It was literally a âcauseâ for celebration this past June at the second annual Sandra Schmirler Foundation Golf Tournament.
Not only was a staggering $47,000 raised to support the acute care of premature infants at Âé¶čAV General Hospital, it was also Sandraâs birthday.
The atmosphere was festive as Schmirlerâs former curling teammates took to the links with 150 friends and supporters to raise money for a very important cause.
The goal was to raise enough to purchase seven new cribs for the neonatal intensive care (NICU) unit at KGH.
âAll of our NICU cribs are nearing the end of their service life and need to be replaced,â noted Bobbi McGrath, manager of womenâs and childrenâs health services at KGH.
âThis is an incredible gift. The new state-of-the-art cribs will allow us to assure the highest quality of care for our very vulnerable little newborns.â
âWe are thrilled!â said event chair Sasha Carter about achieving their goal.
âWe are so grateful to have had Sandraâs Olympic Gold Medallist teammates â Jan Betker, Joan McCusker, Marcia Gudereit and Lindsay Sparkes â join us all the way from Saskatchewan.
âIt was such a great day, and a wonderful way to honour an amazing lady.â
Schmirler rose to international fame as the charismatic skip of the Canadian Olympic team that won the gold medal at the 1998 Winter Olympics, the first year womenâs curling was a medal sport.
Schmirler passed away in 2000 at age 36, but her legacy for leadership and compassion live on through the foundation that bears her name.
Funds, donated to the KGH Foundation, will go directly towards the purchase of the NICU cribs.
The upgraded NICU is part of the overall expansion of the perinatal unit at KGH, which opened last March and now occupies the 4th floor of the new Interior Heart and Surgical Centre.
âThis group is just so much fun,â said Doug Rankmore, CEO of the KGH Foundation, who also golfed in the tournament.
âWe are incredibly grateful to be the beneficiary of their generosity for the second year in a row.â
Through the Giving Giggles campaign, the KGH Foundation continues its commitment to raising $3 million to support the purchase of advanced medical equipment and patient care items for the newly expanded perinatal unit at KGH.