|
|
Las Vegas Photos Courtesy of Las Vegas News
Bureau
|
University Medical Center, affiliated with the University
of Nevada School of Medicine, is the premier teaching
hospital in the state. The medical center serves the
medical needs of Southern Nevada and parts of California,
Utah and Arizona as well as the millions of visitors
to fabulous Las Vegas every year.
Web Connect Link Update We’ve updated the UMC Hospital System in preparation for the National Provider ID being required for all physicians and hospitals!
Our WebConnect application has been updated as well as the URL to get to it – so be sure to re-mark it in your Favorites!
Nevada's Only Kidney Transplant Centers Consolidate Resources The transplant program at Sunrise Hospital & Medical Center will merge into the existing program at University Medical Center on July 1. This consolidation will create one larger program that will better serve the needs of the community and better position the transplant program for future growth and success.
UMC Children's Center Receives $60,000 Worth of Toys The UMC Children’s Center received approximately $60,000 worth of toys from the Gift Bank program of Kids Wish Network, a national charity. UnitedHealthcare, a diversified health and well-being company, covered the shipping costs. Some of the donated toys will be utilized by UMC’s Child Life Specialists. The specialists use play, among other communication methods, to reduce any anxieties that a child may experience as a patient.
Life-saving Skills for Babysitters Teens earning spending money this summer babysitting can now improve their skills through free Safe Sitter classes held at University Medical Center.
UMC offers free Safe Sitter classes to adolescents age 11 to 13. Safe Sitter classes teach would-be babysitters how to handle emergencies when caring for children. Call 383-2229 to reserve space.
UMC Receives Level II Pediatric Trauma Center Verification University Medical Center of Southern Nevada is now a verified Level II Pediatric Trauma Center by the American College of Surgeons’ (ACS) Committee on Trauma (COT) and also is designated as such by the State of Nevada. UMC is the only hospital in Nevada to hold this designation.
There are only five hospitals nationwide with an ACS-verified Level II Pediatric Trauma Center designation. There are 16 hospitals with an ACS-verified Level I Pediatric Trauma Center designation.
Weight-Loss Seminar Scheduled University Medical Center (UMC) and the University Health System, the clinical practice of the University of Nevada School of Medicine, will host a seminar on Bariatric surgery Wednesday, July 9 from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Dr. James Lau will conduct the seminar, which will be held at the Delta Point building at 901 Rancho Lane (across from the UMC campus) in the Emerald Room.
Dr. Lau is board-certified in general surgery and completed a fellowship in minimally invasive Bariatric surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine. Dr. Lau practices exclusively at UMC and is also the assistant director for the surgical residency program at the University of Nevada School of Medicine.
Call 671-5150 for more information or to reserve your space.
Families with Babies in Intensive Care to Benefit from New Project The March of Dimes announces that it has named University Medical Center to implement NICU Family Support ®. March of Dimes NICU Family Support provides information and comfort to families of premature babies and other critically ill newborns being cared for in a Newborn Intensive Care Unit (NICU).
The project is an important component of the March of Dimes Prematurity Campaign, a nationwide effort to address the growing problem of premature birth, which is the leading cause of newborn death and a major cause of serious health problems. It costs society billions of dollars every year. The March of Dimes is also funding research to find the causes of premature birth.
Emergency Medicine Residency Program First in Nevada University Medical Center (UMC) and the University of Nevada School of Medicine have announced the formation of the state’s first emergency medicine residency program, which will train new emergency medicine doctors.
Residents joining the three-year program will gain expertise in all areas of medicine. In the first year, they will focus on learning about specialty areas of medical practice, with the second year providing ample opportunity to fine tune their skills by working alongside experienced emergency medicine doctors. During the last year, residents will focus exclusively on emergency medicine and will be qualified to treat any patient that walks into the emergency department.
|
|
|