Park City native and longtime ER nurse Sloane Johnson knows all about the front lines of crisis, from the intensity of surgical ICUs and the Summit County Jail to a decade in the Park City Hospital ER. But since 2014, her customized personal approach to healing through Two Hearts Concierge Care has brought Parkites a fresh approach to wellness – one that it is never one-sided.
“It always two hearts working together — the nurse and the client,” Sloane smiles. “That is when health improves most.” Clients love Sloane’s calm, relational setting where vitamin infusions and wellness plans based on whole-person assessments are paired with advocacy and listening. “I want to keep people out of the ER,” she says, “and it’s been a raging success!”
Sloane’s philosophy also found expression at Summit County Community Gardens, “because prevention starts with the food we eat,” she avers. She helped launch the innovative Food Farmacy program in 2023 (“fresh food is medicine!” she says) and ultimately merged Community Garden with EATS.
It all became personal when Sloane’s husband, Bill, was diagnosed with cancer. Despite her experience, she describes feeling “thrown into a washing machine” by the health care system — overwhelmed and often unheard. Using wellness tools and the science-backed Two Hearts protocols developed with medical partner Dr. Kris Kemp has helped Bill go “from constant fear to nearly normal living,” reinforcing Sloane’s commitment to respectful, relational care.
She and Dr. Kemp connected in 2009 while opening the Park City Hospital ER. He has supported Two Hearts from the beginning, providing medical oversight and the science-based wellness protocols.
With a teen at Park City Winter School and another at Picabo Street Academy, Sloane lives the Mountainkind life full blast. “We love being outside, hiking with the dogs, skiing, cheering each other in sports,” she smiles. Shh sums up her hometown work and family in one neat phrase: “We are all involved in preserving the community we know and love.”