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Amidst daunting challenges, innovations offer promise for rural hospitals

1 of 6 The Ellwood City Medical Center closed in January 2020, leaving Lawrence County with only one hospital, UPMC Jameson. NEW CASTLE NEWS Then-State Health Secretary Karen Murphy is joined by Dr. David Nash, dean of Thomas Jefferson University’s Jefferson College of Population Health, during the announcement of the 1889 Foundation-Jefferson Center for Population Health in Johnstown on Feb. 26, 2016. CNHI file photo Robert Inglis/The Daily Item This screen with two cameras, a microphone, and more attached allows doctors to get an up close look at patients while not being in the room at Evangelical Community Hospitals TeleStroke program. Dr. Clemens Schirmer

UPMC Susquehanna: A new way of caring for our patients | News, Sports, Jobs

UPMC Susquehanna: A new way of caring for our patients | News, Sports, Jobs
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UPMC reports falling virus numbers | News, Sports, Jobs - Williamsport Sun-Gazette

MALLORIE McILWAIN COVID-19 hospitalizations and testing rates at sites in the Susquehanna Region have decreased over the last few weeks. “The outpatient testing site volume has decreased,” Dr. David Lopatofsky, chief medical officer of UPMC Susquehanna, said. “That is sort of our lead indicator.” Lopatofsky said that in December, the system saw over 1,200 patients hospitalized from COVID across their system. Meanwhile, over the last few weeks, they have only seen 500 hospitalized patients, 60 of them being in Central Pennsylvania. “The numbers have declined over the last couple of weeks for inpatient,” he said. Total of patients in the Intensive Care Unit are around 20 percent system-wide.

UPMC hospitalizations decreasing in region | News, Sports, Jobs

Doctors: We simply do not have adequate vaccine supplies | News, Sports, Jobs

Jan 21, 2021 (EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. David Lopatofsky, chief medical officer, UPMC in the Susquehanna Region, agrees with and supports the following statement shared by his colleagues on the Southwestern PA Regional Chief Medical Officer Consortium. “While UPMC is encouraged by the public’s eagerness for the vaccine, we simply do not have adequate vaccine supplies or clear notification of when and how much is coming to be able to meet the new, much larger group as discussed (Tuesday) by the Pennsylvania Department of Health. “Our health care sites and systems will need to continue to prioritize those seeking vaccination, identifying the most vulnerable in their area to serve first and to optimize impact during this time of short supply. That means many requests for vaccination will not be met in the next days to weeks, and this is not from a lack of desire.”)

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