On August 17th please join us in remembering and honoring our beloved Susan at the Cheney Mansion. We will celebrate her life and share our best memories together.
Please arrive between 10:30-11
Memorial ceremony 11-12
Time to reflect and reminisce 12-1
Attire is dressy casual and in full color as Susan would have preferred.
Giving
Charitable Donations in Honor of Susan Hamant Hou
Select a charity of your choice or another one that was personally meaningful to Susan Hamant Hou
Join us in celebrating the life of Susan Hamant Hou. Contribute to this lasting memorial by sharing stories, memories, photos, and videos. A Celebration of Life will be held in Susan's honor on August 17th, 2019. Please arrive between 10:30 and 11:00. The memorial ceremony will be from 11:00 to 12:00. Stay... see moreJoin us in celebrating the life of Susan Hamant Hou. Contribute to this lasting memorial by sharing stories, memories, photos, and videos. A Celebration of Life will be held in Susan's honor on August 17th, 2019. Please arrive between 10:30 and 11:00. The memorial ceremony will be from 11:00 to 12:00. Stay after the ceremony for reminiscing and refreshments. Please share this memorial with family, colleagues and friends.
OBITUARY
Our beloved Susan passed away peacefully, surrounded by her family on 7/27/19. Susan was a cherished wife, mother, grandmother, sister, daughter, doctor, friend, kidney donor, colleague, mentor, and humanitarian who embraced life with a passion that continues to inspire us all to be our best selves. She went by many names: Susan, Mom, Susie, Hou Yi Sheng, Doctora Susan, Mima, Meowmaw, Grandma, Dr. Hou. Her sense of adventure, witty... see moreOur beloved Susan passed away peacefully, surrounded by her family on 7/27/19. Susan was a cherished wife, mother, grandmother, sister, daughter, doctor, friend, kidney donor, colleague, mentor, and humanitarian who embraced life with a passion that continues to inspire us all to be our best selves. She went by many names: Susan, Mom, Susie, Hou Yi Sheng, Doctora Susan, Mima, Meowmaw, Grandma, Dr. Hou. Her sense of adventure, witty humor, brilliant mind, compassion for others, and determination had a rich and diverse impact on the world.
Susan was born on July 29th, 1946 in Boston, Massachusetts to Daniels and Muriel Hamant. After a mischievous childhood of terrifying her grandmother with bugs and snakes, she went on to have a prestigious academic career. She completed high school at Dana Hall School in Wellesley, Massachusetts in 1964. She graduated Magna Cum Laude from Harvard with a BA in Far Eastern Languages in 1967. She earned an MA in East Asian Studies from Stanford in 1970. After being the only applicant to arrive at an interview during a wicked Worcester snowstorm-- thanks to her brother Stoke, who drove her, she was accepted to medical school at the University of Massachusetts, where she obtained her MD in 1975. She then trained at Tufts-New England Medical Center to become a nephrologist in 1980. She went on to become a world-renowned expert in kidney disease and pregnancy.
While training she met her husband, the love of her life and partner in humanitarian endeavors, Mark Molitch. They moved to Chicago in 1984, where Susan worked as a nephrologist at Michael Reese Hospital and Rush University Medical Center, and ultimately as a transplant nephrologist at Loyola University Medical Center. She and Mark built a life with their three children in River Forest, IL.
Susan was proud to have uniquely experienced organ transplantation from all angles. Susan was inspired to specialize in nephrology by a friend suffering with kidney disease in medical school, Stan Cole, who went on to receive a kidney transplant from his brother (of course Susan offered her kidney, but Stan's brother was a better match). Susan and others wrote a seminal article about altruistic, unrelated organ donation in 1986, published in the New England Journal of Medicine. Susan saved five-year old Indira's life in 1996, by facilitating the first living-donor liver transplant in Bolivia. Susan's mother Muriel donated organs when she passed away in 1999. In 2002, Susan achieved a lifelong dream in donating one of her kidneys to one of her patients who matched her very petite body size. In 2010, Susan became ill with pulmonary fibrosis, for which she received a lung transplant, exactly 12 years to the day from her kidney donation in 2014. Due to the toxicity caused by her transplant medications, Susan needed her own kidney transplant and received one from her son Ethan in 2017.
Susan was an avid world traveler, visiting 6 continents and immersing herself in cultures and communities around the world. She impressed many people by speaking English, Chinese, Spanish, Arabic, and Japanese. She was known for engaging strangers everywhere she went, learning their life histories while waiting in line and riding in taxis.
Her philanthropy began when she created the Patient Assistance Foundation to help a woman named Dadi Ding come from China to the United States to get treatment for her kidney disease. She went on to use the foundation to help patients in need to get unaffordable medications and care. The foundation later evolved into the Daniels Hamant Foundation, named after her father. In 2001, with her like-minded Bolivian colleague Douglas Villarroel and her husband Mark, Susan established the Centro Medico Humberto Parra, a free medical clinic in the rain forest outside of Santa Cruz, Bolivia, that has served thousands of Bolivians with their medical care.
Her parents, her older sister Anne and her younger brother Daniels, preceded her in death. She is survived by Mark Molitch; her three children and their spouses: Tamara and Brian, Ethan and Bati, Michael and Danielle; her seven grandchildren Maya, Evan, Isaac, Olivia, Asha, Niko, and Felix; and her two cats Gandalf and Gabriel.
All of her family as well as her extended Bolivian and Chinese family members are honored to have had her in our lives and she will be missed terribly. We will all strive to fill the chasm created by her loss.
In lieu of flowers, please consider contributing to Susan's legacy, the Daniels Hamant Foundation... and please become an organ donor.
Susan's obituary says it all. An amazing woman. We remember her wonderful wit and worldliness, a savvy sense of what is possible, always stretching one's horizon. We enjoyed every minute spent with her, and will miss her wonderful annual Christmas... moreSusan's obituary says it all. An amazing woman. We remember her wonderful wit and worldliness, a savvy sense of what is possible, always stretching one's horizon. We enjoyed every minute spent with her, and will miss her wonderful annual Christmas letter this year as well as, of course, the ever present smile you can see in the picture above, and well, everything about her. John and Emily Gennari less
I am the Nephrology Fellowship Program Director at Rush, where Susan was on the faculty from 1990-2000.
I sent a notice to all the fellows that trained under her.
Here are the responses:
Roger Rodby, MD
“I was deeply saddened to hear of Susan's... moreI am the Nephrology Fellowship Program Director at Rush, where Susan was on the faculty from 1990-2000.
I sent a notice to all the fellows that trained under her.
Here are the responses:
Roger Rodby, MD
“I was deeply saddened to hear of Susan's passing. The last time I saw her in August 2012, she was sitting one row behind me as I was heading to Santiago, Chile. She was getting off in Panama, to then connect with a flight to Bolivia to help with her clinic there. We had a nice impromptu conversation. She made an impact on everyone she worked with, from fellow doctors, students and patients with her selfless energy and concern for others. No one was "too sick" to be helped by Dr Hou. She was also a loving wife and Mom. I learned both Nephrology wisdom, and wisdom in life from Susan, the latter which may take me further in the future...”
“I am deeply saddened to hear this. She was a kind person and an amazing physician . I have so many fond memories of rounding with her. She will be missed ! 😔”
“Thanks for letting us know.
........very sad!!”
“Thanks for letting me know about this very sad news. Susan was always calm and reassuring. Her compassion was unequaled. She will be greatly missed.”
“I was very sad to hear of Susan's passing. She was a great mentor with a kind and caring heart. I will never forget the kindness she extended to me. I know I am a better physician because of her.”
“Thank you for sharing this. Susan was an amazing mentor, clinician, and human-being who was an inspiration to all of us. I am saddened to hear this news. She will long be remembered and missed by all who knew her. Please express my condolences to her family.”
“Thank you for sharing this with us. I was shocked when I got the email from Mark. We visited her 2 years back in Chicago as my daughters want to meet her. She was as witty, humorous and kind as always in spite of her poor health. Her compassion and generosity was out of this world. She was larger than life. She will be missed immensely.”
“Thanks for letting us all know. Susan was an amazing mentor for all of us. Her humanitarian efforts inspired me as a fellow and I will carry those memories with me always. I want to express my sincere condolences to her family.”
“We appreciate your passing on this information. I’m kind of at a loss for words to express what Susan meant especially to me. I still have a bracelet she gave me when I was a fellow.”
“Thanks for passing this message. Susan was special person and made us all aspire to be better doctors. It is a loss for the Nephrology community.”
“Thanks for passing on this news. We are fortunate to have been taught by the best of the best. Dr. Hou was as much of a life coach as she was a nephrology expert.
May she rest in peace and may her family and friends take comfort in the fact that she touched so many.”
“Thanks for letting us know of Susan’s passing. My condolences to you all and her immediate family. She was a very giving and dedicated person in so many ways. She will be both missed and remembered by the many who’s lives that she touched.”
“Thanks for sending. Rounding with her was always a learning experience not only in nephrology but also in how to be a better doctor and person.”
“Sad news. She was a remarkable woman.”
“Thank you for this note. Susan will always be remembered for her unique way of touching the lives of many.” less
Our family is so sorry for the loss of Susan. Her life achievements are an amazing example of humanitarism for us all. We're so sorry for the tough time your family is going through. Love, Peter, Gail and Ella Kaye.