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On January 3, 2011, Mitchell H. Katz, a physician, was appointed Director of Health Services for DHS. [11] Katz served 13 years as director of public health for the San Francisco Department of Public Health, where he designed and implemented the "Healthy San Francisco" program covering all San Franciscans with health care. [11]
Amedisys announced March 28, 2014, it was closing 29 care centers (23 home health and six hospice) and consolidating another 25 (21 home health and four hospice). [12] The Concord (NH) office of Beacon Hospice was closed on April 30, 2014. [13] Hyder Family Hospice House (Dover, NH), one of the facilities in the Beacon Hospice acquisition, was ...
The average U.S. hospice has not undergone a full certification inspection in more than 3.5 years, a HuffPost analysis of Medicare data found. HuffPost found 759 hospices that haven’t been inspected in more than 6 years. Nursing home inspections, by contrast, are required by federal law at least every 15 months.
Katz studied Legionnaire's disease after a deadly outbreak in Philadelphia in 1976. [7] She may have caught the disease herself, from handling a sample of infected lung tissue. [8] [9] She was the first scientist to see the bacterium Legionella pneumophila. [3] [1] Newsweek magazine included Katz in a list of 100 "unsung heroes" in 1986. [10]
In 2012, Katz co-founded the City Projects Foundation, an organization that focuses on improving the quality of life in Russian cities, together with Ilya Varlamov. [2] Katz's eponymous YouTube channel, launched in 2010, features daily political commentary and has amassed a following of over 2.3 million subscribers and more than 1 billion views ...
The Animal Project NYC is being challenged with a near-impossible task this week, attempting to find homes for more than a dozen cats by Thursday, Jan. 23. A Bronx woman had been hoarding the cats ...
Bryce Watts Hansen, wife of former NFL free agent Chad Hansen, broke down the realities of her families' finances during her husband's time in the league
End Game is a 2018 American short documentary film by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman [1] about terminally ill patients in a San Francisco hospital meeting medical practitioners seeking to change the perception around life and death.