News

Pediatric dermatologists reported they are not fairly compensated for educating primary care residents and struggle to balance teaching time with increasing clinical demands, contributing to ...
The company picked up $250 million in series D funding back in February at a reported valuation of $2.75 billion. Abridge has raised more than $460 million, according to public records. Abridge is ...
CHARLOTTE — Officials say that one person is dead after a shooting in north Charlotte Saturday night. CMPD says that they were called to the 100 block of Winding Path Way just before 3 a.m. for ...
Children in South Florida are being taken across county lines or flown to other states for specialized medical care they can’t get close to home. A plan to consolidate medical pediatric ...
A man has been arrested in connection with a fatal shooting in South Charlotte over the weekend, according to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department. It happened on the 5300 block of South ...
Demonstrating the advancements in how complex care can be delivered in the home for pediatric patients, Charlotte, North Carolina-based Atrium Health has reportedly seen early success with the ...
South Carolina has a shortage of primary care. In 2024, the Primary Care Collaborative reported 18.9 percent of South Carolinians have no usual source of care, 54.6 percent of the state’s children “do ...
Pediatrica Health Group partners with M33 Growth to revolutionize pediatric primary care through innovative approaches and groundbreaking changes.
Clarity Pediatrics is transforming the pediatric specialty care journey. Their tech-enabled, virtual care model is built on American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) guidelines and brings the best of ...
The question could not be more urgent. There will be a shortage of 20,200 to 40,400 primary care doctors by 2036. ... Lo Cascio remains committed to primary care pediatrics.
At the bottom of the U.S. News list is Yale, with 10.7% of its graduates finding lasting careers in primary care. Other elite schools have similar rates: Johns Hopkins, 13.1%; Harvard, 13.7%.