
A house call at Fenway Park
While they’re a rarity today, house calls were once the norm in healthcare. But a doctor who comes right to your seat at Fenway Park? Now that’s a different ball game altogether.
This is exactly what happened one Friday evening several years ago for Susan and Michael Mosher. The couple were watching a Red Sox game at Fenway when Michael, who has Parkinson’s disease, began to experience movement issues. When Susan called her husband’s neurologist at the time, Allan Ropper, MD, to line up an appointment with him for Monday, Ropper answered and quickly asked, “Where are you?”
We knew we could make an impact by supporting their promising research and wanted to inspire the next generation to be philanthropic.
It didn’t take long for them to realize they were all at the same Red Sox game—prompting Ropper to head straight to the Moshers’ seats. He helped Michael overcome the issues he was having and provided some helpful guidance.
“That’s going above and beyond,” says Susan.
Throughout the years, the Moshers have found that this blend of expert care and compassion extends throughout the Brigham community—from Michael’s current neurologist, Michael Hayes, MD, to the recovery room nurses who cared for him after the procedures he needed to maintain his deep brain stimulation device.
The Moshers’ experience at the Brigham goes beyond Michael’s treatment for Parkinson’s. Both Susan’s mother and grandmother had Alzheimer’s disease, and tests revealed that Susan could potentially develop it, too. This prompted Susan to participate in a Brigham trial of a preclinical Alzheimer’s drug, giving her invaluable insight into the hospital’s clinical research enterprise.
With their deep commitment to finding better treatments, and ultimately cures, for Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, and other neurologic diseases, the Moshers say it was an easy decision to make a planned gift to benefit the Ann Romney Center for Neurologic Diseases at the Brigham. They were drawn to the center’s highly collaborative approach and its mission to fuel groundbreaking research into Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases as well as multiple sclerosis, ALS, and brain tumors—the most complex and devastating brain diseases of our time.
In recognition of their generous $500,000 bequest, the Moshers were welcomed into The Brigham Legacy Society, which celebrates donors dedicated to shaping the future of medicine by including the Brigham in their estate plans.
“Our children were really happy we made this gift,” says Susan of their two adult children, Geoff and Jaclyn. “They both thought it was a great idea—and the perfect place.”
To learn more about including the Brigham in your estate plans, please contact Kathleen Duffy, assistant vice president of gift planning, at kduffy1@bwh.harvard.edu or 617 424 4326.
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