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The Power of Giving

Advancements in cancer prevention, therapies, and outcomes are driven by innovative research. Gifts power the wheel of cancer innovation, translating promising ideas into new standards of care.

Extraordinary care means our patients have access to the most innovative treatments, technologies, and expertise when it matters most. Gifts provide real-time solutions that directly improve a patient’s journey.

Academic medical centers have the honored responsibility of training the next generation of physician-scientists. Gifts foster a culture of continuous education and training, fueling the cycle of cancer innovation.

Many personal and socioeconomic barriers outside the hospital can impact a patient’s overall healing process and access to care. Gifts create a holistic and personalized approach to cancer that meet people where they are with premiere care designed to treat the entire person—beyond the hospital walls in our community and throughout the world.

Precision radiation therapy at The S. Lee Kling Proton Therapy Center at Siteman Cancer Center

Dig Deeper

Cancer is vast, complex, multidisciplinary, and personal. Search our resource library by cancer type, keyword, or simply browse the documents below to see how philanthropy is having a dramatic impact on cancer innovation.

Feeding the Heart, Mind, and Community

A fruitful garden requires a few simple yet essential elements—seeds, soil, sun, and water. At the Baden Community Vegetable Garden, it also takes committed, creative community members to help the garden flourish, strengthening the neighborhood with fresh, nutritious food and a common purpose rooted in healthy fellowship.

SEEDING A GARDEN
The Foundation for Barnes-Jewish Hospital awarded a community support grant to Assisi House to create the Baden Community Vegetable Garden in July 2022. Community grants from the Foundation provide seed funding to St. Louis nonprofit organizations to launch new programs to reduce health care disparities, foster strong community health care networks, promote health and wellness, or provide quality health care education.

The Baden Community Vegetable Garden is located in the City of St. Louis between Our Lady of the Holy Cross Catholic Church and Assisi House, which offers affordable housing for previously unhoused individuals and families. In a community with few options for fresh, nutrient-dense food, program organizers prioritized growing healthy food and creating a community gathering place where all are welcome.

“We wanted a community garden for the people to have something to do that’s constructive and to provide them with things that they may want to grow and eat,” says Gloria Gooden, a Baden resident since 1972 and owner of Gooden and Daughter Plumbing Contractors. “My hope is that the garden becomes a whole community project.”

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