All eyes on elective care after a rollercoaster year for medtech healthcaredive.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from healthcaredive.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Sam and Aline Skaggs Health Science Center on Idaho State University's Meridian campus. Photo courtesy of ISU Two of Idaho's public universities are starting up advanced degree programs. Boise State University is partnering with the Healthcare Financial Management Association to create a master's degree in population and health systems management. Idaho State University is expanding its program offerings at its Meridian campus to include a master's of occupational therapy degree. Boise State University BSU announced its partnership with with HFMA on Feb. 19 to launch the degree program. The university billed the new program in population and health systems management as the first of its kind. The degree was designed to fulfill the unmet needs for an in-depth master’s level program focused on value-based health care. The degree program is a collaboration co-created and delivered by BSU and HFMA. The degree will meet contemporary health care finance education
As the city reflects on the resilience and innovation seen during the year since the initial surge of Covid-19 last spring, access and equity gaps have been laid bare and need addressing, said Dr. Dave Chokshi, the city’s health commissioner.
The efforts that moved mountains to address the…
PKF O Connor Davies Hires Ari Rothkopf as Partner prweb.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prweb.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Being a nurse was already hard. But in the pandemic, it’s become almost impossible.
Credit.Adria Malcolm for The New York Times
By Theresa Brown
Ms. Brown is a nurse and the author of “The Shift: One Nurse, Twelve Hours, Four Patients’ Lives.”
Feb. 25, 2021
When the Covid-19 pandemic hit New York this spring, Jessica Fink wanted to help. She’s been a nurse for 15 years, and she moved from Delaware to serve at Stony Brook University Hospital on Long Island.
Ms. Fink told me she was “ready to contribute,” to care for Covid patients. But once she got to Stony Brook, where she worked in the I.C.U., she “felt very alone.”