Katie Couric Helps with Dedication of Emily Couric Clinical Cancer Center
Katie Couric Helps Dedicate Emily Couric Clinical Cancer Center, a Patient-Friendly Facility Opens to Patients April 4
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Feb. 26, 2011 – Katie Couric and University of
Virginia leaders joined hundreds of guests Saturday to dedicate the new
Emily Couric Clinical Cancer Center, which brings together UVA’s
cancer experts in a patient-friendly facility with the most advanced
treatment options.
The approximately 150,000-square-foot building for outpatient cancer
care is named for the late Virginia State Senator Emily Couric, who
died from pancreatic cancer in 2001. Patients will begin receiving care
in the $74 million facility April 4.
![]() |
|
Emily Couric's sons, Jeff and Ray Wadlow, unveil the portrait of their mother that will hang in the Emily Couric Clinical Cancer Center. For more photos from the dedication, visit UVA Health's Flickr page. |
Katie Couric, Emily Couric’s sister and anchor of the “CBS Evening
News,” said the center will offer patients “comprehensive,
compassionate, seamless care.”
“I am so thrilled this facility exists,” Couric said. “I think it’s
such a beautiful reflection of my sister’s spirit, and I think she
would be so pleased to know how many people she continues to help.”
Designed to create a warm, welcoming environment, the building
employs more than 21,000 square feet of glass to bring in lots of
natural light and uses natural materials and colors.
The facility also has a host of features – based on conversations with
patients – designed to make treatment more convenient and comfortable.
For instance, dedicated clinic space is set aside for nurses
coordinating clinical trials to provide patients with easier access to
investigational treatments. Designated exam rooms in the women’s
oncology clinic have private dressing areas and bathrooms to provide
additional privacy.
“The UVA Cancer Center is 100 percent about patients,” said Michael
Weber, PhD, Director of the UVA Cancer Center. “We take care of the
patients who are here today with skilled care, technology, and
compassion, and we also take care of the patients who are going to be
here in the future with groundbreaking research.”
UVA’s team of specialized cancer experts is supported by
state-of-the-art treatment technology only available in a few U.S.
cancer centers. UVA is the first cancer center in the U.S. to provide
radiation oncology treatment with the TomoHD, which delivers more
precisely targeted radiation treatments to patients and preserves more
healthy tissue.
“It’s a remarkable facility,” said R. Edward Howell, Vice President
and CEO of the UVA Medical Center. “It provides an opportunity to
provide the most advanced treatments available for the citizens of the
Commonwealth of Virginia.”
By designing every detail of the facility with the patient in mind,
UVA has created an ideal place for providing care, said Steven T.
DeKosky, MD, FACP, Dean of the UVA School of Medicine. The facility, he
said, is “infusing a tremendous sense of pride in our faculty, staff,
and students, that we have such a terrific place to take care of
people.”
UVA President Teresa A. Sullivan said the facility will set new
standards for patient care.
”This building to me represents hope. I think all of us have known a
loved one who has been touched by cancer. In fact, today in Washington,
D.C., there is a memorial service for one of my college classmates who
succumbed to cancer,” she said. “For all of us who have that disease
touch us, knowing that there’s a place like this for really
compassionate care that was built with the patient in mind and has some
of the world’s best scientists working on cures for cancer, it’s a
great day of hope.”
Contact:
Eric Swensen
(434) 465-3526
ews3j@virginia.edu


