Shakima Tozay was 37 years old and six months pregnant when a nurse, checking the fetal heart rate of the baby boy she was carrying, referred to him as “a hoodlum.” Tozay, a social worker, froze. She had just been hospitalized at Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett, Washington, with preeclampsia, a life-threatening complication of pregnancy, and she is Black. Sign up for The Morning newsletter from the New York Times “A ‘hoodlum’?” she said. “Why would you call him that?” The fetus was
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Robust healthcare job market has helped U.S. avoid recession so far. Seven things to know about booming healthcare hiring, including how it has accounted for 30
Amid financial strain and operational challenges, hospitals and health systems have faced challenges related to recruiting and retaining workers. Despite this,