Grand Rapids Business Journal
Courtesy Muskegon Community College
Muskegon Community College President Dale K. Nesbary began serving his two-year term as chair of the Trinity Health Michigan board of directors Jan. 1.
He was elected as chair of the Catholic health system position on Dec. 1. Nesbary served on the Trinity Health West Michigan region board from 2016-18 and joined the Michigan region board as its vice chair upon its formation in January 2019.
“It is a singular honor that my colleagues entrusted me to lead,” said Nesbary, Muskegon Community College’s president since 2009. “I thank Jim Woods for his skilled service as chair over the past two years and look forward to supporting CEO Rob Casalou and colleagues in moving Trinity Health Michigan forward during these challenging times.”
Health systems and health departments next week will receive double the number of COVID-19 vaccine doses they expected as the federal government approved a request from Michigan to use 60,000 doses allocated to the long-term care program managed by CVS and Walgreens.Earlier this week, several…
This week, Michigan received one of the lowest number of doses since mid-December, 60,450, which resulted in fewer distributions by five-fold than what health systems, local health departments and federally qualified health centers requested, system executives said.
Beaumont s new anesthesia model in place at additional hospitals
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Beaumont Health completes transfer of anesthesiology services to Texas-based NorthStar at seven of its eight hospitals
System says single anesthesiology contract that includes hiring 200-plus nurse anesthetists will improve quality, reduce costs
Some specialty nurses, surgeons and physician leaders objected to change
Beaumont Health
Beaumont Hospital Royal Oak is among three hospitals where NorthStar Anesthesiologists has taken over anesthesia services.
Irving, Texas-based NorthStar Anesthesia has taken over anesthesia services at Beaumont Health s three northern hospitals in Royal Oak, Troy and Grosse Pointe and associated ambulatory surgery centers and pain clinics, a move that angered some anesthesia nurses, surgeons and physicians when the contract was announced last summer.