Giving to Emergency Medicine
Two emergency medical professionals moving a patient out of a helecopter.

Shaping the Future of Emergency Medicine

Your gift can help our physicians provide the highest-quality care while contributing to major advances in patient care, research, and education.

Gifts are propelling our work forward across a wide spectrum of medical issues, including:

  • Emergency critical care
  • Severe traumatic brain injury
  • Global health care delivery

The Department of Emergency Medicine is creating the future of emergency care. Our physicians and scientists are at the forefront of critical care treatment and research, bursting with scientific discovery and advancing new therapies. And, with our commitment to medical education that will bring forth generations of experts in the field, your gift will impact patients’ lives.

Giving Opportunities
Emergency Medicine Critical Care Division
The 14-bed EC3 unit is the first and largest Emergency Department ICU in the country. This unit provides concentrated critical care and supports the infrastructure to test new diagnostic tools, monitoring techniques, and therapeutic treatments.
Improve critical care medicine
Survival Flight
Survival Flight, the critical care transport program of the University of Michigan Health System, provides rapid and safe transport of critically ill and injured patients. This fund supports staff education and the Mobile Training Unit.
Help expedite patient care
Emergency Medicine Annual Fund
Gifts to this fund support research and education in emergency medicine.
Support emergency medicine
Emergency Medicine Residency Gifts
Emergency medicine is creating the future of emergency care. Your support ensures that our residency program can train over a dozen new physicians a year to deliver emergency medical care when the patient needs it most.
Bolster resident training
Pediatric Emergency Medicine Division Gift Fund
Gifts to this fund support research and education in pediatric emergency medicine.
Support research and education
Philanthropy News Smiling photo of eight people standing in front of a backdrop that says, "Use Your Voice".
Philanthropy News
Teen's near fatal illness inspires story, advances research at Michigan Medicine
Alice Tapper, daughter of CNN anchor Jake Tapper, has released a children’s book, “Use Your Voice”, with proceeds benefiting Michigan Medicine.
Partner With Us

We would be pleased to discuss your interests and goals — and the impact your gift can have. We can connect you with faculty and staff, identify where your help is most needed, and share how giving can provide personal satisfaction as well as financial and tax benefits.

Mark Clark Mark Clark
Assistant Director of Development
Chris Shoemaker Christopher J. Shoemaker, MEd, MBA, CFRE
Senior Director of Development