Today's Top 20 Healthcare News Articles
-
Health disparities across states: 6 new findings
The Commonwealth Fund released a new report April 18 examining racial and ethnic disparities in healthcare access, quality and outcomes across the U.S. -
Grady to build $38M freestanding ED in Atlanta
Grady Health System plans to begin construction on a $38 million standalone emergency department in South Fulton County, Ga., this fall. -
UC Davis Health, Amazon fight health misinformation with AI
Sacramento, Calif.-based UC Davis Health and Amazon are using generative artificial intelligence to counter health misinformation.
-
Health systems undergoing rebrands
In highly competitive markets, hospitals and health systems are rebranding to differentiate themselves and stand out from competitors. -
Minnesota hospital could transition to state's 1st rural emergency facility
Mahnomen (Minn.) Health Center has submitted plans to the state department of health to transition it to the state's first rural emergency hospital. -
Walgreens pharmacists plan Chicago-area demonstrations
Nearly 900 pharmacists are planning to demonstrate at 46 Walgreens locations in the Chicago area over the next month. -
Researchers explore 9 more diseases GLP-1s could treat
Researchers are expanding horizons for the diseases and disorders that GLP-1s such as Ozempic, Mounjaro and Wegovy could treat.
-
10 hospitals, health systems looking for CFOs
Here are 10 hospitals and health systems that are seeking CFOs and assistant CFOs in recent job listings. -
Experts call for more data on weight loss meds as fertility drugs
Physicians and researchers say more data is needed on pregnancy outcomes in patients taking GLP-1s as a growing number of women turn to the class of weight loss medications in hopes of reducing their risk of pregnancy complications or increasing their chance of conceiving, Bloomberg reported April 18. -
How Mercy accelerated rare disease diagnoses in rural areas
Children's Mercy Kansas City (Mo.) researchers found a way to reduce the time to diagnosis for rare disease by 5.5 months. -
1st-of-its-kind law protects 'neural data'
With the increasing number of technologies that track brain activity, a new Colorado law aims to protect people's "neural data" from falling into the wrong hands, The New York Times reported.
-
How the Change Healthcare hack affected patient care
While the financial impacts of the Change Healthcare hack have gotten a lot of attention, the cyberattack has also harmed patients, health system leaders say. -
Why the former Allscripts is banking on AI
The company formerly known as Allscripts plans to turn its fortunes around by using generative artificial intelligence to find insights in its decades' worth of patient data, Forbes reported April 18. -
HCA California hospital faces pushback on trauma center closure
Local stakeholders are pushing for the state of California to stop the planned summer closure of trauma services at Regional Medical Center in San Jose, The Mercury News reported April 18. -
40% of physicians ready to use gen AI in patient care
Forty-percent of U.S. physicians said they are prepared to use generative artificial intelligence during patient interactions at the point-of-care, an April 16 survey from Wolters Kluwer found. -
South Carolina hospital investigating patient record mishandling
Conway (S.C.) Medical Center is conducting an internal investigation regarding accusations of mishandling of confidential patient health data, The Sun News reported April 18. -
The cities at the bottom of US News' list of best places to retire
Multiple cities in California ranked toward the bottom of U.S. News & World Report's list of Best Places to Retire in the U.S. -
Allina hit with credit rating downgrade
Fitch Ratings has downgraded Minneapolis-based Allina Health's long-term ratings on bonds from "AA-" to "A+" with its rating outlook at stable. -
The rise of 'social prescribing'
Nature walks. Dance classes. Volunteering. These are among the social activities being prescribed across at least 30 programs in the U.S. Social prescribing — or the practice of connecting people with nonclinical activities that target underlying concerns such as isolation, stress and access to healthy foods — is a well-known concept in Britain and is increasingly stirring interest in the U.S., experts told The New York Times in an April 17 report. -
HHS OIG turns down 300-400 'viable' healthcare fraud cases each year
HHS Inspector General Christi Grimm said her office has a "pressing need" for more funding to combat healthcare fraud, waste and abuse.
Page 9 of 50