Breaking News

Mayo Clinic AI model predicts ALS

09/02/2025

Rochester, Minn.-based Mayo Clinic researchers have developed an artificial intelligence model that can predict amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and anticipate patient survival using data from F-wave nerve conduction studies. The model was trained on F-wave responses from 46,802 patients, including 5,329 with motor neuron disease in the training set, according to…

Read More

Cleveland Clinic, IBM open next phase of quantum health innovation program

09/02/2025

Cleveland Clinic is opening applications for the second round of its Quantum Innovation Catalyzer Program, an initiative designed to help startups test how quantum computing could be used in healthcare and life sciences. Here are five things to know about the program: Launched in 2023, the program offers selected early-…

Read More

AMA split on RFK Jr.

09/02/2025

The American Medical Association is weighing whether to work with HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., or oppose policies that threaten public health, Politico reported Aug. 30.  Since Mr. Kennedy was confirmed to lead HHS in February, he has fired and replaced all members of the Advisory Committee for Immunization…

Read More

15 best, worst cities to retire

09/02/2025

Orlando, Fla., is the best place to retire, largely due to its lack of income, estate or inheritance taxes and its availability of recreational activities, according to a Sept. 2 report from WalletHub. The list of best and worst places to retire was determined by comparing 182 U.S. cities —…

Read More

Translating Performance Excellence Improves Brand Recognition

09/02/2025

Healthcare leaders tend to be very internally focused and for all the right reasons. But even when we’re doing very well performance-wise—with all the right metrics moving in the right direction—we can forget to leverage these results externally to build a strong brand. While it’s great to celebrate your successes internally,…

Read More

Thriving Through Financial Pressure by Unlocking Hidden Margins

09/01/2025

How AI Digital Twins are Revolutionizing Capital Planning for Health Systems Health systems continually balance delivering exceptional patient care, maintaining cutting-edge equipment and ensuring financial solvency. While traditional avenues like revenue cycle management and supply chain optimization are common paths for margin recoupment, the strategic management of healthcare technology equipment…

Read More

Managing Back-to-School Respiratory Infections

09/01/2025

Managing Back-to-School Respiratory Infections In late summer, tens of millions of children throughout the United States return to school, sharing tales of their summer adventures and, inevitably, new germs. Many will develop a cough, sore throat, or runny nose in the coming weeks, as part of a well-documented “summer wave”…

Read More

MetroHealth to push insurance sign-ups to curb $1M daily charity care costs

08/29/2025

Cleveland-based MetroHealth plans to launch an initiative to help patients enroll in Medicare, Medicaid and ACA’s marketplace insurance to reduce its soaring charity care costs that now exceed $1 million per day, a spokesperson for the health system confirmed to Becker’s.  That figure puts MetroHealth — Cuyahoga County’s safety-net hospital…

Read More

How Forbes’ best employers for women boost leadership development

08/29/2025

Forty hospitals and health systems were named to Forbes’ list of America’s Best Employers for Women 2025. The list recognizes organizations rated highly by employees on factors such as pay equity, parental leave and advancement opportunities. Leaders from seven of the featured healthcare organizations shared with Becker’s how they are…

Read More

HHS expands oversight into organ transplant network

08/29/2025

HHS launched a dashboard Aug. 27 to track organ transplants that skip patients next in line on transplant waiting lists.  The practice, called “allocation out of sequence,” is growing in frequency. In 2024, organ procurement organizations skipped waitlisted patients for 19% of transplants from deceased donors, six times more often…

Read More

The hardest lessons for orthopedic leaders

08/29/2025

Learning how to deal with declining reimbursements while still delivering top quality care and adapting personal strategies to lift up the strengths of colleagues are just two of the difficult lessons that orthopedic surgeons are reporting they have learned.  To be a strong leader in the orthopedic space, surgeons must…

Read More

Senators probe UnitedHealth over ‘predatory’ loan collections

08/29/2025

Two U.S. senators are pressing UnitedHealth Group for answers on what they deemed “predatory” tactics from the company in seeking loan repayments from healthcare providers related to the 2024 Change Healthcare cyberattack. U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., and Ron Wyden, R-Ore., wrote a letter Aug. 27 to the CEOs of…

Read More

Healthcare needs a stronger ‘backbone’

08/29/2025

For decades, healthcare has invested in breakthrough technologies — from artificial intelligence to genomics to robotics — with the promise of delivering safer, smarter, more personalized care. Yet the most important IT problem remains unsolved. Health system leaders need true interoperability to move forward. Without seamless, secure, real-time data exchange,…

Read More

U of Iowa Health Care delays expansion project amid federal cuts 

08/29/2025

University of Iowa Health Care has decided to delay work on a $2 billion inpatient tower due to federal funding changes that are projected to result in a $9.5 billion reduction in healthcare funding to Iowa. In an Aug. 28 statement, the academic health system said work on the Jacobson…

Read More

Children’s hospitals, cancer centers lose funding for brain tumor trials

08/29/2025

Children’s hospitals and cancer centers are halting enrollment in pediatric brain tumor studies after the federal government paused funding, The New York Times reported Aug. 28.  The Pediatric Brain Tumor Consortium includes more than a dozen children’s hospitals and academic centers across the U.S. and Canada. The network’s objective is…

Read More

10 hospitals closing departments or ending services

08/29/2025

A number of healthcare organizations have recently closed medical departments or ended services at facilities to shore up finances, focus on more in-demand services or address staffing shortages. Here are 10 department closures or services that are ending or have been announced, advanced or finalized that Becker’s reported since July…

Read More

The nonclinical workforce shortages looming in healthcare

08/28/2025

As the U.S. faces ongoing shortages of skilled tradespeople, hospitals and health systems are preparing for those gaps to affect their own operations. Health system leaders told Becker’s roles such as mechanics and electricians are critical to daily hospital operations. At Hartford (Conn.) HealthCare, skilled trades have emerged as a…

Read More

Vanderbilt taps chief supply chain officer

08/28/2025

Vanderbilt University Medical Center has named Yolanda Redmond chief supply chain officer.  She will succeed Teresa Dail, BSN, RN, who will retire from the role at the end of the year and will continue to serve as president of Vanderbilt Health Supply Chain Solutions, according to an Aug. 28 news…

Read More

Drugmaker recalls muscle relaxant over labeling error

08/28/2025

Unichem pharmaceuticals issued a nationwide recall of one lot of cyclobenzaprine hydrochloride tablets after finding that bottles labeled as the muscle relaxant actually contained meloxicam, a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug.  The recall was due to a labeling error in which the cyclobenzaprine 10 milligram label was mistakenly applied to bottles containing…

Read More

CMS launches ‘chili cook-off’ AI competition to tackle Medicare fraud 

08/28/2025

CMS has rolled out the “Crushing Fraud Chili Cook‑Off Competition,” a  market-based research challenge seeking explainable AI and machine learning to detect Medicare fraud, waste and abuse. The challenge also seeks innovative, scalable technologies that reduce labor-intensive processes “while keeping humans meaningfully in the loop to ensure effective oversight and…

Read More

Hospital CEO exits climb 15% year over year: 4 things to know

08/28/2025

Hospitals reported 78 CEO exits through July 2025 — a 15% increase from 68 recorded during the same period in 2024. The finding is from executive coaching firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas’ Aug. 28 report examining CEO turnovers in the U.S. Four things to know: 1. Ten of the 78…

Read More