With more than two decades of experience in the entertainment industry, Michael Bonislawski is an experienced actor and cruise director. Beyond his professional activities, Michael Bonislawski has donated to and volunteered at the St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital is the brainchild of the entertainer Danny Thomas, who sought to create a hospital that would care for children regardless of creed, color, or ability to pay. The hospital opened its doors in 1962 and quickly became a premier hospital for treating acute lymphoblastic leukemia. For instance, when it released a study showing a survival rate of 50 percent among patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in 1972, it revolutionized leukemia therapy around the globe.
In 1984, the hospital established the After Completion of Therapy Clinic, which is today the largest long-term followup clinic in the world for pediatric cancer patients. In 2000, the Hartwell Center for Bioinformatics and Biotechnology opened, housing more innovative research technologies in molecular and computing science for treating pediatric diseases under one roof than any other center in the world. Among its most recent achievements, the hospital partnered with the World Health Organization with the goal of curing, at a minimum, 60 percent of the world's children with the most common kinds of cancer by 2030.
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital is the brainchild of the entertainer Danny Thomas, who sought to create a hospital that would care for children regardless of creed, color, or ability to pay. The hospital opened its doors in 1962 and quickly became a premier hospital for treating acute lymphoblastic leukemia. For instance, when it released a study showing a survival rate of 50 percent among patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia in 1972, it revolutionized leukemia therapy around the globe.
In 1984, the hospital established the After Completion of Therapy Clinic, which is today the largest long-term followup clinic in the world for pediatric cancer patients. In 2000, the Hartwell Center for Bioinformatics and Biotechnology opened, housing more innovative research technologies in molecular and computing science for treating pediatric diseases under one roof than any other center in the world. Among its most recent achievements, the hospital partnered with the World Health Organization with the goal of curing, at a minimum, 60 percent of the world's children with the most common kinds of cancer by 2030.
