We partner with nonprofit organizations, community residents with lived experiences, and BJC HealthCare's Community Health Improvement team to convene, support, and lead efforts that address individual health needs and systemic barriers to health equity. Your gift funds community programs designed to eliminate health disparities in under-resourced communities in the City of St. Louis, North St. Louis County, and rural areas. Together, we can give all people the opportunity to live their healthiest possible lives.

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With support from our donors, BJC Community Health Improvement partners with more than 50 schools and five community organizations to advance equitable health and educational outcomes through BJC's Community Wellness Hub program. The hubs offer families, adults, and children a trusted a safe place for respite, mental wellness programming, and resource connection year-round. Your philanthropic support will empower thousands of families with coping methods to improve their mental wellness each year.

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Thousands of St. Louis neighbors face food insecurity and are diagnosed with type 2 diabetes each year. Through BJC's Healthy Eating Active Living initiative, we work to reduce the prevalence of chronic conditions by improving access to healthy food and providing health education. Philanthropic support advances critical BJC programs that provide food, nutrition education, access to safe spaces for physical activity, and social support to patients and their families to create long-term healthy habits.

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Improving Black Infant and Maternal Health Outcomes

Missouri has the seventh highest maternal mortality rate in the nation, with Black women 3.5 times as likely to die during pregnancy or from complications arising during childbirth compared to white women. With support from donors like you, BJC HealthCare is working to eliminate racial disparities by collaborating with community-based doulas and building clinical care teams that reflect the community it serves to help improve equity in maternal health outcomes.

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Vaccines and screenings play a pivotal role in saving lives, yet vaccination rates continue to fall below targets set by Healthy People 2030. Generous donors make it possible for BJC HealthCare to provide free flu vaccinations, year-round screening events, and other preventative services in under-resourced communities.

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Health equity is about everyone having an equal opportunity to be as healthy as possible. That means addressing the systems and structures that stand in the way of optimal health. Your support will enable us to address emerging community needs (e.g., housing security, gun safety and violence reduction, digital divide, etc.).

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Parker Oliver Named Chair in Palliative Medicine and Supportive Care

Ira Kodner, MD Chair Created with Gift from Anne and John McDonnell

Debra Parker Oliver, PhD, MSW, a noted expert in end-of-life caregiving and a recent addition to the Division of Palliative Medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis has been named the inaugural holder of the Ira Kodner, MD Chair in Palliative Medicine and Supportive Care.

The chair was created through a gift to The Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital from philanthropists John and Anne McDonnell.

Parker Oliver is a nationally known research mentor who has studied caregiving in hospice and palliative care. Her work in the Division of Palliative Care, along with an appointment at the Goldfarb School of Nursing at Barnes-Jewish College, allow her to focus research on helping family caregivers of dying patients.

Palliative medicine and hospice care focus on relieving suffering for patients with advanced diseases. The goal is to address symptoms while using compassionate communication and psychosocial and spiritual support to enhance quality of life for patients and members of their families.

The Foundation created the chair to honor Ira J. Kodner, MD, professor emeritus of surgery and former chief of the Section of Colon and Rectal Surgery in the Department of Surgery. Kodner has authored several articles about the ethical challenges involved in delivering health care. He also taught medical and surgical ethics and was involved in establishing the palliative care program at Washington University.

The endowed chair was made possible through a gift from Anne and John McDonnell. John McDonnell retired as chairman of the board of McDonnell Douglas Corp. after guiding its merger with The Boeing Co. He since has worked to establish St. Louis as a leading center for translating and commercializing life sciences research. He is the founding chair of BioSTL and BioGenerator and has served on the board of the Cortex Innovation Community, a regional innovation hub and technology district. He also is a past chairman and longtime supporter of the Donald Danforth Plant Science Center and the St. Louis Science Center.

The McDonnells and their family also have made significant contributions to advance Washington University’s status as a world leader in research, education and service to society, endowing numerous professorships, scholarships, buildings and academic programs, including the McDonnell International Scholars Academy, a global research and education partnerships with over 30 leading research universities around the world.

Before joining the faculty at Washington University, Debra Parker Oliver was a professor at the University of Missouri in the Department of Family and Community Medicine. She serves on the board of directors of the American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine and as a senior associate editor for the Journal of Pain and Symptom Management.

“We are excited to have an outstanding researcher and experienced hospice care provider join us in this endowed position,” said Victoria J. Fraser, MD, the Adolphus Busch Professor and head of the Department of Medicine at Washington University. “Debra has spent more than 20 years as a social worker and administrator in hospice programs, and her research and experience make her an ideal addition to our team in palliative medicine and supportive care.”

Parker Oliver earned her master’s degree in social work and a doctoral degree in rural sociology at the University of Missouri. She has authored nearly 200 peer-reviewed articles and a book about palliative and hospice care.

In September 2011, her husband, David, was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Parker Oliver and her husband benefitted from palliative care and hospice. The couple created a blog to share the journey with others, and it attracted readers from more than 70 countries. After her husband’s death, Parker Oliver shared even more in a memoir titled “Legacies from the Living Room: A Love-Grief Equation.”

“I am grateful for the opportunity to hold the Kodner chair, which honors one of Washington University’s greatest advocates for palliative medicine, and to work with so many wonderful caregivers at the university, the Goldfarb School of Nursing and throughout the BJC system,” Parker Oliver said. “I am especially grateful to the McDonnells, to Barnes-Jewish Hospital and to BJC HealthCare for their commitment to palliative and end-of-life care. I believe our efforts can help improve life for patients, for their families and for the caregivers who do this very important work.”

Washington University School of Medicine’s 1,500 faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals. The School of Medicine is a leader in medical research, teaching and patient care, ranking among the top 10 medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

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