Skip to content

Hayhow elected chair of KU Academic Medical Center advisory board

April 27, 2016

Joyce Hayhow of Leawood, Kansas, is the new chair of the Advancement Board, an 85-member advisory group of business and community leaders that represents the objectives of the University of Kansas Medical Center, The University of Kansas Hospital and the University of Kansas Physicians.

Joyce Hayhow

The board, which was formed in 2005, works to develop community support for the academic medical center and to bolster philanthropy efforts for education, research and patient care.

Hayhow follows Mary Birch, who completed a two-year term as chair.

Hayhow retired in 2015 after 27 years with the Kansas City Business Journal, serving as publisher the last 23 years. She continues to work with the Business Journal’s parent company, American City Business Journals, on special projects.

“The Advancement Board continues to enthusiastically promote its strategic mission: developing support for the KU Academic Medical Center and improving health and well being through education, research and healthcare delivery,” Hayhow said. “The opportunity to be advocates for our health care professionals and researchers is a honor. The KU Academic Medical Center not only provides outstanding patient care but is an economic force in our community.”

Other Advancement Board officers elected at the meeting are:

  • Secretary: Steve Roling, former president and CEO of the Health Care Foundation of Greater Kansas City
  • Board Development Committee chair: Steve Sestak, CEO, MarketSphere Consulting
  • Community Affairs Committee chair: Betty Crooker, community volunteer
  • Government Affairs Committee chair: Jermee Jones, commercial relationship manager, INTRUST Bank
  • Marketing Committee chair: Janie Gaunce, president and CEO, Grapevine Designs

The Advancement Board embraces the academic medical center’s quest to become a nationally recognized leader in neuroscience discovery, education and care, along with continued support for The University of Kansas Cancer Center’s mission to become a National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center.

The Advancement Board is also supporting two construction projects: The University of Kansas Hospital’s construction of the Cambridge North Tower and the Health Education Building at the University of Kansas Medical Center.

Cambridge North will add 92 patient-care beds at the hospital in 2017 and at least another 32 by 2018. Fundraising for the expansion is ongoing, with a matching challenge in place for all gifts through June. The Health Education Building will serve as the primary teaching facility for the KU Schools of Medicine, Nursing and Health Professions and will include a simulation center and state-of-the-art learning space to support new models of teaching. Construction is expected to last through June 2017, and fundraising is ongoing.

The board also supports all the research and clinical initiatives of the area’s premier academic medical center. It serves to organize the advocacy for the benefits of academic medicine among many fronts.

KU Endowment is the independent, nonprofit organization serving as the official fundraising and fund-management organization for KU. Founded in 1891, KU Endowment was the first foundation of its kind at a U.S. public university.

Posted on
April 27, 2016
Share this article
Connect with Us
Keller_Michelle_2020new
Michelle Keller
Assistant Vice President, Communications & Donor Relations
785-832-7336
Latest News
KUEbuilding-tree-blossoms-hmpg-slider-1920x1278
A message from President Dan Martin
ODOKU_Email_Banner (1)
Donors give more than $2.6 million on One Day. One KU. to fuel the next big idea
wonderful company
University of Kansas renames Institute for Sustainable Engineering after The Wonderful Company

You’re invited to help us create a future where students have uncommon educational experiences, researchers make life-affirming discoveries, and together, we change the world for the better. Ever Onward we go into a future of infinite possibilities.