Patients of Trinity Health may have had some of their personal information compromised in a data breach in January. The health network, which includes Trinity Health of New England, said it was notified by Accellion, a third-party vendor, on January 29 that there was a security issue with its system used for sending secure email. Certain files on the server… Vax-A-Thon 13 hours ago
Trinity Health of New England is holding a 24-hour “Vax-A-Thon” to provide the COVID-19 vaccine to thousands of Connecticut residents as eligibility restrictions ease and all appointments have filled up. The event will run from 5 p.m. on Friday, April 9 to 5 p.m. on Friday, April 10 at The Artists Collective at 1200 Albany Avenue in Hartford. The Vax-A-Thon…
Nearly half of eligible state residents have received vaccine
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CT hospital systems increasingly buying private medical practices
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CT hospital systems increasingly buying private medical practices
Peggy McCarthy, Conn. Health I-Team WriterConn. Health I-Team Writer
April 7, 2021
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Dr. Khuram Ghumman directs patient Carlos Padilla where to look as he checks his eyes during an annual physical at East Granby Family Practice, LLC where he is in private practice.Conn. Health I-Team / Cloe PoissonShow MoreShow Less
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Primary care practitioners in hospital systems’ practices of 30 or more doctors increased from 1,100 in 2016 to 1,441 in 2019 - a 31 percent rise, according to data from the state Office of Health StrategyCHITShow MoreShow Less
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Dr. Khuram Ghumman asks patient Tully Zorick, 5, to hop on one foot during a checkup at East Granby Family Practice, LLC where he is in private practice. Dr. Ghumman takes care of the entire Zorick family.Conn. Health I-Team / Cloe PoissonShow MoreShow Less
Cloe Poisson
Every day, Dr. Leslie Miller of Fairfield thinks about selling her practice to a hospital health system.
“Everybody who is in this environment thinks every day of throwing in the towel and joining a hospital,” said Miller, a sole practitioner in primary care for 20 years. “The business side is the problem,” she said, referring to expensive and time-consuming requirements of medical insurance and government regulations.
Dr. Khuram Ghumman took the unusual route of working in a hospital system first, then going into private primary care practice because he objects to the “corporatization” of health care. He said conflicts of interest can arise if an owner and its employed physicians have different objectives. “I wanted to be responsible to my patients,” Ghumman said.