Fenway Health advocates for and delivers innovative, equitable, accessible health care, supportive services, and transformative research and education. We center LGBTQIA+ people, BIPOC individuals, and other underserved communities to enable our local, national, and global neighbors to flourish.. Learn more by clicking on the sections above.
To Our Community Members,
Let me start by offering a simple but sincere thank you. Our community has supported the lifesaving work we do at Fenway Health for more than fifty years, enabling us to evolve from an all-volunteer clinic in a tiny basement to the world-class, internationally recognized center of excellence for LGBTQIA+ health care that we are today. Thank you for making this possible.
To say that the American health care system is facing challenging times would be an understatement. During the past year, hospitals and community health centers nationwide – including Fenway Health – have faced an unprecedented shortage of nursing professionals, primary care providers, and behavioral health specialists. At the same time, the lingering COVID-19 pandemic, higher-than normal demand for our care and services, and the emergence of the mpox epidemic placed increased demand for prevention and treatment services in Boston and beyond.
I am proud of Fenway Health’s response to these and other challenges over the past year. Our innovative, resilient, and talented staff provided the highest quality care and services, serving nearly 35,000 patients and clients who made more than 171,000 visits. This included over 5,000 people who identify as transgender or gender diverse, and over 2,700 who are living with HIV.
Over the past year, scientists and researchers at The Fenway Institute conducted early stage studies of several experimental HIV vaccine and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) treatments that hold enormous potential to halt the transmission of HIV. Institute researchers also led studies concerning COVID-19 prevention, transgender health care, smoking cessation, HIV care, and more.
Our education and training team led comprehensive trainings and conferences that address a wide range of LGBTQIA+ health topics throughout the U.S. This included the groundbreaking Advancing Excellence in Transgender Health Conference, the one-of-a-kind Advancing Excellence in Sexual and Gender Minority Health Education: A Train-the-Trainer Course for All Healthcare Professionals, and a new four-year initiative funded by HRSA HIV/AIDS Bureau titled The Innovative Intervention Strategies Coordinating Center for Technical Assistance.
Fenway Health remains as deeply committed to our mission today as we have been since the beginning: to advocate for and deliver innovative, equitable, accessible health care, supportive services, and transformative research and education that centers LGBTQIA+ people, BIPOC individuals, and other underserved communities. Thank you for being a part of our mission, our work, and our impact.
Ellen LaPointe
Chief Executive Officer
In 2020, Fenway Health committed to becoming an anti-racist organization by working to overcome the racial inequities that exist in the services we provide, the people we reach, and the outcomes we achieve.
The Fenway Health Board of Directors unanimously approved an ambitious, 5-year strategic plan in June 2021 to guide the work of the organization over the next five years. The plan centers a Racial Action Equity Plan (REAP) designed by a team of employees from across Fenway and several board members to ensure that racial equity is being addressed in eight key areas of focus in the organization. The 2021-2025 Strategic Plan and Racial Equity Action Plan included the adoption of a new mission statement and set of core values.
We are well into our efforts to achieve the first-year goals we set for ourselves, and we are pleased to report that we are making good progress. To ensure accessibility, transparency, and accountability, we are committed to providing regular updates regarding our accomplishments and challenges. Following are key highlights of our recent endeavors and progress:
Fenway Health advocates for and delivers innovative, equitable, accessible health care, supportive services, and transformative research and education. We center LGBTQIA+ people, BIPOC individuals, and other underserved communities to enable our local, national, and global neighbors to flourish.
We are committed to becoming an antiracist organization. We know that we are only at the beginning of this journey. Our work will be ongoing, multidimensional, incremental, and ultimately transformative.
Over time, we will begin to look and act different: Leadership will change; How we design, implement, and evaluate our care models, research, advocacy, and services will change; The people who come to count on us, who want to work with us, who support us will change; and ultimately, Lives will change.
Fenway Health’s Racial Equity Action plan lays out ambitious but achievable goals for the first 12 months; the next 18-30 months; and then 36-60 months. When we announced our commitment to becoming an anti-racist organization, we promised to be transparent and provide regular updates on our work and accomplishments along the way. One of the ways we will do that is on our , which we encourage everyone to visit. We’ll also be talking about this work on our blog and in messages to our staff, patients, and community from our CEO, Board Chair, and others as we continue this work.
During 2022, Fenway Health continued our work to address COVID-19 while also rising to the challenge when monkeypox began spreading in the United States.
The first COVID-19 case was diagnosed in the United States on January 20, 2020 and by March of that year, the pandemic had spread across the country, including to Massachusetts. Fenway Health was quick to respond and you can read more about our efforts those first couple of years here and here. Even as COVID seems to become an entrenched part of modern life, we continue our work to care for our patients, staff, and communities.
Fenway COVID-19 testing, care, and vaccinations continued through fiscal year 2022.
Our providers were able to offer the COVID-19 antiviral therapies Paxlovid and Molnupiravir to patients with severe COVID infection.
As of June 30, 2022, Fenway had performed 6,069 COVID-19 tests, 494 of which came back positive. We also administered 5,964 doses of vaccine to our patients and the community.
The Fenway Institute’s vaccine trial experience goes back more than 25 years, when we enrolled the first participants in anti-HIV vaccine trials funded by the National Institutes of Health. Since then, Fenway has run more than a dozen vaccine trials. Because we have a clinical trials research infrastructure in place that includes a team of experienced clinical research staff, an independent ethics review board, and a dedicated community engagement team that can recruit participants from all risk groups, we were asked to join the COVID-19 Prevention Network, the NIH’s consortium to evaluate vaccines and other promising preventive strategies, in the early days of the pandemic.
During fiscal year 2022, there were two active COVID-19-related study protocols at Fenway:
On May 19, 2022, doctors in Boston diagnosed the first case of what would become an mpox (or monkeypox) outbreak across the US. Mpox is a rare disease caused by infection with the mpox virus. Mpox virus is part of the same family as the virus that causes smallpox. Mpox symptoms are similar to smallpox symptoms, but milder, though mpox can often lead to scarring on infected areas of the body. The mpox outbreak in the United States primarily affected gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM).
Less than two weeks after that first diagnosis, on June 1, The Fenway Institute published Understanding Monkeypox Among Gay and Bisexual Men. The fact sheet contains information on how mpox spreads, what its symptoms look like, and how to seek medical care.
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health working with the CDC launched a vaccination program in July, and Fenway Health was chosen as one of the first five mpox vaccination sites in the state. While vaccine doses were initially limited, that changed over time and Fenway was able to administer 6,681 vaccine doses to patients during fiscal year 2022.
In late July, Fenway’s Pride in Your Health podcast published an episode titled Monkeypox: Just the Facts, featuring Sean Cahill, PhD, our Director of Health Policy Research.
In September, 2022, as mpox diagnoses topped 21,000, Fenway published the policy brief How The Federal Government Can Better Respond To The Monkeypox Outbreak. The brief offers solutions to a range of problems that exacerbated the early spread of the virus. The recommendations for potential future outbreaks include invoking the Defense Production Act to scale up monkeypox vaccine production, monitoring the efficacy of the new intradermal vaccination strategy, making free testing widely available, educating patients and providers about available treatments, and FDA authorization to use TPOXX—a treatment approved for smallpox—to treat monkeypox.
Thankfully, mpox transmission here in the United States is greatly reduced and it is no longer considered a public health emergency.
At Fenway Health, we believe that health care is a right, not a privilege. In every department, our staff is dedicated to meeting the needs of everyone who walks through our doors through integrated personal and compassionate care, regardless of their ability to pay. We offer a wide range of ever-growing services for the entire family within our clinical divisions, including medical, behavioral health, dental, vision, HIV/STI screening, pharmacy, women’s health, transgender health, alternative insemination and obstetrics, and the Violence Recovery Program. Our care and services are available at two Boston locations.
Fenway Health is affiliated with Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and all physicians hold faculty appointments at Harvard Medical School. We are accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.
Patients
who made more than
Patient Visits
30,472 patients
96,750 visits
3,161 patients
14,977 visits
3,886 patients
15,451 visits
1,239 patients
1,697 visits
The Ansin Building, a 10-story, 100,000 square foot health care and research facility. It is the largest building ever constructed by an organization with a specific mission to serve the LGBTQIA+ community.
Fenway: South End and the Borum are located in Boston’s South End, just steps from Back Bay station.
Fenway has helped pioneer a philosophy of integrated care that looks at each patient as a whole person and our staff works as a team to meet the needs of everyone who comes through our doors.
Patient-Centered Medical Care
Fenway Health’s Ansin Building and South End locations are both certified as National Committee for Quality Assurance Level 3 Patient-Centered Medical Homes (PCMH). The PCMH model of primary care emphasizes care coordination and communication to transform primary care into “what patients want it to be.” In 2016, the Massachusetts Health Policy Commission named Fenway: South End the first practice in the state to achieve Patient-Centered Medical Home PRIME Certification for integrating behavioral health in primary medical care. Fenway’s Ansin Building Practice followed quickly, attaining PRIME Certification in early 2017.
Family Medicine
Fenway Health’s Family Medicine Program has expanded to all of our locations, allowing us to provide services to patients of every age group, from the youngest to the oldest.
Transgender Health
More than 5,000 transgender patients currently receive care at Fenway Health locations. The Transgender Health Program’s integrated model of care is one example of how we continuously work to lower the barriers trans and gender diverse people face in accessing care. From their first day at Fenway Health, our providers are trained to provide all aspects of care through an affirming, trauma-informed model. We also consider hormone therapy to be a part of primary care, and all of our Internal Medicine and Family Medicine providers are happy to work with our patients towards their individual goals.
Reproductive Health
Fenway Health’s Reproductive Health Equity Program seeks to meet the healthcare needs of all individuals using its services, across the spectrum of identity, including BIPOC, LGBQIA+, transgender, and gender diverse communities. We offer community engagement and outreach programming that encompasses reproductive health education and holistic health. Our obstetrical services care program partners with Beth Israel Lahey Health to provide prenatal care for patients in all stages of pregnancy. The program also offers comprehensive birth control and emergency contraception services.
HIV Testing and Care
Fenway Health has been a community resource and safe space since the early days of the AIDS epidemic. Our health center saw the first HIV/AIDS cases in New England and, in 1985, was awarded the first HIV counseling and testing contract by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. Today, Fenway remains one of the largest confidential HIV counseling and testing sites in the state and is New England’s largest provider of outpatient HIV/AIDS care.
Insurance Enrollment
1,386 patients visited our Financial Assistance department. Under Fenway’s health insurance enrollment program, patients without insurance can be enrolled in coverage under MassHealth, Commonwealth Care and Health Safety Net.
Fenway Pharmacy
Approximately $1.3 million in free and discounted medication was given to patients in need by the Fenway pharmacy’s two branches. The pharmacies also offer a free home delivery service for homebound patients and others unable to prick up their medication. Together, the two locations fill well over 500 prescriptions per day.
Alternative Insemination
Over 1,000 babies have been conceived through Fenway’s Alternative Insemination (AI) Program since its start in 1983, believed to be the first of its kind in the United States. In fiscal year 2022, the AI program saw 30 new pregnancies. In addition to insemination, the AI Program offers social and emotional support for LGBTQIA+ parents and prospective parents through a variety of workshops and groups.
Addiction Recovery and Wellness
1,130 patients were brought into care through Fenway’s Addiction Recovery and Wellness Program, which treats those struggling with substances like alcohol, cocaine and crystal methamphetamine. In 2017, the program added Problem Gambling Services. We never turn anyone away for lack of ability to pay, and many patients in the Program are referred into other services at Fenway.
Violence Recovery Program
475 survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, hate violence and police misconduct were helped by the Violence Recovery Program (VRP) at Fenway Health. The VRP offers individual and group counseling to LGBTQIA+ survivors. VRP staff also conducts outreach and educational sessions to community groups and professional groups about LGBTQIA+ violence issues on a local, state and national level, including providing technical assistance and training to the Boston Police Department, District Attorney’s offices, hospitals, health centers, social service agencies and community and school groups.
Health Navigators
Fenway’s Health Navigators answered 5,589 calls, providing resources, support, and a friendly ear to people from all walks of life.
The National LGBTQIA+ Health Education Center provides educational programs, training, technical assistance, resources, and consultation to health care organizations with the goal of optimizing quality, cost-effective health care for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual and all sexual and gender minority (LGBTQIA+) people. In FY2022, faculty from the Education Center presented at conferences and facilitated trainings and webinars, educating health care professionals on a range of topics from achieving health equity to care for transgender and gender-diverse patients, to care for LGBTQIA+ older adults, to affirming care for intersex patients. The Education Center also produced 10 new publications and resources in FY2021, including the textbook Transgender and Gender Diverse Health Care: The Fenway Guide. The Guide highlights best practices in care from the perspectives of multiple stakeholders and is the first case-based textbook to address the comprehensive health care needs of transgender and gender diverse adults.
webinars available for watching & CME credits
Interactive online learning modules
Total completions of Webinars and Modules in FY22
Email Subscribers
Unique Website Visitors
On October 1-3, 2021, more than 500 people from around the world attended the seventh annual Advancing Excellence in Transgender Health Conference hosted by The Fenway Institute. Clinicians and health care workers from 44 states, Washington D.C., Puerto Rico, Canada, Australia, Bermuda, Brazil, Costa Rica, Iraq, Netherlands, Philippines, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland and Tunisia heard from experts skilled in the provision of culturally responsive and confident gender-affirming health care that is grounded in research, evidence, and best clinical practices. Although the conference was held virtually due to the on-going COVID-19 pandemic, attendees were able to converse with conference speakers and each other through virtual networking events and one-on-one private messaging. Dr. Rachel L. Levine, Assistant Secretary for Health of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, delivered the conference’s keynote speech. This year’s conference included panels of racially diverse transgender and gender diverse adults and youth, including people of intersex experience and family members of transgender youth who shared their experiences in health care settings with conference attendees in highly interactive case discussions.
On March 25-27, 2022, The Fenway Institute hosted a one-of-a-kind conference titled “Advancing Excellence in Sexual and Gender Minority Health Education: A Train-the-Trainer Course for All Healthcare Professionals.” The conference was held virtually and 140 attendees from 30 U.S. states, Brazil, Canada, the Philippines, Switzerland and Turkey attended sessions where they learned how to develop, implement and offer sexual and gender minority (SGM) health training programs. A panel of SGM health education champions kicked off the weekend and was followed by several foundational overviews by national experts on topics such as LGBTQIA+ Concepts and Terminology, Effective and Affirming Communication, Creating a Welcoming and Inclusive Environment, Collecting Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Data, Developing a Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Challenges (SWOC) Analysis, Creating S.M.A.R.T. Goals, and Building Your Training Skills. On the second and third day, participants spent most of their time in facilitated breakout sessions where participants developed a SWOC analysis and S.M.A.R.T. goals for their work, practiced oral presenting skills, and received real-time expert feedback on trainings they had developed and delivered. The conference was a huge success. Quotes from participants include “Thank you all for all the amazing information and experiences of the past three days,” “Thank you so much! This has been such a meaningful weekend!” and “This has been such an amazing and transformative three days – thank you to everyone!”
In FY22 expanded its ongoing response to COVID 19 and its impact on older adults. The LGBTQIA+ Aging Project convened twice weekly Zoom Drop-In group to reduce social isolation and loneliness. The group met on Thanksgiving and Christmas to reduce holiday isolation. Total participant registration increased from 75 in FY 21 to 104 in FY22. Many newer participants are from outside of Massachusetts, indicating limited online resources for LGBTQIA+ older adults available elsewhere. The LGBTQIA+ Aging Project also convened monthly summits for a dozen elder care organizations, sharing best practices on virtual and hybrid programming for LGBTQIA+ older adults so these organizations could improve their efforts to engage with and sustain relationships with LGBTQIA+ older adults.
Throughout FY22, the LGBTQIA+ Aging Project conducted 30 trainings, workshops, and webinars for a total of 927 participants. Staff participated in one international conference as a keynote speaker, three national conferences, and two local ones. The LGBTQIA+ Aging Project also co-hosted the 11th annual LGBTQ+ Elders in an Ever-Changing World Conference, New England’s premier LGBTQ Aging Conference, with 278 participants representing 27 states, the UK, and Canada. The LGBTQIA+ Aging Project continued its Transgender and Gender Expansive Engagement Initiative surveying the needs of transgender and gender older adults between the ages of 50-70.
It also collaborated with BIDMC’s Parkinson’s Center of Excellence to host “Parkinson’s Pride” an innovative monthly program featuring workshops on music, writing, care management, nutrition, LGBTQIA+ resources, and participants sharing their lived experiences at the intersection of LGBTQIA+ and Parkinson’s identities. Program engaged 20 individuals from across the US and New Zealand.
The Aging Project hosted three bereavement groups for LGBTQIA+ people of all ages who have lost a loved one; all participants valued a LGBTQIA+ safe space to address loss. The LGBTQIA+ Aging Project also continued its leadership on the Massachusetts LGBT Aging Commission, chairing meetings, work groups and engaging members to achieve identified goals.
The Division of Education and Training partnered with many organizations to provide trainings on LGBTQIA+ health. Some of these partners include:
Apple Wellness
The Division of Education and Training collaborated with Apple Wellness to facilitate four live trainings and develop six interactive e-learning modules to train Apple health staff on care for Transgender and Gender Diverse People.
Medical University of South Carolina
Working with MUSC’s Department of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, the Division of Education and Training facilitated three trainings on the collection of sexual orientation and gender identity data. They also developed seven interactive e-learning modules on LGBTQIA+ care that will be hosted in MUSC’s learning management system as required training for staff across the entire organization.
During fiscal year 2022, The Fenway Institute’s Biomedical Research team continued to conduct clinical trials looking at new approaches to preventing HIV infection. Populations include both Adult and Adolescents. Our recruitment and outreach team has worked to represent Fenway at Pride Events in Massachusetts, World AIDS Day, organizations such as the Multicultural AIDS Coalition, Boston Lesbigay Urban Foundation, MA Commission on Youth, NAGLY, and BAGLY as well as at presentations at local colleges and universities throughout the year. As COVID-19 continued to force many events to move online, research staff adapted to move their events online and to represent Fenway at virtual events organized by other community organizations.
The Fenway Institute has operated one of the nation’s first federally funded community-based HIV research programs and has been a site for NIAID network research since 1993. As an active site for the HIV Prevention Trials Network (HPTN) and participating in protocols in the HIV Vaccine Trials Network (HVTN).
The Fenway Institute has participated in key HIV prevention efficacy trials that led to internationally significant breakthroughs, such as the iPrEX study, the first to demonstrate the efficacy of PrEP in preventing HIV infection. More recently, we participated in the DISCOVER trial that demonstrated a second oral medication is effective as PrEP and the recently completed HPTN 083, which demonstrated the efficacy of an injectable medication for PrEP for the first time ever. Since March 2020, The Institute has been deployed to work on COVID-19 research as part of the NIH Coronavirus Prevention Network (CoVPN).
Fenway completed the first CoVPN study in January 2021 and is now conducting clinical trials to understand COVID-19 transmission.
HPTN-092 tests the tolerability, safety, and the immune system’s response to combinations of experimental HIV antibodies. Participants are 18–50 years, HIV uninfected of all genders and sexualities. Actively enrollment is closed, we have one participant in follow up.
Fenway was the only center in New England to enroll participants in HPTN 083, which evaluated injectable cabotegravir given every 8 weeks after 2 loading doses 4 weeks apart compared to daily oral tenofovir/emtricitabine to prevent HIV acquisition in MSM and transgender women. The initial study demonstrated the superiority of injectable cabotegravir, which led to FDA approval, and participants are now being followed to see if the prevention benefit is maintained over time.
Currently have completed enrollment for a Phase 3 HIV Vaccine study called MOSAICO testing for the safety and efficacy of an investigational vaccine. MOSAICO is the third HIV vaccine efficacy trial in progress worldwide. This trial enrolled 3,800 HIV-negative men and transgender people aged 18 to 60 years who have sex with men and/or transgender people. Clinical research sites are in the US, Argentina, Brazil, Italy, Mexico, Peru, Poland, and Spain.
The COVID-19 Vaccine study is testing how safe and effective the vaccine is in protecting against COVID-19. At Fenway we enrolled over 220 participants and we will follow them for 2 years.
The COVID-19 Household study is testing how safe and effective the treatment is in protecting people against COVID-19 exposure. Participants may be eligible if they are 18 years or older and have tested negative for COVID-19. There are 12 visits over the span of 10 months. Enrollment closed, active follow up 7 people completed.
The MyChoices study is an intervention investigating the feasibility and acceptability of MyChoices, a theory-driven mobile app to increase HIV testing and PrEP uptake by young men who have sex with men (YMSM), ages 15-24. The MyChoices app was refined in theater testing and an open technical pilot. The acceptability and feasibility of the updated app was evaluated in a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) among YMSM at risk for HIV acquisition in the US. Phase III (RCT) opened to accrual in October 2018 and participant follow-up completed in November 2019. The cohort was fully enrolled with 60 participants on April 2019.
The ATN’s LSPY protocol entails a two-phase study exploring PrEP adherence through a Cognitive Behavior Therapy based intervention. The first phase includes individual, qualitative interviews with approximately 20 YMSM and 10 key informants for intervention adaptation and refinement. The second phase is a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) of up to 54 YMSM to assess feasibility, acceptability and preliminary efficacy of the LSPY compared to standard of PrEP care only to improve PrEP adherence. Our long-term goal is to develop scalable protocols to optimize at risk YMSM’s PrEP uptake and adherence in order to decrease HIV incidence. The adaptation for LifeSteps for PrEP for YMSM will be informed, developed, and refined through formative research that involves YMSM at all levels. Phase 1 has been completed, and enrollment of the pilot RCT began in September 2019. The study closed enrollment in May of 2021; the Fenway team exceeded its target recruitment with an enrollment rate of 112% (n = 19/17). The study concluded with 32 participants across all sites with 97% subject retention.
P3 is a three arm, randomized-controlled trial (RCT) that tested the efficacy of the P3 app. P3 is a novel, theory-based mobile app that utilizes game mechanics and social networking features to improve PrEP adherence, retention in PrEP clinical care and PrEP persistence among young men who have sex with men (YMSM) and trans women who have sex with men (YTW), ages 16-24. The study is testing the efficacy of P3 and P3+, which adds Next Step Counseling delivered by an adherence counselor through the app, against PrEP standard of care. Participants were randomized to P3, P3+, or standard of care. A cost comparison between P3 and P3+ will be conducted. Enrollment for P3 began in May 2019 and participant follow up recently ended; Fenway overenrolled with a final site enrollment rate of 123% (n = 37/30).
In years 1-3 of the iTech branch of the Adolescent Trials Network, we have optimized and pilot-tested, using a similar study design and identical study outcomes, two distinct mobile apps, LYNX and MyChoices. The apps are designed to increase HIV testing and PrEP uptake among YMSM. The apps were developed based on different theories of behavior change, and therefore contain different components, differing messaging strategies and different approaches for engaging youth. The individual apps will be tested simultaneously in this follow-on research study to evaluate for efficacy; participants will be randomized to receive LYNX, MyChoices, or Standard of Care. Comparing the apps will allow us to identify any efficacy differences in increasing HIV testing or increasing PrEP uptake between the two apps. If justified, we will combine the components of each app that have the greatest impact on behaviors into a final, composite app for dissemination. Enrollment for COMPARE began in September 2019 and completed enrollment in May of 2022 with the final follow up in November 2022. Fenway was the 4th highest enrolling site with 50 enrolled participants. The final enrollment was 381 participants with an 88% retention across all follow up visits.
TechStep is a three-condition, technology-based randomized controlled trial (RCT) focused on stemming HIV and sexual health risk in trans youth. The study utilizes aa stepped care approach where, if deemed necessary, some participants are stepped up to be randomized to receive counseling from an in-app eCoach to discuss issues of trans health and sexual health. The study focused on enrolling high-risk HIV-negative trans feminine, trans masculine, and gender non-conforming youth with the intent to reduce sexual risk behaviors (e.g., condomless anal intercourse, engagement in sex work, sex while feeling the effects of alcohol or drugs) and increasing PrEP uptake. Enrollment for TechStep began in September 2019 and ended in September 2021. The Fenway site had the highest enrollment numbers with 59 total enrollments and 98% retention.
In continuation of our decades-long commitment to treating and preventing HIV/AIDS, Fenway Health is a testing site for another study that explores whether injectable cabotegravir is an effective method for PrEP in youth (people under 18 years old.) The parent study of Injectable PrEP for adults was proven safe and effective. Just as safe, if not more than Truvada.
Youth ages 13-24 make up 21% of new HIV infections (CDC, 2017). Having the option of taking a pill every day or receiving an injection every 8 weeks allows the individual to make the right decision for themselves. We don’t want to leave youth behind in the development of new HIV prevention methods. Enrollment for Injectable PrEP for Youth started in April 2, 2020 and follow up of 4 active participants at Fenway continues.
The Fenway Institute continues to enroll for the PrEP @ Home Study, a trial of a home-based system of PrEP care that involves mail-in STI and HIV testing, as well as video conferences with a study provider. Since participants must be new to PrEP in order to be eligible, our research recruitment team has worked hard to develop new, creative outreach strategies to reach people not already engaged in PrEP care.
Fenway Health, in conjunction with the University of Miami, is conducting research to investigate new ways to help adults stick to their daily PrEP regimen. Participants must be new to PrEP, 18 years or older, assigned male at birth and have sex with men. Actively enrolling.
Fenway Health is the only site in New England for the Puporse 2 study. This injectable PrEP study aims to evaluate the efficacy of the HIV prevention medication, lenacapavir. This injection is given to folks twice annually. The study was designed to include groups who are underrepresented in HIV prevention trials and are disproportionately affected by the HIV epidemic, so Fenway Health is a site that is focusing on enrolling transgender and gender non-binary folks. To date, Fenway has enrolled 4 participants with enrollment continuing into the first quarter of 2023.
The Merck PrEP User Acceptability study is two-phase project sponsored by Merck & Co, Inc. The purpose of this study is to understand how young men who have sex with men ages 18 to 34 feel about current and upcoming ways to take HIV PrEP. including implantable and less frequent dosing, and which ones they use and why. As new methods of preventing HIV are developed, we want to hear the thoughts YMSM have about them. In phase 1, through focus groups, we hope to learn their thoughts about a variety of long-acting PrEP agents, including monthly pills, injections, and implantable rods. Participants will also be asked to share their knowledge about oral PrEP, long-acting PrEP agents, PrEP stigma, PrEP costs, and whether long-acting agents might enhance retention in PrEP care and adherence to PrEP guidelines. Enrollment for phase 1 ended in August 2022 with data analysis underway. Phase 2, where we will conduct a multi-regional quantitative survey to assess the same questions within a larger population, will begin in January 2023.
Project Matter is a refined text-enhanced psycho-behavioral randomized control trial to reduce under-addressed and modifiable barriers to engagement in HIV care, including internalized stigma and related emotions, among HIV-positive men who have sex with men who use substances and are sub-optimally engaged in HIV care. The project is funded by NIDA and aims to elucidate behavioral and social mechanisms associated with substance use and optimize treatment success among this population.
PrEPsteps is a study funded by the National Institutes of Health to build and test a smartphone-based PrEP adherence system that responds to adherence data collected through a novel digital pill, with a focus on improving PrEP adherence among who have sex with men (MSM) who use stimulants.
The Algorithm Study provides smoking cessation pharmacotherapy recommendations integrated into HIV primary care for people living with HIV who smoke cigarettes.
Project QUIT is a behavioral intervention to treat anxiety and depression and to increase rates of smoking cessation among people living with HIV who smoke cigarettes.
National HIV Behavioral Surveillance (NHBS) was conducted by Fenway Health in conjunction with the Massachusetts Department of Public Health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The goal of NHBS is to help establish and maintain a surveillance system to monitor selected risk behaviors, HIV testing, prevention services, and HIV prevalence among groups at highest risk for HIV infection. NHBS completed 2021’s MSM cycle using a hybrid remote/in-person model, with a focus on Men who have Sex with Men in the Boston area.
MAXM is a study that aims to learn from the experiences of young Black men who have sex with men. MaxM seeks to design a program specifically for this group to help protect their sexual health and wellbeing.
iSTRIVE is a study for people living with HIV who have a history of injecting drugs designed to help overcome barriers, like stigma, that interfere with taking medications and getting the most out of medical care by employing talk therapy and digital tracking of medication adherence.
#heReady is designed to increase PrEP use among young Black gay and bisexual men. Research will inform a program to help people protect their mental health and how to fit PrEP into their prevention tool kit.
The LEGACY Project is a longitudinal cohort of Fenway transgender and gender diverse patients. In fiscal year 2021, The Fenway Institute had 5,811 patients whose electronic health record (EHR) data is included in the cohort. Of those patients, 1,377 completed an additional survey that helps fill in the gaps in EHR data. This allows the Epidemiology team to look at more extensive psychosocial factors and patient experiences with hormones, surgeries, and other gender-confirming treatment. LEGACY’s enrollment recently ended.
The LITE study is a longitudinal cohort of HIV-negative transgender women spanning the Eastern and Southern US. Enrollment closed at the end of August 2020; a total of 159 enrolled at Fenway. All participant study visits have continued to be done remotely. Participants are mailed at-home HIV and STI testing kits by Molecular Testing Labs and complete follow-up surveys either online, on the study app, or over the phone every three months. Participants are followed for a total of four years.
The LITEPlus study is a longitudinal cohort of Black and/or Latina transgender women that looks at the effects of stress on cardiovascular health. Study enrollment is ongoing; a total of three individuals have enrolled at Fenway. For much of FY21, study enrollment was done remotely, but as of June 2021, in-person enrollment has resumed.
Life+ Health is a population-based study of patients at Fenway Health, Mattapan Community Health Center, and Harvard Street Neighborhood Health Center (in partnership with Harvard T.H Chan School of Public Health) that aims to advance methods to measure and analyze explicit and implicit discrimination in population health research. In FY21, 538 Fenway patients enrolled in the study (560 total).
Project IMPACT is a longitudinal cohort study to test a behavioral intervention created for men who have sex with men who use stimulants (meth, cocaine, crack) in the context of sex. In FY22, 17 participants were enrolled in Miami and the Fenway site closed to enrollment. The study is ongoing and will continue to enroll into 2023.
PrEP for Health is a randomized control trial study being carried out in the context of two community-based syringe service programs in Massachusetts (ACCESS Drug User Health Program and the Greater Lawrence Family Health Center) that uses a health navigator-based strategy and motivational interviewing to increase PrEP uptake and adherence among people who inject drugs, a population at high risk for HIV. The study began enrollment in September 2021 and, to date, participants have started to complete their 12-month assessment milestone in the study. Across both sites, 80 people have enrolled to date.
The Fenway Institute supports clinical, research and public health services through state-of-the-art health informatics and data systems. Fenway’s Informatics and Data Center continues to be a leader among Community Health Centers in developing data capacity and Health Information Technology (HIT) innovations.
We continue to refine our integration with Electronic Patient Reported Outcomes (ePRO), enabling us to develop algorithms to better meet the clinical needs of patients and quality measures. They provide consultation and technical assistance on federal initiatives and to federal agencies and CHC’s on HIT, data management activities that streamline and improve data capture and reporting processes. Our Data Center collaborates with other departments to provide clinical, financial and productivity data.
The Center quickly developed and implemented technologies in response to COVID-19. As a result, Fenway was able to rapidly pivot to Telehealth to reach some of the most vulnerable populations. We are currently using telehealth for clinical care, research and public health initiatives. We collaborated with a vendor to develop automating the reporting of COVID-19 negative results to patients using text messaging. We have been exploring ways to expand our remote patient monitoring program to increase panel size and include additional chronic illnesses. Our health center was awarded two telehealth specific grants this past year to expand digital access and focus on patient education and inclusion in the delivery of virtual care.
The Center provides supports the organization’s health information technology. In FY’23, they directed our migration to Epic. We also work with other HIT vendors on initiatives using latest technologies to improve patient communication and health outcomes. For example, Fenway has collaborated on a project developing standards for using FHIR to transmit social determinants of health data. Additionally, we conduct webinars and in-person trainings around the US on SOGI implementation and analyzing outcomes.
The Data team participates in both internal and external research teams to collect, analyze, and visualize data for publication. The team has produced over 75 research data sets from our EHR focusing on LGBTQ patients and continues to advise other EHR vendors on refining their products to meet the needs of the LGBTQIA+ patients. It also collaborates with national and federal partners to develop tools to monitor health outcomes; for example, Fenway worked with NACHC and CDC to evaluate a Hepatitis C Care Cascade. The Center participates in many national data registry projects, whose funders include NIH and PCORI. These projects combine de-identified patient data into a shared clinical database to evaluate patient outcomes in real world settings.
The Centers for AIDS Research (CFAR) Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) research network integrates longitudinal clinical data and treatment management of persons living with HIV (PLWH) and provides research infrastructure to support HIV-associated clinical, social, behavioral outcomes, and comparative effectiveness research using data collected from 8 Centers for AIDS Research clinical sites across United States. CNICS has reviewed over 180 concept studies to date, resulting in over 350 peer reviewed manuscripts and over $125M in external funding awards to investigators working in CNICS.
Since 2001, more than 3,800 patients at Fenway Health have enrolled into C-NICS and over 15,500 individual blood specimens have been collected and processed for the biological specimen repository.
The CNICS grant was successfully renewed for an additional 5 years.
An NIH-funded data registry that is a regional collaboration of single-site and multi-site cohorts that includes over 90,000 patients from more than 50 sites throughout the United States and multiple provinces in Canada. Comprised of both academic medical centers and community-based facilities that deliver HIV-primary and specialty care, this registry combines classical epidemiological and clinical HIV cohorts, includes both HIV-seropositive and seronegative persons, and is complemented by specimen repositories for conducting translational research.
Of the 12 national networks that make up PCORNet, a patient-centered data registry that helps answer questions important to patients, Fenway Health contributes data quarterly to the ADVANCE network. ADVANCE is the nation’s largest safety-net community laboratory, consisting of researchers, patients and clinicians. ADVANCE’s is currently composed of 8,067,649 patients, 19 health systems, 32 states, and 1,823 clinic sites. Fenway contributes COVID-19 related data quarterly to ADVANCE.
EVERYWOMAN is examining the impact of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and state level reproductive health policies on the full spectrum of women’s health care provision and health experiences in safety-net populations. EVERYWOMAN applies a mixed-methods approach comprising patient-level electronic health record (EHR) data for large scale quantitative analyses, qualitative observations, and semi-structured interviews with patients and providers to understand perceptions and patterns of care delivery and utilization, and review of state-level reproductive health policies in inform our analyses.
The PROSPER-HIV study is examining the effect of physical activity and dietary intake as effective symptom management strategies for people living with HIV (PLWH), who experience a disproportionately high symptom burden (e.g., fatigue, insomnia, pain) with few treatment options. For this three-year NIH-funded study, 850 PLWH across three CNICS sites (115 at Fenway Health) will complete an annual series of physical activities and dietary recall interviews. Additionally, participants are asked to wear a fitness tracking device to monitor physical activity routines for a week.
Transgender patient participation is greatly underrepresented in biomedical research. To better understand the barriers associated with study engagement, 15 Interviews with transgender patients who have and have not participated in biomedical research. Additionally, 15 interviews with clinical staff involved in providing care or recruiting transgender patients to biomedical research will also help to determine what gaps exist for the recruitment of this population, and whether additional training or other skills may be useful to assist with study recruitment of this patient population. Recruitment for this study has begun, and we have completed roughly half of our enrollment goal.
The SELIGO study assesses perceptions of HIV treatment, including long-acting injectable antiretroviral therapy (LAI ART), among people living with HIV infection (PLWH) and HIV healthcare providers (HCPs) to develop strategies and tools to facilitate shared decision-making by patients and provider considering HIV therapy options.
This 3-year study involves 12 CHCs across the country that are part of, and extended from, the HRSA-established Community Health Applied Research Network (CHARN). The primary goal of this PCORI-funded intervention study is to evaluate the impact of a sexual orientation (SO) and gender identity (GI) data collection training for Community Health Center (CHC) staff on health outcomes for sexual and gender minority patients (SGM).
Health center data from all 12 sites over the 3-year study period, informed by HRSA’s Uniform Data Systems standardized reporting system that provides consistent information about health centers and look-alikes, have been collected.
We empower our clients to live better lives by engaging with them to create practical, workable strategies to reduce their risk of HIV infection. We also assist clients with getting tested for HIV and obtaining medical care, housing, and access to benefits offered by state and federal agencies. As a result, our clients are more likely to know their HIV status, connect with the health care system, and keep themselves and their families safer from HIV infection.
AIDS Action works to support people living with HIV/AIDS, improving their quality of life and increasing treatment adherence, which helps their individual health and the broader public health by reducing the likelihood of transmission. AIDS Action provides a comprehensive set of services for People Living with HIV in order to support their access to medical care and help them achieve HIV viral suppression.
As one of several state-sanctioned and state-funded syringe exchange programs in Massachusetts, the Access Drug User Health Program distributes and exchanges syringes to people who inject drugs. Access Drug User Health Program is one of the state’s pilot sites for the distribution of Narcan, a nasal spray provided to IDUs and their network of supportive family and friends to reverse potentially fatal overdoses.
Starting in early December the Access Program has started to pilot a low barrier medical clinic to offer wound care, treatment for Hepatitis C and other STIs, linkage to nPEP/PrEP, linkage to medication assisted treatment and more. The clinic is currently open twice weekly (Wednesday and Friday 9-12) and offers walk-in availability.
Below are the current service offerings available at Access Drug User Health:
Sterile syringes distributed
Used syringes collected
We trained
in overdose prevention. Individuals trained to administer Naloxone through our overdose prevention programs helped save the lives of 46 people in overdose situations. Additionally, we distributed 2,168 doses of Narcan.
We deliver HIV, hepatitis C, and STI confidential testing and counseling services within our targeted prevention programs. During fiscal year 2022, we conducted 1,359 HIV tests among men who have sex with men (MSM), transgender and non-binary people, and people who inject drugs.
HIV tests conducted
Stable housing is a critical factor in the success of people living with HIV getting connected to and staying in care. Housing staff support clients with housing search, rental and utility assistance, and housing stabilization support.
The Housing Search Program connects clients to a range of housing options, including transitional, permanent, congregate, and scattered site housing units. Our supportive housing programs provide subsidies and supportive services to families and individuals living with HIV who are exiting homelessness. The Rental Assistance Program delivers short-term emergency assistance to clients who face eviction or unaffordable housing, need assistance with move in costs and need assistance with high utility bills to avoid shutoff.
In fiscal year 2022, we helped 136 households impacted by HIV move to stable housing or avoid homelessness through one or more of these housing options.
Number of households assisted
The Legal Services Department provides legal direct representation and legal advice in a variety of civil matters to people living with HIV/AIDS. In fiscal year 2022, Legal Services took on 214 legal cases, which covered a wide range of client needs, including civil matters such as housing and rental disputes, public benefits, financial and end-of-life planning, and more. The goal of the department is to advocate for the legal rights of those living with HIV/AIDS throughout Massachusetts.
We believe that access to legal services allows our clients to live healthier and safer lives.
Legal cases taken on by Legal Services in FY22
The sexual health program provides testing and treatment for HIV/HCV and STIs (chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis) to men who have sex with men (MSM), transgender individuals and sexual partners of those populations.
Additionally, our Linkage to Care Coordinators help navigate newly identified HIV-positive individuals to medical care, reengage individuals who may have fallen out of care, assist with insurance needs, and more. Health Navigators provide PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis, an HIV prevention medication) education and help connect at-risk individuals to providers who can prescribe PrEP.
In fiscal year 2022, the program distributed 8,391 condoms in an effort to prevent HIV transmission.
Youth on Fire is a program for homeless and street-involved youth, ages 14 – 24, which operates a safe and warm drop-in center that provides access to everything from hot showers, meals, and laundry to mental health and medical care and services. We also run a housing program that helps to get young adults off the streets and into safe housing situations so they can start rebuilding their lives.
116 homeless or unstably housed young people received services from Youth on Fire in fiscal year 2022.
Young people received services from YOF in FY22
By publishing policy briefs, submitting public comment and testimony, writing op/eds, participating in media interviews, and joining coalitions in partnership with other institutions, Fenway Health staff and affiliated researchers and scientists engage in broad efforts to advance and disseminate LGBTQIA+ and HIV-related health policy research.
During fiscal year 2022, Fenway programs, publications, staff experts, and events were featured in nearly 3,000 news stories, including in outlets like:
Click a logo to learn more.
With the spring came another decrease in COVID cases and another opportunity to gather in person. In an effort to keep everyone safe and feeling comfortable as the pandemic began to wane, our Gala committee sought an outdoor location and crossed their fingers for great weather. Thanks to the creativity of our staff and co-chairs Mary Beth McInerney and Taylor Brown, the challenge was answered with a successful Gala at Fenway Park! On paper it seemed like a significant departure – an unusual location and a smaller event – but the event sold out, and as folks arrived that same joyous atmosphere returned, but with a distinctively new energy. It was a night for the history books!
Thanks so much to our Gala committee, sponsors, attendees, table captains, and volunteers.
Taylor Brown
Mary Beth McInerney
Tom Evans
Taylor Harris
Jen Petter
John Wolfarth
Racial Equity Award – Diane Wilkerson, Black Boston COVID-19 Coalitions
Thanks to Miranda Rae and her band for setting the mood, to DJ Stevie Psyclone for starting the party, to Bethany VanDelft for guiding us through the evening as an impeccable host, and to our program speakers Lamar Brown-Noguerra, Adrianna Boulin, Nicole Talbott, Jennifer Petter, and Dianne Wilkerson.
The annual ride from Boston to Provincetown is so much more than a fun and exciting event. It is a decade’s long commitment to eliminating HIV/AIDS that organizes hundreds of volunteers to ride, and thousands to contribute. Over the past 20 years, they have raised over $6,000,000 for AIDS/HIV care and treatment. We are honored and grateful to be one of their beneficiaries.
Thanks so much to our riders, donors, and volunteers.
Francisco Castro
David Do
Andrea S. Genser
Mackenzie Gray
Justin T. Isaac
Em Izzo
Robb W. Johnson
M.A. Ladd
Kevin Letsinger
Raul G. Medina
Felix Muzny
Carrie Richgels
Delia Stephens
Michael Sullivan
Brian Weiner
Robert P. Chase
Jeanne Hatfield
Clarice Johnson
Matthew J. McNeff
David J. Russo, Jr.
Woody Smith
Sarah Weiss
Todd Williams
Clint Attebery
Richard B. Carey
Maxwell Cohen
Karen Crays
Ken DeBlois
Philip Finch
Timothy J. Fitzgerald
Patricia Hebert
John Heil
Joshua C. Judkins, PhD
Tyler D. Kinney
Julie-Ann Knight
Ben Kudler
Cei Lambert
Matthew Litchfield
Malinda J. McPherson
Roland Merchant
Court Noyes
Jeff D. Pike and John Kelly
Jane D. Powers, MSW, LICSW
Brian Powrie
Valentina Rosa
Julia Spiegelman
Peter Storm
Mark Vogel
John C. Welch, DNP
Donnie Worth
Clint M. Attebery
Maxwell Cohen
Ken DeBlois
David Do
Philip A. Finch
Timothy J. Fitzgerald
Andrea S. Genser
Warren Green
Patricia Hebert
John Heil
Em Izzo
Robb W. Johnson
Tyler D. Kinney
Julie-Ann Knight
Ben A. Kudler
Mary Ann Ladd
Cei A. Lambert
Roland C. Merchant
Jeff D. Pike
Jane D. Powers, MSW, LICSW
Brian C. Powrie
Carrie Richgels
Valentina D. Rosa
Erina Spiegelman
Brian Powrie
Valentina Rosa
Julia Spiegelman
Peter StormJulia D. Spiegelman
Mark Vogel
Brian Weiner
John C. Welch
Todd D. Williams
Donnie Worth
Mark Vogel
John C. Welch, DNP
Donnie Worth
The 2021 AIDS Walk was our return to in-person events and everyone who participated enjoyed a glorious fall day as 500+ people walked and ran to raise money and awareness for AIDS/HIV. The event also marked a significant increase in dollars raised as many teams broke new records. We were honored to present the Bette Byrnes award to the generous team at Liberty Mutual who provides tremendous support to youth who are experiencing homelessness. They are the largest private contributor to Youth on Fire and they contribute to many other organizations to help end this crisis. Youth who are experiencing homelessness are at much greater risk of contracting AIDS/HIV. Liberty Mutual’s efforts in coordination with Youth on Fire go a long way toward controlling and ending the AIDS epidemic.
Thanks so much to all our walkers, runners, sponsors, donors, and volunteers.
GOLD TEAMS
Fenway Family
INspire-Dunkin’ Baskin-Robbins
Medtronic PRIDE
The Ragon Institute
Vertex Pharmaceuticals
SILVER TEAMS
Boomerangs
North Shore Walks for Verny
OLD Navy MAGIC
Team Alnylam
TEAM BIDMC
Team Fenway YLC
Team Moderna
BRONZE TEAMS
Abt Associates
Fenway’s Fabulous Board
JANSSEN IDV
PRIDE@KPMG
Stonewall Sports Boston
Team Atrius Health
Team Harvard CBAR
Woodruff Pride
Anonymous (1)
Bill Adams
Sam Adams
Saket Agarwal
David Alger
John Jay Alves
Dan Anderson
Max Barbash
Helene S. Bednarsh
Micah Belyea
Joshua S. Boger, PhD and Amy Schafer Boger, MD
Sean R. Cahill
Sharon E. Caplan
Aimee Carew-Lyons
Francisco Castro and Richard D. McCarthy
Jenna Clemenzi
Ross Condit
Brian F. Corte
Linda L. Cotter-Cranston and Scott W. Cranston
Michelle L. Csizmadia
Rita Davidson
Timothy K. Deer
Patrick Dennen
Brian Derrick
Ryan DiMaria
Lisa Diprofio
Farah J. Fard
Elizabeth A. Felipe
Niamh C. Foley
Inez D. Folsom
David S. Fontaine
Angel Fuentes
Musie Ghebremichael
Gail Gilman
Sharon Glasser
Tony Godek
Nancy L. Goldberg
Gordon M. Gottlieb
Jim Haber
Sophie Hall
Bryan Horgan
Mikhaela E. Houston
Swati Joshi
Cheryl Katon and Jenn Katon
Julie E. Kaufmann
Julia Kelly
Peter Konrad and Shaun Watson
Kristen J. Lascoe
Owen Leddy
Helder Lemos
Mark Leonardo
Bianca Lepe
Regan Leston
Casey A. Liston
Kathy M. Lituri
Dana Lyford and Sarah Carroll
Eileen MacDougall and Brian T. MacDougall
Kaitlyn McCarron
Sarah McIntosh
Chad Michael and David Michael
Shaun Noone
Jeffrey L. Peak
Jerrod Perry
Francine Piwinski
Lori A. Queen
Roya Rakhshan
Louise B. Rice and Tess Ewing
Luis Rivera
James Ross
Ann E. Schlesinger
Warren M. Schur
Julian Serrao
Dawnmarie Simpson
William C. Smaha
Jennifer Tran
Rita T. Tries and James H. Tries
Helena Turner
Jonathan M. Urbach
April Venables
Christopher A. Viveiros
Bruce D. Walker and Alice M. Cort
Catherine Weerts
Amy Whitcomb Slemmer
The theme of outdoor events continued as the spring moved into June and we held one final outdoor event at Time Out Market. The brand-new Fenway Social was created to provide a gathering opportunity for community members who may not have been able to attend the gala or wanted to try something new. The silent auction, delicious food, and activities were a big hit, but just like so many of our events, spending time with the community quickly became the priority. Everyone was laughing, hugging, and dancing! It was a wonderful night of reconnecting with old friends and networking with new contacts.
Thanks so much to our Social committee, sponsors, attendees, and volunteers.
Sarah Blackburn
Brian Bourquin
Taylor Brown
Tim Burdsall
Ross Condit
Steve Dyer
Pat Gotham
Kelly MacFarland
Zachary McCabe
Amanda Preston-Sicari
Tristan Rushton
Brian Samuels
Julian Serrao
Dan Solworth
Travis Waldrop
Matt Wilder
Trillium
Ms. Clucks Deluxe
Cusser’s Roast Beef and Seafood
Taqueria El Barrio
BISq
Michael Schlow’s
anoush’ella
Source
Nu Burger
Time Out Market Bar
Gelato & Chill
gogo ya
InChu
Union Square Donuts
Moderna
Beth Isreal Lahey Health
Biogen
Eastern Bank
Gilead
Takeda
Janssen
alight · Consumer Medical
PTC
PwC
Santander
Vertex
Be Biopharma
BMW USA
Boston Veterinary Clinic
CCD Fundraising
edible Boston
EY
Hawk Partners
Venegas and COmpany
Wilder Strategies
Bar Method · Boston Park Plaza · Boston Urban Hospitality · Curio Spice · Dorchester Brewing Company · Eataly Boston · Eck MacNeely Architects · Flour Bakery · Formaggio Kitchen · Four Seasons One Dalton · Laugh Boston · Lisa’s Hands of Time · Living Proof · Martignetti · Mark Dodd Massage · Milk Street · Nemo Equipment · Noor Oriental Rugs · Pammy’s Restaurant · Revolve Boutiques · Tatte · The Koji Club
Our Boston Marathon runners: Matthew Erikson, Daniel Kahn and Kaitlyn McCarron raised almost $23,500!
We’d like to give a special thanks to our co-chairs and committee members who helped make the Bayard Rustin Community Breakfast possible.
Nigel Griffith
Kimberly Wilson
Joty Allison
Adrianna Boulin
Harold du Four-Anderson
Robert Martin
Philip Robinson
Zariah Williamson
Spencer Collins, IV
Jonathan Matsui, PhD
CHAIR
Diane M. Tucker
VICE CHAIR
Scott Walker, CFA
TREASURER
Joblin C. Younger, Esq.
CLERK
Trevor Z. Boylston
Robert Chambers
Jennifer Chrisler
Benjamin Davis, MD
David J. Davis, RN
Harold du Four-Anderson, M.Ed, LADC I
Roxane Gardner MD, MPH, MSHPEd, DSc
Colin Gibbons, MHA
Lillian Gonzalez, CPA, MST
Guadalupe Hayes-Mota, MBA, MS, MPP
Mikhaela Houston
Jennifer L. Jones
Michael Kramer, DDS, DMSc
Amy Rasimas, MBA
Betsy Smith, Psy.D
Vincent C. Smith, MD, MPH
Jonathan Matsui, PhD
CHAIR
Jennifer Chrisler
VICE CHAIR
Guadalupe Hayes-Mota, MBA, MS, MPP
TREASURER
Lillian Gonzalez, CPA, MST
CLERK
Alejandra Caraballo
Robert Chambers
Benjamin Davis, MD
David J. Davis, RN
Harold du Four-Anderson, M.Ed, LADC I
Colin Gibbons, MHA
Allen Gove, MBA
Mikhaela Houston
Jonathan Matsui, PhD
Mai-Khoi Nguyen-Thanh
Tej Nuthulaganti
Amy Rasimas, MBA
Julian Serrao
Betsy Smith, Psy.D
Vincent C. Smith, MD, MPH
Diane M. Tucker
Mike Yepes, MPP, MPH
The Board of Visitors’ mission is to heighten Fenway’s visibility and provide additional expertise and experience to support the organization and its work. Fenway’s Board of Visitors members are interested and influential members of the community, patients, donors, and friends. Corbin Petro was the Chair of Fenway’s Board of Visitors.
Karen Akunowicz
Mikki Ansin
Clint M. Attebery
Steven Auerbach
Ashley L. N. Banfield
John H. Basile
Casey Brown
Taylor Brown
Bryan Bryson
James C. Buttrick
Leah C. Camhi
Stewart B. Clifford, Jr.
Harry R. Collings
Gillian Comito
John M. Costello
Deborah A. Daccord, Esq.
Gary K. Daffin
David M. Datz, Esq.
Kace Dolan, PT, DPT
Steven F. Fossella
Isabella M. Gambill
John Gormley
Jack Gronau
Megan Hall
Cyrus Hamer
Cynthia Harmon
Taylor S. Harris
Charlie R. Hindmarsh
Justin T. Isaac
John B. Koss, Esq.
Mary Landrigan-Ossar
Seth Levenson
Bruce A. Lewis
Michael Lowenthal
Paul E. Lynch, MD
Lindsey L. Noecker
Rev. Fr. Alex Oneto
Liz Page
Corbin Petro, Chair
Bryan C. Pridgen
Brian Ramos
Rick Redmond
Gena Ricciardi
Alessandra R. Robinson
Jonathan S. Rotenberg
Arnold E. Sapenter
James R. Seligman, DMD
Douglas W. Spencer
Richard Spencer
Shaunya Thomas
Claire B. Willis, LICSW
Michael T. Wong
Brady Wyrtzen
Stephen H. Zinner, MD
Deloitte & Touche USA LLP
Beth Israel Lahey Health
Gilead Sciences, Inc.
Gordon Family Foundation
Harbor To The Bay Inc.
MassDevelopment
Moderna
Panjandrum Foundation
Anonymous
Biogen Idec Foundation
Broadway Cares, Inc/Equity
Fights AIDS
The Boston Foundation
Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals
American Tower Corp.
Anthro New England
Boston IVF
ConsumerMedical
Eastern Bank Foundation
Ernst & Young LLP
Frank W. and Carl S. Adams Memorial Fund
Frederick Lobl Trust
Harvard Medical School
Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation
Janssen Products, LP
Janssen Therapeutics
Karyopharm Therapeutics, Inc.
Liberty Mutual Foundation
Macy’s Foundation
MassMutual
PTC Inc
PwC LLP
Red Sox Foundation
Santander Bank
TD Charitable Foundation
The Bennett Family Foundation
The Bernard and Anne Spitzer Charitable Trust
The Hamilton Company Charitable Foundation
Tikkun Olam Foundation, Inc.
Arrakis Therapeutics
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation
Cambridge Community Foundation
Cambridge Savings Bank
Dowling & O’Neil Insurance Agency
Dunkin’ Joy in Childhood Foundation
Eaton Vance Management
Forest Foundation
Genesco Sports Enterprises
Google, Inc.
KeyBank
KPMG
Locke Lord LLP
Mass General Brigham
Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers
People’s United Community Foundation of Eastern MA, Inc.
Quest Diagnostics
Robert Lloyd Corkin Charitable Foundation
Rockland Trust – Blue Hills Charitable Foundation
Ropes & Gray LLP
Slalom, LLC
Stonewall Sports Boston
The Melik-Baschkopf Foundation
The Susan A. and Donald P. Babson Charitable Foundation
Trillium Brewing Company
Woolley-Clifford Foundation
AAFCPAs
Abt Associates Inc.
Be Biopharma
Blueprint Medicines
BNY Mellon
CCS Fundraising
Community Care Cooperative
CrossFit RBP
Dechert LLP
Gap, Inc.
Gonzalez & Associates, PC
Grail, Inc.
HawkPartners
Ironwood Pharmaceuticals
LYFT
MFS Investment Management
MLS Property Information Network, Inc.
Morgan Brown & Joy
Performance Northeast Services, LLC
Room & Board
The Sidewater Family Foundation Inc.
Wellington Management Company, LLP
Ameriprise Financial
Combined Jewish Philanthropies
Cummings Properties, LLC
Elm Horizons Corp
Eugene M. Lang Foundation
G & R Quiat Family Foundation
Goulston & Storrs
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care, Inc.
Health Advances
John Hancock Financial Services
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
Massachusetts Teachers Association
Mathworks
McKinsey & Company, Inc.
Medtronic Foundation
Night Shift Brewing
Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe LLP
Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts, Inc.
Raytheon
S&P Global Inc.
Sanofi Foundation for North America
Stafford Tech, Inc.
State Street Matching Gift Program
Takeda Pharmaceuticals
The Zahn Foundation
Town Fair Tire Foundation, Inc.
Tufts Health Plan Foundation
We Work for Health
Amazon Smile
Autodesk, Inc.
Beyond Meat
Boston CMA
Chubb Federal Insurance Company
Citizens Bank
Comscore Rainbow Alliance
Embark Veterinary, Inc.
Giant Panther Real Estate, Inc.
Healthcircle
John Wiley & Sons Inc
Johnson & Johnson Services, Inc.
JPMorgan Chase
Kendra Scott
Loomis, Sayles & Company, LP
Mennonite Congregation of Boston
Microsoft Giving Campaign
Nuance Communications
Pegasystems
Reading Memorial High School
Second Street Associates, LLC
SiriusXM
Stop & Shop Supermarket Company LLC
The Cambridge School of Culinary Arts
The Greater Fall River Domestic Violence Coalition, Inc.
The Home Depot Foundation
Wells Fargo Advisors, LLC
The above lists reflect donations made to Fenway Health by our generous donors during the fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
The following lists reflect donations made to Fenway Health by our generous donors during fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
Jeffrey Beale and Michael Stockbridge
Mary C. Jigarjian and George Jigarjian
J. Scott Walker
Anonymous (1)
Joshua S. Boger, PhD and Amy Schafer Boger, MD
John M. DeCiccio
Adam C. Gilpatric
Elizabeth L. Johnson
Steven Auerbach and Mark Scofield
John H. Basile
Nan Dumas
John R. Ehrenfeld and Ruth R. Budd
Paul M. Frascella
Paul B. Gilbert and Patricia C. Romeo-Gilbert
Raphael Jaimes-Branger and Eliot T. Wright
Ellen LaPointe and Jen Cross
Seth L. Levenson and John Cunningham
Mary Beth McInerney and Susan Barclay
Shaun P. McMahon
Betty I. Morningstar and Jeanette Kruger
Oppenheim Charitable Foundation
Sarah Schochet and Darrah March
Kevin P. Wulff
Anonymous (1)
Gregory D. Ansin
Ashley Banfield and Emily Drahzal
Mark Brimhall-Vargas and Joseph Kaufman
James C. Buttrick
James E. Canales and James C. McCann, MD
Aimee Carew-Lyons
Stewart B. Clifford, Jr.
Steven D. Corkin and Dan Maddalena
John M. Costello
Marco A. DeThomasis
A.J. Goulding and Jason Huang
Patrick C. Guerriero
Gregory and Katty Halloran
Paul Hempel
Joanne Herman and Terry Fallon
Jennifer L. Jones
Cheryl Katon and Jenn Katon
Mark H. Libenson, MD and Lisa M. Muto, PhD
Matthias D. Maguire
Tracy Marburger
Duncan McKechnie
Thomas J. McNichol
Jeffrey B. Meaney
Brian T. Mitchell
Jeffrey H. Munger and Robert T. Whitman
Daniel S. Newton and Christopher L. Flynn
Anne M. Peterson and Mark A. Peterson
Jennifer and Catherine Petter
Jane D. Powers, MSW, LICSW and Margaret M. Hayes
Andrew Russell and Helene Norton-Russell
Carl M. Sciortino, Jr., MPA and Francis P. Brown
Andrew Sigel
Diane M. Tucker
Bruce D. Walker and Alice M. Cort
John C. Welch, DNP
John F. Winterle, DMD
Joblin C. Younger, Esq.
Eddie Zaidner, MD
Yijie Zhang, PhD
Anonymous (2)
Clint Attebery
Gary Bailey, MSW
Mitchell Bilczewski
Mohan D. Boodram and Robert F. Morris
Brian Bourquin
Trevor Z. Boylston
Graham T. Brown
Stacie Burgess and Johnney Burgess
Dorothy P. Burstein and Paul Burstein
Joseph R. Caputo and James W. Hanosh
Kenneth J. Carangelo
Richard B. Carey
Brian P. Cooper, PhD and Margueritte S. Murphy, PhD
Michael K. Daly
David J. Davis and Tracy Thompson
Laura E. Dorfman and Martha L. Wengert
Harold du Four-Anderson
Arlene Fortunato and Darcy Pfeifer
Janet and Andrew Gainer-Dewar
Lillian Gonzalez, CPA, MST and Adela A. Mendoza
Mia Gore and Abraham Gore
Christina Grasso, MPH
Timothy S. Halpin
Sarah E. A. Hanselman and Eric G. Hanselman
Stephen C. Harrison and Tomas Kirchhausen
Fiona Hopkins
Andy Huang
Pearl Huang
Ellen Hurvitz and Barry Strasnick
Ian W. Johnson
Peter F. Jones and Wayne G. Gaffield
Todd A. Katzman and Marc Lacasse
Susan Kelley and Peter Kadzis
Kenneth W. Kendrick, Jr.
Tom Kennedy
Mary Landrigan-Ossar, MD, PhD and Jacob Ossar
Jillian Levine and Sherry Cheuk
Anna Li
Jonathan S. Litt, MD
Thomas J. Martorelli
Jonathan I. Matsui, PhD and R. Bryan Smith
Robert McBride
Scott McCoy
Raul G. Medina and Bradley Ursillo
Kathy Melbourne and Lisa Close
Renee L. Miltz
Ann Pearson and K. Brook Herren
Benjamin D. Perkins and David W. Brown
Corbin Petro and Jessica Gelman
Michael J. Piore and Rodney L. Yoder
John R. Pitfield, Esq. and Paul E. Lynch, MD
David J. Poorvu and Nancy Poorvu
Brian Price, MD and Paul D. Anagnostos
Ernest J. Pusateri
Kelly Ransom
Joseph T. Realmuto, Jr.
Zachary Rieken
Glenn Rigoff
Paul and Carol Rose
William B. Rubenstein
Tristan R. Rushton and Matt Fecteau
Craig M. Sato and Joseph J. Takarewski
Joseph Schutt
Cornelia E. Smith and Berit Pratt
Blaze A. Stancampiano
Charles Steenburg
Caleb Paul Stewart
Deb G. Taft and Terri L. Rutter
Donna J. Venegas
Amy Whitcomb Slemmer
Matthew Wilder
John P. Wolfarth and Kevin W. Powers
Anonymous (5)
Ceceilia Allwein
E. Morrey Atkinson
Joanne Barker
Michael J. Barry, MD and Jean W. Barry
R. David Beck and Gregory R. Van Boven
Kathleen R. Beckman and Theodore Postol
Steven H. Berez
Yomna Blaisdell
James M. Bonanno, MD and John J. Cormier
Michael and Jennifer Borislow
Katherine Bowdish
William H. Brack and Jessica A. Ladd
Peter J. Brady and Alan Davis
Margot H. Brickelmaier
James Brickner
William B. Brockman and Lucy E. Hadden
Maureen Brodoff, Esq. and Ellen Wade, Esq.
Avery Brooks
Robert L. Buckwalter
Dr. K. Mahala Burn
Patricia J. Caldwell
Gordon Calkins
Blair L. Campbell
Dr. Christopher L Campion & Jason M Vellen
Juliet Carey, MPH and Barbara Parton
Timothy Carey
Roger M. Carter
Darren Cartwright
Joseph Castellana, PhD and James R. Seligman, DMD
Robert A. Chabot
Stewart and Patricia Chapin
Douglas Cohen
Jay Cohen Philanthropic Fund of Horizons Foundation
Dennis E. Condon and Robert J. Cummings
André and Marilyn Danesh
Diane Davidson and William Weidacher
Frances Davis
John D. Degnan
Jonathan Delgado
Frederick J. Doherty
Christine Donahue
John W. Erickson and Michael E. Field
Raymond Faulkner and Carlos M. Terra
Valerie and Jacqueline Fein-Zachary
Dena B. Feldstein and Edward Brody
Bruce W. Finch and Keith A. Reimann
Wes Fireman
Wendy Flanagan and Christopher B. O’Malley
Lucy A. Flynn
Deborah Ford and Catherine D’Amato
Domenic Gaeta
Clifton A. Gaskill
David A. Georgantas
Thomas L. Geraty and Stuart T. Walker
Samantha Gervais
Charlotte Glasser and Genie Gore
Marcia Glassman-Jaffe and Mark Jaffe
Cynthia M. Goncalves
Alex Gonzalez, MD, MPH
Dr. Anne K. Goodman
Adrian Gore
Brendan Greenwood
Anthony Grillo
Sara A. Hamel
Guadalupe Hayes-Mota
Chris Haynes
Mary Lynne Hedley
Kenneth F. Hirschkind
Angel L. Hueca, PhD
Anita L. Huggins and Norman W. Huggins
Cheryl A. Jacques and Jennifer Chrisler
Matthew Jemison
Wendy E. John
Paul Johnson
Lorraine Jones and Elizabeth Halstead
Michael Karalis
Collin Kelly
William W. Kimball
Richard J. Kinny-Giglio and James R. Kinny-Giglio
Richard Kovalcik
G.P. Paul Kowal
Michael A. Kramer, DDS, DMSc
Ronald V. Lacro and Jon P. Schum
Eric S. Lander and Lori W. Lander
Jessica Lang
Noah Langowitz
Richard Lerner
Jacqueline Lindsay
Derek R. Lisinski and Julie Lisinski
Michael E. Lorrey-Parena and Frederick Lorrey-Parena
Clarence R. Lyons
Lucy Mack
Edmond R. Macri
Kim Marrkand and Kathleen Henry
Carla and Rebecca Marshall-Waggett
Shibin Mathew
Nancy A. Mathieu and Theresa Mason
Christine Matsui and Jerold Matsui
Kenneth H. Mayer, MD
Shane P. McBride
Zachary D. McCabe
Kimba R. McCant
Kaitlyn McCarron
Sean M. McConnell
Malinda J. McPherson
Robbie J. Meitler
Paul O. Miller and Joseph Riddle
Edward Moore and Shawn Brooks
Ann Moorehouse
MaryAnn Moskofides
Jess Muskin-Pierret
Kristy Nardone
Jack O’Leary
Richard D. Olson, Jr. and Richard R. O. Smith
Ellen O’Neil
Liz Page and Marianne Stravinskas
Faith K. Parker and Glenn P. Parker
Gordon E. Parry
Janet A. Penn and Mark Finklestein
Stephen P. Pentek
Brian K. Perry and Kevin Crawford
Michael F. Phipps and Monica S. Phipps
Monika Pichler
Michael Pickard
Jenny Potter, MD and Joyce L. Collier
Sashank Prasad and Kerry Prasad
Robert Quigley
Brian Ramos
Amy Rasimas and Lauren Eramo
Rick Redmond
Leah Reis-Dennis and Maria O’Byrne
Andrew A. Rempis and Deborah T. Rempis
Michael L. Reney and Alexander Cruz
Louise B. Rice and Tess Ewing
Luis Rivera
Jonathan S. Rotenberg
Rebecca Roth Gullo
Steven J. Rowley
Catherine N. Ryan
Arnold E. Sapenter and Joseph C. Reed, PhD
Fillip Saraiva
Gina Savageau and Jodi Meehan
Dorothy A. Savarese
Clara Schultz
James Scott
Glenn A. Seberg
Brian Seed
Ellen Semonoff
Douglas P. Shaheen and James Rodenmacher
Jennifer F. Shay and Timothy D. Shay
Andrew Sheeler
Jen Sheen
Richard Silverman
Michael Skrip and James M. Brown
Gary R. Sloper
William C. Smaha
Pamela A. Smith and Steven E. Thomas
Ryan Smith and Dante Ramos
Vincent C. Smith, MD, MPH
Sally A. Stalker
Joshua Sternberg
Dan Sugalski
Joseph Sullivan III and Jay Qu
James M. Sweeney
Robert Tavares
Peter Tenggren and Warren Mitchell
Hal Tepfer and Stacie L. Simon
Vic Terawskyj
Susan Thorpe
Stephen Thrush
Mark E. Toney and Daniel J. Hartigan
Dang Trinh and Aaron M. Lemmon
Michael E. Trykowski
Leigh J. Tucker and Stephen R. Mehrtens
Dorothy A. Van Ryzin
Joseph C. Veneto
Richard Voos
Cathy L. Walker
Jane Wang
Becky Weidenbruch and John Weidenbruch
Lisa Whittemore and Cynthia Esthimer
Kim Williams and Trevor Miller
Scott R. Wilson
Clair Windsor
Elizabeth Witten
Angela Yen
Stephen H. Zinner, MD
Michael F. Zito
Anonymous (2)
Jonathan B. Aibel and Julie I. Rohwein
Robert Alkon and Helen Alkon
Kristina Allikmets
Frederick W. Alt
Justin Alves
Jonathan S. Appelbaum, MD and William D. Morowski
Julie E. Bailit and Michael H. Bailit
James Baker
The Barrington Foundation
Kenneth J. Bazydola and Sarah M. Bazydola
Michael Bellante
Sarah Blackburn
Edward S. Boesel
Carol J. Bresler and Carolyn A. Billinghurst
David A. Bross, MD and David Buckle, MD
Stuart Burdsall
Timothy Burdsall
Christian Burr
Carson Burrington and Andrew Marley
Paul Buzzell
James A. Canfield
Noel Carlino
Alexander G. Carlock
Robert M. Caro
Kalli Catcott
Elyse D. Cherry
Richard Childs
Tina Cincotti
Russell Cloon III
Gary Cohen and Lauren Cohen
T. Coletti
Lance W. Connolly and Kelly Connolly
Julia Cort
Brian F. Corte
Ronald Coursey
Francis Cronin
Mary Ann Cugini and Thomas H. Ryan
Emilee Cummings
Norman R. Daoust
Cesar DeAndrade
Ashwil Devanesan
Caitlin Donnelly
Jennifer Drawbridge
Per Dutton
Lee Edelman and Joseph Litvak
George P. Edmonds III and Athena Edmonds
Caite Eilenberg
Leif W. Ellisen, MD, PhD
Paul W. Ernest and Camille G. Ernest
Kimberly T. Erwin
Margaret Eskridge
Dixie-Lee Esseltine, MD
Alan F. Feeney V
Kevin Fitzgerald
Dj Fitzpatrick
John S. Flaherty
Miles A. Freedman and Anthony B. Abruzese
Karen Gilman
Adeline Giuggio
Carmen Gonzales
Gordon M. Gottlieb
Don and Mary Green
John Groarke
Jim Haber
Elizabeth Hamel
Harriet and Brian Hamilton
Matthew Hamilton
John D. Hancock and John F. Wood
Adam C. Harrington
Nancy L. Hathaway
Shirley A. Hayden and Thomas O. Sherman
David G. Hayter and Daniel Borges
Patricia Hebert
Mark Hickey
Terron P. Hill
Bradley Honoroff and Jane Honoroff
Jennifer Hopkins
Peter E. Hornstra
Ryan C. Jarvis
Cristina Jiron
Derek Johnson
Fern L. Johnson and Marlene G. Fine
Robb W. Johnson and Richard J. Gosselin
Elizabeth Kass, MD
Neal Kass, MD
Terrence Kontos
Victoria Krasnakevich
Tommy Lamont
Stewart J. Landers, Esq. and John Boyce
Michelle B. Lapointe and Ehrika Tourigny
Phillip Larimer
Christopher G. Lawrence
Nadya Lefaivre
Joseph S. Levine, PhD
Andrea H. Loew
Heather Lounsbury
Daniel A. Lowen
Stephen Lussier
Malachy C. Lynch
William T. Lynch and Ingrid G. Larson
Kelly MacFarland
Stephen Magee
Sara Malconian and Katherine Truscott
Cheryl Marriott
Daniel McCarron
Helen T. McCrady
M. Lisa McHam, MD and Catherine W. Johnson
Theresa M. McLaughlin
Patrick J. McNamara
Matthew J. McNeff
Matthew McTygue and Todd A. Rivers
Richard Millard
Ljiljana Minwalla
Robert F. Monaco
Michael Mosey
Raghuvar Nadig
Tej Nuthulaganti
Sarah Jayne Olan
Michael Oliveri
Matt O’Malley
Tony Origlio
Dr. Jay D. Orlander and Dr. Jacqueline Mitus
David W. Pantalone
Jim Parada
Rhonda Parker
Elizabeth C. Parsons
Vinod Parthasarathy
Dee J. Perry
Kevin Peterson
John J. Petrowsky and Thomas B. Vise
Tina M. Pittore
Francine Piwinski
Amanda and Adrianna Preston-Sicari
Paul Ragaller
Abram Recht and Martha Recht
Ken Reyes and David M. Slatcher
Mark S. Richard
Tim Ritchie
Michael Roberts and John Murdock
Daniel Rodas
Diane M. Rogers
Michael Rotenberg and Karen S. Rotenberg
Steven Rotman
Linda M. Rowley
John L. Rutledge
Steve A. Safren, PhD and William F. Pirl, MD
L Frank Salisbury
Brian W. Samuels
Mary Sanker
James C. Sargent
Philip S. Saul
Agnes C. Savini and Mary Kate Savini
Kevin Schindelwig-Franca
Carole Schlessinger
Michael Schur
Joe Scott
Pedro Serrano Navarro
Lyn Shamban
Ryan Shoeplein
Marilyn J. Showers
Samantha Singer
Claire E. Smith
Naomi Sobel and Becky Silverstein
Lisa Solar
Seunghan Song
Joyce K. Spencer
Julia Stewart
Dan Sullivan
Suzanne Swift
Patty Thom
Kenneth Tonis
Steven J. Tromp
Samantha S. Truex and Edward H. Truex
James Tucker Bradley
Elizabeth Vena
Robin F. Verdier and Antoinette Verdier
James C. Wadleigh
Travis Waldrop and Shawn Goodwin
Gregory W. Ward
Lindsay Ward
Thomas P. Webber and Keith J. MacDonald
Jason Wilson
Sherry Winternitz and Jean Ann Frazier
Michael T. Wong, MD
Sandra Wrobel
Brady Wyrtzen
Samuel Yin
Karen R. Young
Richard J. Yurko
Judith L. Zabin and Albert P. Zabin
The above lists reflect donations made to Fenway Health by our generous donors during fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
The Haviland Society was founded to recognize and to honor Fenway’s most crucial donors, those who consistently give to the Annual Fund year after year.
Anonymous (10)
Michael Achey
John H. Adams
John N. Affuso
Jonathan B. Aibel and Julie I. Rohwein
Michael S. Albert
Larry Albertson
Philip J. Allessio
Martin R. Anderson
Amanda Annis and Guillermo Velasco
Gregory D. Ansin
Mikki Ansin
Jonathan S. Appelbaum, MD and William D. Morowski
Paul B. Atwood and Rebecca H. Atwood
Paul A. Auerbach and Nancy D. Auerbach
Julie E. Bailit and Michael H. Bailit
Michael J. Barry, MD and Jean W. Barry
John H. Basile
Kenneth J. Bazydola and Sarah M. Bazydola
R. David Beck and Gregory R. Van Boven
Bettina Beckman and Ronald J. Castile
Kathleen R. Beckman and Theodore Postol
Peter P. Belobaba
Alan R. Bender
Adrienne R. Benton
Steven H. Berez
Marilyn Bernstein
Philip C. Bibb
Mitchell Bilczewski
Arthur R. Blake
Michael A. Blau and Dianne A. Blau
Nora Bloch
Stephen J. Bobrinitz
Edward S. Boesel
Joshua S. Boger, PhD and Amy Schafer Boger, MD
James M. Bonanno, MD and John J. Cormier
Mohan D. Boodram and Robert F. Morris
Michael and Jennifer Borislow
Debra K. Borkovitz
Trevor Z. Boylston
Billie R. Bozone
William H. Brack and Jessica A. Ladd
Peter J. Brady and Alan Davis
Gary B. Brenner
Carol J. Bresler and Carolyn A. Billinghurst
Margot H. Brickelmaier
Judith H. Briss
Kenneth A. Bryant and Diane J. Bryant
Wayne M. Bryant and Maryann Grenier
Robert L. Buckwalter
Richard J. Buirkle
Susan O. Bush
James C. Buttrick
Paul Buzzell
Joseph M. Cacciola and Thomas G. J. Trykowski, AIA
Sean R. Cahill
Patricia J. Caldwell
John and Annette Campbell
James E. Canales and James C. McCann, MD
Leon Cantor and Jayne E. Cantor
Joseph R. Caputo and James W. Hanosh
Juliet Carey, MPH and Barbara Parton
Alexander G. Carlock
Joseph A. Carrese and Michele E. Beaulieu
Kirk and A. Price Carter
Roger M. Carter
Roger M. Cassin and Irma M. Schretter
Joseph Castellana, PhD and James R. Seligman, DMD
Michael A. Castellana and Robert Rothery
Francisco Castro and Richard D. McCarthy
Kenneth F. Caulfield
Helen T. Chapell
Elyse D. Cherry
Anne McAdams Chochrek and Joseph Chochrek
Anderson Clark, PhD
Stewart B. Clifford, Jr.
John Coakley
Laurie H. Cohen***
Bren M. Cole
Joyce L. Collier, LICSW and Jennifer Potter, MD
Harry R. Collings and Daniel B. Moon
Jane L. Collins
Dennis E. Condon and Robert J. Cummings
Lance W. Connolly and Kelly Connolly
Patricia A. Connolly, MD
Barry B. Corden
Steven D. Corkin and Dan Maddalena
John M. Costello
Paul L. Coulombe
Teresa H. Crowley and Daniel J. Crowley
Tom Daccord
Arthur Dahl
Joan C. Dalto and Edward A. Dalto
Lisa Dames and Barry N. Wilensky
André and Marilyn Danesh
Jessica L. Daniels and Paul Blackborow
Norman R. Daoust
Philip R. Daoust
Diane Davidson and William Weidacher
Marc J. Davino
David De Rosier and Esta DeRosier-Markin
Grace E. Deasy
John M. DeCiccio
Emily R. DeMelo
Edward J. DeMers
Marco A. DeThomasis
Frederick J. Doherty
Laura E. Dorfman and Martha L. Wengert
Brenda Doyle
Margaret E. Doyle
Mark J. Duffy
Nan Dumas
Frank M. Dunn and Sheila Condon
Steven P. Dyer
Lee Edelman and Joseph Litvak
George P. Edmonds III and Athena Edmonds
John R. Ehrenfeld and Ruth R. Budd
Leif W. Ellisen, MD, PhD
Peter J. Epstein, Esq.
Paul W. Ernest and Camille G. Ernest
Kimberly T. Erwin
Donald H. Eunson
G. Douglas Evans
Thomas P. Evans
Gail D. Fanning-Grove
Susan E. Faris and Charles Faris
Teresa L. Faulisi
Raymond Faulkner and Carlos M. Terra
Valerie and Jacqueline Fein-Zachary
Jared A. Fijalkowski
Bruce W. Finch and Keith A. Reimann
Philip Finch and William Halpin
Arthur M. Finstein and Lois A. Finstein
Michael Fiorentino
Timothy J. Fitzgerald
J. Kevin Foley and Elaine K. Foley
Niamh C. Foley
Inez D. Folsom
Janice Forsstrom
Arlene Fortunato and Darcy Pfeifer
Susan E. Foster and Bruce Horwitz
Victoria Fowler and Ileen Carrel
Paul M. Frascella
Russell Furtado and Charles Smith
Lisa S. Fusaro, MD and Maura Shaughnessy, MD
Roxane Gardner
Clifton A. Gaskill
Robert L. Geary
Jerry Gechter and Anne M. Gechter
Kathy A. Gianino and Alice M. Knowles
Paul B. Gilbert and Patricia C. Romeo-Gilbert
Sterling B. Giles
Robert W. Gill
Arthur L. Gilman
Sharon Glasser
Cindy B. Goldstein and Roger N. Goldstein
Alexa A. Gomez
Alfredo Gomez
Alex Gonzalez, MD, MPH
Andrew Goodman
Dr. Anne K. Goodman
Gordon M. Gottlieb
A.J. Goulding and Jason Huang
Christina Grasso, MPH
Peter G. Green and Lucy A. Green
Marcia N. Grey
Stephen A. Griffin
Anthony Grillo
Carolyn Grillo and Erin Deadmon
Edward M. Gromada and Madeleine T. Gromada
Mark L. Guenard
Robert M. Guerin
Patrick C. Guerriero
Jim Haber
Lisbeth J. Hall
Philip K. Hamilton and Mary C. Hamilton
John D. Hancock and John F. Wood
Carolyn E. Hannauer
Dean T. Hara
Ross Harpestad
Stephen C. Harrison and Tomas Kirchhausen
Carol Hartman
Alan S. Healy and Christina S. Healy
Deborah Heller, PhD and Ann Sanders
Paul Hempel
Neil F. Henderson
Joanne Herman and Terry Fallon
John E. Hershey and Anna S. Hershey
Marcie Hershman
Jeffrey J. Hickey and Christian F. Brocato
Luke R. Hill and Mary E. Driscoll
Kenneth F. Hirschkind
Sheilah M. Hoelscher and Melissa A. Stockbridge
Peter E. Hornstra
Roland P. Houde and Mary G. Houde
Robert E. Housman and Sue T. Housman
Derek A. Howe and Brian S. Galloway
Laura J. Howick and Dale J. Szczeblowski
Ellen Hurvitz and Barry Strasnick
Raphael Jaimes-Branger and Eliot T. Wright
Katherine A. Jantzen and Ronald Michaels
Herman C. Janzen and Gary A. Godin
Maria Jasin
Mary C. Jigarjian and George Jigarjian
Wendy E. John
Ian W. Johnson
Robb W. Johnson and Richard J. Gosselin
Willard M. Johnson
Jennifer L. Jones
Peter F. Jones and Wayne G. Gaffield
Steven L. Jones and David Langer
Marvin H. Kabakoff
James C. Kaddaras, Jr.
Minai Kam and Amy Murrett
Elizabeth Kass, MD
Rob Kassel
Todd A. Katzman and Marc Lacasse
James M. Keating
Susan Kelley and Peter Kadzis
John E. Keon and Claire T. Keon
William W. Kimball
Susan F. Klein
Leslie C. Knapp
David E. Knudsen
Peter Konrad and Shaun Watson
Andrew W. Koppel
G.P. Paul Kowal
Michael A. Kramer, DDS, DMSc
Stanley Kramer
Ellen Kranzer
Thomas E. Krueger
Ralph A. Kusinitz
John S. Kyper
Robyn Laing
Stewart J. Landers, Esq. and John Boyce
Peter A. Lans
Gregory L. Larson and Stefanie K. Larson
Suzanne Lascoe
Lewis Lasher
Cathy J. Lavoie Griffin and Thomas W. Griffin
Janet Lawn and Maryann Chaisson
David E. Lefebvre and Amy LeFebvre
Seth L. Levenson and John Cunningham
Lorenzo Lewis, Jr., MD and Eva Schoenfeld
Mark H. Libenson, MD and Lisa M. Muto, PhD
Steven L. Lieberman
John Lisker
Jonathan S. Litt, MD
Daniel and Deborah Lolik
Sue Lonoff de Cuevas
William E. Louie
Margaret A. Lourie
Daniel A. Lowen
Richard Lu
Kathleen A. Luvisi and Margaret Luvisi
Kristin K. Lynch
Malachy C. Lynch
William T. Lynch and Ingrid G. Larson
Peter Machinist and Alice R. Machinist
Lucy Mack
Robert W. Mack
Edmond R. Macri
Matthias D. Maguire
Diane L. Mahana
Susan Malspeis
Judith G. Mannheim
Melvin A. Manson
Elizabeth L. Marks and Paul A. Taylor
Mary and Alan Marshall
Rebecca and Carla Marshall-Waggett
Brian Martin
Lawrence A. Martin
Thomas J. Martorelli
Jonathan I. Matsui, PhD and R. Bryan Smith
Gal Mayer, MD
Kenneth H. Mayer, MD
Kimba R. McCant
Sean M. McConnell
Matthew J. McCormack and Kelly E. McCormack
Robert McDonald
Thomas E. McDonald
Kevin F. McElroy
John McGrail
Michael E. McHugh
Arthur P. McIntosh
Vinnette A. McKay
Andrew W. McKinley
Theresa M. McLaughlin
James H. McQueen
Matthew McTygue and Todd A. Rivers
Jeffrey B. Meaney
Robbie J. Meitler
George Mercier
Myron Merrow
Matthew Metivier
Daniel A. Michaud, MPA and Brice Booker
Neil Miller
Stephen Minicucci
Vicki E. Mistacco
Brian T. Mitchell
Thomas Mitchell
Robert F. Monaco
David L. Montanari and Sara L. Rubin
Kendra E. Moore, PhD
Lynda Morgenroth
Betty I. Morningstar and Jeanette Kruger
Ruth E. Morris and Peter G. Kelly
Chad C. Mosca
Fredric A. Moscowitz and John T. Stella
Edmund A. Mroz and Celia B. Shapiro
Peter Muise
James R. Mullin and Wendy K. Mullin
Kathleen M. Mundhenk and Charles F. Mundhenk
Jeffrey H. Munger and Robert T. Whitman
Florence M. Murphy
Daniel S. Newton and Christopher L. Flynn
Patricia A. Nichols-Cordero and Andrew P. Cordero
Lindsey L. Noecker
Karen Norlin
Peter A. Norton and Elizabeth H. Norton
Constance L. Otradovec
Allison Page
Liz Page and Marianne Stravinskas
Lisa Paine, CNM, DrPH and Linda Daniels, PsyD
Robert H. Paisner and Elizabeth Paisner
Marcia A. Parisi and Robert J. Parisi
Faith K. Parker and Glenn P. Parker
Elizabeth C. Parsons
Robert P. Patten and Valerie A. Yarashus
Ann Pearson and K. Brook Herren
Thomas D. Penque
Stephen P. Pentek
Nicholas Pepe
Roy D. Perdue
Judith E. Perlman
Brian K. Perry and Kevin Crawford
Stephen C. Perry and Oliver Radford
Anne M. Peterson and Mark A. Peterson
John J. Petrowsky and Thomas B. Vise
George Phillips
Jay Philomena
Michael J. Piore and Rodney L. Yoder
John R. Pitfield, Esq. and Paul E. Lynch, MD
Tina M. Pittore
Jane D. Powers, MSW, LICSW and Margaret M. Hayes
Berit Pratt and Cornelia Smith
Charles Q. A. Pratt and Alexandra I. England
Brian Price, MD and Paul D. Anagnostos
Carla Procaskey and D. Anthony Flanders
Michael Prokosch and Rebecca A. Pierce
Philip E. Pryor
Judith M. Quanrud and Richard B. Quanrud
Maria A. Quiroga and Alvin Shiggs
Joseph D. Raccuglia, Jr.
Alicia and William Ramos
Brian Ramos
Dante A. Ramos and Ryan Smith
Dennis R. Ramsier
Robert and Wendy Reasenberg
Abram Recht and Martha Recht
Mark W. Register
Sheila B. Rehrig and Brian H. Rehrig
Rachel D. Reisman
Michael L. Reney and Alexander Cruz
Ken Reyes and David M. Slatcher
Phyllis D. Ribakoff
Gena and Bailey Ricciardi
Louise B. Rice and Tess Ewing
Janet P. Robbins
Jon Z. Rosbrook
Paul and Carol Rose
Abby S. Rosenberg
Leon V. Rosenberg and Marilyn L. Rosenberg
Jay K. Rosengard
Jonathan S. Rotenberg
David J. Russo, Jr.
Michael P. Ryan
Elizabeth A. Saef and Edward C. Saef
Steve A. Safren, PhD and William F. Pirl, MD
Arnold E. Sapenter and Joseph C. Reed, PhD
James C. Sargent
Mary Kate Savini
John Scanlon
John J. Schaeck
Stephen E. Schlesinger
Carole Schlessinger
James W. Schmidt and Jane E. MacDonald
Jon P. Schum and Ronald V. Lacro
Warren M. Schur
Susan G. Schwarz and Philip S. Schwarz
Carl M. Sciortino, Jr., MPA and Francis P. Brown
Lisa E. Sebell-Nevins
Glenn A. Seberg
Joan M. Seifert
Robert W. Seifert
Ellen Semonoff
Carol A. Sestito and Kathleen A. Bower
Douglas P. Shaheen and James Rodenmacher
Lyn Shamban
Brian S. Shannon and Keith Bell
Sarah A. Sharpe
Donald L. Shulman and Jill D. Shulman
Christine W. Siegrist and Richard Siegrist
Andrew Sigel
Michael Skrip and James M. Brown
Pamela A. Smith and Steven E. Thomas
Naomi Sobel and Becky Silverstein
Frank T. Solensky
Virginia L. Spaulding
Douglas Spencer
Janet Spencer
Sally A. Stalker
Blaze A. Stancampiano
Daniel and Susan Stec
Charles Steenburg
Caleb Paul Stewart
The Barrington Foundation
Lise Striar and Myles Striar
Jo M. Sullivan and Peter Boyd
Deb G. Taft and Terri L. Rutter
Joseph Takarewski and Craig Sato
Amy J. Tananbaum
Timothy J. Tardiff and Annalee Tardiff
Fred A. Taub and Susan C. Cohen
Patricia A. Tecu and William F. Tecu
Peter Tenggren and Warren Mitchell
Hal Tepfer and Stacie L. Simon
Vic Terawskyj
Joseph P. Texeira and Patricia Texeira
Diane Thomas
Mark E. Toney and Daniel J. Hartigan
Mark A. Tries
Steven J. Tromp
Kathleen A. Tucker
Leigh J. Tucker and Stephen R. Mehrtens
Robert F. Tucker
Patricia Umile
Jonathan M. Urbach
Kenneth A. Vaidulas
Dorothy A. Van Ryzin
Joseph C. Veneto
Robin F. Verdier and Antoinette Verdier
Richard Voos
James C. Wadleigh
Cathy L. Walker
J. Scott Walker
Wanda Wallace
Judith H. Walsh and Robert T. Walsh
Spencer D. Warncke and Theresa A. Belmonte
Donald R. Warren
Kendall P. Watts and Robert T. Derry
Linda C. Watts
Thompson Webb and Joan M. Webb
Robert S. Weinstein and Elizabeth S. Ginsburg
Karen A. Welling
Mary K. Werler
P.J. Wheeler
Christine E. Whiteside
Louis Wiley
Kim Williams and Trevor Miller
William H. Williams and Sally H. M. Williams
Scott R. Wilson
Rosemary N. Winfield
Henry N. Winslow
John F. Winterle, DMD
Steven J. Wolf
John P. Wolfarth and Kevin W. Powers
Michael T. Wong, MD
Christopher A. Wood
R. S. Wright
Kevin P. Wulff
Kathy and Richard Wunderlich
Joblin C. Younger, Esq.
Richard J. Yurko
Albert P. Zabin and Judith L. Zabin
Yijie Zhang, PhD
Joseph D. Zibrak, MD
Stephen H. Zinner, MD
Michael F. Zito
Anonymous (2)
Godwin C. Aduba and Tim Byrne
Clint Attebery
Ashley Banfield and Emily Drahzal
Erin Bates-McNamara
Patricia Baudoin and Madge Kaplan
Andrew E. Bishop
Mara Blesoff
Kyle D. Bowman and Patrick Dykes
Graham T. Brown
Richard B. Carey
Stewart and Patricia Chapin
Jacqueline Chu
Terry Clewley
Erina Colombo
Gillian Comito
Brianna Connolly
Richard T. Conway
Nicholas Dials and Dustin Henderson
Kace Dolan, PT, DPT
Alma-Lynn Dupont
Janet and Andrew Gainer-Dewar
Judy G. Gale
Isabella M. Gambill
David A. Georgantas
Phillip Giacomoni
Cynthia M. Goncalves
Megan Hall and Honor MacNaughton
Matthew Hamilton
Taylor S. Harris
Timothy B. Harwood
Andy Huang
Eric R. Jaukkuri
Lorraine Jones and Elizabeth Halstead
Emily Kang
Judy Kaplan
Kenneth W. Kendrick, Jr.
Mary Landrigan-Ossar, MD, PhD and Jacob Ossar
Susan LaRosa
Ted T. Lee
Nadya Lefaivre
Dana Lyford and Sarah Carroll
Maureen A. Maimone and Carmine Maimone
Mina S. Makarious
Robert McBride
Zachary D. McCabe
Matthew McGuirk
Malinda J. McPherson
Michael Meidinger
Paul O. Miller and Joseph Riddle
Renee L. Miltz
Alex Myers and Lisa Tipp
Patricia Noone
Michael Oliveri
Natercia Pereira
Corbin Petro and Jessica Gelman
Monika Pichler
David J. Poorvu and Nancy Poorvu
Adrianna Preston-Sicari and Amanda Preston-Sicari
Ernest J. Pusateri
Helen Raizen and Kathy MacDonald
Emmett Reuder
Lucille Rexroad
Donald J. Richgels and Mary Richgels
Alessandra R. Robinson
Daniel Rodas
Shawon Rodger
Amy Ross and Dana M. Ross
YK Lee Rubin
Jonathan M. Ruiz
Phil Saines
Vardit Samuels and Richard Samuels
Brian Sandstrom
Fillip Saraiva
Rachel Sebellshavit
Julian Serrao
Paul Sherman and Susan Gill
Daniel Solworth
Joseph Sullivan III and Jay Qu
Michael Sullivan
Matthew Tenore
Brianda Thompson
Dominick Tribone
Diane M. Tucker
Travis Waldrop and Shawn Goodwin
John F. Wardle
Brian C. Ware
John C. Welch, DNP
Lauren E. Wojtkun
George D. Wright IV
Brady Wyrtzen
John Yazbek
Carolyn R. Young
Anonymous (2)
Casey Accardi
Takako Aikawa
Pamela F. Aist
Matthew Alvarado and Anne Alvarado
Steven Auerbach and Mark Scofield
June A. Baboian
Kristin Baltrusaitis
Kenneth J. Barr and Michael Fenter
Matthew Bauer
Nancy F. Bauer and Mark Richard
Alyssa Beauchamp
Helene S. Bednarsh
Vivian Bennett
Karina Bercan
Allison J. Berger and Seth D. Berger
Jean B. Blakeman and Peter A. Mahieu
Lynn Bolo and Mark Michalski
Catherine Boothby
Roger Brace
Jill Brand and Thomas Nehrkorn
William B. Brockman and Lucy E. Hadden
Jack Bruno
Thomas E. Burdett and Kathleen Burdett
Dr. K. Mahala Burn
Carson Burrington and Andrew Marley
Kenneth J. Busch
Anne Calabresi and Bob Oldshue
Jessica T. Caponigro
Danielle M. Caputo
Clair A. Carlson and Pamela M. Carlson
Bruce E. Cawley and Christine L. Cawley
Mary P. Chatfield
Lauren Chow
Janice C. Chung and Wayne Wylupski
Alyssa J. Clark
Bruce Clark
Rebecca T. Clarke and Thomas R. Hostage
Jarrod Cohen
Martha Cohen
Ross Condit
Wendy Conroy and Charles Conroy
Brian P. Cooper, PhD and Margueritte S. Murphy, PhD
Allison J. Cyganowski and John H. Cyganowski
David J. Davis and Tracy Thompson
Nancy E. Davis
Carolyn DeMoranville
Mary K. DeNevi
Dragan Djukic
Lauren Doty and Casey Brown
John P. Driscoll and Mary K. Driscoll
Bridget Dunn
Daniel Edwards
Jennifer Elia
Kathleen S. Entler and Jane E. Caufield
Chris Erchull and Cade Jerome
John W. Erickson and Michael E. Field
Roberta K. Eriksen
Sheila M. Faherty
Dena B. Feldstein and Edward Brody
Pauline Fennessy
Theresa H. Ferran and Arianna Mitropoulos
Laurie P. Fischer
Julius C. Fister and Liliana Gheorghiu
Michael Fitzpatrick
John S. Flaherty
Miles A. Freedman and Anthony B. Abruzese
Shavon R. Fulcher and Samantha Chishlom
Kaitlin Gallagher
Virginia Giannelli and Frederick Giannelli
Michael F. Gill
Marcia Glassman-Jaffe and Mark Jaffe
Phillip Gonzalez and Carrie Gonzalez
Don and Mary Green
Deborah A. Hackett and Terence D. Hackett
Judith J. Hall and Arthur A. Hall
Cyrus Hamer
Harriet and Brian Hamilton
Jan Hanson
Katherine Heckman
Frederick J. Heinrichs and David Heckert
Clinton A. Heitman
Ruth A. Hendrickson and Robert A. Hendrickson
Alison Hickey
Matt Hipp
William D. Hollis
Jennifer Hopkins
David M. Hough
Mikhaela E. Houston
Angel L. Hueca, PhD
Anita L. Huggins and Norman W. Huggins
Charles W. Husbands and Nancy W. Husbands
Martha A. Jacobus and Michael Burke
Ryan C. Jarvis
Clarice Johnson
Fern L. Johnson and Marlene G. Fine
Stephen M. Kafka
Cynthia S. Kagno and David Wittenberg
Cornelia A. Kammerer and Richard Parmentier
Michael J. Kane
Kevin Kapila, MD
Ana Karchmer
Cherry C. Karlson and James A. Karlson
Anne Kelly and Adam Reeves
Rua Kelly
Richard Kovalcik
David A. Kronman
Mary Ann Ladd and Margaret M. Burns
Ellen LaPointe and Jen Cross
Richard Lerner
Jillian Levine and Sherry Cheuk
Anna Li
Gregory H. Lichniak
Stuart Licht
Shawna Liff
Derek R. Lisinski and Julie Lisinski
Casey A. Liston
Andrea H. Loew
Shelby Magliari
Will Martin
Lucy B. Masters and Jeffrey Masters
Christine Matsui and Jerold Matsui
Mona McGean
Mary Beth McInerney and Susan Barclay
Shaun P. McMahon
Susan W. McNeice and Thomas G. McNeice
Chad Michael and David Michael
Suzanne R. Michaud
Jaelyn Montes
Ann Moorehouse
MaryAnn Moskofides
George J. Mullen
Jess Muskin-Pierret
Lindsay Neagle
Craig A. Norberg-Bohm
Richard W. Olson
Dr. Jay D. Orlander and Dr. Jacqueline Mitus
Kenneth A. Osgood
Michael Parran
Joseph A. Pecora and Malik K. Lewis
Anne W. Perry and Ross B. Perry
Kevin Peterson
Jennifer and Catherine Petter
Michael Pickard
Barbara J. Popken
Brian Powrie and Adam Krueger
John Prince
Brian Quirk
Nancy Radner
Elisabeth A. Raleigh
Amy Rasimas and Lauren Eramo
Mary Reed and David Reed
Robert R. Reitano and Lisa V. Reitano
Angie Riccio
Fiona Roberts
Philip Robinson and Joseph E. Jackson
Christopher D. Robtoy
Cynthia G. Robtoy
Stephen T. Romano
William B. Rubenstein
Robert Ruggiero and Bruce Law
Tyler Sanslow, DMD
Gina Savageau and Jodi Meehan
Dorothy A. Savarese
William J. Sawyer and Pamela P. Sawyer
Mark Schatz
Ann E. Schlesinger
Sarah Schochet and Darrah March
George Scialabba
Edward Selgrade
Nuala A. Shields
Nancy Shrader and Linda Barba
Barbara Simon
Dawnmarie Simpson
Barbara E. Slack
Gary R. Sloper
David K. Snodgrass and Eleanor F. Snodgrass
Joshua D. Sparrow
Joyce K. Spencer
Mark A. Stevens
Peter Stokes
Spencer Stone
Claire Stout
Dan Sugalski
Mark E. Sullivan
Stephen Sullivan
Ryan Sweeney
Bridget Tannian
Joan P. Tanzer and Bruce R. Tanzer
Josephine Testa
Shaunya Thomas
Stephen Thrush
Sandra Tiah
Joseph Tierney and Cornelia C. Tierney
Maurice Tivey and Margaret Tivey
Jennifer Tran
Richard B. Trousdell
Michael E. Trykowski
Patrick Turner
Robert M. Turner and Leslie S. Turner
Donna J. Venegas
Christopher A. Viveiros
Donna L. Wade
Ying Wang, Esq.
Thomas P. Webber and Keith J. MacDonald
William M. Webster and Jeffrey P. Dugan
Becky Weidenbruch and John Weidenbruch
Sarah Wengert and Matthew Kelly
Debbie S. Wennett and Steven P. Levine
Amy Whitcomb Slemmer
Paige L. Williams
Brian H. Wilson and Annette M. Sassi
Keith R. Yamamoto
Esther Yanow
Eddie Zaidner, MD
The above lists reflect donations made to Fenway Health by our generous donors during fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
Fenway Health is grateful to the following individuals and companies who came forward with in-kind support, and in doing so have helped to advance Fenway’s mission.
#togronis
Bar Method
Big Sticks Golf
Boston Park Plaza
Boston Red Sox
Boston Urban Hospitality
Bronca
Bullfinchs Restaurant
Cape Air
Curio Spice
Dorchester Brewing Company
Dr. Green’s Golf & Entertainment
Eataly Boston
Eck MacNeely Architects
Flour Bakery
Formaggio Kitchen
Four Seasons One Dalton
Gay4Good
Hamilton Restaurant
Holly Ridge Golf Club
Island Creek Oysters
Deborah Kerr
Kimball Farm
Laugh Boston
Lisa’s Hands of Time
Living Proof
Mark Dodd Massage
Mei Mei Dumplings
Milk Street
Moonrise Cinemas
Myers + Chang
Nemo Equipment
Noor Oriental Rugs
Pammy’s Restaurant
Parachute Studios
Picco
Pine Ridge Country Club
Kathryn Price
Revolve Boutiques
Roche Bros. Supermarkets
Ally Schmaling
Siena Farms
Stella Yacht Charters
Sterling Golf Management, Inc.
Tatte
The Anchor
The Boston Public Library
The Coolidge Corner Theater
The Koji Club
The Verb Hotel
Tides Restaurant Nahant Beach
Total Wine & More
Zulu Nyala
The above lists reflect donations made to Fenway Health by our generous donors during fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
Gift planning is the marriage of philanthropy and sound financial planning. By making a bequest to Fenway Health through a will or trust, naming Fenway as a beneficiary of a life insurance policy or retirement plan, or creating a life income plan to support Fenway, these donors are forging a lasting legacy that benefits the people they most care for, and those who depend on Fenway.
Anonymous (10)
Robin A. Atlas, MD and Talia N. Herman, MD
Joan Ayers and Diane Patalano
Jeffrey C. Banks
Raymond L. Barnes
John H. Basile
Jeffrey Beale and Michael Stockbridge
Marcia Bernd
Sabrina Birner
Michael and Jennifer Borislow
Stephen Boswell and John Neale
Graham T. Brown
William Burton
Joseph R. Caputo
Michael A. Castellana and Robert Rothery
Stewart B. Clifford, Jr.
KC Cowan*
Ryan W. Cunningham, Esq.
John M. DeCiccio
Nannette L. Dumas
Stephen M. Earheart
John R. Ehrenfeld
Stephen J. Engler and John S. F. Lopes
Kyle Y. Faget, Esq.
Bruce W. Finch
Philip Finch
Steven F. Fossella
Brian K. Gerhardson
Adam Graves
Dean T. Hara
Timothy B. Harwood
Deborah Heller, PhD and Ann Sanders
Paul Hempel
Joanne Herman
Charlie R. Hindmarsh
Kenneth F. Hirschkind
Ralph Hodgdon and Paul McMahon
Howard Hoffman
Justin T. Isaac
Robb W. Johnson and Richard J. Gosselin
John D. Kane*
Terence M. Keane and Douglas H. Hughes
Keith D. Kohl
G.P. Paul Kowal
Michael A. Kramer, DDS, DMSc
David Lampariello, OD
Ken A. Levine
Rhonda Linde, PhD
Edmond R. Macri
Theodore V. Marsters
Patrick J. McNamara
Thomas J. McNichol
Louis M. Meucci
Paul O. Miller and Joseph Riddle
Kendra E. Moore, PhD
Jeffrey H. Munger and Robert T. Whitman
Joseph J. Nicholson
Matthew B. O’Brien
Rev. Fr. Alex Oneto
Dale Orlando
Liz Page
Lisa Paine, CNM, DrPH and Linda Daniels, PsyD
Stephen P. Pentek
James P. Phillips
Michael E. Profenno
Brian Ramos
Rick Redmond
Ruth and Robert* Remis
Louise Rice
Glenn Rigoff
Louis F. Risoli and Charles B. Fisk
Carol A. Roby and Michele Rubin
Jose L. Romero, Jr. and William I. Allison
Ronald Jack Brunner Estate
Carol Tye Rose
Allison Salke
Arnold E. Sapenter and Dr. Joseph C. Reed PhD
Sarah Schochet and Darrah March
James R. Seligman, DMD
Douglas Spencer
Scott E. Squillace, Esq.
Charles E. Steinman and John C. Marksbury
Caleb Paul Stewart
Philip Tackel
David Todisco, MSW, LICSW
Diane Tucker
Bradford W. Voigt
Scott Walker
Liz Whittemore
Edward L. Wierman
David R. Yalen
Joblin C. Younger, Esq.
*Deceased
The above lists reflect donations made to Fenway Health by our generous donors during fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
Tribute and memorial gifts provide a unique way for people to acknowledge loved ones and others who have had an impact on their lives. Whether honoring individuals who believe strongly in our mission, or memorializing those who have passed away, these gifts help Fenway provide access to quality care for all those who need it. Celebrated through gifts in their honor or memory, the exceptional people listed here have made a lasting impact on the lives they have touched.
AI Team
Alana Brennan
Amika Brewster
Max Brodsky
Thomas M. Carco
Eric Castro
Zaria Christopher and Taylor Marsyla
Stephanie Cook
Coralie and Alicia
Roland C. Crocker Jr.
David’s FAITH Team
Sara and Amanda DeBrule
Caitlin Duane
Rachel Erdil and Mayur Contractor
Tom Evans
Lauren Gabovitch
Br. Sean Glenn’s birthday
Lillian Gonzalez
Laura Gustafson and Kirby
James W. Hanosh
John Harper
Charlie Hindmarsh
Gabe Keller
Michael McDermott
Mary Beth McInerney & Susan Barclay
Lauren Nocera
Alex Oneto
Dr Ken Orth and George Paolucci
John O’Toole and Brian Horn
Joel and Martha Pierce Family
Cal Pierog and Katy Perdue
Brian Quinn and Craig Gimbrone
Carrie Richgels
Michael Roffi
Ruby K.
Kelly Rush
Winter and Fay Russell
Frederique Schutzberg
Raymond Sheelan
Paul Silva
David Sizemore
Darlene Stromstad
Ryan Sullivan and Mariah Freark
Lisa Wu
Anthony Almazan
Peter Ansin
Eleanor Berkovitz
Jeffrey Blau
Jason Bortle
Judy Bradford
Donnie Bresnahan
Col. Lawrence Campion
Pat Carbone and Sharron Fox
Peter Carley
Peg Christiansen
Eliot Cohen
Laurie Hope Cohen
Timothy Coleman
Benjamin Conti-Hilly
Merrit Crawford
P. Richard DiNardi
Greg Dorian
Ron Duby
Justin Duval
Lawrence Khari Farrell
Bob Foster
Chef Sam Goldman
Samuel Torres Gonzalez
Jim Goshen
John Phillip Hang
Gail Herron
L. Gail Herron
Joe and Gary
John J. Keane 3rd
Rudy Kikel
Jonathan Klein
Erin Lavalla
Dr. Mark Lerner
Lillian
Eugene Lipsky
Danny Lydon
Jason Maimone
Michelle Majuru
Christopher Marrion
Ed Martin
Kevin Michael Martin
Thomas Martin
Richard McNabb
Kathleen Moriarty
Noel
Frank Primavera
Gary Rocco
Adam Rosenthal
Andre Rossi
David Russell
Michael Smith
Michael J. Thivierge
Kate Thomas
Toby
James Michael Tries
Billy Warner
Mario Wear
Charlie Whiteside
The above lists reflect donations made to Fenway Health by our generous donors during fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
The Young Leaders Council is an initiative of Fenway Health that aims to empower emerging LGBTQIA+ leaders and allies to shape their community’s future. Paving the way for generations to come, YLC members exhibit the best of the young LGBT community. Members are individuals in their 20s and 30s who’ve made an annual gift of $300 or more between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022.
Casey Accardi
Ceceilia Allwein
Justin Alves
Clint Attebery
Ashley Banfield and Emily Drahzal
Alyssa Beauchamp
Emily Beinecke
Marcus Belger
Samantha Bellissimo
Mitchell Bilczewski
Andrew E. Bishop
Mara Blesoff
Kyle D. Bowman and Patrick Dykes
Jack Bruno
Timothy Burdsall*
Dr. K. Mahala Burn
Sharon E. Caplan
Dan Chadwick*
Russell Cloon* III
Bren M. Cole
Gillian Comito*
Brianna Connolly
Jenna Damon
Kat Delos Reyes*
Kace Dolan*, PT, DPT
Lauren Doty and Casey Brown
Rosemary Dowling*
Alma-Lynn Dupont
Steven P. Dyer
Kimberly T. Erwin
Theresa H. Ferran and Arianna Mitropoulos
Paul Flagg*
Isabella M. Gambill
David A. Georgantas
Charlotte Glasser and Genie Gore
Carolyn Grillo and Erin Deadmon
Sara A. Hamel
Cyrus Hamer*
Adam C. Harrington
Taylor S. Harris
Katherine Heckman
Mark D. Hochberg
Andy Huang
Jillian M. Jennett*
Clarice Johnson
Ian W. Johnson
Collin Kelly
Tyler D. Kinney
Jamie Kmak*
Cei Lambert
Daniel Lander
Austin Lessin*
Jillian Levine and Sherry Cheuk
Casey A. Liston*
Dana Lyford and Sarah Carroll
Kaitlyn McCarron
Malinda J. McPherson
Paul O. Miller and Joseph Riddle
Jessica Minahan
*SteerCo Members
Arianna Mitropoulos
Jaelyn Montes
Michael Mosey
Margaret Mullard
Kevin Peterson
Tina M. Pittore
Amanda and Adrianna Preston-Sicari
Robert Protulis
Rick Redmond
Leah Reis-Dennis and Maria O’Byrne
Emmett Reuder
Gena and Bailey Ricciardi
Alessandra R. Robinson*
Shawon Rodger
Tyler Sanslow, DMD
Kevin Schindelwig-Franca
Julian Serrao*
Claire E. Smith
Naomi Sobel and Becky Silverstein
Erina and Julia Spiegelman
Charlie Steinberg
Daniel Tawil
R. Mitchell Thomas
Dominick Tribone
Ying Wang*, Esq.
Scott R. Wilson
George D. Wright IV
Brady Wyrtzen*
John Yazbek
The above lists reflect donations made to Fenway Health by our generous donors during fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
Richard Boyd
Paul Buzzell
Anthony Carpinelli
John Donnelly
Douglas Evans
Campbell Glenn
Timothy Jordan
Bruce Reisman
Max Sigal
Nathaniel Alemayehu
Coco Alinsug
Reese Caldwell
Khaoula Ben Haj Frej
Jay Bourgeois
Lucas Carstensen
Gary Daffin
Quinn Fitzpatrick
Kirsten Freni
James Grant
Sunil Gulab
Shane Hebel
John Isaac
Harrison Knowlton
Rick Li
Fred Mazyck
Elizabeth Quinn
Jimit Raghav
Zach Schwartz
Kim Wilson
Antonio Xu Liu
Joelle Zaslow
Ben Zola
Nathaniel Alemayehu
Nar Gulvartian
Bobby Haskell
Meghna Iyer
Jennifer Judge
Josh Kalfus
Daniel Kwon
Kyle Ockerman
Alex Pan
Aanika Parikh
Anisha Patel
Elizabeth Quinn
Maddie Scavotto
Ben Zola
Alicia Anderson, MBA, FACHE, BB
Jeffrey Bonnaud, MHS, PA-C
Jennifer Campbell, PhD, Chair
Mark Cayabyab, PhD
Gerry Colvin, D.O.
Bruce J. Dezube, MD
Abby Hornstein, MD
Chee-Seng Lee, PhD
Jennifer Mitty, MD – Co-Chair
Carl Streed, Jr, MD – Co-Chair
Amy Ben-Arieh, JD, MPH (Staff)
Elizabeth Boskey, PhD, MPH, LICSW, MSW
Sarabeth Broder-Fingert, MD, MPH
Kristen Connal
Bryan Cook, PharmD
Mark Dávila-Witkowski, LICSW
Sandy Falk, MD
R Feynman
Jamie Flaherty, JD
Eli Godwin, EdM, MPH
Blake Hereth, PhD
Dana Longobardi
Megan Kwock
Yvette Marts, MSc, CIP
Will McIntire, JD
Majagamy Ramos
Reiner See, MD
Aditya Shekhar
The above lists reflect Fenway Health volunteers during fiscal year 2022, July 1, 2021 through June 30, 2022.
Boomerangs was started as part of a long-term strategy to diversify revenue streams in the face of declining state and federal funding. As public funding for HIV support, prevention and education programs continues to dwindle, this entrepreneurial approach allows Fenway Health and AIDS Action to continue providing services—the need for which increases each year.
During fiscal year 2021, Boomerangs faced serious challenges due to COVID-19. Along with many other retailers, we were forced to operate at reduced capacity for several months following our temporary closure earlier in 2020. We reconfigured our stores and donation system to help keep our staff and shoppers safe and healthy and expanded our online shopping options.
Despite those challenges, Boomerangs continued in our mission to raise funds and awareness for HIV services and programs. Thank you to everyone who stood by us and who continues to shop at our three brick and mortar stores and online. Your support means the world to us.
Our Special Edition store in the South End is highly curated to realize the full potential of high-end donations.
In addition to our brick and mortar stores, Boomerangs has a variety of online storefronts, including Amazon, Etsy, Ebay, and Poshmark. Learn more and check out our online sales here.
Synthetic clothing may take hundreds of years to decompose in a landfill. If the average life of clothing was extended by just three months, it would reduce by five to ten percent their carbon and water footprints, as well as waste generation. The recycling of two million tons of clothing per year equates to taking one million cars from U.S. streets. Read more about the benefits of textile thrifting and recycling here.
716 Centre Street
Jamaica Plain, MA 02130
563 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139
1407 Washington Street
Boston, MA 02118
Our financial future is strong. We continue to operate responsibly and efficiently as is demonstrated in this report. This strength will enable us to build on our successes, anticipate the needs of our community, and better reach underserved groups, no matter how great the obstacles, nor how significant the challenges.
Click below to download the combining statements of financial position for FY22 and FY21.
Fenway Social