Five women CFOs are redefining financial leadership—shifting from cost control to strategic influence across operations, workforce, and policy.
Despite women making up the majority of the nursing workforce and the broader healthcare workforce, only a few of them go on to fill leadership positions. According to a 2024 systematic review ...
Serving older adults with complex health needs such as multiple chronic conditions requires care coordination, preventive services, and harnessing data.
The clash between payers and providers over AI-driven coding is intensifying, with insurers arguing that documentation tools are inflating reimbursement without corresponding care. AI is quickly ...
House Speaker Dan Hawkins intensified frustration among Republicans and Democrats by taking new steps to block legislation sought by hospitals and clinics to preserve integrity of a federal program ...
Biomedical engineers at Brown University have developed a hydrogel-based wound dressing that releases antibiotics only in the presence of infection-causing bacteria, offering a potential new method ...
Oakland County is erasing $6 million in medical debt for 6,300 county residents. The county is working with the national nonprofit Undue Medical Debt, which acquires the medical debts of those who are ...
FTC Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson has directed agency staff to create a Healthcare Task Force aimed at coordinating enforcement ...
CMS is swapping out faxing and mailing for streamlined electronic transactions, an action it says lets providers spend less time on administrative hassle and more time caring for patients. The ...
Medicare payment problems are generating steep financial hardships for some of Minnesota’s rural hospitals at a time when many are struggling to stay afloat. State hospital leaders and officials at ...
A regulatory snag may endanger the planned April 1 closing of the merger between Maimonides Medical Center and NYC Health+Hospitals. The state Attorney General's office has opted not to issue ...
A new study this week in JAMA, identified sepsis in 1.3% of hospitalized U.S. children ages one month to 17 years old. The study, which included data from nearly four million admissions from 2016 ...