UT Tyler School of Medicine Receives $400k Gift From Anonymous Donor

April 1, 2024 | Elizabeth Wingfield

The University of Texas at Tyler School of Medicine received a $400,000 gift from an anonymous donor to support the hospice and palliative medicine fellowship. The purpose of the gift is to retain physicians in the East Texas region.

After a doctor graduates from medical school and residency, completing a fellowship can offer them additional specialization and differentiate them from other candidates. As the last piece of a physician’s medical education, a fellowship often determines where they stay for the rest of their practice.

“This generous donation to our hospice and palliative medicine fellowship program signifies a significant step forward in our mission to provide exceptional health care services to the East Texas community,” said Dr. Brigham C. Willis, School of Medicine founding dean. “In particular, education on chronic disease management, end of life issues, quality of life improvement and so much more, as is provided in this fellowship, is fundamental to our mission of training well-rounded, humanistic physicians. This support will not only benefit our fellows but also the patients and families they serve.”

The donor’s gift will support the promotion of the fellowship and cover additional costs for fellows, such as books and moving expenses, drawing more health care providers to East Texas.

“What we do is the heart of medicine—caring for people,” said Dr. Laura Ferguson, hospice and palliative medicine fellowship program director. “Having compassion means you see someone’s suffering, you feel their suffering and then you ask, how can I help ease their suffering. This gift will enable us to meet East Texans’ health care needs and support their families, for now and the years to come.”

Hospice-and-palliative-medicine-trained physicians care for patients with incurable diseases, most often in an elderly population. According to the United States Census Bureau, in 2022, the median age of the populations of the Tyler and Longview, Texas metropolitan statistical areas were higher than the statewide average. At UT Tyler, the fellowship partners with the Hospice of East Texas and Texas Palliative Care to provide their fellows with the necessary experience to treat these patients.

With a mission to improve educational and health care outcomes for East Texas and beyond, UT Tyler offers more than 90 undergraduate and graduate programs to nearly 10,000 students. Through its alignment with UT Tyler Health Science Center and UT Health East Texas, UT Tyler has unified these entities to serve Texas with quality education, cutting-edge research and excellent patient care. Classified by Carnegie as a doctoral research institution and by U.S. News & World Report as a national university, UT Tyler has campuses in Tyler, Longview, Palestine and Houston.