BENEFACTOR REPORT

Class of 1968 Endowed Financial  Aid Fund

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George Q. Daley, MD, PhD
Dean of the Faculty of Medicine
Caroline Shields Walker Professor of Medicine

June 2026
George Q. Daley, MD, PhD

Dear Dr. McNutt,

Sincerely,

Our financial aid program reflects our core belief that cost should never be a barrier to attending Harvard Medical School. Because of you, we can welcome outstanding students regardless of their financial means and enable them to begin their training with purpose and focus. 

As the representative of your class’s fundraising efforts, thank you for your generous commitment to financial aid at Harvard Medical School and for your support through the Class of 1968 Endowed Financial Aid Fund. I am grateful for your leadership and for your classmates' collective philanthropy. I’m pleased to share this report on how your class’s philanthropy is making a difference in our students’ lives and in the future of medicine.

Harvard Medical School is proud to offer one of the most generous financial aid programs in the country. In fiscal year 2025, we awarded $31.2 million in MD financial aid, placing HMS sixth nationally in total MD scholarship funding awarded. Seventy-one percent of our MD students receive aid, with an average annual scholarship of $61,758, and half of our scholarship recipients qualify for our Middle Income Initiative, which adjusts the parental contribution expected from HMS families with the greatest financial need. Your class’s support is essential to maintaining this level of aid and directing resources to those with the greatest need.

Even in a current challenging financial environment, with uncertain federal support, we remain steadfast in our commitment to financial aid. With your class’s partnership, we can continue to prioritize access and opportunity for outstanding students.

Financial aid does more than ease financial pressure—it enables our students to fully engage in their education, research, and clinical experiences, and to pursue careers guided by impact and service rather than by financial constraints. Thank you to your class for helping to educate and inspire the next generation of physicians and physician-scientists.

Miya Hugaboom

Class of 1968 Endowed Financial Aid Fund

Pathways, Class of 2028

Path to Medicine

Miya's path to medicine began at Vanderbilt University, where she earned dual degrees in Molecular and Cellular Biology and Medicine, Health, and Society. As an undergraduate researcher in the Rokas Lab, she led work comparing nuclear and mitochondrial genomic evolution in Aspergillus section Flavi, providing new insight into fungal mitochondrial genomics. This early focus on molecular evolution and host–pathogen biology motivated her transition toward translational cancer immunology.

Training & Development

After Vanderbilt, Miya joined the Braun Lab at Yale School of Medicine as a postgraduate associate in medical oncology. There, she contributed extensively to studies of renal cell carcinoma treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors, including work dissecting T cell phenotypes, resistance mechanisms to PD‑1 blockade, and the prognostic role of tertiary lymphoid structures. Her research has appeared in journals such as Cancer Discovery, ESMO Open, G3, and Microbiology Resource Announcements, as well as multiple conference abstracts and preprints.

Access & Opportunity

Miya is committed to making advanced medical training accessible and has benefited from competitive external funding, including a Fulbright research fellowship and support through federally funded research programs. At Harvard Medical School, financial aid reduces financial barriers to her training, and she mentors students interested in research‑based pathways to medical education.

BA, Vanderbilt University

Your support of financial aid ensures that the world’s most promising students can attend Harvard Medical School, regardless of their financial means. In turn, these students, representing a wide range ofbackgrounds and perspectives go on to become innovators and leaders in the field of medicine. HMS is proud to have one of the most generous financial aid programs in the country.

 Thank you

We could not do this without you.

Class of 2029

HST

165

Students

PATHWAYS

135

30

15 students are pursuing both an MD and a PhD (MD-PhD)

14%

From groups historically underrepresented in medicine

62

Colleges

31

U.S. States

09

Countries

The Impact of Financial Aid

Average annual scholarship

$61,758

Qualify for the HMS Middle Income Initiative, which adjusts the parental contribution expected for HMS families with the greatest financial need.

50%

Come from a family whose annual income is $50,000 or less

1 in 5

Receive financial aid

71%

Student Beneficiary

The Impact

Office of Alumni Affairs and Development


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