• Features
  • News
  • Print
  • Home
  • Features
  • Perspectives
  • News
  • Lifestyle
  • Gallery
  • Family
    • Weddings
    • Milestones
    • Obituaries
  • Classifieds
  • Advertise
  • About
  • Share a story
  • Contact us
  • Sign in

Latest News

  • Open Bible on a wooden board near the river.

    Bible Reading Plan 2026

    December 09, 2025
  • Healthy Heart Habits Lead to Super Bowl Surprise for KSDA Student

    December 09, 2025, by Laurie Yoshihara
  • PAA Prepares Students for College Success

    December 08, 2025, by U'Lee Brown

Print magazine

A Family Provides Care for Their Community

By Kirsten Cutler, July 13, 2022

When Esther Ong moved to Los Angeles from the Philippines and was seeking a nursing job, her brother gave her a tour of the Adventist Health hospital in Glendale. She knew almost right away it was the place for her.

“When I had my tour, I felt the ambience,” Esther recalled. “I said, OK, I think I’ll be working at Glendale!”

Esther achieved her goal and started working there in 2003. Throughout her 19 years with Adventist Health, Esther has worked as a staff nurse, preceptor, relief charge nurse and now is a telemetry educator at White Memorial in Los Angeles, California. In the process, she started an unlikely family tradition. All five of her children now work as medical professionals for Adventist Health.

“As soon as [my kids] reached high school, I enrolled them in the White Memorial Foundation as hospital volunteers,” Esther said. “The purpose of that was to keep them busy with activities in the summer instead of being in the house playing with gadgets all day long and, in addition, for them to see the bigger picture of the healthcare system.”

Esther considers her children’s volunteer experiences as at least one factor in their decisions to become health care providers. “It’s like we’re following the saying: ‘The family that works together, stays together,’” she said with a laugh.

Karla — the second oldest of Esther’s children — was first in line. After working in nursing for three years at Glendale, she’s now a nurse practitioner at Adventist Health Bakersfield.

“As a nurse, you’re the one that’s most remembered by the patient,” Karla said. “I’ve been a patient myself, so I kind of know how it is on the other end of things, and I think that drives you to become better for your patients.”

Karla adds that her mother has involved her family in medical mission trips throughout their life, which have also shaped their goals as a family and as individuals. “I think that did influence a lot of our decisions, going into healthcare and becoming the professionals that we are,” she said.

The eldest Ong sibling, Karen, is also a nurse by training, and now serves as employee health manager at Adventist Health White Memorial. She sees her professional mission as a family mission, as well. “Our mission is to get people better,” Karen said, “especially those who really are in need.” 

Karen said compassion, understanding and patience were words and values she grew up with. “Not everybody is as lucky as we are,” she said. “I’m grateful to my mom for guiding us with the principles that she has taught us since we were small.”

Image

Esther Ong has been a nurse with Adventist Health for nearly 20 years and has started an unlikely tradition: All five of her children also work at Adventist Health.

Print Friendly and PDF

Featured in: July/August 2022

Author

Kirsten Cutler

Adventist Health managing editor for story and experience
Section
Adventist Health
Tags
Adventist Health, Health

You may also like

  • Pad Thai Noodle Salad

    November 30, 2025, by Nina Curtis
  • Smiling woman doing shopping in supermarket and deciding what to buy. Happy woman shopping in a grocery store and holding shopping basket. Mature latin woman buying vegetable in a grocery shop.

    Food Trends With Staying Power

    November 23, 2025, by C.J. Anderson
  • Two joyful Caucasian couples bundled in warm winter clothing take a cheerful selfie outdoors in a snowy landscape adorned with twinkling festive lights.

    5 Back-to-Basic Ways to Stay Well This Winter

    October 10, 2025, by C.J. Anderson
  • Adventist Health Residents Experience Global Health Rotation

    October 06, 2025, by Kim Strobel
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Submit
  • Reprint/Repost Request
  • Style Guide
  • Change of Address
  • Subscriptions
  • Sunset
  • RSS
  • Contributor Login
  • Contact

The Gleaner is a gathering place with news and inspiration for Seventh-day Adventist members and friends throughout the northwestern United States. It is an important communication channel for the North Pacific Union Conference — the regional church support headquarters for Adventist ministry throughout Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. The original printed Gleaner was first published in 1906, and has since expanded to a full magazine with a monthly circulation of more than 40,000. Through its extended online and social media presence, the Gleaner also provides valuable content and connections for interested individuals around the world.

Copyright 2025, North Pacific Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists. All rights reserved. Legal disclaimer & privacy policy.