NH employers may lower health costs by supporting better health for employees
Diabetes costs the U.S. economy approximately $413 billion annually, including more than $106 billion in lost productivity.
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Bradley Kreick, a veteran health care executive and consultant, has begins his new job today as CEO of SolutionHealth, the parent organization of Elliot Health System in Manchester and Southern New Hampshire Health System of Nashua.
Kreick succeeds Sherry Hausmann, who resigned in October after holding the top job at SolutionHealth for three years.
With over 25 years of health care business management experience, Kreick has been an executive at publicly traded and privately held health care providers and insurers, including Apria Healthcare, Oxford Health Plans and Healthsource Inc.
A New Hampshire native, Kreick lives in Nashua with his wife Beth and also is head coach of the Bishop Guertin High School Girls Basketball Team and chair of the Rivier University board of trustees.
Dianne Mercier, chair of the SolutionHealth board of trustees, called said Kreick “uniquely qualified” to lead the organization.
Diabetes costs the U.S. economy approximately $413 billion annually, including more than $106 billion in lost productivity.
A new report from the AARP concludes there’s an urgent need to support the tens of thousands of New Hampshire residents who serve as caregivers to people close to them.
The bipartisan Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM) Price Transparency and Accountability would break the link between PBM compensation and drug price, and lower prescription costs, advocates say.
In 2016, the New Hampshire Legislature enacted a system of care model for children’s behavioral health services, recognizing a critical gap: Children exposed to adverse childhood experiences and those with severe emotional disturbances were falling through the cracks of fragmented services.
The award totals $1.6 million over four years and will support training, placement and sustainability efforts to strengthen the behavioral health workforce across rural Vermont and New Hampshire
A free-standing 24-hour emergency room operated by Parkland Medical Center was conditionally approved by planners Nov. 13
A process to create human tissue and bone through 3D printing won top honors at the NH Tech Alliance’s Product of the Year competition. The BioAssembly Bot 500, a robotic-based tissue fabrication and manufacturing platform, was developed by Advanced Solutions Life Sciences, a Louisville, Kentucky-based company whose research and development team is based in the Manchester Millyard.
Industry group celebrates second year with more than 50 member companies
