$10M Charles Stewart Mott Foundation grant will help expand complex care spaces at C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital

Author | Mike Wilk

A nurse reads The Going to Bed Book by Sandra Boynton to a baby who is in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. The baby is in a hospital crib and hooked up to several machines. The nurse is wearing blue-gray scrubs.

University of Michigan Health C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital is once again taking steps to advance pediatric medicine and improve the lives of children with the most complex medical needs.

A $10 million grant from the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation to U-M will enable C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital to renovate space within the Brandon Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) and Reese Partlow Pediatric Cardiothoracic Intensive Care Unit (PCTU), which admits patients in need of critical cardiac care and complex heart procedures. This renovation project will add much-needed beds to the PCTU.

“For decades, people all over the world have looked to the University of Michigan and C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital as leaders in health care,” says Santa J. Ono, Ph.D., president of U-M. “The steadfast support of the Mott Foundation over the years has empowered us to continue innovating, advancing, and making progress in pediatric medicine.

“This project is an inspiring example of how support from our community can make a transformative and life-changing difference for families who come to our hospital from across the state, throughout the nation, and around the world to receive the highest quality care for their child.”

Over the past few years, the hospital has seen a steady increase in high-risk births, requiring a greater number of NICU beds to care for a growing number of infants. To accommodate this increase in volume, PCTU beds have been converted to care for NICU babies, including the renovation of multiple rooms to support twins.

With the U-M Congenital Heart Center at C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital serving as a national and international referral center for patients with congenital heart defects, pediatric heart surgery cases have also been on the rise. This has left the Brandon NICU and Reese Partlow PCTU with a need to update the spaces they use to care for their expanding patient populations.

The Mott Foundation grant will support a plan to renovate areas across the 8th-floor NICU and 10th-floor PCTU at C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital. The new NICU will be able to accommodate the 13 NICU beds currently occupying the converted PCTU spaces on the 10th floor. The PCTU will return to its original 30-bed capacity.

Once these new spaces are completed, teams at C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital will be able to accept more outside transfers and elevate leading-edge treatments and therapies that can enable children with the most complex conditions to survive and thrive.

“The Mott Foundation’s vision and support over the years have helped our hospital to not only provide world-class care for the most complex patients but also adapt to the changing needs of our communities,” says Luanne Thomas Ewald, M.H.A., chief operating officer of C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital and Von Voigtlander Women’s Hospital.

“Whenever our Little Victors and their families needed a place to look to for greater hope and options for care, the Mott Foundation has stepped up. Their grant to expand our pediatric intensive care spaces will increase our ability to provide beds, monitoring, and world-class care to medically complex children from across the state of Michigan and beyond.”

The NICU and PCTU renovations are planned to start in the first half of 2025, with completion targeted for the end of 2026. Care will not be interrupted on either unit during the renovation process. The NICU and PCTU will continue to operate at full capacity, ensuring that children and families will not lose any access to the care they need.

“Since it opened, C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital has been at the forefront of pediatric medicine, with leading-edge technology and treatments, expert teams of care providers and researchers, and extraordinary facilities,” says David Miller, M.D., president of U-M Health, executive vice dean of clinical affairs at the Medical School, and professor of urology.

“This generous grant reinforces a commitment we share with the Mott Foundation to ensure that our children and families are able to find the best possible outcomes and a greater chance to live happy, healthy lives.”

The Mott Foundation has been a steadfast supporter of children’s health at U-M for six decades. In 1969, C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital first opened with $6.5 million in grant support from the foundation.

In the time since, the Mott Foundation has continued to support the children and families who seek care at U-M. The foundation provided a $2 million grant for a major hospital renovation in 1984 and another generous $25 million grant to help build the current C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital that opened in 2011.

“The Mott Foundation has always been com­mitted to improving the well-being of residents in our community and beyond,” says Ridgway White, president and CEO of the Mott Foundation. “We are proud to build on our long-standing relationship with C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital and look forward to seeing the committed staff at the hospital continue to make a difference for children and families across Michigan and around the world.”

Featured News & Stories

Well-Being at Michigan Medicine with Dr. Elizabeth Harry
Well-Being at Michigan Medicine

The Power of Mattering

What does it take to create a culture where people can truly thrive? In this episode, Dr. Elizabeth Harry welcomes Dr. Robert Ernst, Chief Health Officer and Associate Vice President for Health and Wellness at the University of Michigan, about building well-being into systems, policies and everyday experiences. They explore purpose-driven leadership, belonging, mental health and why helping people feel they matter can strengthen entire communities.
On left side, a ReacStick is being dropped. A hand is reaching out to grab the stick with green lights illuminated. On the right side, the ReacStick is being dropped with no lights illuminated. The hand is letting the stick fall.
Health Lab

A method to prevent falls before they happen

To prevent falls, the JEDII Fall Clinic at University of Michigan Health has specialized tests they use to measure whether you could be at a fall risk before it happens
person close up nails and shots going into face on comptuer screen gif moving
Health Lab

What is looksmaxxing?

A Q&A with Dr. Bravender discussing what looksmaxxing is. Along with the true dangers of it, what parents should know, and when to intervene.
eyes looking pink background looking at cell tracker
Health Lab

When should parents stop tracking their kids' location?

Some parents may be crossing a line with tracking their young adult kids’ locations, according to a new national poll.
darker pink brain with electrodes from white device
Health Lab

Emergency EEG study suggests need for faster seizure diagnosis and care options

Study finds emergency EEG study suggests need for faster seizure diagnosis and care options for patients.
Health Lab Podcast in brackets with a background with a dark blue translucent layers over cells
Health Lab Podcast

New Findings on a Decade of Medicaid Expansion in Michigan

A new U-M report shows that individuals, hospitals and primary care clinics all experienced positive impacts in the first decade of Michigan's Medicaid expansion, but the report also raises concerns about the cost-sharing provisions that all states must soon enact.