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March 11, 2026

Pitt Alumni Couple Commit $1.5 Million to the Safar Center for Resuscitation Research

Charles Chabal III, MD, MED ’82, and Sharon W. Chabal, NURS ’80, have pledged to create a $1.5 million fund to support the work of the Safar Center for Resuscitation Research in the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

Home / News / Pitt Alumni Couple Commit $1.5 Million to the Safar Center for Resuscitation Research
Charles and Sharon Chabal during their visit to the Safar Center for Resuscitation Research

Charles and Sharon Chabal during their visit to the Safar Center for Resuscitation Research. Pictured from left to right: Patrick Kochanek, Director Emeritus, Charles Chabal, Jason Stezoski (senior laboratory technician) and Sharon Chabal.

Charles Chabal III, MD, MED ’82, and Sharon W. Chabal, NURS ’80, have pledged to create a $1.5 million fund to support the work of the Safar Center for Resuscitation Research in the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

“Traumatic brain injury, cardiac arrest and the other devastating events studied by the Safar Center often come out of nowhere and change the lives of the patients and their families forever,” said Anantha Shekhar, senior vice chancellor for the health sciences and John and Gertrude Petersen Dean,  School of Medicine, at Pitt. “We thank the Chabals for their commitment to driving research in this very important field and providing training for the next generation of researchers.”

The Safar Center’s research programs include traumatic brain injury, cardiac arrest and resuscitation, neurocritical care, child abuse, therapeutic hypothermia, hemorrhagic shock, combat casualty care and rehabilitation of central nervous system injury. Investigators work closely with the Departments of Critical Care Medicine, Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Neurological Surgery, Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Emergency Medicine, and Pediatrics at both the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine and UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, as well as national and international collaborators.

“We are immensely grateful to Charles and Sharon for creating the Dr. Charles Chabal and Sharon Workman Chabal, BSN, MSN, and Family Endowment for Breakthroughs in Resuscitation Research,” said Robert S.B. Clark, MD, interim director, Safar Center for Resuscitation Research. “This gift will provide vital support to the Safar Center, to facilitate the groundbreaking work of our outstanding team of faculty, staff and trainees working across the fields of acute brain injury and resuscitation medicine in its broadest sense.”

The center was founded in 1979 by the late CPR pioneer Peter Safar. It was initially known as the International Resuscitation Research Center and was renamed after Safar in 1994 to recognize his innumerable contributions to the field of resuscitation medicine. Charles Chabal trained with Safar in the 1980s, contributing to seminal work on the resuscitation of cold-water drowning victims using extracorporeal support.

“In gratitude for that opportunity, which provided my foundational experience in anesthesiology research, I am moved to give back to the center. I have always had the utmost respect for the work being done at the Safar Center, and Sharon and I are continually impressed by the staff’s dedication to advancing resuscitation science,” said Charles Chabal.

“This is such important work in a field that can impact any family, at any time,” added Sharon Chabal. “It makes us immensely proud to know we are playing a role, if even a small one, in helping improve lives.”

The center is an 11,000 square-foot state-of-the-art research facility located in the John G. Rangos Research Center on the campus of UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh. It houses the laboratories of research-scientists and clinician-scientists working across a broad spectrum of fields important to resuscitation medicine. The endowed fund will support a wide range of activities within the center, including but not limited to sustaining state-of-the-art translational research and equipment, training, mentorship and travel to conferences.

About the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

As one of the nation’s leading academic centers for biomedical research, the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine integrates advanced technology with basic science across a broad range of disciplines in a continuous quest to harness the power of new knowledge and improve the human condition.

Likewise, the School of Medicine is equally committed to advancing the quality and strength of its medical and graduate education programs, for which it is recognized as an innovative leader, and to training highly skilled, compassionate clinicians and creative scientists well-equipped to engage in world-class research. The School of Medicine is the academic partner of UPMC, which has collaborated with the University to raise the standard of medical excellence in Pittsburgh and to position health care as a driving force behind the region’s economy. For more information about the School of Medicine, see www.medschool.pitt.edu.

Last Updated: April 13, 2026

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