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Ingram's: 2025 Heroes in Healthcare
Each year, Ingram's chooses a select group of Heroes in Healthcare to feature in an issue of their magazine. In its 22nd installment, Saint Luke's Health System is proud to have a leader named as one of Ingram's 2025 Heroes in Healthcare.
News
Ingram’s: 50 Missourians You Should Know - 2025
Julie Quirin, BJC West Region President, recognized on the latest list of high-achieving Missourians in business and civic life.
News
Ingram's: Jani Johnson Named to 2025 Class of Women Executives–Kansas City
Every year, Ingram's, Kansas City's Business Magazine, honors and highlights outstanding women in leadership roles at high-profile regional companies.
News
Ingram's: Saint Luke's Physician Named in Top Doctors 2024
Saint Luke's is proud to have Dr. Anna Grodzinsky, cardiologist at Saint Luke's Mid America Heart Institute, named to Ingram's Top Doctors of 2024.
News
Ingram's: Saint Luke’s, UMKC Partner on Four-Year Study to Combat Maternal Mortality
The four-year observational study will research U.S. pregnant people with cardiovascular disease to better understand and combat maternal mortality and morbidity.
News
Ingram's: The Circle Tightens
Recent consolidations have created a realignment in acute-care providers across Kansas City. Julie Quirin, President of BJCHealthcare West Region, shares her viewpoint on how Saint Luke's integration with BJC will benefit patients and employees.
News
Iola Register: Slithering Surprises
Emergency rooms at Allen County Regional Hospital and Anderson County Hospital have seen an increase in snake bites this summer.
News
It Runs in the Family—Aspiring Saint Luke’s Nurse Continues Career Journey
Amelia McPherson’s nursing career at Saint Luke’s is just getting started—after working for four years at the on-site daycare, she recently enrolled in Saint Luke’s Nursing Assistant Academy.
News
JAMA Medical News: Even After CPR, Surviving Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Might Be Influenced by Race, Sex
A new study provides evidence that even among those who receive CPR, Black or female individuals are less likely to survive an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest than White or male individuals.