Cofounded by Drs. Stephen Archer and Stephen Vanner of the Department of Medicine, the space was always intended to foster a culture of interdisciplinary and collaborative translational medicine research. The aim was to accelerate the discovery of clinical therapies and their integration into clinical practice to improve overall patient care.
Dr. Archer expressed gratitude for the foundation’s investment, offering special thanks to director David Pattenden, Arts’67, MA’69, Law’71, MEd'74, LLD’03, and foundation trustee Michael Hickey, Artsci’82.
“I am so grateful to the W.J. Henderson Foundation for their financial support of TIME and their investment in our new Collaboratory,” said Dr. Archer. “As important as their financial support, is their personal encouragement of me and their independent validation of TIME’s impact. Their investments from our earliest days have been instrumental to our genesis and ongoing success. To David Pattenden and Michael Hickey, I offer a heartfelt thank you.”
Pattenden said the foundation focuses on funding research that can have a practical and immediate impact on clinical care.
“We are proud to once again partner with Queen’s Health Sciences, a partnership that has been strengthened over four decades,” said Pattenden. “Together, we share a vision to bring the inspirational research conducted here at Queen’s to the front lines of health care, where lives can not only be improved, but also saved. By advancing health education, we don’t have to wait for tomorrow. This groundbreaking Collaboratory will make earlier detection of disease, more personalized and compassionate treatments, and new therapies a reality today.”
Dr. Lisa Tannock, Dean of Queen’s Health Sciences and Director of the School of Medicine, also expressed gratitude to the foundation.
“As a clinician-scientist, I know first-hand how this gift will help us turn scientific discovery into human impact. In bringing the best minds together, the W.J. Henderson TIME Collaboratory will allow researchers on campus and even internationally to learn from each other, and it will ensure that their breakthroughs become real tools to improve the health of Canadians.”
The William J. Henderson Foundation has a long history of supporting Queen’s, with total giving now exceeding $5.5 million to Queen’s health education and research.
The foundation was set up by Judge William Henderson, a 1938 Queen’s Arts alumnus who passed away in 2006. Judge Henderson was grateful to Queen’s and local hospitals for the high quality of medical care he received later in life when he encountered health problems.