Walter Panzirer, is a grandson of Leona Helmsley. Raised in California, he adopted South Dakota as his home. Having worked as a first responder in both states, Walter witnessed personally the significant disparities in quality health care available close to home – disparities that demanded attention. Serving as a paramedic, firefighter, and police officer also made him acutely aware of the range of situations encountered by these professionals – from cardiac and stroke events, to individuals facing a mental health crisis.
Upon the death of his grandmother, Walter was to his great surprise named a Trustee of the Helmsley Charitable Trust. He realized the opportunity for investing in better healthcare for Americans in rural communities as well as for supporting communities across rural Africa to build resilience. A passionate advocate for telehealth, Walter is committed to shortening the distance between a medical emergency and life-saving treatment, including outfitting first responders with modern equipment for managing emergencies. His curiosity, coupled with a get-it-done acumen, means that he’s always looking for healthcare leapfrog opportunities that can be readily implemented.
Walter studied business and history at Black Hills State University, and pursued pastoral studies at MidAmerica Nazarene University. An inductee to American Telehealth Association’s College of Fellows as well the South Dakota Hall of Fame, Walter has served on a number of nonprofit and educational boards. He, his wife, and their family own and operate a hunting lodge in rural South Dakota and multiple commercial properties.
June 12, 2024
May 8, 2024
Inside Philanthropy recently sat down with Helmsley Trustee Walter Panzirer to discuss the origin of our ECMO initiative and current cardiac portfolio. The article details how our ECMO initiative began when Helmsley Trustee Walter Panzirer met with Dr. Demetris Yannopoulos, the visionary behind the first ECPR program in the United States, bringing ECMO to cardiac arrest patients. Since then, we’ve…
March 21, 2024
People in rural areas have always wanted water piped to their homes, the same as urban residents. But it has often been assumed that delivering piped water to rural areas would be prohibitively expensive or that people would not be willing to pay for water.
March 21, 2024
Through my years of involvement in improving rural healthcare, I’ve been aware of the value of point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS), but a conversation with a physician assistant in rural Glenwood, Minnesota proved how this single imaging tool can save even more lives when used in new ways. When Tom Pahl began working in rural medicine two decades ago, his practice was…
February 6, 2024
With the launch of a new certification from the American Heart Association, stroke patients will have access to faster, more effective recovery in skilled nursing facilities. The story of Helmsley’s work with the Association to develop this certification shows how much progress can be made when industry and philanthropy join forces.
January 29, 2024
In recent years, infectious diseases like West Nile, Zika, and Covid-19 have dominated global headlines while the ravages of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs) have quietly persisted. NTDs, a group of debilitating viral, bacterial, and parasitic diseases including river blindness and elephantiasis, affect 1 of every 5 people around the globe. They cause enormous suffering and often life-altering disability, and…
January 4, 2024
In Ethiopia, the vast majority of the population lives in the rural countryside, and people often undergo long treks on foot, bicycle, or motorcycle in order to reach schools, medical facilities, and markets. During periods of heavy rain, rivers or gorges become impassable and cut communities off from broader networks. Since 2001 Bridges to Prosperity, headquartered in Kigali, Rwanda, has…
June 28, 2023
Helmsley’s $3 million grant to the Billings Clinic in Montana created the state’s first psychiatry residency program. “Your physician to population shortage ratio is extreme in a lot of these upper Midwestern states,” Helmsley Trustee Walter Panzirer said. This grant aims to increase the number of psychiatrists in the state; a previous internal medicine rural residency program resulted in 60%…
May 31, 2023
Helmsley Trustee Walter Panzirer sat down with Inside Philanthropy to discuss Helmsley’s rural mental health grantmaking portfolio. “We face an all-hands-on-deck moment to address current needs,” Panzirer said, adding that “philanthropy can often act more nimbly than local, state or federal governments, and we are in a fortunate position to help transform care in communities with novel solutions that respond…
April 11, 2023
Walter Panzirer, a Helmsley trustee, discussed our AED initiative, which aims to put AEDs in every law enforcement officer’s vehicle across eight states.
February 2, 2023
Walter Panzirer, a Helmsley trustee, penned an op-ed about the mental health crisis is America. In this op-ed, he outlines the disparities between rural and urban access to mental healthcare professionals as well as the initiatives that Helmsley is taking to close the gap. Read his op-ed here.
September 21, 2022
Walter Panzirer, a Helmsley Trustees, sat with PBS host Amber Renee Dixon for an installment of Nevada Week In Person. Together they discussed Walter’s background, his role in shaping the Helmsley Charitable Trust, and the passions that drive the mission of his work in his role as a Trustee. Watch the full interview at pbs.org.