SSM Health
SSM Health is a Catholic, not-for-profit integrated health care system founded in 1872 by five Franciscan Sisters of Mary who emigrated from Germany to St. Louis, Missouri, seeking religious freedom and establishing a ministry of healing rooted in Christian principles.[1][2] Operating across Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin, it comprises 23 hospitals, over 60 outpatient facilities, and serves comprehensive health needs through approximately 40,000 team members and 15,000 providers, emphasizing the revelation of God's healing presence amid empirical demands for sustainable, compassionate care.[1][3] Guided by the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services, SSM Health prioritizes the sanctity of life from conception to natural death, prohibiting procedures such as elective abortions, euthanasia, and direct sterilizations, which has positioned it as a counterpoint to secular health systems in debates over reproductive and end-of-life practices.[4] This commitment traces to milestones like opening the nation's first Catholic hospital for African Americans in 1933, reflecting a heritage of addressing underserved communities while adhering to causal realities of human dignity over utilitarian interventions.[5] As one of the largest U.S. Catholic systems by scale, it has expanded through integrations and innovations, though operational challenges including data security incidents affecting millions in 2023 have drawn scrutiny alongside its financial stability rated at AA levels.[6][7] Under President and CEO Laura S. Kaiser, the system continues advancing health equity initiatives grounded in its founding charism, balancing empirical outcomes with faith-based realism amid broader industry pressures.[2]History
Founding and Early Years
SSM Health's healthcare ministry originated with the arrival of five Sisters of St. Mary—led by Mother Mary Odilia Berger—from Germany to St. Louis, Missouri, on November 16, 1872. Fleeing religious persecution and motivated to serve the poor and sick in the aftermath of the American Civil War, the sisters possessed minimal resources, including approximately $5 and a basket for collecting donations and transporting medical supplies. They commenced their work through itinerant nursing, visiting homes to treat victims of prevalent epidemics such as smallpox and cholera.[8][9] In 1877, the sisters established their first permanent facility, St. Mary's Infirmary, on Papin Street in St. Louis, marking the inception of organized hospital care under their auspices. This institution addressed the acute need for accessible medical services in a city grappling with industrial growth and immigrant influxes. Early operations emphasized compassionate, faith-based healing aligned with Franciscan principles of humility and service to the marginalized.[8][10] The congregation's early years involved perilous expansions, including in 1878 when 13 sisters volunteered to nurse yellow fever patients in Memphis, Tennessee (eight sisters) and Canton, Mississippi (five sisters), with eight returning alive amid high mortality rates. On October 4, 1880, the Vatican granted official approval to the Sisters of St. Mary as a religious institute, shortly before Mother Odilia's death on October 18 of that year. These foundational efforts laid the groundwork for a network of Catholic hospitals that would evolve into SSM Health by the late 20th century.[8]Mid-20th Century Expansion
In the post-World War II era, the Sisters of St. Mary, who operated the facilities that would later form SSM Health, addressed surging healthcare demands through targeted expansions and modernizations at key hospitals. At St. Mary's Hospital in Jefferson City, Missouri, remodeling and physical expansions in the 1940s incorporated a new convent and chapel to support the growing operations and staff needs of the institution.[11] By the 1950s and early 1960s, similar initiatives focused on enhancing clinical capabilities amid population growth and advancing medical practices. For instance, the Physical Therapy Department was established at St. Joseph Hospital during this period, reflecting a broader commitment to specialized rehabilitative services.[12] These developments aligned with national trends in hospital infrastructure investment, enabling the Sisters' network to serve expanded patient volumes without formal system integration until later decades. A notable milestone occurred in the mid-1960s at St. Mary's Hospital in Jefferson City, where a six-story addition boosted bed capacity to 200, upgraded emergency and surgical departments, and introduced one of Missouri's earliest intensive care units.[11] This project, part of a two-phase expansion beginning around 1966 in select facilities, underscored the Sisters' proactive adaptation to technological and demographic pressures, laying groundwork for sustained regional coverage.[12]Late 20th and 21st Century Developments
In 1986, the Franciscan Sisters of Mary formalized SSM Health as an integrated not-for-profit Catholic health care system, consolidating hospitals, nursing homes, and related services under centralized governance to enhance operational efficiency and mission alignment.[1] This restructuring marked a shift from independent facilities to a coordinated network, enabling broader resource sharing amid rising health care costs in the late 1980s.[13] During the 1990s, SSM Health pursued incremental expansions, including facility upgrades and entry into adjacent markets like Illinois, while maintaining adherence to Catholic ethical directives in care delivery.[1] By the early 2000s, the system achieved national recognition for quality, receiving the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award in 2002 as the first U.S. health care organization to earn this honor for excellence in leadership, strategic planning, and patient-focused performance.[14][15] The 21st century brought accelerated growth through strategic mergers and acquisitions to counter competitive pressures and extend geographic reach. In 2013, SSM Health merged with Dean Health System in Wisconsin, adding multiple clinics and hospitals to its Midwest portfolio and integrating over 500 physicians.[16] In 2015, it acquired St. Louis University Hospital from Tenet Healthcare, repatriating a facility with historical ties to the system's founding sisters and rebranding several St. Louis-area hospitals to unify branding amid expansion.[17][18] Further consolidation occurred in 2018 with the merger of Agnesian HealthCare and Monroe Clinic in Wisconsin, incorporating four hospitals, eight post-acute centers, and dozens of clinics, thereby strengthening rural and community-based services.[19] Subsequent developments included a 2019 partnership with LHC Group for home health and hospice services across multiple states, enhancing post-acute care capabilities.[20] In 2022, SSM Health integrated SLUCare Physician Group, the academic practice of Saint Louis University School of Medicine, adding over 900 providers and deepening ties to medical education while preserving the hospital's role in training.[21] These moves expanded SSM Health's network to over 20 hospitals and 39,000 employees across Missouri, Illinois, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin by the mid-2020s, with a focus on value-based care and supply chain innovations like generic drug partnerships to reduce costs.[22][23]Governance and Sponsorship
Sponsorship by Franciscan Sisters of Mary
SSM Health was founded and originally sponsored by the Franciscan Sisters of Mary, a Roman Catholic religious congregation established in St. Louis, Missouri, following the arrival of five sisters led by Mother Mary Odilia Berger on November 16, 1872.[24] These founding sisters, fleeing religious persecution in Germany, initiated healthcare ministry by nursing the sick poor in their adopted community, establishing the Sisters of St. Mary congregation that later merged to form the Franciscan Sisters of Mary in 1987.[24] Under their sponsorship, the sisters developed a network of hospitals and healthcare agencies across four Midwestern states, emphasizing service to the underserved and adherence to Catholic principles of healing.[24] The Franciscan Sisters of Mary maintained direct canonical sponsorship of SSM Health for over 140 years, guiding its expansion and operations while integrating Franciscan values of compassion, stewardship, and respect for human dignity into its mission.[1] This sponsorship ensured alignment with the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services issued by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, particularly on issues of life, dignity, and care for the vulnerable.[25] As the congregation's membership declined—to 89 sisters with no new entrants in 35 years by 2013—the sisters initiated a structured transition to perpetuate their charism amid demographic shifts affecting many religious orders.[25] In June 2012, the Franciscan Sisters applied to the Vatican for approval to transfer sponsorship to a public juridic person, which was granted in November 2012; the handover to SSM Health Ministries occurred on November 16, 2013, marking the 141st anniversary of the congregation's founding in St. Louis.[25] SSM Health Ministries, designed to sustain the Franciscan legacy through lay and clerical collaboration, initially comprised three Franciscan Sisters of Mary and three lay members, with renewable terms of up to nine years to balance continuity and renewal.[25] By September 2024, the sponsoring body included two Franciscan Sisters of Mary, one Sister of St. Agnes, one Jesuit priest, one Franciscan priest, and four lay persons, collectively exercising reserved powers over SSM Health's governance to preserve its Catholic identity.[26] This model reflects a broader trend in Catholic healthcare to adapt sponsorship structures canonically while retaining the originating congregation's influence.[25]Organizational Structure and Leadership
SSM Health operates as a centralized not-for-profit Catholic integrated health system, with executive leadership overseeing strategic, operational, human resources, capital allocation, policy development, and procedural standardization across its facilities in Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin.[27] The structure balances enterprise-wide standards with regional autonomy, incorporating regional presidents to manage local operations while aligning with system-level goals.[28] At the facility level, entity leadership includes hospital presidents, administrative councils comprising senior executives, and medical staff leaders, totaling oversight for approximately 24 hospitals, over 300 physician offices, and associated outpatient services as of recent reports.[29] The executive leadership team is headed by Laura S. Kaiser, who serves as President and Chief Executive Officer, a role she has held while advocating for affordable and accessible high-quality care.[30] Key members include Sue Anderson as Regional President for Wisconsin, Joan Bachleitner, JD, as Chief Strategy Officer, Caroline Battles as Chief Administrative Officer, and Stephanie Duggan, MD, as Chief Clinical Officer, appointed in November 2023 to lead clinical strategy and operations.[27][31] Additional senior roles encompass a Chief Financial Officer and Chief Human Resources Officer, supporting financial and personnel governance.[32] Governance is provided by a Board of Directors, which sets overarching policy and strategic direction, with Samuel Ross, MD, MS, serving as Chair since January 2023.[33] The board underwent expansions in January 2025 with the addition of Paige Bass, JD, and David E. Hartenbach, MD, enhancing expertise in legal and medical affairs.[34] Regional adaptations, such as the August 2023 realignment in Wisconsin integrating leadership across seven hospitals under unified operational command, exemplify efforts to streamline decision-making and improve coordination.[35] This hierarchical model ensures alignment with the system's mission while addressing diverse regional needs.Facilities and Operations
Overview of Services
SSM Health provides a comprehensive range of healthcare services, including acute inpatient care through its 23 hospitals, outpatient services via over 290 physician offices and clinics, virtual care options, senior living facilities, home health programs, and hospice care, serving communities in Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin.[15][36] Primary care constitutes a foundational element of its offerings, with providers specializing in family medicine, internal medicine, obstetrics and gynecology, and pediatrics to address routine health needs across all life stages.[37] Urgent care and express clinics supplement this by treating minor injuries and illnesses when primary providers are unavailable.[38] Specialty care encompasses more than 50 medical fields, including cardiology (e.g., A-Fib ablation), oncology, orthopedics (e.g., joint replacements and fracture management), neurology, gastroenterology, dermatology, and behavioral health services for addiction treatment and mental health support.[39][40] Diagnostic and imaging services, such as allergy testing and advanced scans, support these specialties, while women's health programs address reproductive and gynecological needs.[40] Post-acute and community-based services include home health care with skilled nursing, physical, occupational, and speech therapies, medical social work, and home health aides; specialized home programs for wound care and orthopedic recovery; palliative care; and hospice services focused on end-of-life support and grief bereavement.[41][42] Workplace health initiatives, such as employee assistance programs, injury prevention, and worksite wellness, extend services to occupational settings.[43]Facilities by Region
SSM Health maintains facilities across four primary regions corresponding to states: Missouri (divided into the Greater St. Louis metropolitan area and Mid-Missouri), Southern Illinois, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin. The system encompasses 23 hospitals, over 490 physician offices, and various outpatient and post-acute care sites as of recent reports.[44][45] In the Greater St. Louis metropolitan area of Missouri, SSM Health operates eight hospitals, including SSM Health DePaul Hospital, SSM Health St. Clare Hospital, SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital, and SSM Health St. Joseph Hospital - St. Charles, alongside affiliations such as SSM Health Saint Louis University Hospital and SSM Health Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital. These facilities provide comprehensive inpatient and outpatient services, supported by nearly 2,500 staff physicians and 11,500 employees in the region.[46][47] Mid-Missouri facilities center on SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital in Jefferson City, a full-service acute care hospital with 167 beds offering emergency, cardiology, orthopedics, oncology, maternity, and imaging services, including a Level II nursery. Additional sites include urgent care centers and medical group clinics in areas like Belle and Holts Summit.[48][49][50] In Southern Illinois, key hospitals include SSM Health Good Samaritan Hospital in Mount Vernon and SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital in Centralia, complemented by medical group practices in Benton, Centralia, and Mount Vernon for primary and specialty care, including behavioral health and wound care services.[51] Oklahoma operations feature SSM Health St. Anthony Hospital in Oklahoma City, SSM Health St. Anthony Hospital - Shawnee, and SSM Health St. Anthony Hospital - Yukon, with associated medical groups, bone and joint centers, and labor and delivery units.[52] Wisconsin facilities span South Central regions with hospitals such as SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital in Madison and Janesville, and SSM Health St. Clare Memorial Hospital in Oconomowoc, alongside over 70 clinic locations including Dean Medical Group sites in Baraboo and other communities for integrated primary, specialty, and community-based care.[53]Key Hospitals and Clinics
SSM Health operates 23 acute care hospitals across Illinois, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Wisconsin, alongside over 490 outpatient facilities including clinics and physician offices.[44] Key hospitals anchor regional care delivery, often featuring specialized services such as trauma centers, pediatric care, and academic affiliations.[54] In Missouri, SSM Health Saint Louis University Hospital in St. Louis serves as a Level I trauma and stroke center with 368 beds, partnering with Saint Louis University School of Medicine for training and research.[55] SSM Health DePaul Hospital - St. Louis, established in 1866, provides comprehensive services including cardiology and orthopedics in a 476-bed facility.[56] SSM Health Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital, a pediatric specialist center with 195 beds, handles over 15,000 emergency visits annually and is the only Level I pediatric trauma center in Missouri. SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital - St. Louis offers maternity, cancer, and neurology services in a 184-bed community hospital setting. Wisconsin facilities include SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital - Madison, a 354-bed academic medical center recognized for high-performing ratings in multiple specialties by U.S. News & World Report in 2025–2026, with expertise in cardiology and orthopedics.[56] [57] SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital - Janesville provides regional care including women's health and cancer services in a 50-bed facility.[58] In Illinois, SSM Health Good Samaritan Hospital in Mount Vernon, with 134 beds, functions as the primary regional provider for surgical and emergency services.[51] Oklahoma's major sites encompass SSM Health St. Anthony Hospital - Oklahoma City, a 603-bed tertiary center offering advanced cardiology, neurology, and oncology.[52] SSM Health St. Anthony Hospital - Midwest City delivers community-based acute care including emergency and imaging services.[59] Prominent clinics include SSM Health Express Virtual Care for telehealth and numerous SSM Health Medical Group outpatient sites providing primary care, urgent care, and specialties like ENT and pain management, with over 2,500 affiliated physicians system-wide.[54][60]Catholic Identity and Ethical Policies
Adherence to Ethical and Religious Directives
SSM Health, sponsored by the Franciscan Sisters of Mary, operates as a Catholic health care ministry and mandates adherence to the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services (ERDs), sixth edition, issued by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in 2018.[61] These directives outline moral and theological principles for Catholic health care organizations, addressing issues such as the dignity of human life from conception to natural death, the sanctity of marriage, and the prohibition of procedures like direct abortion, euthanasia, assisted suicide, and sterilization.[61] SSM Health integrates the ERDs into its governance by requiring all facilities to adopt them as policy, ensuring compliance through mission statements, ethical review processes, and staff obligations.[62] The organization's commitment is formalized in provider education materials, which state that SSM Health complies with the ERDs as a core aspect of its Catholic identity, emphasizing respect for human dignity, care for the vulnerable, and stewardship of resources.[63] Ethics committees at SSM facilities, such as at Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital, promote an ethical culture aligned with Catholic teachings and the ERDs by addressing clinical dilemmas, consulting on end-of-life decisions, and ensuring decisions respect the directives' prohibitions on interventions that intentionally end life or violate Church doctrine.[64] Non-compliance can result in corrective actions, as outlined in SSM's code of conduct, which ties ethical behavior to the ERDs, Church teachings, and corporate responsibility processes.[65] Adherence extends to partnerships and operations, where SSM Health evaluates collaborations to ensure alignment with ERD principles, such as avoiding referrals for prohibited services like contraception or reproductive technologies that separate procreation from marital unity.[61] This framework influences patient care protocols, research ethics, and resource allocation, prioritizing holistic care that integrates spiritual support with medical treatment while rejecting materialistic or utilitarian approaches to health.[62] In practice, SSM's annual credentialing education reinforces ERD compliance for physicians and staff, covering topics like advance directives that honor natural death over hastened interventions.[63]Policies on Life Issues and Patient Care
SSM Health maintains policies on life issues and patient care in strict accordance with the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services (ERDs), sixth edition, issued by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in 2018. These directives mandate that Catholic health care organizations prohibit direct abortion at any stage of pregnancy, defining it as the intentional termination of pregnancy for reasons other than to save the life of the mother in cases where the child's death is unavoidable. Procedures such as euthanasia, physician-assisted suicide, and mercy killing are explicitly forbidden, with emphasis placed instead on compassionate palliative care, pain management, and spiritual support for dying patients.[61][62] For care at the beginning of life, SSM Health does not offer contraception, direct sterilization, or in vitro fertilization techniques that involve embryo destruction or third-party gamete donation, as these conflict with the ERDs' requirement to respect human life from conception and the unitive-procreative integrity of marital acts. Ethical alternatives, such as natural family planning and fertility awareness methods, are promoted where appropriate, while treatments for infertility focus on restorative approaches like NaProTechnology that align with Catholic moral principles. In maternal-fetal conflicts, interventions prioritize the viable child unless separation is medically necessary to save the mother's life, without intending the child's death.[61][66] Regarding end-of-life care, SSM Health supports the use of advance directives that reflect Catholic teaching, allowing patients or proxies to forgo extraordinary or disproportionately burdensome treatments while requiring the provision of ordinary care, nutrition, hydration, and comfort measures unless they prove futile or excessively painful. Hospice and palliative services are available to affirm human dignity in dying, but no active shortening of life is permitted, even at patient request. Ethical consultation committees at SSM facilities assist in resolving dilemmas consistent with these standards.[67][61][64] Patient care policies extend to prohibiting services deemed incompatible with Catholic anthropology, such as gender transition surgeries or hormone therapies that alter sex characteristics, leading SSM Health to discontinue such procedures at its Aesthetic Center in Middleton, Wisconsin, in mid-2023 following review by diocesan authorities. These restrictions ensure all care upholds the inherent dignity of the human person as male or female, body and soul, without exception for elective interventions.[61][68]Awards and Quality Recognition
Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award
SSM Health Care, a not-for-profit Catholic health system, received the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award in the health care category on November 21, 2002, marking the first time a health care organization earned this presidential honor administered by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST).[69][14] The award evaluates recipients on seven criteria: leadership; strategic planning; customer focus; measurement, analysis, and knowledge management; workforce focus; process management; and results, with SSM Health Care demonstrating sustained excellence across these domains through data-driven continuous quality improvement (CQI) and mission-aligned leadership.[14][70] Central to SSM Health Care's recognition was its values-driven approach, rooted in its Catholic identity, which integrated strategic, financial, and human resource planning (SFPP) with performance management processes to foster accountability and innovation.[14] Key achievements included expanding clinical collaboratives from their 1999 launch to 85 teams by 2002, yielding measurable outcomes such as over 80% of congestive heart failure patients receiving coumadin therapy compared to a 64% industry benchmark.[14] The organization also grew its St. Louis market share to 18% over three years amid competitors' declines, maintained an AA credit rating for four consecutive years (achieved by fewer than 1% of U.S. hospitals), and reduced employee turnover from 21% in 1999 to 13% in 2002 while increasing minority representation in professional roles from 8% in 1997 to 9.2% in 2001.[14] Technological integration further underscored its results, with physicians connected to automated information systems rising from 3,200 in 1999 to 7,288 in 2002, enabling enhanced data utilization via tools like DI Diver software for clinical decision-making.[14] Announced by President George W. Bush, the award highlighted SSM Health Care's $1.7 billion in annual operating revenues and its role as a model for quality management in health care, influencing subsequent Baldrige applications in the sector.[69][71]Other Quality and Safety Achievements
SSM Health facilities have received multiple 'A' Hospital Safety Grades from The Leapfrog Group, which evaluates hospitals on preventing medical errors, infections, and other harms. For instance, SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital in Centralia earned an 'A' for spring 2022 and fall 2021, recognizing superior performance in safety practices such as hand hygiene and error prevention.[72][73] Similarly, SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital - Madison received an 'A' for fall 2021.[73] Healthgrades has awarded the Patient Safety Excellence Award to select SSM Health hospitals, honoring those in the top 10% nationally for minimizing 14 preventable conditions like infections and falls. SSM Health Good Samaritan Hospital in Mount Vernon received this distinction in recent years, alongside the Outstanding Patient Experience Award.[74] SSM Health Monroe Hospital also earned the Patient Safety Excellence Award in 2023.[75] In nursing excellence, which supports overall patient safety outcomes, SSM Health Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital achieved Magnet recognition from the American Nurses Credentialing Center in November 2024, marking it as upholding the highest standards in nursing care and leadership.[76] SSM Health pursues Magnet designation system-wide as a benchmark for quality.[77] SSM Health was honored with the Wisconsin Safety Council Workplace Safety Award in April 2025 for exemplary safety records, training, and health programs, reflecting efforts to protect staff and, by extension, patient care environments.[78]Financial Performance
Historical Financial Trends
SSM Health's consolidated operating revenues have grown steadily, rising from $8,253 million in 2020 to $11,409 million in 2024, reflecting expansions through acquisitions and organic growth in patient services.[79][80] This expansion aligns with the system's integration of entities like Dean Health System in Wisconsin and increased pharmacy benefit management revenues.[79] Total assets expanded from $10,540 million in 2020 to $12,277 million in 2024, supported by investment portfolio growth and capital investments in facilities.[79][80] Operating income transitioned from surpluses of $114 million in 2020 and $209 million in 2021 to persistent losses, reaching $249 million in 2022 and stabilizing around $60-70 million deficits in 2023-2024, amid higher labor, supply, and inflation pressures common in U.S. healthcare.[79][81][80] Despite operational challenges, the excess of revenues over expenses remained positive overall from 2023 onward due to nonoperating gains, including investment returns averaging 9-12% annually and one-time divestiture proceeds in 2021.[79][80] Net assets increased from $3,674 million in 2020 to $5,172 million in 2024, indicating strengthened liquidity and capital position.[79][80]| Fiscal Year | Operating Revenues ($ millions) | Operating Income/Loss ($ millions) | Excess of Revenues over Expenses ($ millions) | Total Assets ($ millions) | Total Net Assets ($ millions) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 8,253 | 114 | 286 | 10,540 | 3,674 |
| 2021 | 9,086 | 209 | 716 | 11,423 | 4,814 |
| 2022 | 9,307 | (249) | (464) | 10,629 | 4,504 |
| 2023 | 10,536 | (59) | 292 | 11,610 | 4,871 |
| 2024 | 11,409 | (70) | 264 | 12,277 | 5,172 |