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LCRH celebrates residency program graduates

As medical residents gather across the country this spring to celebrate graduation ceremonies - many connected only by video camera or drive-through event - Lake Cumberland was proud to honor

VA Maryland Health Care Names New Associate Chief of Staff of Education and Academic Affairs

VA Maryland Health Care Names New Associate Chief of Staff of Education and Academic Affairs Share Article The VA Maryland Health Care System has named Dr. Ryan Scilla as the new associate chief of staff for Education and Academic Affairs. In this position, Scilla oversees the strategic planning and implementation of health professional training programs, veterans’ health education, and the employee education and training program for the health care system. .The VA Maryland Health Care System has named Dr. Ryan Scilla as the new associate chief of staff for Education and Academic Affairs. “We’re especially excited that Dr. Scilla brings his excitement for education to our team,” said Jonathan R. Eckman, P.E., director of the VA Maryland Health Care System.

Mercy Fort Smith Kicks Off New Residency Programs

Mercy Fort Smith will welcome its first internal medicine and family medicine residents this summer. The new residency programs, the result of a collaboration with the Arkansas Colleges of Health Education, are set to begin July 1. A $1.3 million donation from ACHE and the Degen Foundation is funding the programs, designed to help retain doctors in the River Valley while boosting the hospital’s staffing. The Arkansas College of Osteopathic Medicine is the sponsoring institution, and the programs have received accreditation from the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. With the significant physician shortage in our community, a new graduate medical program will help us to grow our own, said John Sealey, DO, associate dean of clinical medicine at ARCOM, in a news release. Statistics indicate that 75% of individuals who study and then train in a location will stay in that area. These new physicians tend to be young and at a point where they are planting roots.

A precarious situation : St Bernards doctor reacts to COVID-19 surge in his home country

‘A precarious situation’: St. Bernards doctor reacts to COVID-19 surge in his home country ‘A precarious situation’: St. Bernards doctor reacts to COVID-19 surge in his home country By Jurnee Taylor | May 9, 2021 at 5:54 PM CDT - Updated May 10 at 5:44 AM JONESBORO, Ark. (KAIT) - Coronavirus cases in India continue to shatter records. The South Asia country saw over 400,000 confirmed cases Friday and while the government there is rushing to find solutions, several here in Region 8 also have their eyes on what can be done. “Most of the big metropolitan cities, big densely populated cities have been affected badly to a point where there are no hospital beds for people to go to,” St. Bernards Dr. Abhijit Shivkumar said.

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