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Recently, a system scorecard highlighted weaknesses between a Midwestern hospital’s hospitalist division and its other vital specialty departments. The hospitalist division cared for 97% of the facility’s admitted patients, so the stakes were high and the need for change great. Seeking to stabilize performance metrics, the facility’s leadership turned to TeamHealth. Creating a customized approach, we partnered with the facility to implement a new strategy based on culture change, better communication and streamlined collaboration to improve inpatient care. Learn more about building and sustaining this high-performing hospital medicine team in our most recent case study.
TeamHealth's clinical integration model unlocks efficiencies and supports clinicians to improve coordination of care across service lines. Our seamless, integrated approach delivers the best results for our hospital partners and the patients we serve. Read more about our innovative model in our latest blog post.
Join us as Dr. Suj Sundararaj, Regional Performance Director, Hospital Medicine, answers "Why TeamHealth?" Hear more about TeamHealth’s dedication to growth, learning and collaboration.
Today, we’re revisiting a #BeyondClinicalMedicine podcast episode with Dr. David Hogan, Vice President of Educational Development, and Dr. John Matheson, Facility Medical Director at Kadlec Medical Center, about how clinicians can be prepared to handle the issue of human trafficking. Hear valuable information and useful resources clinicians can implement at their facilities to help identify, report and intervene in human trafficking.
When you join TeamHealth as a post-acute care clinician, you join a real team with the strength of over 15,000 affiliated clinicians behind you. With over 400 post-acute care teams nationwide, we prioritize work-life balance and clinician wellness, providing vast resources, supportive environments and stable schedules. Search our open post-acute care jobs.
TeamHealth's Critical Care Council unites our nationwide critical care programs to allow for collaboration and communication. Through the council, our teams share best practices, performance data and metrics to help our partners and clinicians provide exceptional care to facilities’ sickest patients. Hear more from Dr. Suj Sundararaj, Director, TeamHealth Regional Performance.
TeamHealth would like to congratulate Luis Martin, MD, Facility Medical, on receiving the Distinguished Faculty Service Award for Internal Medicine and Transitional Year at Del Sol Medical Center in El Paso, Texas. The Distinguished Faculty Service Award is presented to the faculty member that has demonstrated exceptional teaching accomplishments and has made an impact on the residents. Dr. Martin was nominated by residents who highlighted his exemplary teaching, caring personality and clinical expertise. Congratulations, Dr. Martin, and thank you for your dedication to teaching and commitment to excellent patient care! Read more about our teams in El Paso and how they responded during the worst months of COVID-19.
“The world is changing, and it is healing,” says Nicole Hubbard, CRNA. As TeamHealth Chief CRNA at Tampa General Hospital, Nicole has led her team through the pandemic and some of the most challenging times of her own career. Read more from Nicole as she reflects on COVID-19, what we’ve learned and how it provides hope for the future.
The COVID-19 pandemic spotlighted the need for outstanding clinical and operational critical care performance. In a post-pandemic world, we have the opportunity to carry forward lessons and improvements to overcome the challenges intensive care leaders and clinicians face. Read insights on this topic from Dr. Rohit Uppal, Chief Clinical Officer, Hospital Medicine, in a recent interview with Modern Healthcare.
Throughout the pandemic, many questions have arisen regarding the protection level from “natural immunity” versus immunity from the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. Data from a recent National Institutes of Science (NIH) study support that mRNA vaccine-produced antibodies are more likely to effectively target mutations and variants of the virus than antibodies produced from a natural infection. Read more about the study and the continued need for clinicians to educate and encourage full vaccination.