Category Archives: Family Medicine

PeaceHealth names new chief medical officer for its communities in … – PeaceHealth

BELLINGHAM, Wash. Lorna Gober, MD, has joined PeaceHealths Northwest network as chief medical officer (CMO).

As CMO, Dr. Gober will work closely with the PeaceHealth Northwest executive team as well as medical staff and medical group physician leadership. Dr. Gober will also be an important addition to the PeaceHealth senior physician leadership team made up of other PeaceHealth hospital and medical group CMOs.

Dr. Gober most recently served as the Medical Director of Sound Physicians at PeaceHealth facilities in Bellingham, Sedro-Woolley and Vancouver, an expanded leadership role within Sound after leading the hospitalists at PeaceHealth St. Joseph. Prior to Sound, Dr. Gober was with Family Care Network in Bellingham for more than a decade, during which time she held a variety of executive leadership roles. Earlier in her career, Dr. Gober worked at Western Washington University Student Health Center, and briefly as a fill-in physician at Sea Mar Community Health Clinic and Nooksack Tribal Health.

Dr. Gobers well-rounded experience makes her ideally suited for the CMO role, says Charles Prosper, chief executive of PeaceHealths Northwest network. We believe that she will be an excellent leadership partner and mentor.

Dr. Gober received her Bachelor of Arts from the University of Oregon Honors College, where she graduated magna cum laude. She received her Doctor of Medicine from the University of Washington and completed her residency training at the Tacoma Family Medicine Residency Program.

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PeaceHealth names new chief medical officer for its communities in ... - PeaceHealth

St. Luke’s official: Change is needed in Idaho’s abortion laws before … – Yahoo News

To those who witnessed the fall of Roe v. Wade and the implementation of Idahos total abortion ban, the medical community accepts that broad access to abortion is no longer an option in Idaho.

Dr. John M. Werdel is the womens service line medical director at St. Lukes Health System.

What most do not realize is the dramatic impact criminalizing medical care is having on recruitment and retention of physicians who care for Idahos pregnant women. We need the citizens and legislators to fully understand and appreciate what is at stake now and act before it is too late.

As the medical director of womens health care at St. Lukes Health System, I am witnessing first-hand the impact of these laws on all physicians who give advice and care to pregnant women. These providers are terrified and constantly second-guessing their decisions. Not because of the restrictions on broad access to abortion, but because they can no longer safely manage and advise their patients who have pregnancy complications.

Complicated pregnancies are not rare; the average is 30 per week for the St. Lukes Health System alone. These complications may require the termination of the pregnancy to protect the health of the mother or end a fatal fetal defect. But physicians dealing with these complications could be facing felony charges from such care and have no choice but to defend these medical decisions in court.

What reasonable physician wants to take that chance? Many are deciding it is not worth the risk.

A recent survey shows that more than 45% of obstetrical-gynecological physicians are currently considering or exploring relocation out of Idaho.

In the last six months, three of the maternal fetal medicine physicians (high-risk pregnancy specialists) in our state have decided to leave Idaho. Family medicine and generalist OB-GYN physicians, who manage the vast majority of pregnant patients in our state, are also signaling a desire to limit their practice, retire early or leave Idaho.

Recruitment of new physicians to Idaho has been virtually impossible since late summer 2022, which should be setting off alarm bells throughout Idaho.

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Again, it is not the restrictions on elective abortion that are driving this unfolding nightmare. Physicians do not want to practice in Idaho; they do not want to live and raise a family in a state that criminalizes care that is both medically appropriate and necessary.

It is not too late.

Legislators in this session could make simple changes in the laws and allow for appropriate and medically necessary exceptions in the cases of terminations. This would allow the doctor and the patient to make these often heart-wrenching decisions, without the fear of prosecution hanging over their heads.

Obstetrical care is complex, and a nuanced approach is required. If we do not rewrite these laws during this legislative session, we will lose more physicians. Recruitment will remain difficult if not impossible. This will lead to provider shortages, increased access issues, substandard and unsafe care.

Please contact your representatives and ask them to prioritize this issue.

Dr. John M. Werdel is the womens service line medical director at St. Lukes Health System.

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St. Luke's official: Change is needed in Idaho's abortion laws before ... - Yahoo News