Skip to main content

Dr. Steven and Rebecca Scott Commit $20 Million to Duke Medicine

The gift will be used to expand Duke's sports medicine programs and provide support for the Duke University School of Medicine.

Dr. Steven Scott and his wife, Rebecca Scott, have committed $20 million to expand Duke's sports medicine programs, including clinical and research program development, faculty recruitment and retention, and support for sports medicine training, as well as provide support for the Duke University School of Medicine.  

Under the direction of Claude T. Moorman, M.D., Duke Sports Medicine currently comprises the Duke Sports Medicine Clinic, Duke Sports Medicine Physical Therapy, the Michael W. Krzyzewski Human Performance Lab and the Duke Sports Performance Program. It is a division of the Duke Department of Orthopaedic Surgery.

"Steve has worked closely with our sports medicine team to make a gift that will help build a multi-disciplinary program for athletes of all ages," said Victor J. Dzau, M.D., chancellor for health affairs and president and CEO of the Duke University Health System. "This gift will be a catalyst for discovery and innovation, and we are very grateful to Steve and Becky."

President Richard H. Brodhead said the gift will have a far-reaching effect. 

"Steve and Becky Scott are wonderful partners with both Duke University and Duke Medicine," Brodhead said. "This generous gift will allow our sports medicine program to grow to better serve athletes at Duke and beyond: our trainees will go on to advance research and care, while the research insights generated at Duke will have an impact on the field of sports medicine." 

Scott is a member of the Campaign Steering Committee for Duke Forward, the $3.25 billion university-wide fundraising campaign launched last September. He is also on the planning committee for "Medicine that Changes the World," Duke Medicine's $1.2 billion fundraising effort. 

"I see a great opportunity for Duke Medicine to differentiate itself in sports medicine," said Scott, a member of the Duke University Health System Board of Directors. "I truly believe Duke Orthopaedics is one of Duke's signature programs, and I hope this gift will benefit both the department and Duke University School of Medicine."

Leaders of Duke Sports Medicine said the Scotts' gift would have a lasting impact on their program.

"The Scott Family has given us the resources through this gift to build the top sports medicine center in the country," Moorman said. "It will allow us to integrate orthopaedic and primary care services with sports performance specialists, research scientists, sports psychology, sports nutrition and physical therapy, all to the advantage of our patients."

"Steve and Becky's generous gift will enable Duke Sports Medicine to achieve its mission to assist athletes at all levels in reaching maximum performance," added James R. Urbaniak, M.D., the Virginia Flowers Baker Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery and former chair of orthopaedic surgery. "At Duke, we are fortunate to align world-class clinical specialists with championship athletic programs to achieve a level of excellence that benefits Duke Athletics, the medical center and the community."

In October, Scott and his wife committed $10 million to Duke Athletics to help support the activities and programs in a new 35,000-square-foot building that will house ticket offices, a team store and training rooms. The gift was the largest ever to Duke Athletics at the time.

Steve Scott is the retired chairman of the medical investment company, Scott Holdings, LLC. He has nearly 35 years of experience in medicine and medical business. He also serves as an assistant consulting professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Duke University School of Medicine; president of the Scott Family Foundation; and a member of the Board of Trustees at the University of Florida. He is a member of the North Carolina Medical Society and the Florida Medical Association, among others.

He received a medical degree from Indiana University, completed internship and residency training at Duke University Medical Center from 1974-78 and is board certified in obstetrics and gynecology. He founded Coastal Physician Group (later named PhyAmerica), a company specializing in providing physicians and mid-level providers for emergency departments and other specialty services. Throughout the 1990s, he purchased several health maintenance organizations and eventually re-organized them into Florida Health Plan Administrators LLC/Vista Healthplan. Vista generated annual revenues of more than $1.2 billion and was sold to Coventry Health Care, Inc., in 2007.

Rebecca Scott is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro who went on to earn an allied health certificate in nurse anesthesiology from Duke in 1979. She served on the board of Durham Academy, The Hill Center and the Lucy Daniels Center for Early Childhood while the Scott family resided in Durham. After moving to south Florida, she served on the board of St. Andrew's School in Boca Raton, where the three youngest Scott children graduated from its upper school. 

The Scotts, who live in Boca Raton, have five children, including two who currently attend the Duke University School of Medicine.