Donate



header_tabbox_top2
Get Your Local Info
usmap Find out what is happening at your local American Heart area
header_tabbox_top
Wichita Heart Ball
  • Updated:Oct 25,2012
Where:
Drury Plaza Broadview Hotel
400 W. Douglas Avenue
Wichita, Kansas, 67202
Link to Map
When:
Starts:Sat, 16 Feb 2013 5:30:00 PM
Ends:Sun, 17 Feb 2013 12:00:00 AM
Registration Fee:Sponsorship and ticket information is available


Wichita Heart Ball LogoThe Wichita Heart Ball, a black tie affair, has become known around Sedgwick County over the past nineteen years as an evening filled with an elegant dinner, inspiring program, silent and live auctions, and an incredible After Party with live entertainment.

The Heart Ball benefits the American Heart Association (AHA) and raises monies to continue the “fight against heart disease and stroke” – the nation's #1 and #4 killers of men and women - and to benefit the AHA’s lifesaving mission of building healthier lives, free of cardiovascular diseases and stroke.

The 2013 Heart Ball Co-chairs are Greg Black & Karen Cox and Dr. P. David and Lynne Margolis.

While we've made great progress, there is still work to be done to further the mission of the AHA and impact the lives of the many people that live, work and play in our community. If you are interested in learning more about the Heart Ball, please give us a call!

                       Locally Presented by

Kansas Heart Hospital

 

Click on thumbnail pics to see photos of the 2012 Wichita Heart Ball
For more information contact:
Kristin Ghere
(316) 265-4238 x20
Kristin.Ghere@heart.org
Research Banner

Learn more About our Research at the American Heart Association
1940- Present

1948
Dr. Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, 1937 Nobel Prize recipient in Physiology or Medicine, receives the first AHA-supported research grant. The $25,000 grant covers equipment and staff salaries. Szent-Gyorgyi receives a second grant (for $10,000) in 1949. Both grants are awarded to enable him to do fundamental studies on muscle energetics.

With national AHA support, Dr. Alfred Farah examines the influence of sulfahydryl compounds as diuretics. The next year, Dr. William Schwartz, also receiving national funding, finds sulfanilamide can act as a diuretic. Diuretics help treat congestive heart failure and high blood pressure.



This site complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information:
verify here.