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Medical Report: Hospitals should bring care into communities, study suggests

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Registered Nurse Orlyn Grace (R) administers a COVID-19 booster vaccination to Diane Cowdrey (L) at a COVID-19 vaccination clinic on April 06, 2022 in San Rafael, California. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has authorized a second COVID-19 booster of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines for people over 50 years old four months after their first booster.
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

PHILADELPHIA (KYW Newsradio) — Two major academic medical centers in Chicago are sending a message about how our major health systems need to change to care for patients.

During the pandemic, leaders at Rush University and the University of Illinois Health System, which serve under-resourced communities, shared resources with the Chicago Department of Public Health. They went into the community, including homeless shelters, to bring vaccines and treatment outside hospital walls.


A new report in the New England Journal of Medicine said this partnership has expanded to numerous areas of health care, and outreach has yielded dramatic results.

The implication is hospital leaders focus beyond their walls to provide services for those who traditionally don't benefit.

Get more medical reports from Dr. Brian McDonough.

​​KYW Newsradio's Medical Reports are sponsored by Independence Blue Cross.