Today's Top 20 Healthcare News Articles
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Adventist HealthCare CEO heading to Health First
Terry Forde, president and CEO of Gaithersburg, Md.-based Adventist HealthCare, will step down from his role this summer. -
Ascension names new head of marketing
Dino Rhodes has been named vice president and head of marketing at St. Louis-based Ascension. -
Hackers lurked in Change Healthcare's network for more than a week
Hackers gained entry to Change Healthcare's IT systems nine days before the ransomware attack on the UnitedHealth Group subsidiary, The Wall Street Journal reported April 22.
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HCA's CEO-to-worker pay ratio over the past 5 years
Nashville, Tenn.-based HCA Healthcare CEO Sam Hazen was paid between 254 and 556 times more than the health system's median employee since becoming the health system's chief executive in 2019, according to proxy statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. -
UHS hospital's dual CEO-COO resigns
St. Mary's Regional Medical Center in Enid, Okla., is seeing a change at the top with the resignation of the leader who served as both its COO and interim CEO. -
74 hospitals with 5+ Magnet designations
About 1% of U.S. hospitals have five or more Magnet Designations, according to data from the American Nurses Credentialing Center. -
45 top healthcare workplaces for mental well-being: Newsweek
Newsweek has named 45 hospitals and health systems among its 750 greatest employers for mental well-being.
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SUNY Downstate gets $300M in New York 2025 budget
New York Gov. Kathy Hochul's final 2025 budget has provided $300 million in capital funding and up to $100 million in operating expenses to support SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, which includes University Hospital at Downstate, in New York City's Brooklyn borough. -
Vanderbilt hospital at home integrates with Epic
Vanderbilt Home Care, Vanderbilt Medical Center's home-based care program, went live with an Epic EHR system on Jan. 16. -
Flexible work availability at 10 major healthcare companies
Flexible work policies vary widely across different major healthcare companies, according to a recent report from LinkedIn. -
314-bed Texas hospital taps president
Methodist Health System has selected Michael Stewart as president of Methodist Charlton Medical Center in Dallas.
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Ardent taps DEI leader from IU Health
Nashville, Tenn.-based Ardent Health has tapped Lisa Gutierrez as vice president of diversity, equity and inclusion. -
Sentara hospital appoints 2 new execs
Sentara Northern Virginia Medical Center in Woodbridge has welcomed two new leaders to its executive team: Heather Casseaux, MSN, NP, has been named vice president of operations and Debra Lee, MD, has been named chief medical officer. -
Availity taps R1 RCM exec as chief product officer
Revenue cycle management company Availity has named Sean Barrett chief product officer. -
Emory Healthcare promotes pharmacy leader
Emory Healthcare recently promoted Ryan Haumschild, PharmD, to the role of vice president of ambulatory pharmacy. -
Rallies held outside Steward Massachusetts hospitals ahead of loan agreement deadline
Several rallies are being held outside of Massachusetts hospitals owned by Dallas-based Steward Health Care amid fears that the facilities could be negatively affected by the health system's April 30 loan agreement deadline. -
UNC Health opens $425M surgical hospital
Chapel Hill, N.C.-based UNC Health held a ribbon-cutting ceremony April 19 for its new $425 million surgical hospital — the single largest addition to the Chapel Hill campus since 1952. -
14,280 Black patients moved up transplant waitlist after race scrubbed from criteria
Roughly 14,280 Black kidney transplant candidates moved up the waitlist after race was eliminated from the candidate criteria, ABC News reported April 22. -
CDC probe into fake Botox grows: 5 notes
Health officials are now investigating at least 22 reports of harmful reactions linked to counterfeit or mishandled Botox injections in 11 states, the CDC said in an April 19 update. The agency first announced the probe earlier this. At that time, it was investigating illnesses in five states. -
Nurses' job satisfaction: 2018 vs. 2022
The amount of registered nurses who reported being "extremely satisfied" with their jobs fell 12 percentage points between 2018 and 2022, federal data shows.
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