SEARCH
Looking for a doctor? Try our Find a Doctor Search
Showing 12493-12501 of 12502 results
UMass Memorial Medical Center
|News and Media
|
UMass Memorial closes 2020 fiscal year with operating gain
UMass Memorial Health Care canceled thousands of procedures and faced multi-million dollar drops in revenue, but ended fiscal 2020 in the black.
UMass Memorial Medical Center
|News and Media
|
Baystate Business: Stimulus, Vaccine, Virus
Dr. Eric Dickson, CEO of UMass Memorial Health Care, on how the DCU field hospital is filling up with Covid patients, and the status of Covid vaccinations (1:12:51)
UMass Memorial Medical Center
|News and Media
|
Health care system in Massachusetts under immense pressure, Gov. Baker says
Hospital beds in Massachusetts are filling up fast amid a surge in coronavirus cases, and if the number of cases continues to rise, they may soon be full.
On Monday, Gov. Charlie Baker said the state's health care system is under immense pressure, as the seven day average of COVID-19 hospitalizations has more than doubled within the last month.
The number of hospital beds that are currently available statewide is much lower than it was during the first COVID-19 surge in the late spring.
News and Media
|
UMass Memorial and Harrington health care systems, seeking merger, file with state regulatory agencies
UMass Memorial Health Care and Harrington Health Care System, seeking to become officially affiliated, have taken another step forward in the process by filing with state regulatory agencies.
The health care systems have jointly submitted the first in a series of required filings for UMass Memorial to become the parent company of Harrington, UMass Memorial said in a statement Tuesday. This would make Harrington Hospital, system employees and the medical group members of the UMass Memorial Health Care system.
UMass Memorial Medical Center
|News and Media
|
Health Care Workers Tend To COVID Patients On Christmas: ‘It’s A Horrible Day’
Healthcare workers are no strangers to skipping traditions with family to work a holiday. In 2020, it’s a different experience, especially for those working on COVID-19 floors in hospitals.
“It’s pretty tough in here today,” nurse Shannon Lora told WBZ over Zoom from the CCU at HealthAlliance Hospital in Leominster.
“It’s a horrible day here actually. We have a lot of very sick patients. We have a couple of people dying. It has not been a very good day.”
UMass Memorial Medical Center
|News and Media
|
UMass Memorial Dr. Eric Dickson On COVID: 'It's Going To Be A Tough January' In Massachusetts
"If Christmas is as bad as Thanksgiving, we're going to see a compounding of bad on top of bad," said Dr. Dickson to CBSN Boston's Anna Meiler.
UMass Memorial Medical Center
|News and Media
|
UMass Memorial plans to have all caregivers vaccinated by mid-February
UMass Memorial Health Care, the largest employer in Central Massachusetts, plans to have all of its health providers vaccinated against coronavirus by mid-February, a period of roughly two months.
All of the system's caregivers are expected to have at least appointments in place for vaccinations by Jan. 11, according to a memo sent to employees Friday. Those who are providing care directly to COVID-19 patients are going first, followed by those with less contact with virus patients, and then other providers.
UMass Memorial Medical Center
|News and Media
|
UMass Memorial plans to have all caregivers vaccinated by mid-February
UMass Memorial Health Care, the largest employer in Central Massachusetts, plans to have all of its health providers vaccinated against coronavirus by mid-February, a period of roughly two months.
All of the system's caregivers are expected to have at least appointments in place for vaccinations by Jan. 11, according to a memo sent to employees Friday. Those who are providing care directly to COVID-19 patients are going first, followed by those with less contact with virus patients, and then other providers.
UMass Memorial Medical Center
|News and Media
|
UMass Memorial Doctor: COVID Vaccine Provides Relief, Hope
Nine months into the pandemic, doctors who have been treating COVID patients say the vaccine is their greatest source of hope.
Dr. Gayle Galletta has anticipated this moment for months. “Excitement would be an odd word, but relief,” Galletta said after she got the shot.
Relief that she’s getting a vaccine that will also protect people around her. Early on, the emergency medicine physician at UMass Memorial Hospitals in Worcester and Clinton worried constantly she’d bring the virus home to her family.