In Their Parents Footsteps: Siblings Enter Saint Louis University School of Medicine Together
07/31/2024
ST. LOUIS – Attendees were seeing double at this year’s Saint Louis University School of Medicine White Coat Ceremony.
Aarti and Arjun Sahai, siblings in a triplet set, have shared essential milestones over the years. On Sunday, July 28, they added one more to their repertoire. They were part of the incoming Class of first-year medical students at SLU.

From left, Arjun and Aarti Sahai, siblings in a triplet set, are incoming first-year medical students at Saint Louis University School of Medicine. Photo by Kyle Kabance.
Unlike their brother, Akshut, who’s studying to become a dentist at Arizona State University, Aarti and Arjun chose to enter the medical profession like their parents, Animesh, M.D., and Madhu, M.D., who cloaked their children in their first white coats at the ceremony.
Aarti and Arjun are among 26% of incoming medical students who are SLU alums, earning undergraduate degrees in public health and neuroscience, respectively. They were also among 15% of the class who came from SLU’s Medical Scholars Program.
Training to Address Health Disparities
Natives of Kentucky, Aarti and Arjun lived in Washington state before moving with their parents to Sikeston, Missouri, at the start of their sophomore year in high school. Growing up in a rural community in the Bootheel, Aarti and Arjun noticed it was a hotspot for underserved populations.
Rural Missourians often face more disparities in health outcomes than their urban and suburban counterparts, in part from challenges accessing health care. Aarti said it’s jarring to witness “critical components” of urban and rural communities going without the care they need. Still, Aarti said she’s being trained to address health disparities.
Aarti credits the program with an early introduction to the biopsychosocial approach to medicine that systematically considers biological, psychological, and social factors and their complex interactions in understanding health, illness, and health care delivery.
The siblings say they gravitated to SLU because of its reputation as a top-ranked research university where faculty and students conduct ground-breaking work to address the world's toughest challenges. Aarti and Arjun are already impacting their community in positive ways.
Through an ongoing research internship with the City of St. Louis Department of Health, Aarti is playing a pivotal role in the fight to end the HIV epidemic. She created HIVE: The Art of Coming Together, a multi-pronged, community-based intervention program that tackles HIV health education at the individual, institutional, and community levels to increase the uptake of HIV prevention resources in underserved, marginalized groups ages 13-24 in the city of St. Louis.
As an ASPIRE Research Fellow through Washington University School of Medicine, Arjun assisted in a clinical trial that investigated the safety and efficacy of a diabetic medication in a sample of epileptic adults. He was also paired with a pediatric neurologist to assist with research on the health outcomes of parents of children with epilepsy who were found to have higher rates of stress, anxiety, and depression and exceeded the threshold for behavioral health referrals. He and his mentor presented their findings at last year’s Child Neurological Society annual meeting.
Looking ahead to their plans after medical school and residency, the duo said they’re keeping their options open. But one thing for sure is they will remain committed to service, Aarti said.
Arjun agreed, “I was drawn to SLU’s commitment to community-driven initiatives, which is a big part of SLU’s mission. I want to learn how I can play a role in this.”
White Coat Ceremony 2024
Latest Newslink
- SLU Chess Qualifies for Collegiate Chess ChampionshipSaint Louis University chess teams are heading to the Collegiate Chess Championship. The Billikens recently competed in the 2026 Pan-American Intercollegiate Chess Championship in Oak Brook, IL. SLU’s A Team finished fourth and secured a spot Collegiate Chess Championship finals, known as the President's Cup or colloquially as the “Final Four.” Additionally, the SLU B-Team was the top women’s squad at the tournament and will advance to the inaugural Women's President’s Cup.
- Building Connection and Collaboration: SLU President, Local Leaders Headline Leadership Speaker SeriesSaint Louis University’s Emerson Leadership Institute and Edward Jones Speaker Series will feature SLU President Edward Feser, Ph.D., as part of a joint speaker series on Wednesday, Jan. 21. Feser will speak on the theme, “Great Cities, Great Universities: Leading With Hope to Strengthen Our Shared Community,” sharing his vision for how SLU can lead boldly, collaborate meaningfully, and serve as an anchor of opportunity in St. Louis.
- SLU Hosting Journalists for 'Candid Conversations in Turbulent Times'The Saint Louis University American Studies Department will host award-winning ABC News anchor Linsey Davis and SLU alum John Krull (American Studies, '84) for the program "Candid Conversations in Turbulent Times." The event will take place at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 29, 2026, in the Anheuser Busch Auditorium in Cook Hall.
- Kathryn Mitchell Pierce, Ph.D.: 1955-2025Kathryn Mitchell Pierce, Ph.D., associate professor of educational studies, died Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2025. She was 70 years old. Pierce joined Saint Louis University in 2015 as an assistant professor in the School of Education. Initially a literacy specialist in the undergraduate program, she eventually taught and mentored across all levels at the School of Education. She became an associate professor in 2022.
- Saint Louis University Student Speaks About Leadership and Disability at Ignatian Family Teach-In for JusticeSaint Louis University senior Grace LoPiccolo shared her personal leadership journey at the 2025 Ignatian Family Teach-In for Justice. The event, held annually in Washington, D.C., is the nation’s largest Catholic social justice advocacy day.
- SLU Research Shows Surge in Alcohol-Related Liver Disease Driving ‘Deaths of Despair’Researchers at Saint Louis University School of Medicine say deaths from alcohol-related liver disease have surged in recent years, and the increase is hitting people without a college degree the hardest. While nearly every demographic group is seeing higher death rates—including those with college degrees—the gap between economically disadvantaged groups and more affluent ones is growing, according to new research.









