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Massachusetts hospital to close in 2020
Union Hospital in Lynn, Mass., will close by May 2020, about eight months later than its expected closure in October 2019, according to CBS Boston. -
Dayton Children's cancels elective surgeries after severe storm knocks out power
Dayton (Ohio) Children's Hospital canceled elective surgeries May 28 after a powerful storm knocked out power the night before, according to an update posted on the hospital's website. -
Illinois hospital to close senior behavioral health unit
McDonough District Hospital in Macomb, Ill., will close its senior behavioral health unit in June, the hospital's board of directors said May 21, according to NBC affiliate WGEM. -
Michigan hospital working to reopen surgical center after fire
Bronson Methodist Hospital in Kalamazoo, Mich., is working to reopen its surgical center by May 24 after a small fire epupted at the facility, according to radio station WKZO. -
Sick of waiting: Patients ditching congested California ERs against medical advice, report says
Many emergency room patients facing long waits at crowded California hospitals are leaving before their care is complete, according to a California Healthline report. -
Freestanding EDs shorten waits in rural Texas, but not in its big cities
The presence of freestanding emergency departments in large cities in Texas have not helped relieve ED congestion or cut hospital wait times, a study published in the American Journal of Emergency Medicine showed. -
New Jersey hospital CEOs: Patients should receive needed information before being transferred out of state
Three New Jersey hospital CEOs are throwing their support behind a state proposal that would require the disclosure of information to patients who are being referred or transferred to an out-of-state hospital or provider, according to an opinion piece published on NJ.com. -
Loyola Medicine performs 1,000th lung transplant: 3 things to know
Surgeons at Maywood, Ill.-based Loyola Medicine performed their 1,000th transplant April 27, making the hospital one of 11 in the country to achieve this milestone. -
More patients are leaving EDs prematurely amid long wait times in California
More patients are leaving emergency departments in California against medical advice, which may be due to ED overcrowding, according to state data cited by California Healthline. -
Fire forces evacuation of Michigan hospital
Dozens of patients, staff and visitors were evacuated May 15 from Kalamazoo, Mich.-based Bronson Methodist Hospital due to a small fire, according to local news station WWMT-TV. -
UPMC Children's Hospital may face state scrutiny if patients report access troubles
Pennsylvania's insurance commissioner said UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh would likely face state intervention if patients ever raise concerns about access to the facility, according to the Pittsburgh Business Times. -
Mayo Clinic's patient volume plateaus amid 20-year expansion project
While Mayo Clinic is seeing its revenue and employment increase, it hasn't seen an uptick in patient volumes during the first years of its Destination Medical Center initiative, according to the Post Bulletin. -
All students injured in Colorado shooting now released from hospitals
All eight Colorado students who were injured in a school shooting May 7 have now been discharged, according to The Denver Post. -
California hospitals may divert ambulances to avoid treating underserved populations, study suggests
Hospitals in California may be strategically diverting ambulances to avoid treating low-income patients typically served by public hospitals, suggest the findings of a study cited by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. -
Why some 911 calls in Las Vegas are rerouted to nurses
Emergency dispatchers in Las Vegas can now reroute nonemergent 911 calls to nurses through a new pilot program, reports Fox5 Las Vegas. -
Addressing the behavioral healthcare crisis in our nation's emergency departments
Emergency departments have become the safety net for America's emergency behavioral health patients. Between 2006 and 2014, behavioral health ED visits increased by nearly 57 percent for children and 41 percent for adults, according to AHRQ. This trend continues to grow and is having significant financial and operational effects on ED throughput. -
Nonemergency first responders unit could ease strain on Seattle hospitals
Seattle is establishing a first-responder team for nonemergencies in its downtown area in hopes that it will reduce 911 call volume and relieve pressure on city hospitals that are forced to deal with low-acuity medical issues, according to a Seattle Times report. -
Ford to compete with Uber, Lyft in medical transportation
Looking beyond automobile manufacturing to tech-enabled transport, Ford Motor Co., says it will expand its medical transportation program to 40 cities in four years, Reuters reports. -
Colorado hospitals treat 8 people injured in school shooting
Eight people were taken to Colorado hospitals after a school shooting in which nine people were shot, one fatally, according to The New York Times. -
6 hospitals ending maternity services
In the last two weeks several hospitals announced plans to shutter maternity units or cease obstetrics services to shore up finances, focus on more in-demand services or improve patient care.
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