• The popular sport with injuries on the rise

    A recent analysis found pickleball-related injuries have increased more than 200% in 20 years, NBC News reported Feb. 12.
  • ED capacity issues nearing boiling point

    Over the past months, health systems in numerous states have faced growing capacity challenges. That includes Boston-based Massachusetts General Hospital, which saw the highest level of patients boarded in the emergency department in its 200-year history.
  • Billings Clinic parts ways with anesthesiology group

    Billings (Mont.) Clinic's contract with Billings Anesthesiology expired Feb. 9, with the health system aiming to create its own fully staffed anesthesiology department, according to Montana's News Leader. 
  • A factor that could worsen ED boarding

    An overwhelming majority of emergency department physicians say they have experienced boarding times in their facilities exceeding 24 hours. While hospital-at-home programs have been shown to be a tool to ease the boarding crisis, experts worry the problem may worsen if CMS funds for the program run dry by the end of the year, NBC News reported Feb. 7. 
  • 'Overcrowded is par for the course': Physicians on Atlanta's healthcare system strain

    Atlanta's healthcare system is routinely operating under significant strain — a situation physicians, patients and local officials worry could lead to larger problems, NBC News reported Feb. 7. 
  • Hawaii hospital transfers patients due to broken AC unit

    Wahiawa (Hawaii) General Hospital shut down inpatient operations for multiple days due to a broken air conditioning system, KITV News reported Feb. 5.
  • Illinois hospital loses trauma center designation

    Vista Medical Center East in Waukegan, Ill., lost its level 2 trauma center designation Feb. 2.
  • Health systems at 'high risk' in healthcare's darling state

    Massachusetts has declared several regions "high risk" due to limited hospital capacity, a stark downturn for a state that is regularly heralded for the performance of its hospitals and healthcare system.
  • States with the most, fewest trauma centers per capita

    Arizona has the most level 1 trauma centers per capita and Washington has the fewest centers per capita, a study found.
  • The impact of AI on patient experience and patient care

    The use of AI technologies in healthcare is rapidly becoming more widespread. But at this early stage of widespread AI adoption, patients have clear preferences as to which AI tools they perceive as useful and which they view with suspicion. 
  • How 3 systems are tackling the rise in alcohol use disorder

    It's estimated that 29.5 million people over the age of 12 meet the criteria for alcohol use disorder in 2022, and hospital leaders told Becker's that number continues to rise.
  • HCA hospital resumes some surgeries after sterilization-related delay

    HCA Florida North Florida Hospital in Gainesville has resumed some surgeries after shutting down procedures earlier this month to address equipment sterilization issues.
  • Older adults spend 3 weeks per year at health appointments

    Older adults are spending an average of three weeks every year on healthcare appointments, a Jan. 23 study found.
  • UAB, Infirmary Health collaborate on cancer care

    The University of Alabama at Birmingham Health System and Mobile, Ala.-based Infirmary Health have formed a joint venture to provide comprehensive cancer services to patients in southern Alabama, southeast Mississippi and the Florida panhandle.
  • Stop Leaving Money on the O.R. Table: The Case for Outsourced Surgical Services

    The value of surgical navigation or image-guided surgery has long been proven, offering reduced revision surgeries, lessened complication rates, minimized radiation exposure, and improved outcomes. Surgical navigation has come into its own as a valuable approach to spinal, cranial, and ENT procedures.
  • 55% of rural hospitals don't offer obstetric care: Report

    More than half of rural hospitals in the U.S. do not offer labor and delivery services, according to a new report from the Center for Healthcare Quality & Payment Reform.
  • How UVA Health cut number of ED visits

    Charlottesville, Va.-based UVA Health is connecting patients who regularly visit emergency rooms for non-emergency care of chronic conditions to a program designed to make care more accessible, while keeping critical ER beds free and lowering capacity.
  • CMS propels more EMTALA trainings for hospitals

    In response to a growing pile of questions about compliance with the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act, HHS and CMS are deploying new education efforts. 
  • ED boarding at crisis levels, Mass General says

    Boston-based Massachusetts General Hospital is requesting permission from the state to add more than 90 inpatient beds amid what it says is an "unprecedented capacity crisis." 
  • HCA hospital suspends surgeries amid equipment issues

    HCA Florida's North Florida Hospital in Gainesville will suspend elective surgeries for four days, beginning Jan. 17, to address equipment sterilization issues, a spokesperson for HCA Florida confirmed to Becker's.

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