Making Healthcare the Best It Can Be
Recently, there was a mother at Novant Health Presbyterian Medical Center.
Recently, there was a mother at Novant Health Presbyterian Medical Center.
Aaron Condon: Why men’s health matters as a father
When Yeakley checked in on January 29, he thought he was only experiencing digestion discomfort and he’d be discharged in short order.
Well before COVID-19 hit, a different kind of epidemic was impacting physicians across the country — a rampant and, at times, debilitating state of burnout.
Eight years ago, Susan Pfefferkorn went in for a routine mammogram at Novant Health Forsyth Medical Center. Susan was no stranger to breast cancer. She’d lost a college friend to the disease back in the 1980s, and her mother had been diagnosed post-menopause. As a result, Susan had always been proactive.
Allan Cheatham believes in taking care of people and giving back to the community where he lives and owns a business.
Thompson had a mammogram the previous December. She’d kept up with regular, at-home breast exams. She had lost two aunts to breast cancer. A mother of three, she knew she had to be proactive, so she was.
A generous donation from Dan and Kay Donahue has helped us develop the Donahue Developmental Therapeutics Unit, located at Novant Health Forsyth Medical Center.
Immediately after Connor Loomis was born at Novant Health Presbyterian Medical Center in June 2020, he was in the fight of his life.
Nursing is a calling for Julie Schaefer. It always has been.