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Member News

Valley View Hospital Announces New Chief Medical Information Officer

Foster Goss, DO, MMSc is an emergency physician and Chief Medical Information Officer (CMIO) at Valley View. He completed his residency at Albert Einstein Medical Center and pursued a National Library of Medicine fellowship in biomedical informatics at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Goss holds board certifications in both emergency medicine and clinical informatics.

The Leapfrog Group Awards Delta Health an ‘A’ for Hospital Safety Grade

Delta Health earned an “A” Hospital Safety Grade from The Leapfrog Group, an independent national nonprofit watchdog focused on patient safety. Leapfrog assigns an “A,” “B,” “C,” “D” or “F” grade to general hospitals across the country based on over 30 performance measures reflecting errors, accidents, injuries and infections, as well as the systems hospitals have in place to prevent them.

Moab Regional Hospital Announces New Chief Medical Officer & Director of Nursing

Moab Regional Hospital is thrilled to announce the addition of two accomplished leaders to its team: Dr. William Gustin, Chief Medical Officer, and Margy Swenson, RN, Director of Nursing. Their extensive experience and unwavering dedication to patient-centered care strengthen the hospital’s commitment to providing exceptional healthcare services. The hospital looks forward to the positive impact they will bring to the community.

Telluride Regional Medical Center Shares Future Plans for New Facility & Expanding Services

Construction for the new medical center is currently expected to start in 2026 and last until 2028. With complete services likely to start in 2029, the planning analysis forecasted that the center would be able to offer 15,000 primary care visits and 4,500 ER visits annually once fully operational. The expanded services would add about 3,200 doctor visits, including primary care and specialists.

Aspen Valley Hospital’s Breast Center Upgrades Technology to SCOUT® Radar Location System

Enter SCOUT: A wire-free localization system that uses an implant about the size of a grain of rice for breast and soft tissue tumor localization. It can be implanted at the time of biopsy, or any other time before surgery that marks the biopsy site. The SCOUT® reflector system uses radar detection instead of the traditional wire and radiation system used by surgeons for generations to guide them to the tumor.