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= The Blair E. Batson Hospital for Children =

We're home to the state's only dedicated children's hospital.
Children’s of Mississippi Hospital began in 1996 as Batson Children’s Hospital.

We now include two patient care towers and the state’s only pediatric ER.

Clinical Research Studies offered at Children’s of Mississippi Hospital - Blair E. Batson Tower

Researchers at UMMC are committed to discovering innovative ways to prevent and treat the diseases that affect our daily lives. Clinical research studies play a vital role in the advancement of medicine and can improve the well-being of our families, friends, communities, and future generations. In this way, participation in clinical research studies furthers our vision to create "a healthier Mississippi."

Dr. Blair E. Batson, the first chair of pediatrics at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, died Nov. 26, 2018. He was 98.

Dr. Lou Ann Woodward, UMMC vice chancellor for health affairs and dean of the School of Medicine, said Batson’s importance to the health of children in the state “cannot be overestimated. He truly is the father of organized pediatrics in Mississippi,” she said, “and the lives of countless children in our state have been touched through his work.”

Batson’s successor as chair, Dr. Owen B. Evans, called him “a living archive of pediatric diseases and experiences. And he was a role model for me in how to be a gentleman,” Evans said.

Batson earned his B.A. and M.D. at Vanderbilt, where he completed a residency in pediatrics. While an undergraduate, he was president of the student council and of his fraternity, Sigma Chi.

He served in the U.S. Army during World War II and in the U.S. Army Medical Corps from 1946 to 1948 in Giessen, Germany, as ward officer for contagious diseases and pediatrics for the 388th Station Hospital.

From 1949 to 1950 he was chief resident at Vanderbilt and held a faculty appointment from 1949 to 1952.

Batson completed a one-year residency at the Johns Hopkins Hospital and was on the faculty of the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine from 1952 to 1955. He also received a master of public health degree from Johns Hopkins University.

At 34, Batson was named chair of the Department of Pediatrics at UMMC just two months after the medical center opened its doors to patients in 1955. He officially retired in 1989, although he still taught for years afterward. During his long career, Batson taught more than 3,500 medical students and 240 pediatric residents. He was inducted into the University of Mississippi Alumni Hall of Fame in 1995. In 1996 he was selected as Vanderbilt School of Medicine Distinguished Alumnus of the Year. He received the Humanitarian of the Year tribute from the Epilepsy Foundation of Mississippi in 2000. Batson also received awards for outstanding service from the March of Dimes, the National Easter Seal Society, and the American Academy of Pediatrics District VII. He received an award for leadership and devotion to child health care from the Mississippi Academy of Pediatrics.

In 1997, the new children’s hospital was named the Blair E. Batson Hospital for Children in recognition of his lifetime contributions to the health of children in Mississippi. A new addition to the hospital is currently under construction.

Survivors include Batson’s only brother, John O. Batson II, BA’48; six nieces and nephews; and four great-nieces and great-nephews.

CHILDREN’S OF MISSISSIPPI NAMES NEW CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL EXPANSION AFTER SANDERSON FAMILY Since 2015, Children’s of Mississippi has been in a state of growth so that Mississippi’s children can continue to grow and thrive. While this $180 million expansion was certainly no easy feat, hospital leaders did not have to face the challenge alone as two passionate benefactors stepped up to lead the fundraising efforts necessary to sponsor the expansion. Those two kind souls were none other than our own chairman of the board and chief executive officer, Joe F. Sanderson Jr., and his wife, Kathy.

Co-chairs of the Campaign for Children’s of Mississippi, Joe and Kathy have worked tirelessly for the cause for the past five years because of the significant impact it will have on Mississippi’s most vulnerable population, it’s children, and due to the life-altering care their own granddaughter, Sophie Creath, received at the hospital when she was only four years old. Suffering from a chronic case of hereditary pancreatitis, young Sophie received excellent care at Batson Children’s Hospital and now controls her condition with proper nutrition and medication. She is now a healthy and active college student at Baylor University in Waco, Texas, thanks to the doctors and staff at Children’s of Mississippi.

Although Sophie’s days at Children’s of Mississippi are now long behind her, her grandparents have far from forgotten the excellent care she received at the hospital and the positive impact it now has on her quality of life as a young adult. “After witnessing the competent, loving care of Dr. Paul Parker [pediatric gastroenterology] and the team at Batson, we realized the importance of this wonderful hospital,” said Kathy Sanderson. “We were so impressed with the hospital and with the whole team because they were so genuinely caring.”

Easily the most ambitious campaign in Children’s of Mississippi history, the Sandersons were up for the challenge and ready to make an impact on health care for generations of Mississippi children to come. Taking very seriously their call to champion Mississippi’s children both today and for future generations, Joe and Kathy took it upon themselves to lead, by example, the very same culture of giving that they hoped to inspire in Mississippians all across the state.

Not only did they lead the largest fundraising campaign in the history of the hospital, they also donated the campaign’s first large gift of $10 million, a tenth of the overall campaign goal of $100 million. In addition to Joe and Kathy’s personal donation and the personal donation of president and chief operating officer, Lampkin Butts, and his wife, Susie, the Sanderson Farms Championship has raised more than $7.7 million since 2013 for Friends of Children’s Hospital, the fundraising arm of Batson Children’s Hospital.

“An extraordinary plan needed extraordinary leaders,” said Dr. Lou Ann Woodward, vice chancellor for health affairs and dean of the School of Medicine at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. “Joe and Kathy Sanderson were the first people we thought of. We knew if anyone could help us reach this lofty goal, Joe and Kathy, with their track record of dedication to Mississippi, Children’s of Mississippi and UMMC, could.”

Children’s of Mississippi, part of UMMC, encompasses all of the pediatric services available at UMMC and at clinical sites throughout the state. At the heart of these services is Batson Children’s Hospital, the state’s only hospital devoted exclusively to the care and treatment of sick and injured children.

The ambitious campaign was conceptualized for one clear goal, a $180 million pediatric tower with seven stories, 340,000 square feet, 88 private neonatal intensive care rooms, 12 operating rooms, 32 pediatric intensive care rooms and an imaging center designed for children and a specialty clinic. This new pediatric tower allows for updated space and additional room, as well as more convenience and comfort for families of sick children.

Inside the tower is where 88 babies, each in a private neonatal intensive care room, get their start in life. It is where 12 operating rooms are used to save lives, where the most critically ill children in the state receive care and where MRI machines are fanciful and kid-friendly. Thanks to the new tower, pediatric subspecialists including neurologists, urologists and endocrinologists all call one outpatient clinic home.

This new home, a home that provides hope for so many children and their families, is now known as none other than the Kathy and Joe Sanderson Tower, rightfully named after the two Mississippians who passionately led the charge for its inception for over half a decade now. After five years of fundraising and nearly three years of construction, Children’s of Mississippi ushered in a new era of pediatric care in the state of Mississippi with the snip of a ribbon and the toss of colorful confetti in the air.

While the ribbon-cutting ceremony had limited in-person attendance and was livestreamed on Facebook due to COVID-19, no pandemic could put a damper on the smiles peeking from behind attendees’ cheerful Children’s of Mississippi masks. The Kathy and Joe Sanderson Tower was finally complete and has now opened its doors to children all across the state in need of its specialized care and attention.

“It’s thrilling to think that patients and their families are now coming through the doorway to the hospital to receive the care they need,” said Kathy Sanderson. “Joe and I could not be more excited about this facility and couldn’t be prouder of the medical team that is there to treat the children.”

The new Sanderson Tower complements the existing Blair E. Batson Tower that opened back in 1997 and was named after a pioneer in pediatric medicine, Dr. Blair E. Batson, who was UMMC’s first pediatrics chair. “Together, a tower named after our pediatrics’ founding father and a tower named for two of Mississippi’s most compassionate and generous residents provides world-class care to Mississippi’s children right here, close to home, in Mississippi’s only children’s hospital,” said Woodward.

“The opening of this new facility means that the highest level of care will be there for the children of our state and for children yet to be born,” said Joe Sanderson. “We have incredible doctors and nurses at Children’s of Mississippi that deliver world-class pediatric care and achieve outcomes that rival the best children’s hospitals in the county, and because of this expansion, we have a facility that matches

their skills.”

Building the Vision

In nearly three years, the vision for Children’s of Mississippi’s future expansion has evolved from a mere architectural concept to a best-in-class hospital tower. In that relatively short period of time, the site of the new seven-story pediatric tower adjacent to the existing Blair E. Batson Tower has transformed from a parking lot to a construction zone humming with equipment and, finally, to a state-of-the-art medical facility practicing its life-saving work for Mississippi’s children. During the construction phase, Joe Sanderson toured the tower in its early inception to observe the progress made. Now, this tower is where children and families all across Mississippi find hope for a better future.

“The level of care has been enhanced as the Sanderson Tower pairs excellent nurses and physicians with state-of-the-art facilities and equipment,” said Dr. William Moskowitz, professor and chief of the Division of Pediatric Cardiology and co-director of the Children’s Heart Center. “The combination provides an excellent experience for children and their families while providing the highest level of comprehensive care.” "Now the Children's Hospital Grew into two Pediatric Medical Towers" Mississippi Children's Cancer Clinics Blair E Batson Hospital for Children, and The Kathy and Joe Sanderson Hospital for Children

Eli Manning Children’s Clinics

Located on the second floor of The Blair E. Batson Tower at Children’s of Mississippi, the Eli Manning Children’s Clinics make up a state-of-the-art, 15,600-square-foot center that sees more than 75,000 Mississippi children annually.

Pediatricians and pediatric specialists provide kid-focused care, including well-child visits, a vaccination program, and acute care.

The Eli Manning Children’s Clinics opened in 2009, thanks to the leadership and support of Eli and Abby Manning. In partnership with Friends of Children's Hospital, the couple raised more than $2.5 million to make the clinics possible. Eli’s parents, Archie and Olivia Manning, and brothers Cooper and Peyton and their wives, all lent their efforts in support of the clinic as well.

Eli, a University of Mississippi alumnus, quarterbacked the New York Giants to two Super Bowl victories. As the parents of three daughters, Eli and Abby are staunch supporters of quality pediatric care for Mississippians.

Eli Manning is giving back to his alma mater in a big way.

The University of Mississippi Medical Center recently announced that Eli and Abby Manning pledged $1 million in support of the school’s children’s hospital.

“Abby and I are the parents of three precious daughters,” Eli said in a media release, “so we know that the health of your children means everything. We want every family to have the best quality care for their children close to home. That’s why we opened the Eli Manning Children’s Clinics at Batson Children’s Hospital, and that’s why we made this commitment to the future of pediatric care at UMMC.”

The fundraising is part of a growth and expansion effort:"With the theme of “Growing. So they can grow,” the campaign aims to fund an expansion and update of the neonatal intensive care unit, add more pediatric ICU rooms and surgical suites, create an imaging department just for children and expand the outpatient clinic so that care can be centralized and more convenient for families."Manning previously made a $2.5 million contribution to help open the clinics bearing his name, referenced above, in 2009.

The New York Giants quarterback played at Ole Miss from 2000-03.

We're home to the state's only dedicated children's hospital.
Children’s of Mississippi Hospital began in 1996 as Batson Children’s Hospital.

We now include two patient care towers and the state’s only pediatric ER.I went there ever since 2013 and that was when i was 5 months old i didn't know a tumor was arriving to the top of my spinal cord and My grandma took me there and it was just Batson Tower, they gave my a diagnoses test and it said that had a tumor going to my spinal cord and they took me to surgery and Everything was alright until the machines was sounding bells & whistles and they stop and call it an inoperable tumor that when they said that me and my grandma have to come until i grow up to at least 11 years old and they put a port on my upper chest and came every Monday but there was something wrong when i go to the MRI when i start falling asleep i feel like my head is going to Blow up and react quickly and when they try to get me to sleep i try not to because the gas is doing something to me but i'm now 10 my birthday is 2 months away and on June 24 i'll go to Eli Manning Clinics and get this port out and Radiation and I just thank Jesus and God, Grandma, Kathy and Joe Sanderson, and Dr. Blair E. Batson for getting me through it all and Now that i'll get Radiation i might not see them again but i always think about all of them. Special Thanks to: Jesus, Dr. Batson, Grandma, The Blair E. Batson Hospital for Children, Children's Of Mississippi, UMMC, Colonel Harland Sanders Children's Emergency Department, and the Two only Pediatric Towers Batson and Sanderson Tower. -Dr. Amir Mitchell