As they were discussing wellness on the way to a Houston Texans football game one fall morning, John M. O\u2019Quinn told his longtime business partner and foundation trustee Rob Wilson III, \u201cAt some time,
I want to give a meaningful gift to Houston Methodist \u2014 that\u2019s number one on my list.\u201d\nDiscovering meaning and purpose in life energized O\u2019Quinn. He rose from a modest start to graduate first in his class at the University of Houston Law Center before becoming one of the most sought-after plaintiffs\u2019 attorneys in the country. Driven by a powerful sense of justice and the desire to change lives for the better, O\u2019Quinn represented the underserved in his professional life and championed societal advances in education, health care, the environment and services for underprivileged youth through the eponymous foundation he created in 1986.
\nO\u2019Quinn\u2019s admiration for Houston Methodist in life translated to philanthropic support following his unexpected passing in 2009, including endowments establishing The John M. O\u2019Quinn Centennial Chair in Concussion Research and Care in 2018 and The John M. O\u2019Quinn Foundation Presidential Distinguished Chair in Neurology in 2021. His stated intention from that fall morning, though, truly became a reality in 2023, when The O\u2019Quinn Foundation made a transformational gift \u2014 one of the largest gifts made by the foundation since his death \u2014 to Houston Methodist to support research, education and patient services across a full spectrum of neurodegenerative disorders.
\n\u201cWe\u2019re very passionate about brain research,\u201d says Wilson, O\u2019Quinn\u2019s friend of three decades and now president of the foundation. Wilson adds that members of the foundation and their families know firsthand the impacts of neurological diseases.
\nThe recent philanthropic investment establishes The John M. O\u2019Quinn Foundation Neurodegenerative Disorders Laboratory, through which an interdisciplinary team of neurologists and neuroscientists in the Houston Methodist Stanley H. Appel Department of Neurology conducts innovative research, runs clinical trials and develops new treatments for disorders such as Alzheimer\u2019s disease, peripheral neuropathies, ataxia and Parkinson\u2019s disease. The gift will support ongoing and new research as well as help attract the brightest in the field thanks to the creation of two endowed chairs for neurodegenerative disorders research and an endowed fellowship.
\nA confluence of factors makes this research an urgent matter. The World Health Organization projects the number of people over age 65 will at least double in 30 years, resulting in a larger population most at risk of developing neurodegenerative diseases. Moreover, these conditions are among the most complex due to a wide range of potential causes \u2014 or none at all \u2014 a variety of symptoms, and few to no biomarkers that can be accurately and reproducibly measured.