St. Louis Children's Hospital

[1] The hospital treats infants, children, teens, and young adults aged 0–21.

Senator Frank Blair conversed with friends about the need for a hospital dedicated to the care of poor children.

[3] Blair encouraged her friends to support the hospital and a female Board of Managers was formed.

They supported the daily administration of the hospital and a "gentlemen's advisory board" was responsible for the financial and legal side.

After occupying the rented house for a year, the organization raised funds to buy a building on Franklin Avenue.

With accommodations limited to fifteen beds, patients with chronic, incurable, or infectious diseases were not admitted.

In the early 1900s, Washington University's Medical School was undergoing a re-working after receiving a poor rating during a review in 1909; the medical school was noted to be lacking in full-time faculty and dedicated teaching hospitals.

Today, St. Louis Children's Hospital's clinical and community outreach programs serve more than 250,000 patients annually.

Pediatric polysomnography patient
Children's Hospital
The entrance to St. Louis Children's Hospital.
Kidsflight 1 is a MBB/Kawasaki BK 117 helicopter operated by the SLCH transport team