Graduate Medical Education

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Resident and Fellow Graduation
June 13, 2025

St. Luke’s University Health Network proudly celebrates its 2025 Resident and Fellow graduates – physicians and providers who have completed specialty training through 55 residency and fellowship programs at St. Luke’s University Health Network.

The 33rd Annual Graduation Ceremony was held June 13 at the ArtsQuest Center at SteelStacks in Bethlehem. Nearly 50% of the graduating class of physicians will remain with St. Luke’s – an enormous benefit to the greater Lehigh Valley. As one of the nation’s top teaching hospitals, St. Luke’s attracts, cultivates and retains talent and expertise, ensuring the region will continue to enjoy local access to the highest standards of medical care.

“The growth of our programs year over year has been rapid, and that speaks to the Network’s commitment to paving the way for the next generation of learners” said J.P. Orlando, Ed.D, PCC, Chief Graduate Medical Education Officer. “We are being intentional about mentorship and making sure that we’re building a community around education. We’re helping our residents and fellows really feel connected to that intentional work we’re doing, and it’s exciting each year at orientation to welcome and interact with physicians who will be training with us and will hopefully be our future colleagues.”

For example, nine of our longstanding Graduate Medical Education residencies at St. Luke’s, including Emergency Medicine, Family Medicine and Internal Medicine, have collectively retained 40 physicians to stay with the Network this year. This includes those who will take on roles as attending physicians (29 hired) and those will further explore subspecialties of their chosen field (11 pursuing sub-specialty training) in a St Luke’s fellowship.

“From the beginning, we’ve recruited doctors who are team players, collegial, and motivated to serve this community. We teach them well and we treat them well during their time in the residency,” says the Bethlehem Campus Internal Medicine Program Director, John Hippen, MD, FACP. “We let them explore different opportunities and interests, which lets them see the vast possibilities within the Network.”

Holly Stankewicz, DO, program director of the Emergency Medicine residency at Bethlehem Campus and Andrew Goodbred, MD, program director of the Family Medicine residency at Anderson Campus, concur.

“We have faculty, both core and clinical, who are very dedicated and passionate about teaching. Our goal is to make sure the residents are able to handle whatever walks in the door.”

One of this year’s graduates remaining with the Network has another reason to view this milestone as a momentous occasion. Kurt Henly, DPM, a graduate of the Podiatric Medicine and Surgery Residency, was just months away from program completion in November 2023 when he was critically injured in an automobile accident. His extensive injuries included severe fractures to his left femur, left patella, right tibia and fibula (lower leg), pelvis, left radius and ulna (forearm), as well as fractures to both collar bones, left foot, and multiple ribs. He also suffered a collapse of both lungs and multiple severe internal abdominal injuries. He has since endured numerous surgeries and is grateful for the Network-wide support he received throughout his recovery.

“For this residency, we work at most of the hospitals within the Network. At each campus, for the first time I was back to any of those hospitals, it was like a reunion,” said Henly, who will join the St. Luke’s Monroe Campus this summer as an attending physician. “This has always been a very welcoming, supportive, family-like environment.”

Program director Robert Diamond, DPM, says Henly’s perseverance, ability to finish his residency, and the fact that he has three other program graduates staying with him at St. Luke’s this year are all worth celebrating.

“My residents,” he says, “really are a family.”