Giving to Hematology/Oncology
A health professional in PPE standing in front of a globe.

Changing and Saving Lives

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 ground-breaking work forward across a wide spectrum of disease areas that impact families, including:

  • Identifying tumor cells
  • Targeted leukemia treatment
  • Bone marrow transplant

The Division of Hematology-Oncology is working to prevent disease and protect those who seek our care. Our faculty are at the forefront of science and medicine, bursting with innovative 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
Adult Blood & Marrow Transplantation Gift Fund
Gifts to this fund support research and other activities related to the Adult Blood and Marrow Transplantation Program.
Advance life-saving research
Hematology/Oncology Clinical Research
Gifts to this fund will advance clinical research in blood cancers with the goal of providing better treatment options for patients with cancer and hematologic disorders.
Advance life-saving research
Hematology/Oncology Division Patient Care Gift Fd
Gifts to this fund support otherwise unfunded activities related to patient care in the Division of Hematology and Oncology.
Support leading-edge care
Melanoma Research
Money received will support melanoma research at Michigan Medicine.
Advance life-saving research

Because of funding from donors like you, members of my research laboratory have been able to perform experiments that have directly led to a clinical trial for patients with aggressive brain cancers. This means now, when I sit down with a patient in my clinic, I'm able to offer them a new and experimental treatment that maybe, just maybe, could help move the needle for these types of cancers. And so from me, and more importantly from my patients, thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

Associate professor of radiation oncology and associate professor of neurosurgery, University of Michigan Medical School
Smiling portrait of Dan Wahl, M.D., Ph.D., seated in his laboratory/
Philanthropy News Smiling portrait of Jack Fineske. He has short brown hair and is wearing a red sweater.
Philanthropy News
Catching Up With Jack
Nonprofit organization Catching Up With Jack fuels leading-edge pediatric brain cancer research while honoring a journey of courage and faith.
Smiling group shot of eight Bright Pink board members standing in a row together. They are wearing business casual and appear to be in the lobby of a restaurant.
Philanthropy News
Bright Pink invests in cancer prevention innovation 
Bright Pink funds PROACT, a partnership between University of Michigan and Stanford to empower families with inherited cancer risk to access genetic testing and lifesaving resources.
Danielle and David Risk seated comfortably together on a couch with an artistically decorated living space behind them.
Philanthropy News
Gift expands lifeline of support for Rogel Cancer Center patients and families
With support from David and Danielle Risk, the U-M Health Patient and Family Support Services Program can provide even more hours of specialized care to people who are living with cancer.
A young girl in a yellow T-shirt with a yellow pompon. She’s outdoors and smiling at the camera.
Philanthropy News
Block Out Cancer: Stand With Us to Make a Difference for Children
National Childhood Cancer Awareness Month in September spotlights the impact of pediatric cancer and emphasizes the vital roles of research and patient support programs.
Group photo of roughly 100 people holding up letters that spell "Stomp Out Sarcoma" in a grassy, wooded area.
Philanthropy News
Annual 5K event builds awareness and support for rare cancer research
The Stomp Out Sarcoma 5K joins patients, survivors, care providers, and loved ones to raise funds and awareness for sarcoma research at the U-M Rogel Cancer Center.
Kenneth Eisenberg and the late Frances Eisenberg
News Release
$40 million gift supports Michigan Medicine’s new specialty care facility in Troy and mental health research
A $40 million gift to Michigan Medicine from the Eisenberg Foundation will be honored with the naming of a center for specialty care that will be built in Troy, and will support depression prevention research.
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.

Lori Hirshman Lori Hirshman
Director of Development