Today's Top 20 Healthcare News Articles
  1. Cleveland Clinic eHospital expands to monitor 300,000 patients

    Cleveland Clinic's eHospital program has expanded and now monitors 248 patient beds in ICUs and other units across the organization's network.
  2. Tampa General's enlists drones to respond to 911 calls

    Beginning May 1, Tampa (Fla.) General Hospital will use drones to deliver critical equipment to certain 911 callers in Manatee County. 
  3. How leaders are building the healthcare workforce pipeline

    The workforce is top of mind for hospitals and health systems, and executives are investing in retention and upskilling to address shortages and reduce reliance on contract labor. While leaders understand they must address short-term workforce needs, they also understand they must build a robust talent pipeline with candidates who are ready to fill roles years down the road.

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  1. Adventist Health reorganizes post-M&A

    Roseville, Calif.-based Adventist Health is modifying its service area models in California and Oregon after adding hospitals to its system from Tenet Healthcare.  
  2. CHS posts $6M Q1 net loss as interest expenses eat into operating profit

    Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems reported $231 million in operating income (7.4% margin) in the first quarter, up from $210 million (6.8% margin) during the same period last year. 
  3. Sutter Health may accommodate electives as California hospital faces CMS contract loss

    Stanislaus Surgical Hospital has typically seen more than 400 elective surgeries per month. But the facility is likely to close April 30, when its Medicare contract with CMS is set to terminate. At least one other hospital in Modesto, Calif., has indicated it plans to take on cases originally scheduled at SSH, according to a report from The Modesto Bee. 
  4. Senate to probe Ozempic, Wegovy's cost

    A Senate committee opened an investigation into Novo Nordisk's list prices for Ozempic and Wegovy, Novo Nordisk's diabetes and weight loss drugs. 

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

    CEOs for Franklin, Tenn.-based Community Health Systems were paid between 96 and 161 times more than the median annual salary for an employee at the health system between 2019 and 2023, according to proxy statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
  2. Texas hospital taps dual chief operating, nursing officer

    Methodist Hospital Atascosa in San Antonio named Jacalyn DeHarte, BSN, its COO and chief nursing officer. 
  3. Inmate shot, killed by officer in Georgia hospital

    A 31-year-old man was shot and killed by an officer in Washington County Regional Medical Center in Sandersville, Ga., April 23, after what local officials describe as an attempted escape from correctional officers. 
  4. US Chamber of Commerce sues to block FTC noncompete ban

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is asking a federal court to halt the Federal Trade Commission's noncompete ban, alleging it violates the law in "numerous ways." 

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  1. Nearly 4 million Medicare patients with heart disease may be eligible for Wegovy coverage

    Nearly 4 million Medicare patients could be eligible to have Wegovy covered after the FDA approved it to reduce risk of heart attack and strokes, KFF reported April 24.
  2. CVS invests $19M for affordable housing in Colorado

    Arvada, Colo., will soon have 85 more affordable housing units because of a $19.2 million contribution from CVS Health, the healthcare company said April 24. 
  3. HealthPartners names new hospital president

    Emily Blomberg was selected as the next president of St. Paul, Minn.-based Regions Hospital and the Regions Hospital Foundation.
  4. A new metric may provide insight into healthcare disparities

    A Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health study suggests nearly 80% hospitals admit a significantly different proportion of Black Medicare patients age 65 and older compared to those admitted to any hospital in that market — which could point to racial sorting.
  5. UPMC to lay off around 1,000 employees

    Pittsburgh-based UPMC will lay off more than 1% of its 100,000 workforce — approximately 1,000 employees — due to ongoing post-pandemic challenges, the health system confirmed to Becker's.
  6. Weill Cornell names COO of physician organization

    Adam Cheriff, MD, was appointed COO of Weill Cornell Medicine's Physician Organization, effective May 1. 
  7. Sutter workers begin 3-day strike

    Members of the National Union of Healthcare Workers began a three-day strike April 23 at the Sutter Center for Psychiatry in Sacramento, Calif., according to NBC affiliate KCRA.
  8. Children's Hospital of Orange County taps quality chief

    Emma Sandhu, MSN, RN, was named chief quality and patient safety officer of Orange, Calif.-based Children's Hospital of Orange County.
  9. Premier Health Ohio hospital to close level 3 trauma center

    Centerville, Ohio-based Miami Valley Hospital South, part of Dayton, Ohio-based Premier Health, will discontinue operations at its level 3 trauma center May 1 as part of an ongoing healthcare operations review.

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