Today's Top 20 Healthcare News Articles
  1. Hospitals slam FTC's noncompete ban

    The Federal Trade Commission on April 23 voted 3-2 to ban noncompete agreements in a move it estimates will save up to $194 billion in healthcare costs over the next decade. 
  2. Alabama hospital laying off 95

    Union Springs, Ala.-based Bullock County Hospital laid off 95 employees beginning April 9, according to regulatory documents filed with the state.
  3. Providence Oregon taps chief executive

    Jennifer Burrows, RN, was named chief executive of Providence Oregon, effective May 6, according to a message to staff from Joel Gilbertson, chief executive of the Providence Central Division.

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  1. 800 California hospital nurses plan strike

    Members of California Nurses Association/National Nurses United plan to hold a 24-hour strike from May 1-2 at Washington Hospital Healthcare System in Fremont, Calif.
  2. 10 recent hospital, health system CEO moves

    The following hospital and health system CEO moves have recently been reported by Becker's:
  3. Intermountain to exit Kansas with clinic changes

    Salt Lake City-based Intermountain Health is making changes with three Kansas clinics, effectively ending its operations in the state.
  4. 4 RCM companies making executive moves

    Here are four revenue cycle management companies that have made executive leadership moves since March 25: 

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  1. Tenet's CEO-to-worker pay ratio over the past 5 years

    Dallas-based Tenet Healthcare CEOs were paid between 189 and 452 times more than the health system's median employee between 2019 and 2023, according to proxy statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
  2. Joint Commission unveils new accreditation

    The Joint Commission has created a new telehealth accreditation program for eligible hospitals, ambulatory and behavioral healthcare organizations. The program will launch July 1. 
  3. Why healthcare should start outside the hospital

    There are two issues in healthcare that Bruce Swords, MD, is highly focused on: Physicians struggling to stay independent, and systems focusing on solely acute care instead of preventive medicine.
  4. 4 Ozempic updates

    Debates are swirling about surgery disruptions, a baby boom phenomenon and additional uses for Ozempic and other glucagon-like peptide-1 medicines. 

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  1. How healthcare's view of AI has shifted

    Since the launch of ChatGPT in 2023, generative artificial intelligence has gathered buzz, with many healthcare workers, leaders and staff expressing concerns about using "unregulated" technology. But has this sentiment changed?
  2. Community Health Network to scale home-based care program

    Indianapolis-based Community Health Network is working with technology company Biofourmis to scale its care-at-home services.
  3. Hospital groups react to Medicaid access and payment rules

    CMS published two final rules on April 22 designed to expand access in the Medicaid fee-for-service and managed care programs. 
  4. 41 hospitals, health systems among Forbes' best employers for diversity

    Forbes released its seventh annual ranking of the nation's best employers for diversity on April 23, and the rankings include 41 hospitals and health systems.
  5. OhioHealth hospital embarks on $400M expansion

    In 2028, OhioHealth plans to open a new, seven-story trauma and critical care center at Grant Medical Center in Columbus as part of a $400 million expansion project. 
  6. HHS: No breach notification from Change

    HHS said it has not received a breach notification from UnitedHealth's subsidiary Change Healthcare in the wake of the February cyberattack it suffered. 
  7. Nurse practitioner median annual wage across states

    Nurse practitioners in the U.S. earn a median annual wage of $126,260 and a median hourly wage of $60.70, according to the latest Bureau of Labor Statistics data, released April 3.
  8. Bill would extend hospital-at-home program through 2027

    U.S. lawmakers have drafted legislation to expand the CMS waiver for hospital-at-home programs through 2027, drawing applause from the American Hospital Association.
  9. City of Hope invests $33M in cancer support startup

    Duarte, Calif.-based City of Hope has invested $33 million in AccessHope, a cancer support startup that partners with health systems around the country.

Top 40 Articles from the Past 6 Months

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