Lasting Difference

By David Orenstein / November/December 2015
November 13th, 2015

Brown increased its commitment to improving the health of children this fall when it announced a new institute it is forming along with affiliated hospitals, including Hasbro Children’s Hospital and Women & Infants Hospital of Rhode Island. The Hassenfeld Child Health Innovation Institute, formed with a gift of $12.5 million from the family of retired Hasbro Chairman and CEO Alan Hassenfeld, will target autism, asthma, obesity, and other urgent problems.

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Mike Cohea
Paxson and Hassenfeld plan to creat "global solutions" to children's health isssues through a new insitute.

President Christina Paxson and Hassenfeld joined Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo and other state leaders at the State House in Providence on September 28 to make the announcement. They said the institute will begin by focusing on three areas: (1) healthy weight, nutrition, and physical fitness; (2) autism and precision medicine; and (3) childhood asthma research. Brown will raise $12.5 million to match the Hassenfeld family gift.

Hasbro is named after Hassenfeld and his brother, Stephen, who preceded him as the company’s leader. Hasbro Children’s Hospital opened in 1994, and the family established the Stephen D. Hassenfeld Children’s Center for Cancer and Blood Disorders at NYU’s Langone Medical Center in 2011. The family has also funded the Hassenfeld Pediatric Center at NYU, which will open in 2017, and at Brown established the Alan G. Hassenfeld Professorship of Pediatrics, as well as the Sylvia Kay Hassenfeld Professorship of Pediatrics.

Hassenfeld, a former Brown trustee, said his family’s long commitment to children inspired him to work with the University to identify a set of initiatives that could make a lasting difference.
“Many excellent doctors have researched areas of child health and brought us to a certain level,” he says, “and the question is, can we take those past learnings and create something even more impactful? My greatest hope is that when we look back in ten, twenty, thirty years, we will have created global solutions to alleviating some of these child health conditions.”

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November/December 2015