What Donations Do For Your Community 

Since its inception, The Foundation of FirstHealth has been committed to inspiring and mobilizing people, families, businesses and other organizations to provide FirstHealth of the Carolinas with the financial resources to fulfill its core purpose - To Care for People. Some of our biggest successes are listed below. We can't wait to see how your support will help with our next major project.

FirstHealth Cancer Center

The FirstHealth Cancer Center is a comprehensive treatment location on the campus of Moore Regional Hospital in Pinehurst, North Carolina. The four-story, 120,000-square-foot center opened in March 2023 and was purpose-built to bring all of FirstHealth's outpatient cancer services together under one roof. In addition to state-of-the-art treatment facilities, the center includes palliative care services, research and clinical trials, navigation and support services for patients and caregivers, nutrition services and a dedicated wellness center, well-equipped with a yoga room. A healing garden outside the building offers a place for patients and their families to connect and relax.

Reid Heart Center

Completed in 2011, Reid Heart Center, the FirstHealth Cardiac and Vascular Institute at Moore Regional Hospital, offers next-generation cardiac and vascular care. Its nationally respected staff of cardiothoracic surgeons, vascular surgeons and cardiologists work together to treat heart patients with the latest in technology, clinical methods and clinical trials. The vision of donors Walter and Betty Reid made the Center possible in conjunction with the Stepping Stones Campaign conducted by The Foundation of FirstHealth.

FirstHealth Hospice House

Serving people with life-limiting illnesses, FirstHealth Hospice House provides our community with resources for taking care of patients and their families in a home-like setting. The facility, a short distance from FirstHealth Moore Regional Hospital, meets the needs of patients and family alike. Operations are supported in part through the FirstHealth Hospice Foundation.

Clara McLean House

Opened in 2012, the Clara McLean House is setting a grand new standard for what have been called hospital hospitality houses. Reflecting the vision of donors like Clara McLean and Ruth Watkins, the Foundation developed and operates this haven of hope, support and affordable lodging. Clara’s House serves families traveling far from home with a loved one in the hospital, as well as outpatients here for treatment of serious illnesses.

Timeline of Generosity

Travel through time to see the difference that generosity has made for the health of our community.

1929-1949

1929 – The Duke Endowment provides one-third of the $225,000 cost of building the original Moore County Hospital (MCH).

1930 - The Moore County Hospital Auxiliary is born. Mrs. Leonard Tufts conceived the idea of a women’s auxiliary for the newly built hospital serving the people of the Sandhills.

1936 – The first big addition – The first hospital expansion program includes construction of a wing of private rooms and conversion of a second-floor solarium, increasing bed capacity to 80. The beginnings of philanthropy – The first bequests create a lasting relationship between compassionate people and the causes they help sustain. Many name the hospital as a beneficiary in their wills, ensuring its success for future generations.

1939 – The Auxiliary raises $6,500 for a nurse’s dormitory. 

1948 – A major expansion is announced, the construction of a new wing to be called the Memorial Wing. On November 7, 1950, the 37-bed facility was “dedicated to the sons and daughters of Moore County who gave their lives for their country in time of war.”

1950-1970

1952 – Mr. and Mrs. H. Arnold Jackson give $50,000 for a new emergency room dedicated in memory of their sons. The Jackson’s’ endowment gifts to the hospital ultimately exceeded $1 million. The hospital’s first pediatric unit opens, furnished with a memorial gift from the family of C. Louis Meyer. 

1956 – Mr. Samuel Allen leaves the hospital an endowment of $100,000, the income from which will support “regular operating expenses, especially in connection with the fare of worthy charity cases.”

Late 1950s – The Auxiliary contributes more than $103,000 to Moore Memorial. The hospital hires a coordinator for the volunteer corps, which has swelled to more than 300 members.

1964 – The Clement R. Monroe Wing is dedicated in honor of the doctor who had done so much to found and build the once small hospital into a major medical care center. The Auxiliary raises $20,000 toward the wing and its surgical suites.

1967 – Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Robins donate $150,000 for a new intensive care unit.

Emilie “Jo” Roberts, also known as the “Watch Lady,” raises $130,000 to help establish a radiation therapy department by selling watches for many years in the hospital lobby and at the Pinehurst Hotel.

1971-1991

1974 – Moore Regional Hospital (MRH) completes its first successful fund drive campaign (more than $3 million) and opens a new two-story wing.

1975 – The Moore Regional Hospital Foundation is created as a fund development arm of the hospital. The Foundation encourages and distributes funds, matching the interests of donors with the needs of the hospital.

1979 - Hal Stevens sets out to broaden the MRH Foundation’s base of philanthropic support (which at the time rested on the generosity of a fairly small number of prominent families) with the creation of the Scroll Society. Membership in the Scroll Society is open to friends of the Hospital who give, bequeath or otherwise make available to the Society the sum of $10,000 or more.

1980 – The Clement R. Monroe Club is established as the first of several annual giving programs established as the principal source of “current-use” gifts from patients and friends.

1984 – A freestanding Ambulatory Surgical Center opens on Page Road.

1987 – Dr. David Cowherd, an interventional cardiologist, performs the first cardiac catheterization at MRH.

1988 – A day care center for children of hospital employees is opened as the Little People’s Village. The center was and remains a favorite Auxiliary project.

1989 – MRH Auxiliary donations to the hospital over the years reach $1 million.

1990 – The first open-heart procedure is performed at MRH by Dr. John F. Krahnert, Jr.

1992-Present

1995 – MRH gets a new first name – FirstHealth Moore Regional Hospital (FMRH). With the merger of Moore Regional and Montgomery Memorial hospitals, FirstHealth of the Carolinas is created.

1996 – FirstHealth of the Carolinas acquires Sandhills Hospice.

1997 – The Foundation of FirstHealth leads the “In Love and Service” capital campaign to raise more than $10.8 million for the largest expansion project in the hospital’s history. 

1999 – The FirstHealth Hospice Foundation, which was established when FirstHealth acquired Sandhills Hospice, launches a fund-raising campaign, The Hospice Challenge, to increase its endowment to $10 million. This endowment covers the annual operational deficits, allowing for quality care with dignity for all in this community with life-limiting illness, regardless of their ability to pay.

1999 – The Outpatient/Admitting entrance on Page Road opens.

2000 – FMRH opens a new Patient Tower that brings together the clinical components of the Community Hospital Comprehensive Cancer Center. The tower also includes a renovated and enlarged Emergency Department, and new medical and surgical inpatient units that bring FMRH’s bed total to 385.

2005 – FirstVillage opens with a new facility for Pinehurst Surgical and a new freestanding ambulatory surgery center, the Surgical Center of Pinehurst.

2007 – FirstHealth and Pinehurst Medical work together to create the Outpatient Hematology and Medical Oncology Center located on Page Road. 

February 29, 2008 – The Foundation of FirstHealth kicks off the public phase of the Stepping Stones Campaign to raise funds for the Reid Heart Center, FirstHealth Hospice House and the Clara McLean House.

2011 – The Reid Heart Center opens at FMRH, offering next generation heart and vascular care. Later this year the FirstHealth Hospice & Palliative Care campus opens to provide a new home for Hospice and 11-acute care beds for patients at the end of life.

2012 – The Clara McLean House opens, offers caring and affordable lodging and support services for families from out of town with a loved one receiving care at FMRH, and for outpatients at FMRH.

2013 – The inaugural class of the FirstHealth Physician Leadership Program is underway, beginning the journey of leadership development for physicians within the FirstHealth system. The first class graduates 15 members.

2023 - The four-story, 120,000-square-foot FirstHealth Cancer center opens in March. It was purpose-built to bring all of FirstHealth's outpatient cancer services together under one roof. In addition to state-of-the-art treatment facilities, the center includes palliative care services, research and clinical trials, navigation and support services for patients and caregivers, nutrition services and a dedicated wellness center, well-equipped with a yoga room. 

Innovative Equipment and Training

EBUS: Innovative care for lung cancer patients

EBUS stands for endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS). Using EBUS equipment purchased with funds from The Foundation, physicians at FirstHealth Moore Regional Hospital can now diagnose and stage lung cancer and other diseases of the lung faster and more effectively. The EBUS procedure lets them collect better tissue and fluid samples from the lungs and surrounding lymph nodes without conventional surgery and no incisions. That means patients can usually go home the same day and no longer have to travel far from home for the procedure.

LifeVest™ Rentals: A fashion statement that saves lives

Over the past three years, the Foundation has distributed $51,000 for the rental fees of this life-saving equipment, which helps help patients waiting on a pacemaker.  The LifeVest™ is a personal defibrillator worn by the patient at risk for sudden cardiac arrest. It monitors the patient’s heart continuously, and if the patient goes into a life-threatening arrhythmia, the LifeVest delivers a shock treatment to restore the patient’s heart to a normal rhythm. For patients who need financial assistance, we’ve got them covered.

Nurse Training: A sound investment

The nurses in the Emergency Department have better equipment for performing ultrasounds – and they know how to use it! The Foundation invested $37,500 in 2013 to provide the equipment and training to ensure its effective use.

Ready to Help?

Won’t you join with your friends and neighbors in supporting health care in the mid-Carolinas with a generous donation?

Make a Donation

Every donation makes a difference to our patients, our clinical staff and in access to care for our community. 

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Events

Upcoming Events

  • Nov
    14
    Friday
    10:00 AM - 4:00 PM
  • Nov
    15
    Saturday
    10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    The goal of the class is to provide specific information about the latter stages of pregnancy, labor and delivery, a tour of the Women and Children’s center, as well as what to expect following delivery.
  • Nov
    17
    Monday
    10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
  • Nov
    18
    Tuesday
    9:00 AM - 2:00 PM
  • Nov
    20
    Thursday
    6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
    Expectant parents will learn the benefits of breastfeeding, positions to use while breastfeeding, feeding patterns, pumping and introduction of bottles.