Adams McHenry
Mr. and Mrs. David McKeithan
John and Carolyn McKelvey
Stewart and Corra McKnight
Carol V. Middelberg, PhD
Ms. Melda L. Miller
Mr. George P. Mitchell
Ms. Lucy H. Molinaro
Carol and Jim Moller
Mr. Kirk A. Mooney
Jane D. Moorman, PhD
Ms. Patricia F. Morille
Andrew and Shawna Morris
23
Roll of Honor 2010
Members
Associate members
Ms. Tracy Naylor
Monty and Susan Nelson
Susie Peake
Ms. Mary Lou Pringle
Mr. Robert D. Pugh
Ms. Martha A. Railey, MS
Mrs. Sherry Rapport
Mrs. Marilyn Ratner
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Rigney
Dr. and Mrs. Donald L. Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Ronus
Mr. and Mrs. William Rovere
Ginny and David Russell
Ms. Lucy Schimmel
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Schlatter
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Schwille
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Shaffer
Mr. and Mrs. F.B. Shelton
Ms. Susan L. Siphron
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Steele
Mr. and Mrs. Guido H. Stempel III
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Stevenson Jr.
Garvin and Carol Stryker
Bert Subrin
Gina Sullivan
Ms. Stephanie Tabbah
Tetsuro Takahashi
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Taylor
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thornton
Margery M. Tonks
Mr. and Mrs. Emile F. Vanderstucken
Mr. and Mrs. L.D. Weaver
Mrs. Eric Walter Weinmann
Ms. Donna H. Wilson
Associate members of the C.F. Menninger Society make
gifts of $35 or more.
24
28 Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Abraham
Mr. Michael J. Adam
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Adams
Mr. James L. Agnew
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Agresta
Mr. James R. Ahrenholz
Mr. and Mrs. John Aitken
Dr. and Mrs. George H. Allison, MD
Jan and Denny Anderson
Kerstin Archer, MD
Eduardo C. Armenteros, LMHC
Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Bahr
The Andrew and Dorothy Bain Estate
Mrs. Shirley Bain
Mr. and Mrs. George C. Bange
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Barnes
Mr. Joseph E. Batson Jr.
Lieutenant Colonel Richard A. Beach
Mrs. Katrina H. Becker
Eleanor Bell
Mrs. Barbara H. Benda
Ms. Lucille Benevides
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Bergerson
Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Bernstein
Ms. Carole V. Bibby
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Blaney Jr.
Darlene Blizzard
Patricia A. Block, MD
Mrs. Isabel M. Boardman
Ms. Karen M. Brady
Ms. Gwen Brehm, LPC, LMFT
Mr. and Mrs. Milford Brinkerhoff
Ms. Dorothy A. Brockhoff
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Brubaker
Mr. Jack W. Burckhardt
Richard H. Burns Jr., DDS, MSD
Ms. Barbara J. Burris
Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Carey
Ms. Patricia T. Carlson
Ms. Elizabeth W. Carswell
Mr. and Mrs. Vito A. Catalfio
Mr. and Mrs. Francis X. Cavanaugh
Robin Cavanaugh, DBA
Ms. Yvonne Champion
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Y. Chao
Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Chornesky
Mr. Steve T. Cochran
Mr. and Mrs. Roe L. Coffman
Associate members
Roll of Honor 2010
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald S. Cohn
Edward M. Colbach, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Russell L. Cook Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Cooke
Virginia C. Cox
Mrs. Angela K. Crawford
Deborah Davies, PhD
Mr. Allen V.C. Davis
Ms. Helen P. De Alessi
Mr. and Mrs. George T. De Cecco
Mr. and Mrs. Abbott de Rham
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Disney
Mrs. Patricia F. Doemer
Dr. Malcolm Dole Jr., MD
Frank and Karen Donnelly
Dr. and Mrs. James F. Drane
Ms. Dorothea Drayton
Mrs. Israel Drukaroff
Ms. Ann C. Drumm
Dr. and Mrs. Don E. Dulany
Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Eardley, MD
Mr. and Mrs. P. Eilbott
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Eiting
Ken Ensroth, MD
Michael J. Epstein, MD
Dr. Gerald L. Euster
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ewing
Ms. Nadine R. Ewing
Dr. and Mrs. Elwin R. Falkenham
Mr. Robert Fay
Bernie Feld
Mr. Saul A. Fenster
Ms. Charlene Fink
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Finkenstaedt
Chaplain Debra Flitter
Mr. and Mrs. L. Michael Foley
Ms. Emma T. Foss
Elaine A. Franco
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Free
Mrs. Loretta Friedman
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Gainer
Mrs. Pamela J. Gastineau
Ms. Janet F. Gavagan
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Gialde
Mr. Irwin F. Goodman, PE
Ms. Rosemarie Goodnough
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Goodridge
Ms. Sharon Graham
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Grubaugh
Ms. Josephine J. Haibeck
Professor and Mrs. Bruce Hall
Ms. Marjorie A. Hamon
Dr. and Mrs. Steven V. Hansen, MD
Martha G. Hanson, PhD
Richard C. Hardes
Dr. Judith M. Harper
Mr. Peter Harriott
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Harris
Bob and Sandi Harris
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hartman
Ms. Grace W. Harvey
Ms. Harriet Hausman
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Carson Hays III
Mr. and Mrs. William D. Helms
Mrs. Jane A. Henson
Ms. Bonnie E. Hibbert
Dr. Rae Hill
Mr. William W. Hodges
Mr. Jon Hoffheimer
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hoffmire
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Hopkins
Leonard Horwitz
Mr. and Mrs. E. Mitchell Hough
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Howe
Beth and George Hower
Mr. and Mrs. C.M. Hudspeth
Ms. Diane S. Humphrey
Ms. Alice B. Hupfel
Christine Jaynes-Bell, PhD
Mr. and Mrs. Allen P. Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Rajesh D. Kamdar
Mrs. Lynne K. Kane
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis R. Kayem
Ms. Theresa Kelly
Drs. Ellen and John Kerber
Judge Carolyn D. King and Judge Thomas M. Reavley
Mrs. Emily L. Kisber
Ms. Mary Louis Kister
Mr. Paul A. Klinger
Mr. Clark W. Knierman
Mr. and Mrs. A.H. Koenig
Ms. Marian B. Kohlstedt
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Kostyrka
Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Krupnow
Ms. Liza B. Kutner
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ladenberger
Ms. Sharon Lasman
Dr. and Mrs. Scott Lawrence, MD, PC
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Leaverton
Mrs. Sarah B. Lehmberg
Virginia F. Lessenden, MSW
Mr. Lewis A. Levey
Lisa Lewis, PhD
Mr. and Mrs. Brian L. Leyden
Sarah Lincoln, MSW, LCSW, and Mr. Joseph Hester
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Link
Jim and Nancy Lomax
25
Roll of Honor 2010
Associate members
Mr. Michael Porro and Ms. Diane M. Lucca
Ms. Marcia H. Macdonald
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Mack
Sophie Magafan
Mr. John Magnani
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Maier
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Maislin
Mrs. Brooke Malone
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Y. Marchand
Ms. Carolyn G. Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Gil M. Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Matthaei
Mr. Sam McCaffree
Mr. and Mrs. James A. McCullough
Mr. Alonzo L. McDonald
Mr. and Mrs. Brian P. McFadden
Patricia McFarlen
Mr. and Mrs. Glen McLaughlin
Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Menninger
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Milnes
Ms. Marilyn S. Minto
Valerie MiroQuesada
Ms. Amy Moen
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Morgan
Mr. E. Jack Murphy
Frank and Kathleen Nageotte
John and Carol Nalbandian
Eleanor G. Nasser
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Newey
Dr. and Mrs. Ford Nielsen
Ms. Eleanor M. O’Neill
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Opp
Ms. Virginia W. Oram
Dr. Susan Snider Osterberg
Charlyne M. Pack
Mr. Mark G. Palazzo
Dr. and Mrs. Victor Parsonnet
Mr. and Mrs. Tom C. Peters
Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. S. Peterson
Leroy and Mary Joyce Pickett
Lindsey Plummer
Mr. Sheldon Pogue
Dr. Elizabeth J. Posey and Mr. Bob Posey
Ms. Helen L. Price
Mr. and Mrs. Brian L. Rappold
Ms. Violet M. Reilly
Mrs. Margaret M. Ressegieu
Loys Reynolds, PhD
Dr. and Mrs. Grant V. Rodkey
Ms. Annette R. Roiphe
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ruckert
26
Ms. Nichole Rust
Mr. Donald C. Rutherford
Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Sacco
Dr. Rafael Sanchez Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. R.D. Saunders
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Schmidt
Dr. and Mrs. R. Larry Schmitt
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome S. Schultz
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Schwartz
John Sear, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Jackson H. Sell
Mr. Pearce Henry Shanks Jr.
Larry and Barbara Shaw
Mr. and Mrs. Michael W. Shea
Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Sherman
Dr. Mary N. Shinn
Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Shull
Ms. Arline R. Siegel
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Sillars
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Slan
Jane R. Jenks Small
Ms. Stephanie S. Smith
Ms. May Soll
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Sprott
Arlene Stabenau
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Stage
Katie Stanton
Mr. Moses Sternlieb
Diane Stevens
Ms. Emilie F. Stewart
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Stewart
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Strange
Dr. Stanley and Debra-Sue Strauss
Mr. and Mrs. William K. Street
Mr. and Mrs. Hans Strohmer
Mrs. Doris H. Strong
Mr. and Mrs. Warren R. Stumpe
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Sturm
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Suden
Mr. Joe C. Sumner
Mr. and Mrs. Barry J. Sutcliffe
Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Taaffe
The Rev. and Mrs. Elmer A. Talcott
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Tenenbown
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Tennyson
Mrs. Jane R. Terry
Ms. Brenda Booth Thornton
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Treas
Mr. and Mrs. Russell L. Treyz
Mrs. Ann Turnbull
Mr. and Mrs. Howard N. Uhrig
Jill C. Valenti
The Rev. Victor Vogel
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Wallace
Elizabeth Walter Keeney
Associate members
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Warrens
Mr. Jerry T. Webb
Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Weber
Ms. Janice E. Wilhelm
Miss Pauline E. Williman
Ms. Carolyn S. Wilmot
Ms. Melissa Wingfield
Mrs. Bette K. Winslow
Nicole and Leslie Wish
Ms. Mary J. Wolf
Ms. Susan Wright
Ms. Marjorie P. Zeigler
Shoujie Zhang, MD
Mr. Norman A. Zilber, Esq.
Estate gifts
Estates, trusts or life income plans from the
following persons provided gifts in 2010.
Foundations
Ann L. Bronfman Foundation
Aspen Business Center Foundation
Blum-Kovler Foundation
The Louis L. Borick Foundation
The Gordon A. Cain Foundation
Carl Jacobs Foundation
Carolyn Curry Elbel Memorial Foundation
The P. and C. Carroll Foundation
Conner Foundation
Denton A. Cooley Foundation
The Davidow Charitable Fund
The Davidson Family Foundation
Donald H. and Barbara K. Bernstein Family Foundation
Edwin W. and Catherine M. Davis Foundation
Fraternal Order of Eagles Memorial Foundation Fund
Frederick H. Leonhardt Foundation
Greater Houston Community Foundation
Greater Milwaukee Foundation’s Dr. Carl W. Eberbach
and Elisabeth Falk Eberbach Fund
Hackett Family Foundation
The Heffner Fund
Jack Taylor Family Foundation
Joan and Stanford Alexander Foundation
The Kayser Foundation
Joe Levit Family Foundation
The Ernest Lowenstein Foundation Inc.
The Lyons Foundation
John P. McGovern Foundation
The Robert & Janice McNair Foundation
The McReynolds Family Foundation Inc.
Morse Family Foundation
Gertrude B. Nielsen Charitable Trust
The John M. O’Quinn Foundation
ONEOK Foundation Inc.
Robert R. and Kay M. Onstead Foundation
The Oshman Foundation
Patterson Family Foundation Inc.
Scurlock Foundation
Shadywood Foundation
Stedman West Foundation
The William B. Stokely Jr. Foundation
The Glickenhaus Foundation
The Horwitz Family Memorial Foundation
The Moran Foundation
The Oxford Muse
The Trammell Foundation
Samuel Weinstein Family Foundation
Yellowbrick Foundation
Roll of Honor 2010
Maxine J. Anton
Yetta H. Appel, DSW
Andrew and Dorothy Bain
Doris G. Baumgarten
Nathalie B. Brown
Samuel H. Brown
Patsy Cary
Howard P. Dallas
Clayton E. Elliott
Helen L. Gilkey-Greenberg
Harry Moon
Sadie Danciger Trust
Terry L. Sales
Eleanor H. Schwartz
Louise and Prescott W. Thompson, MD
James B. Tunny Jr.
Hendrik W. Vietor
Jeanne W. Watson
Foundations, corporations
and organizations
27
Roll of Honor 2010
Foundations, corporations and organizations
The Menninger Heritage Society
Corporations
Allflex Packaging Products Inc.
ARAMARK Corporation
BBVA Compass
Chesapeake Operating Inc.
Debner + Company
Dorè Energy Corporation
EBSCO Industries Inc.
Elegant Additions Inc.
FEMCO, Inc.
Fulbright & Jaworski L.L.P.
Gilliland Oil & Gas Inc.
Goldman Sachs & Co.
Haynes Whaley Associates Inc.
Hilton Americas - Houston
Horizon Natural Resources Inc.
Kirksey Architecture
Locke, Lord, Bissell & Liddell
Morgan Stanley Smith Barney
Nancy Alfaro Enterprises Inc
Rocky Mountain Psychotherapy PC
Smith Seckman Reid Inc.
Tellepsen Builders
Texas Petroleum Investment Company
Thompson & Knight L.L.P.
Veenker Resources Inc.
Individuals who have named Menninger as a beneficiary in
their Menninger Life Income Plan, will or trust are honored
with a membership in The Menninger Heritage Society.
Corporate Matching Gifts
Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation, Inc.
Goldman, Sachs & Co. Matching Gift Program
IBM Corporation
Organizations
Center for Behavioral Wellness
The Council on Alcohol and Drugs Houston
DePelchin Children’s Center
Michigan Psychoanalytic Council
Partnership for Cures
Province of St. Joseph of the Capuchin Order
Santé Center for Healing
Society for the Performing Arts
South Texas College of Law
Texas Children’s Hospital
University of St. Thomas
28
4 Anonymous
Miss Agnes C. Adams and Miss Joan Adams
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Adams
Geraldine C. Allen, MSW
Mrs. William R. Anderson Jr.
Maxine J. Anton
Jeffery S. Atwater, DMin
Sylvia Brody Axelrad, PhD
Jerry Baker
Ronald P. Baker
Beatrice Balaban
Cynthia T. Barnett
Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Barrett
William J. and R. Jean Beard
Mrs. Neale M. Bearden
Dr. and Mrs. Kedar N. Bhasker
G. Madeline Boudegen
Carolyn V. Bourne
Don Brady, PhD
Lorena R. Brock
Jean E. Brower
Mr. and Mrs. David Brown
Rice E. Brown
Carolyn J. Bunker
Walter L. Burroughs
F. Robert Burrows
Willem and Jacquelin Bynagte
Allen C. Calkins
Patricia T. Carlson
L. Russell Cartwright
Letty Casazza
Herbert Cattenberg
Joan Cavally
Richard F. Chapman, MD
Maria Il-Cha Choe, MD
Norton Clapp
Mary J. Clements
Jack and Candy Clevenger
Catherine W. Cockburn
Rosalie Cohen
Alvin Cohn
Virginia L. Coleman
Donna “Missie” Coneybeer
Loretta Connolly
Maynard G. Cox
Alice S. Davies
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas T. Denault
Dr. Carl E. Eberbach and Elisabeth Falk Eberbach
Mrs. Evelyn Eber
The Menninger Heritage Society
Roll of Honor 2010
Clayton E. Elliott
Carol L. Elsaesser
Bonnie H. Emerson
Dr. Ermaleen B. Etter
Robert Fay
Ronald K. Filippi, MD
Dr. Virginia O. Fine
Jeanne Flierl
Donald S. Frederick
Beverly and Harold Friedman
Naomi and Jack B. Friedman
Barbara R. Furlow
John R. Gambill, MD
Sara Jean Gamble
Binford W. Gilbert, PhD and Mrs. Lois H. Gilbert
Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Gilbert
Harry B. Gordon Jr.
Richard J. Gough
John R. Grayson
The Rev. John R. Hall
Robert Hanft
Julia H. Harms
Barbara B. Haythe
Layton Dean Hector and Adele Arico Hector
Marilyn J. Hodge
Mary D. Hooper
Irene Jakab, MD
Homer Jefferson
Professor E. Winston Jones
Marilyn B. Jury
Jean Ann Kesler
Jo Ann Klemmer, MA
David S. Kruidenier, Jr.
Katherine E. Laiolo
Nick and Rosella Lalich
June Lees
Nina Marilyn Liff
Louise R. Lord
Marcia B. Lustig
Edward Macauley, IV
William C. Madlener
Peggy M. May
Catherine A. Mayer, MD
Margaret L. Mayer
Harris C. McClaskey, PhD
Marian McPartland
Roberta V. Meek
Laura and Edwin A. Menninger Jr.
Philip B. Menninger
Richard M. Menninger
Barbara J. Moore
Verna Motto
Larry Movsovitz
Charles T. Nevels, MD
Linda Norman, DO, and Robert Ryan, LCSW
Dorothy Nuttall, MSW
Roberta Ossi
Tom C. and Melinda J. Peters
Susan R. Philbin
Jack Pinard
Diane K. Potter
Selma Putman
Mrs. Jack Rieger
George W. Roark, MD
Dr. Janice Roberts
Margaret Robertson
William H. Robinson III, MD
R. Rodriguez
Cassandra L. Ruden
Robert L. Ruden
Shulamith Salem
Terry L. Sales
Dorothy Ruby Saxe
Michael Schinagel
Marilyn G. Schnitz
Sidney Z. Searles
Wendy and Derry Seldin
Arline Ruth Siegel
Cynthia S. Simons
Johanna L. Smith
Stephen B. Sofro
Jeannette P. Spotts
Marcia J. Squire
Caren A. Staley
Gale Steinberg
Alfred P. Stern
Elizabeth D. Taylor
Jane R. Terry
Donald N. Test Jr.
George A. Thatcher Jr.
Ann G. Trammell
Drs. Charlotte Trautman and William Cannon
Jacque D. Vallier
Donna L. Vanier
Betty Vincent-Karl
Jerry K. Wardrip
John W. Weber
Ginia Wexler
Patricia A. Nielsen Wilkie, PhD, PsyD
Jeannie R. Williams
Margarett M. Williams
John H. Wilms, MD, LFAPA
Robert C. Winkler
Marie and William Wise
Gertrude Wittenberg
August R. Woods Jr.
Arthur P. Young
Rose P. Young, PhD
29
In honor
In honor of Sahaj R. Kamdar
Mr. and Mrs. Rajesh D. Kamdar
In honor reflects gifts made in 2010 in the name
of the following persons.
In honor of Lauri Lasman
Ms. Sharon Lasman
In honor of Joan and Stanford Alexander
Ms. Bernice R. Feld
In honor of Dr. Charles A. LeMaistre
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory A. Kozmetsky
In honor of Stanford Alexander
Ms. Bernice R. Feld
In honor of Constance Libbey Menninger
John A. Menninger, MD, and Claire Zilber, MD
In honor of Deb and Richard Allison
Lt. Col. Richard A. Beach
In honor of W. Walter Menninger, MD
Sue Anschutz-Rodgers
The Honorable and Mrs. James E. Carter Jr.
Ms. Joan Granlund
Lucy Rosenberry Jones
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore W. Libbey
Mrs. Julia J. Matthews
John F. McGovern, DO
Carol C. Nadelson, MD
Mrs. Ruthann Pozez
Mr. Charles W. Rosenberry II
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Saxe
Mr. and Mrs. William S. Snider
Drs. Judith and Robert Wallerstein
In honor of Philip J. Burguières
Joan and Stanford Alexander Foundation
Robert R. and Kay M. Onstead Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Marc J. Shapiro
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B. Tutor
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Williams
Roll of Honor 2010
In honor of Raymond L. Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Warren R. Stumpe
In honor of Cooper Robert Dolsen
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Jewell
In honor of Carol and Alfred Gassner
Mr. Mark S. Phelps
In honor of Earl M. Gilbert
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Christopher Gilbert
In honor of Ty Gilbert
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Christopher Gilbert
In honor of Maureen and Jim Hackett
Mr. and Mrs. Marc J. Shapiro
In honor of Maureen O. Hackett
Ms. Chree Boydstun
Mr. Barry Mandel
In honor of Robert and Susan Haggard
Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Bernstein
In honor of Josephine J. Haibeck
Mrs. Doris H. Strong
In honor of Gregory Hebert
Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Hebert
In honor of Harris Kaffie
Mr. and Mrs. Melvyn N. Klein
30
In honor of Flynn O’Malley, PhD
Mr. Sheldon Pogue
In honor of Dee Sterling Osborne
Hackett Family Foundation
In honor of Jacob Matthew Pack
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Pack
In honor of Janice L. Poplack, LCSW
Michael J. Epstein, MD
In honor of Mrs. Mildred Riveness
Ms. Josephine J. Haibeck
In honor of Wilhelmina E. Robertson
Joan and Stanford Alexander Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B. Tutor
In honor of Kelsi J. Squire
Ms. Marcia J. Squire
In honor of Betty Ann Stedman
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph L. Pullin
In honor of Mrs. Doris Strong
Ms. Josephine J. Haibeck
In honor
In memory
In honor of Betty S. Tutor
Ms. Jan Carson
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Cooke
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Frank Faust
Mrs. Andrea Warner Gaitz
Mr. and Mrs. Harry H. Gendel
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Mach
In memory reflects gifts made in 2010 in the name
of the following persons.
In honor of the Mark and Sharon Wise Family
Ms. Leslie Barry Davidson and Mr. W. Robins Brice
In honor of Mark E. Yoh II
Anonymous
In honor of Stuart C. Yudofsky, MD
Max & Rochelle Levit Family
Beverly and Staman Ogilvie
In memory of Teresa Bernardez, MD
Michigan Psychoanalytic Council
In memory of Rita and Kenneth Bleyaert
The Rev. Kathleen A. Bleyaert
In memory of Betty Blomquist
Anonymous
In memory of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Buntin
Ms. Carolyn S. Wilmot
In memory of Jerry L. Burris
Ms. Barbara J. Burris
In memory of Jeffrey A. Champagne
Mr. and Mrs. W.M. Champagne
Roll of Honor 2010
In honor of Stuart Yudofsky, MD, and
the Baylor College of Medicine
Psychiatric Staff
Mr. and Mrs. Adolph O. Susholtz
In memory of Madeleine M. Aitken
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Hays III
In memory of Bernard G. Colby
Mrs. Carol P. Colby
In memory of Leslie L. Cooke
Mrs. Beverly K. Crichton
In memory of Clarice M. Cooley
Mr. Ralph A. Cooley
In memory of John A. Crichton
Mrs. Beverly K. Crichton
In memory of Patrick Ross Davidson Jr.
David Brice and Erin Hamilton
Ms. Leslie Barry Davidson and Mr. W. Robins Brice
Elegant Additions Inc.
Ms. Peggy Murphy
Ms. Stephanie Tabbah
In memory of Israel Drukaroff
Mrs. Israel Drukaroff
In memory of George Fredrickson Jr.
Ms. Margaret D. Brown
In memory of Jack B. Friedman
Beverly and Harold Friedman
31
Roll of Honor 2010
In memory
In memory of Angela O’Neill
Mr. John J. O’Neill III
In memory of Michael Alden Grant
Ms. Rebecca R. Grant
In memory of John M. O’Quinn
Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Burguières
In memory of Dr. Marvin Lee Graves
Marilyn Graves Lummis
In memory of Samuel Rapport, MD
Mrs. Sherry Rapport
In memory of Norma Green
Ms. Nancy G. Dickenson
In memory of Manuel A. Rodriguez-Perez, MD
Mrs. Ivelisse Garcia de Rodriguez
In memory of Richard Showalter
Julie Wagner Gregg and Alex Gregg
In memory of C and M B Roholt
Ms. Dianne I. Roholt
In memory of Albert J. Henrion Sr.
Mrs. Rosemary P. Henrion
In memory of Karen Scharbauer
Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Durham Jr.
In memory of William D. Horton, MD
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Leaverton
In memory of John Schoenherr
Jan and Denny Anderson
In memory of Magna Estilette Hungerford
Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Burguières
In memory of Arthur Schwartz
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Schwartz
In memory of Gretchen Hupfel
Ms. Alice B. Hupfel
In memory of Denis, John, Mary and Denis Sheahan
Anonymous
In memory of Christine Kohlstedt
Ms. Marian B. Kohlstedt
In memory of Robert Stein, MD
Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Eardley
In memory of Robert Kuldell
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Taylor
In memory of Matthew Stockwell
Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Francis
In memory of Thomas Norris Langdon
Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Finkenstaedt
In memory of George Berkley Stringer
Mrs. Colette Clarke
In memory of Alicia Marie Lannes
Nicole and Leslie Wish
In memory of Jerry E. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Morgan
In memory of Norman W. Leus
Ms. Patricia C. McFarlen
In memory of Cecilia Vella
Mr. Paul R. Vella
In memory of Joanna Lowry
Mr. L. Alan Lowry
In memory of Margaret S. Vogel
The Rev. Victor G. Vogel Jr.
In memory of Mr. and Mrs. S.L. McCaffree
Mr. Sam McCaffree
In memory of Bertha Weber
Anonymous
In memory of Hazel McClintick
Mr. and Mrs. Phil E. Dinsmore
In memory of Joseph and Frank Wera
Mr. David P. Holm and Mrs. Judith M. Horton-Holm
In memory of Constance Libbey Menninger
Miss Dorothy Dodge
In memory of David Arthur West
Mrs. Anne S. Reece
In memory of Virginia Moore
John A. Moore
32
Menninger giving by the numbers
Menninger gifts for 2010 totaled
$4,301,245, of which $3,703,873
went to the Miracles in Mind capital
campaign to build The Mental Health
Epicenter. The total reflects 1,204 gifts
from 908 donors. Foundations were
the source of the majority of gifts in
2010, in contrast with 2009, when
individual giving made up the bulk of
gifts.
Construction of The Epicenter
began in November 2010 with an
official groundbreaking that followed
in March 2011. Phase I construction
of the new home for The Menninger
Clinic includes three patient care
buildings with 120 beds, Commons
and Facilities buildings—totaling
161,112 combined square feet—on 23
acres of the nearly 50-acre campus.
The new campus will place
Menninger within minutes of the
Texas Medical Center, the largest
medical complex in the world, that
offers virtually every medical
discipline.
The proximity of the Medical Center to Menninger will benefit patients,
clinicians, researchers and trainees,
especially for patient treatment and
in research collaborations with the
colleagues at the Menninger School of
Psychiatry & Medical Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, Menninger’s
affiliate.
All giving
4.5M
$4,301,245
4.0M
Roll of Honor 2010
3.5M
Millions of Dollars
3.0M
2.5M
2.0M
1.5M
0.5M
0M
0.0M
2010
33
Clinic by the numbers
Clinic revenue and expenses
p
40M
$33,376,535
$33,3
,376,535
$35,611,378
,378
$35,445,775
$34,514,227
Expenses
Revenue
Expenses
30M
25M
20M
15M
10M
5M
0M
Revenue
Revenu
enue
2009
2010
2010 Revenue
40M
Millions of Dollars
$35,445,775
$33,045,938
and the lightest in January.
Our patients continue to
come from 46 states and
U.S. territories, with 41
percent from Texas. Our
international patients rose
to nearly 3 percent of our
population, representing
Canada, Mexico, Australia,
Columbia, Greece, Guatemala, Costa Rico, Venezuela, Ecuador and The
Philippines.
Menninger had more
than 600 patient interactions in new community
mental health services in
underserved areas around
Houston.
30M
Foundation endowment
25M
20M
50M
15M
10M
$2,399,837
$2,399,83
2, 9,837
5M
0M
Net patient
nt
revenuee
Grant and
other revenu
revenue
enue
Total
40M
$39,900,000
$39,90
900,000
$35,722,166
$35,
5,722,166
200
2009
2010
30M
20M
10M
0M
2010 Operating expenses
40M
$34,514,227
35M
30M
1M
25M
20M
$19,971,757
,757
$14,542,470
$14
14,542,470
42,470
15M
10M
5M
Total grants
$913,044
,044
To grants
Total
gr
$669,766
$6
800K
600K
400K
200K
0K
0M
Salaries &
benefits
ts
34
2010
010 Foundation expenditures
ex
Thousands of Dollars
Millions of Dollars
Roll of Honor 2010
35M
The best-case scenario
for The Clinic—revenue
exceeding expenses—occurred during 2010 by
$931,548. In 2010, we
admitted 899 patients, a
slight uptick from the year
before, treating most individuals for an average of
six to eight weeks in 2010
over the course of 27,968
combined patient days, of
which 1,014 patient days
were provided as charity
care.
Our daily patient
population averaged 77,
with the heaviest month for
admissions in November
Millions of Dollars
Millions
Mill
ns of Dollars
35M
Other than
tha
salaries
es
Total
Education
ion
(includes chairs
ch
and residents)
resident
ents)
Research