Why I Give: Margo and Jim’s Story

By: Abbey Stephenson

October 18, 2024

Margo and Jim, donors to Renown Health Foundation, pose for a photo.

Lifetimes of Service in Medicine

Margo and Jim Veazey are no strangers to hospitals and medicine. They are impressive duo with notable professional achievements and seem to always have service to their communities and country as their true north.  

Margo was a nurse and nurse administrator for her entire career, which spanned just under 50 years, including 25 years in nursing leadership at the Connecticut VA Healthcare System. Her predecessors at the VA had only stayed a year or two prior to her, but Margo found a place where she could make a positive impact and stayed for a quarter-century. 

During her time at the VA, she helped secure a much sought after $40 million grant to establish a VA Nursing Academy including funding for five new faculty members. The groundbreaking program to educate and train more nurses shares some strong similarities with Renown’s recently established Gerald “Jerry” Smith Academic Practice Partnership.

Jim has had his own esteemed medical career of over four decades as an infectious disease doctor, serving in academic, clinical and research roles on the east coast. He retired from the U.S. Army as a Colonel after 29 years of combined Federal Service in 2012. Among his self-stated greatest achievements was working on the eradication of Smallpox in India (coincidentally, Renown was founded in 1862 during a Smallpox outbreak). 

A Near Death Experience

Rarely had the Veazeys been on the receiving end of trauma care, but that all changed in 2017 after their move to Reno, when Margo was admitted to the Renown Regional Emergency Room with a volvulus, an obstruction caused by twisting of the intestine and a very serious medical emergency.

The symptoms that led her to the ER were severe and extremely uncomfortable: fever, severe abdominal pain, overly active bowel sounds, and vomiting blood.  

Margo recalls: “the last thing I remember was hearing someone say my pulse was down to 20. I thought I was dying and then I blacked out. I woke up two days later in the ICU [Intensive Care Unit] as they told me to breathe out when they were removing my ventilator tube.” Jim, on the other hand, remembers it all, including the long hours waiting for Margo to wake up. 

Margo’s near-death experience left quite an impression on both of them and, while traumatic, it also created deep feelings of gratitude for the care Margo received from her doctors and nurses at Renown during that time. 

Reno Becomes Home

Margo and Jim spent most of their lives on the east coast. They met at Dartmouth when Jim was a wide-eyed intern in the ICU, and Margo was working in the ICU as a nurse. They were married a year later and recently celebrated their 52nd wedding anniversary! You don’t have to spend much time with them to see their adoration for each other, even after all these years.

In the midst of their busy careers, the Veazey’s raised a son and daughter, who now each have children of their own. Being closer to those grandchildren became a priority after Jim and Margo retired, which prompted their move to Reno in 2016. 

Having access to good healthcare was on their radar when deciding where to move, and they were not sure what they would find when they arrived in Reno. Fortunately, a neighbor they met early on introduced them to Renown and the Renown South Meadows Medical Center emergency room as an option for emergency care. It was not long after that, when Margo made a visit to the Renown South Meadows ER for diverticulitis. They’ve been coming to Renown ever since for her care.

Expressing Their Gratitude

Margo’s visit to the South Meadows ER in 2016 and her near-death experience in 2017 were among the first in a series of unfortunate and mostly unrelated health incidents she has faced since moving to Reno. Over the past eight years she has come to Renown for eleven major health issues including six surgeries. 

Her medical conditions have ranged from breast cancer to the need for a knee replacement to atrial fibrillation, and Renown has been a one-stop shop to meet her these urgent health care needs. Based on the trust she has in Renown providers, Margo counts on Renown for her preventative care too. Thanks to his long federal service, Jim receives his care at the VA.  

The consistency in the high-quality, compassionate care she receives—Margo and Jim will both tell you repeatedly how much they love Renown physicians and how great the nurses are—is why they keep coming back. When asked if they recall any specific doctors or nurses, Margo responded, “we’ve been to the emergency room so many times and I’ve had so many procedures that it would take a long time to list all their names, and I received wonderful care from all of them. My brother, who was a Rhode Scholar, emergency room doctor in Florida, and a lawyer was incredibly complimentary of the care I received when he was here during one of my ER visits.”   

The exceptional care is also what prompted them to include a gift to Renown Health Foundation in their estate plan. Although the Veazeys have always been charitable and support many organizations near and dear to them with annual gifts (including Renown Children’s Hospital), their legacy gift to Renown was the first time they included a charity in their estate plan.

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When reflecting on why they included Renown in their plans, the Veazeys shared: “As we were updating some of our estate planning documents after the sudden death of Margo’s beloved brother, we wanted to show our appreciation to Renown for saving Margo’s life. Margo wouldn’t be here today without the care she received at Renown.” 

Legacy gifts are donations made in a will, trust, or other document that provide for a charity to receive a part of the donor’s estate after they have passed away. Legacy gifts are among the most impactful gifts a charity can receive as they are often the largest gift a donor will give to a charity. Individuals, like Margo and Jim, who include Renown in their estate plan are welcomed to the Renown Legacy Society. 
 
Legacy gifts and non-cash donations, such as gifts of stock or real estate, can be used to purchase state-of-the-art equipment, enhance patient care, support innovative programs, and advance vital research initiatives at Renown Health.

Margo also expresses her gratitude by speaking with current Renown nurses about her experiences and volunteering on the Patient Family Advisory Council (PFAC) at Renown. The PFAC is a group of Renown patients and family members who participate in the co-design of quality improvement initiatives, policies, strategies, and services. With her background in nursing leadership and personal experiences at Renown, she is a natural fit.

Thank you, Margo and Jim for your incredible generosity and for inspiring us all to make a difference!

How You Can Help

At Renown Health Foundation, your support—whether through donations, volunteering, or sharing stories like Margo and Jim’s—helps provide life-saving care, advance medical research, and offer comfort to those in need. Join us in making an impact. Consider including Renown Health Foundation in your will, trust, or IRA to help build a future where everyone has the chance to fight and thrive. To learn more about planned giving at Renown and to join the Renown Legacy Society, visit renown.org/LegacyGiving or call 775-982-5545.
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