If you are a credentialed allied health worker — or training to be one — moving to Kansas, the practical question is not whether jobs exist but where they are concentrated and what specific credential each major employer expects to see on a resume. The hospital systems and metropolitan markets profiled below absorb the majority of allied health hiring in this state, and reading their actual job postings before you finalize a training program is one of the highest-leverage moves a candidate can make. The Kansas labor market is anchored by the Wichita metropolitan area, with secondary concentrations in Overland Park, Topeka.
Major Hospital Systems
The largest acute-care hospital systems in Kansas account for the bulk of allied health hiring across nearly every profession tracked on this site. They typically post several hundred allied health requisitions per year apiece — across radiology, respiratory care, surgical services, sterile processing, pharmacy, laboratory, and ambulatory care — and they tend to operate their own continuing education programs that count toward the state's renewal hour requirements.
- University of Kansas Health System — operates flagship hospital(s) plus a regional outpatient and ambulatory surgery footprint across Kansas; typically requires national certification at hire and offers tuition reimbursement after a defined service period.
- Stormont Vail Health — operates flagship hospital(s) plus a regional outpatient and ambulatory surgery footprint across Kansas; typically requires national certification at hire and offers tuition reimbursement after a defined service period.
- Ascension Via Christi — operates flagship hospital(s) plus a regional outpatient and ambulatory surgery footprint across Kansas; typically requires national certification at hire and offers tuition reimbursement after a defined service period.
Where the Jobs Are Concentrated
Allied health hiring in Kansas tracks roughly with the state's metropolitan population distribution. The Wichita market is the single largest employer base, anchored by the hospital systems above plus the academic medical center(s) affiliated with the state's research universities. Secondary markets in Overland Park, Topeka carry meaningful hiring volume in their own right and are often a better fit for candidates seeking a lower cost of living, a shorter commute, or proximity to family. Outside the metropolitan markets, hiring concentrations follow the locations of regional medical centers and the federally funded community health center networks; rural-area allied health roles are increasingly hard to fill, which has driven sign-on bonuses and loan-repayment offers materially higher than urban norms over the past several cycles.
Beyond the Hospital Systems
A meaningful share of Kansas's allied health workforce works outside the major hospital systems entirely. The most active non-hospital employers include:
- Outpatient physician practices and specialty clinics — primary care groups, cardiology and orthopedics specialty groups, urgent care chains, and gastroenterology and ophthalmology centers. Roles tend to offer Monday-through-Friday business hours.
- Ambulatory surgery centers — high-volume employers of surgical technologists, sterile processing technicians, and pre/post-op nursing support roles.
- Reference laboratories and blood collection centers — Quest Diagnostics, Labcorp, hospital outreach laboratories, and the regional blood services operate large phlebotomy and laboratory technician workforces.
- Retail pharmacy chains — CVS Health, Walgreens, Walmart Pharmacy, and Kroger-affiliated pharmacies are major employers of pharmacy technicians.
- Long-term care, skilled nursing, home health, and hospice — typically the second-largest employer of medical assistants and patient care technicians after the hospital systems, particularly in areas with older populations.
- Veterans Affairs medical centers and the Indian Health Service — federal employers offering competitive benefits and pension; Kansas falls within a defined VISN region of the VA system.
- Travel and per-diem registry agencies — paid materially above local staff wages for short-assignment coverage in tight specialties; particularly active in surgical services and respiratory care.
What Employers Credential At Hire
Employer credential expectations in Kansas generally meet or exceed the state minimum. The table below summarizes, for each profession, what the state legally requires and what major Kansas employers typically expect on top of that.
| Profession | State minimum | Typical employer expectation |
|---|---|---|
| Medical Assistant | No state license required; voluntary national certification | National certification (CMA (AAMA)) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| Phlebotomist | No state license required; national certification expected by employers | National certification (CPT (NHA)) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| Emergency Medical Technician | State license required | National certification (NREMT EMT) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| Surgical Technologist | Certification required by many hospital employers; state regulation varies | National certification (CST (NBSTSA)) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| Radiologic Technologist | State license required in most states | National certification (ARRT R) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| Respiratory Therapist | State license required in 49 states | National certification (CRT (NBRC)) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| Pharmacy Technician | State registration or license required in nearly all states | National certification (CPhT (PTCB)) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| Dental Assistant | Radiography permit required; expanded-function permits available | National certification (CDA (DANB)) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| EKG Technician | No state license required; national certification expected by employers | National certification (CET (NHA)) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
| Sterile Processing Technician | Certification required by statute in select states; required by most hospital employers nationally | National certification (CRCST (HSPA)) plus current Healthcare Provider BLS |
Salary Context
Wages at the major Kansas hospital systems generally cluster around the modeled state median for each profession, with hospital roles sitting at or above the median and outpatient clinic roles sitting somewhat below it. The 90th-percentile figure on each career guide page typically reflects experienced practitioners working at the academic medical centers and largest regional health systems in the state, in lead or charge positions, or with sought-after specialty credentials. Travel and per-diem rates can run materially above the staff wage but at the cost of benefits continuity and the security of a permanent assignment.