Shoshana R. Ungerleider Last updated November 15, 2025 Early life Ungerleider was born in Eugene, Oregon , to Jewish American parents. She is the daughter of American documentary film producer, author and sports psychologist Steven Ungerleider , and Sharon Margolin Ungerleider and granddaughter of Joy Ungerleider-Mayerson, author and Jewish philanthropist, [ 9] and great granddaughter of D. Samuel Gottesman , a Hungarian-born, American pulp-paper merchant, financier and philanthropist [ 10]
Career Ungerleider practiced internal medicine in San Francisco at Sutter Health 's California Pacific Medical Center [ 11] until becoming a primary care physician at Crossover Health [ 12] and is president of a non-profit organization she founded in 2017 called End Well [ 13] which aims to improve end-of-life care for all. She is an advocate for palliative care education and endowed a program [ 14] at California Pacific Medical Center to teach medical residents.
As a journalist, she has published articles about end of life and other medical topics in popular media including Newsweek , [ 15] USA Today , [ 16] Scientific American , TIME , Vox , San Francisco Chronicle and Stat and has appeared regularly as a medical expert contributor on CNN , [ 17] MSNBC and Fox News as well as PBS NewsHour and CBSN .
In film, Ungerleider executive produced Netflix 's Academy Award-nominated short documentary, End Game , [ 18] by directors Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. She was a major funder of Netflix's Extremis , an Academy Award-nominated, [ 19] Emmy-nominated [ 20] short documentary by director, Dan Krauss . [ 21] In 2020, Ungerleider executive produced Robin's Wish , a feature-length documentary about the final years of actor and comedian Robin Williams . [ 22]
In March 2018, she planned the San Francisco March for Our Lives rally [ 23] to protest gun violence in schools where thousands marched from Civic Center Plaza to the Embarcadero (San Francisco) . [ 24]
End Well Ungerleider founded endwellproject.org in 2017, a non-profit organization focused on education and awareness to improve the end of life experience where she remains President of the Board of Directors. [ 25] The organization began as End Well Symposium; which first convened in 2017 in San Francisco [ 26] and has also become an educational media platform. Its perspective ranges from culture, healthcare, design, business, technology to policy where notable individuals such as actress Taraji P. Henson , [ 27] country music singer Tim McGraw , comedian Tig Notaro , [ 28] Ricki Lake , [ 29] actor Yvette Nicole Brown , style icon Stacy London , Bravo (American TV channel) reality host Andy Cohen , therapist Esther Perel , Dr. Atul Gawande , Dr. BJ Miller , [ 30] singer Melissa Etheridge and others have spoken.
Awards In 2018, Ungerleider was named to San Francisco Business Times 40 Under 40 class. [ 31] In 2018, she was named Woman of the Year by Women Health Care Executives. [ 32] She was named to Becker's Hospital Review, 90 healthcare leaders under 40 in 2018. [ 33] In June 2020, Ungerleider was named a 2020 Changemaker by Hospice News, an aging and end of life industry publication. [ 34]
Filmography Year Title Role Notes 2020 Robin's Wish Executive producer 2018 End Game Executive producer Academy Award-nominated 2016 Extremis Major funder Academy Award, Emmy-nominated
References ↑ "Women Who Inspire Us: Shoshana Ungerleider" . ohsu.edu . Retrieved 4 June 2020 . ↑ "TED Relaunches TED Health Podcast with Dr. Shoshana Ungerleider, Leading Voice in Healthcare" . www.prnewswire.com (Press release). Retrieved 8 June 2021 . ↑ "All New Podcast "Before We Go" Premiering October 8" . www.podnews.net (Press release). Retrieved 12 January 2025 . ↑ "End Well Project" . endwellproject.org . Retrieved 4 June 2020 . ↑ "CNN's Michael Holmes interviews Dr. Shoshana ungerleider" . Twitter.com . Retrieved 21 June 2020 . ↑ "Can coronavirus be transmitted via mail delivery?" . Fox News . 12 April 2020. Retrieved 12 April 2020 . ↑ "Coronavirus pandemic special: Doctors answer viewers' questions" . Fox News . Retrieved 12 April 2020 . ↑ "Testing in order to re-open the economy" . Fox News . Retrieved 17 April 2020 . ↑ Pace, Eric (9 September 1994). "Joy Ungerleider-Mayerson, 74, Former Head of Jewish Museum" . The New York Times . Retrieved 8 July 2019 . ↑ Green, David B. (13 February 2015). "This Day in Jewish History 1955: Four Dead Sea Scrolls Come Home to Israel" . Haaretz . Retrieved 8 July 2018 . ↑ "Shoshana Ungerleider, MD" . Sutter Health . Retrieved 9 April 2020 . ↑ "The quest for long life: a distraction we can't afford" . Modern Healthcare . 27 April 2022. Retrieved 21 May 2025 . ↑ Voelker, Rebecca (2019). "Building a Better Death, One Conversation at a Time" . JAMA . 322 (3): 195– 197. doi :10.1001/jama.2019.6885 . PMID 31241718 . S2CID 195658986 . Retrieved 4 June 2020 . ↑ "Give to the Ungerleider Palliative Care Education Fund" . Sutter Health . Retrieved 4 June 2020 . ↑ Ungerleider (25 August 2021). "Are You Unvaccinated? It's Time to Make an End-of-Life Plan" . Newsweek.com . Retrieved 21 January 2022 . ↑ Ungerleider. "Nurses get spit on, kicked, assaulted. Stop hurting us. We are here to help you" . USAToday.com . Retrieved 21 January 2022 . ↑ "Nearly half of US states are reporting a rise in new coronavirus cases" . CNN.com . 22 June 2020. Retrieved 25 June 2020 . ↑ Gaitan, Daniel (8 July 2019). " 'End Game' Is The Documentary Film America Needs" . LifeMattersMedia . Retrieved 3 April 2020 . ↑ Wilkinson, Alicia (25 March 2017). "The Netflix short documentary Extremis looks at the hard questions of end-of-life care" . Vox . Retrieved 7 July 2019 . ↑ Stinson, Annakeara (6 September 2016). "Extremis Trailer: Netflix Documentary Examines Grim Realities of End-of-Life Care" . IndieWire . Retrieved 10 April 2019 . ↑ Staff. "Extremis screening Stanford Arts" . Stanford Arts . Retrieved 3 Feb 2020 . ↑ "IMDB Robin's Wish" . IMDB.com . Retrieved 11 Aug 2020 . ↑ Tucker (22 March 2018). "No one was organizing an SF rally against gun violence — so 1 woman did it" . SFchronicle.com . Retrieved 2 June 2020 . ↑ "San Francisco March for our Lives protesters rip NRA, call for gun bans" . Mercurynews.com . 24 March 2018. Retrieved 2 June 2020 . ↑ Perry, Kevin (11 November 2021). " 'I've experienced states of consciousness beyond this life': The people turning to psychedelics on their deathbeds" . The Independent . Retrieved 12 July 2022 . ↑ Tedeschi, Bob (4 January 2017). " 'Death is hot right now': An advocate for palliative care scored big with 'Extremis' " . STAT News . Retrieved 13 July 2022 . ↑ "End Well Announces Take 10, a Life Changing Event to Be Hosted December 10, 2020" . www.businesswire.com/ (Press release). 10 December 2020. Retrieved 12 June 2022 . ↑ Dembosky, April (28 December 2023). "Doctors are pushing Hollywood for more realistic depictions of death and dying" . NPR . Retrieved 14 May 2025 . ↑ Telling, Gillian (29 November 2024). "Ricki Lake Says She Tried Ayahuasca Despite Formerly Being 'Scared of Drugs': 'It's Been Profound' " . People . Retrieved 14 May 2025 . ↑ Martin, Courtney (14 December 2017). "Death Without Duality: Three Both/Ands at the End of Life" . On Being . Retrieved 9 July 2022 . ↑ Staff. "Meet the San Francisco Business Times' 40 under 40 Class of 2018" . San Francisco Business Times . Retrieved 9 April 2020 . ↑ Staff. "Women Health Care Executives - 2018 Woman of the Year Recipient" . whcesfbay.org . Retrieved 9 June 2019 . ↑ "Rising stars: 90 healthcare leaders under 40" . beckershospitalreview.com . 26 July 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2020 . ↑ Parker. "Changemakers: End Well Founder Shoshana Ungerleider, M.D." hospicenews.com . Retrieved 20 June 2020 . This page is based on this
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