Health & Wellness Center named after Habif family

As young adults, university students learn to master far more than academic subjects; they also learn how to live independently and make individual decisions, especially regarding their health and lifestyle.

As parents of a current WUSTL student and two graduates, Linda and David Habif know that experiences with health and wellness issues during these formative college years play a significant role in establishing future health habits. The Habifs feel so strongly about the need for comprehensive health services at the University that they have made it their priority to support new health and wellness programs and facility upgrades.

The Linda Johnston Habif Society has already been established to recognize the Habifs and all alumni, parents and friends who support health promotion and wellness for WUSTL students. Now, the University is recognizing the family’s longstanding commitment and support by naming its new facility the Habif Health & Wellness Center.

This semester, the Habif Health & Wellness Center opened on the garden level of Forsyth House at the corner of Big Bend Boulevard and Shepley Drive. For the first time, all health and wellness services are located under one roof.

Student medical and mental-health treatment had been provided at Student Health Services in Umrath Hall, and Health Promotion Services was in the Women’s Building.

With the opening of the new facility, Chancellor Mark S. Wrighton said, “I am pleased to announce the creation of a new, expanded medical and counseling space to address the health needs of generations of students. The new facility is dedicated to the enhancement of the health and wellness of each student and the entire Washington University community.

“The impact of the Habifs’ support is truly remarkable in scope. I am very grateful to Linda and David Habif for their generosity and their concern for our students. This remarkable commitment to support our students begins a new chapter in encouraging healthy lifestyles for our students.”

Alan I. Glass, M.D., the center’s director, explained that the Habif Health & Wellness Center is designed to optimize its physical space to benefit and support all students.

“We’re thrilled to have the opportunity to work out of a beautiful state-of-the-art facility,” Glass said. “We’ve always practiced quality medicine, but I know that we’re going to do an even better job in this new facility.

“All staff members in the areas of primary care, mental-health care and the promotion of health and wellness are in the same space for the first time in our history. This creates beneficial collaborations and professional efficiencies that we need to perform at the best level of our abilities.”

Highlights of the new center include:

• Having a prominent physical presence where many undergraduate students live and easy accessibility for those who do not;

• Full accessibility for students with disabilities;

• An enhanced triage area;

• A complete women’s health suite; and

• New dispensary space.

With a focus on privacy, the center also provides the first shared waiting room for medical and mental-health patients for any university of comparable size. The shared waiting room is revolutionary because it gives equal focus to mental- and physical-health patients.

Knowing that access to and education about health care is directly related to academic success, the Habif Health & Wellness Center concentrates on outreach to students. The Health Promotion and Prevention staff provides information on nutrition, fitness and recreation, safety, sleep patterns and stress management.

The Habif Health & Wellness Center serves all full-time undergraduate and graduate students, as well as any spouses or domestic partners of those students who enroll in the University health plan.

A formal dedication of the new facility will take place over Parents Weekend in October.

The Habif family’s relationship with the University began in 1993 when their daughter, Stephanie, came here as a freshman in the College of Arts & Sciences. Their other daughter, Meredith, followed two years later, enrolling in the Olin School of Business. Stephanie graduated in 1997 and Meredith in 1999.

Their son, David, is now a freshman in Arts & Sciences.

David Habif, M.D., retired director of the Teaneck, N.J., Radiology Center, serves on the University’s Board of Trustees and on the National Council on Undergraduate Experience. He also served as a leader of the University’s Regional Cabinet in northern New Jersey.

Both David and Linda have a long and active association with the University’s Parents Council and previously served as the council’s co-chairs. The Habifs reside in Sarasota, Fla.