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TriHealth's Innovative Culture Receives National Recognition
TriHealth's Innovative Culture Receives National Recognition

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

TriHealth's Innovative Culture Receives National Recognition

CINCINNATI, June 4, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- TriHealth, Cincinnati's nationally-recognized health care system, is pleased to celebrate ranking as one of the top five humanizing health care brands in the nation. Branding agency Monigle recognized TriHealth as a Top Five National Health Care Brand, The Number One Brand in Ohio and the Top Brand in Cincinnati for the third straight year. Monigle scores more than 200 health system brands nationwide and ranks them by their brand strength within their market. Rankings are based on consumer opinion and composite scores from its Humanizing Brand Experience model. Specifically, Monigle surveyed more than 27,000 insured household decision-makers who received medical care over the last two years in order to compile the eighth annual edition of the report. Rankings factored in dozens of characteristics of consumer advocacy, including emotional, intellectual and behavioral components. "We are pleased to see how Monigle has recognized the power of TriHealth's authentic brand promise and how we are living it through our team members and culture by seeing, hearing and healing patients every day, in every interaction," said TriHealth President and CEO Mark C. Clement. "This extraordinary achievement is the direct result of all we have done together as a team over the last 10 years on our journey to Get Health Care Right! From building an industry-leading culture to living our values and delivering on our brand promise, we have put in the hard work each and every day to make our brand vision a reality for the Cincinnati community." TriHealth's unique culture – known as the TriHealth Way – has been in the making for the last 10 years under Clement's leadership. In addition to making regular assessments and upgrades at all of TriHealth's hospitals and offices, TriHealth has instituted the Population Health model of making sure patients feel seen, heard and healed. In a time with many unanswered questions about the future of health care culture, TriHealth is honored that its commitment to Cincinnati's patients has been recognized and pledges continue working to Get Health Care Right. More about TriHealthTriHealth is hospitals, physicians and the community working together to help people live better. We provide clinical, educational, preventive and social programs through Bethesda North, Bethesda Butler, Good Samaritan and McCullough-Hyde hospitals, and more than 140 other locations throughout Greater Cincinnati. Contact: Tom Lange, Senior Public Relations Consultant Thomas_Lange@ 513-569-6728 View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE TriHealth, Inc.

When the data is the story: reporting on the doctors on Big Pharma's payroll
When the data is the story: reporting on the doctors on Big Pharma's payroll

Yahoo

time18-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

When the data is the story: reporting on the doctors on Big Pharma's payroll

Every so now and then I'll encounter a database that's a real feat of engineering. Despite aggregating an enormous amount of data, it works seamlessly and is intuitive to use for members of the public and researchers alike. Open Payments is one of those databases: It publishes tens of millions of transaction records every year, allowing patients to see how much money their doctors have received from pharma and medical device companies within seconds. At nearly 750,000 entries, the dataset of transactions between companies and medical practitioners in Cincinnati was extensive. It covered $136 million worth of payments over the past seven years and is the largest dataset I have analyzed on the job. While it required many rounds of analysis, gut checks, and calls and texts with those more data savvy than I – Open Payments allowed me to identify the highest earning doctors in industry payments in the Cincinnati area and interview them. Writing this story has reinforced my belief that often, the data is the story. Having access to a detailed, easily searchable, and publicly available database also allowed me to ask readers to search their own doctors and relay what they found back to me. A dozen readers responded to our survey, while a few more wrote emails. People wrote in about their primary care doctors, surgeons and cardiologists, who received payments ranging from less than $100 to millions of dollars. They worked at TriHealth, UC Health, Bon Secours Mercy Health, and Christ Hospital, along with a couple private equity-owned physician groups. Using the database elicited varying reactions in readers. Joan Doyle, who was disappointed to find at least a dozen of her family's doctors had received industry money, had mixed feelings. She said she loves her doctors but wondered what their industry ties might mean for the quality and cost of care provided to herself, her husband and their daughter. Sandy Pittman, of Cleves, felt differently. 'I really don't care, because I trust my doctors enough,' shared Pittman, who looked up the records of her cardiologist. 'That's the biggest thing.' This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Reporting on the doctors on Big Pharma's payroll

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