Showing posts with label opens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label opens. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

American Specialty Health Opens Dallas Operations Center

SAN DIEGO, July 2, 2012 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Leading health services company American Specialty Health Incorporated (ASH) has opened a new 50,000 square foot operations center in Southlake, TX, a suburb of Dallas. The new location will allow ASH to expand its operational services, while also offering redundancy capabilities to ensure uninterrupted operations in the event of any emergency that might impact the company's Southern California headquarters and operations center.

Heading up the new Dallas operations is Kirk Hartman, who recently joined ASH as associate vice president, Specialty Health Operations. Hartman has been instrumental in helping to prepare the new office for day-to-day operations supporting ASH business. Previously, he was a director of call center operations for a large radiology management company where he oversaw more than 300 employees across three locations in Texas and New York.

"ASH has seen growing interest in our programs and we are investing appropriate resources to support new capabilities in this area," said ASH CEO and chairman George DeVries. "Our new location will afford us more opportunities to grow and better serve our customers."

The organization is looking to fill more than 100 positions at their new office.

About ASH

American Specialty Health Incorporated (ASH) is a national health services company that provides specialty health care management programs, fitness and exercise programs, and total population health and prevention/wellness programs to health plans, insurance carriers, employer groups and trust funds.

Based in San Diego, ASH has more than 900 employees and serves nearly 30 million members. ASH subsidiaries include American Specialty Health Insurance Company, American Specialty Health Group, Inc. and Healthyroads, Inc. Products offered through ASH and its subsidiaries include the Healthyroads Wellness(R) Program, the Silver&Fit(R) Program, the ExerciseRewardsTM Program and others. For more information about ASH programs, visit ASHCompanies.com or call (800) 848-3555. Follow ASH on Twitter @ASHCompaniesor @Healthyroads and on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/Healthyroads.


View the original article here

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

UNH opens health clinic for faculty, staff


View the original article here

UNH opens health clinic for faculty, staff

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — The University of New Hampshire opened a new health clinic Monday aimed at saving money and providing faculty and staff with more convenient options for their medical needs.

The clinic, located within the university's student health building in Durham, will serve more as an urgent care facility than a primary care office.

It will be open from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. during the academic year and will provide treatment for ailments such as ear and sinus infections, sprained ankles and other injuries.

Services include a pharmacy, X-rays and laboratory testing. Officials expect the latter to provide the most immediate savings, given that it costs about $15 for a comprehensive lab workup done by an independent lab versus $90-$150 at local hospitals.

Those savings are critical at a time when the university system is spending $66 million on health care benefits this year, with the Durham campus accounting for about $46 million of that total. And those costs have been rising 7-10 percent per year, said Amy Schwartz, the university system's director of health care cost containment.

"It's really unsustainable, so we started thinking about what sorts of things can we do that meet the needs of employees but also as employers to control the health care costs," she said. "We have a thriving health service, we serve 12,000 students very successfully, and the thought was, let's take some of our internal resources and see if indeed we can build more efficiently and effectively than we can buy."

The new clinic, which has its own waiting area and eventually will have a separate entrance, is staffed by workers from student health services for now, but new staff could be added if needed. If it turns out faculty and staff don't use it much, it could be closed without the university system having spent a lot of money, Schwartz said. But she expects it to be a success, saying workers already have expressed interest.

"We can improve productivity because people don't have to leave campus and spend half the day trying to get an appointment, and then get back on campus," she said. "It makes sense to try it."

UNH isn't alone in opening such a clinic. The College and University Professional Association for Human Resources surveyed 415 institutions last year and found that about a quarter of them provide on-campus medical services to faculty and staff.

Kevin Charles, executive director of UNH Health Services, said it cost about $200,000 to build the new clinic, and he expects it to be self-sustaining in less than three years. Just one patient visited the clinic on its opening day, but many other faculty and staff members stopped by with questions, he said.

Staff will spend the next few months fine tuning the clinic's operations, with a grand opening set for next fall.


View the original article here

Saturday, February 4, 2012

New inner-city health center opens in Boston

BOSTON (AP) — Bob Thompson learned he had prostate cancer after routine screening at the Whittier Street Health Center, a community-based facility that has long served serving thousands of residents of the inner-city Roxbury neighborhood.

The screening probably saved his life, said Thompson, 60, a long-time Roxbury resident who had surgery for the cancer last May.

"Without it I probably would not have discovered that I had cancer, it would have gone on for a number of years and the cancer would have gotten worse," he said.

On Monday, Gov. Deval Patrick and others will attend a ceremony dedicating Whittier's new, $35 million state-of-the-art facility viewed by many as a model for efficient health care delivery to traditionally underserved urban residents. The six-story, 79,000-square-foot building has been described as a "one-stop" center for health care and social services, offering 19,000 residents everything from cancer screening to dental care to violence prevention programs.

Patrick said community health centers like Whittier are critical to the state's twin goals of providing universal care while reducing costs.

"Part of the way to assure access and also part of the way to assure cost-containment is encouraging as many people as possible to get their care in lower-cost community centers," he said in an interview last week. Patrick has been pushing lawmakers to approve a payment reform bill that would shift the health care industry away from a fee-for-service system based on individual tests and procedures and toward a so-called global payment system that stresses a team-oriented approach to patient care.

Construction of the new facility was largely enabled by a portion of the $80 million in federal stimulus funds the state received for eight community-based health centers, four in Boston and one each in New Bedford, Fall River, Fitchburg and Lowell.

Nationally, community-based health centers received about $2 billion in federal stimulus grants over the past two years, according to the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration.

Whittier first opened in 1933 to help care for newborn babies in a public housing development. The new building keeps the center's original name though it is now located on a former vacant lot on nearby Tremont Street, with more than twice the size and capacity of the previous facility.

Situated just a few miles from, but in many ways a world removed from, Boston's renowned Longwood medical district, it has faced enormous challenges serving the diverse and largely low-income neighborhood.

"When you look at our mission statement it is about eliminating health and social disparities," said Frederica Williams, Whittier's president and chief executive. "You cannot cure someone's illness and make them engaged if they are dealing with poverty or not making sustainable wages."

Center officials say 60 percent of their patients live below the poverty level and 85 percent live in public housing.

Fewer than one in four patients have private insurance and about half receive Medicaid. And 23 percent have no health insurance at all — a startling figure in Massachusetts, where 98 percent of all residents have health insurance because of the state's landmark 2006 health care law.

The socio-economic disparities appear to translate directly to health disparities. About 70 percent of Whittier's patients have been diagnosed with at least one chronic medical condition such as diabetes, cancer, hypertension , asthma or obesity. Many live with more than one such disease.

The neighborhood's 1-in-10 infant mortality rate also far exceeds state and national averages.

Four in five patients also have "psycho-social" issues, center officials say, often stemming from violence or substance abuse prevalent in their lives or families.

"If other stressors in your life are preventing you from addressing care or seeing your doctors on a regular basis, then it's hard to stay connected," said Dr. Christopher Lathan, director of the cancer care equity program at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. Lathan is one of five oncologists assigned on a rotating basis to a cancer clinic at Whittier that is run by Dana-Farber, one of the nation's most prestigious cancer research and treatment centers.

Lathan pointed to statistics showing that African-American men have the highest rates of prostate cancer in the world, and African-American women in the U.S. have higher breast cancer mortality rates. He said Dana-Farber tries to provide Roxbury residents with access to similar care that patients would receive at the institute's main campus in the Longwood medical area.

The clinic, originally funded by a 2008 gift from New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and his late wife, Myra, may be the first example of a major U.S. cancer center operating in a community-based setting, Williams said.

Monday's dedication culminates a nearly decade-long quest by Williams to find a permanent home for Whittier, yet she understands the building itself doesn't guarantee that all in the community will take advantage of its offerings.

That's why, she said, the center employs roving "health ambassadors" in the neighborhood to seek out residents — particularly men — who might otherwise have no contact with doctors until a crisis lands them in a hospital emergency room.

"We are relentless in getting you in here," said Williams. "Once we screen you for the first time, if there is an abnormal result, our patient navigators will follow you and call you until you have no choice but to come in."


View the original article here

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Monday, January 23, 2012

Gerald L. Frances Center opens for School of Health Sciences

Reporter Ryan Green tours the news Francis Center for the School of Health Sciences.

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

View the original article here

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Gerald L. Frances Center opens for School of Health Sciences

Reporter Ryan Green tours the news Francis Center for the School of Health Sciences.

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

View the original article here

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Gerald L. Frances Center opens for School of Health Sciences

Reporter Ryan Green tours the news Francis Center for the School of Health Sciences.

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

View the original article here

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Gerald L. Frances Center opens for School of Health Sciences

Reporter Ryan Green tours the news Francis Center for the School of Health Sciences.

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

View the original article here