Intermountain Health

Intermountain Health

Hospitals and Health Care

Murray , UT 99,077 followers

About us

As the largest nonprofit health system in the Mountain West, Intermountain Health is dedicated to creating healthier communities and helping our patients and caregivers thrive. It’s time to think of health in a whole new way, and by partnering with our patients and communities, providing expert care closer to home, and making great health more affordable, we can help more people get and stay well. We proudly invest back into improving the care we deliver, and our pioneering research is making healthcare more personalized, effective, and affordable. Serving patients and communities throughout the Mountain West, primarily in Colorado, Utah, Montana, Nevada, Idaho, and Wyoming, Intermountain includes 34 hospitals, 400 clinics, a medical group, affiliate networks, homecare, telehealth, health insurance plans, and other services - along with wholly owned subsidiaries including Select Health, Castell, Tellica Imaging, and Classic Air Medical.

Website
http://intermountainhealthcare.org/Pages/home.aspx
Industry
Hospitals and Health Care
Company size
10,001 employees
Headquarters
Murray , UT
Type
Nonprofit
Specialties
Cancer, Heart Services, Women's Services, Orthopedics., Healthcare, and Pediatrics

Locations

Employees at Intermountain Health

Updates

  • View organization page for Intermountain Health, graphic

    99,077 followers

    MacKenzie Bean, a dietitian in clinical nutrition, recently met with an individual in an outpatient setting at Riverton Hospital in Riverton, Utah who shared their challenge with a severe eating disorder. Although MacKenzie doesn’t specialize in eating disorders, see how she built trust with the patient and provided a referral to a dietitian who could help in the article below. #WeArePartnersInHealth #TogetherForTheHealthiestLives

    Trusting collaboration: a dietitian shares how she partners in health

    Trusting collaboration: a dietitian shares how she partners in health

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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    As the team at Lutheran Medical Center in Colorado is getting ready to move patients to a brand new facility, a reminder that this isn’t our first rodeo! Over the last several decades, Intermountain Health facilities have grown, requiring a great migration of patients from old to new facilities. Here’s a look back at some—were you a part of any of these moves? Photo 1: December 10, 1980, Logan Regional Hospital staff moved 48 adult patients and 12 infants to the new Logan Regional Hospital with the help of seven ambulances and a large truck from surrounding cities. Ten minutes after Logan Regional Hospital opened, the first baby was delivered. Photo 2: In 2007, teams transferred an estimated 200 hospital patients from Cottonwood Hospital and LDS Hospital to Intermountain Medical Center. Each of the 14 ambulances, donated by Gold Cross for use in the move, was outfitted with GPS devices that allowed the teams to monitor the vehicle's precise location at all times. Photo 3: Saint Joseph Hospital in the heart of downtown Denver will be celebrating the 10th anniversary of its big move later this year. On 12-13-14, the hospital with its signature radial towers, completed in 1961, moved to the beautiful facility right next door where it continues to serve the Colorado community today. Photo 4: On April 23, 1990, a fleet of ambulances moved 114 patients to the new Primary Children's Hospital on the University of Utah campus. The hospital opened in a beautiful new building with 186 beds. Today, PCH SLC has expanded to 289 beds as well as a campus in Lehi! Photo 5: In 2018 all major hospital services, including labor & delivery, where finally under one roof at the River Road Campus in St. George. The new campus opened in 2003. Declan Mitchell, the smallest baby born in the 400 East Hospital, cut the ribbon for the new expansion to open.

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  • View organization page for Intermountain Health, graphic

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    What do bubbles and color-coded prescriptions have in common? No, it’s not the start of a bad joke, but some of the ways we at Intermountain Health reimagine how we care for our patients. People often come to our care sites in difficult circumstances. They may be experiencing life-altering symptoms or illness, or someone they care about is. Our mission of helping people live their healthiest lives possible includes healing the whole patient — their mind, body, spirituality, and caring for their support system. #WeServeWithEmpathy #TogetherForTheHealthiestLives

    Bubbles and color-coded prescriptions: Helping the whole patient heal

    Bubbles and color-coded prescriptions: Helping the whole patient heal

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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    Katie Swenson always knew she wanted to go into medicine. As executive director of our surgical specialties and digestive health clinical program, she certainly draws on her years of experience as a physician assistant in pediatric transplant and pediatric general surgery-trauma. But she finds, too, that she draws just as much on the leadership and teambuilding skills she acquired as a U.S. Air Force aircraft maintenance officer. We caught up with her recently to talk about military leadership skills, innovation through collaboration, and empowering patients to take control of their health. 

    Kathryn Swenson, clinical programs leadership athlete

    Kathryn Swenson, clinical programs leadership athlete

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

  • Intermountain Health reposted this

    View profile for JP Valin, MD, MHA, FACP, graphic

    Chief Clinical Officer at Intermountain Health

    I had the privilege of sitting down with HealthLeaders podcast host, Chris Cheney, to discuss the ins and outs of Intermountain Health’s merger with SCL Health in 2022. As I told Chris, the best piece of advice I received at the beginning of our merger was, “Don’t break anything!”   While that guidance was shared tongue-in-cheek, it served as a good reminder throughout the integration process that we were bringing together two health systems with legacies of clinical excellence and positive community impact that could learn from one another. Instead of one organization dictating how things were going to be to the other, we have taken the approach of finding the best of both worlds and sharing those practices across the enterprise thereby strengthening the system as a whole.   Of course, this hasn’t always been a walk in the park, but we are learning and growing along the way. I invite you to listen in on our conversation as I share the personal experiences and insights I’ve gained throughout this merger, including how to successfully:   ·      Integrate care without sacrificing clinical excellence ·      Align and streamline technology, governance, and operations ·      Unite medical staff, care for their wellbeing, and create a culture of collaboration ·      Appropriately prioritize integration initiatives ·      Listen to and address the needs of our caregivers ·      Unify our staff under a single mission built upon shared values ·      Simplify the caregiver and patient experience   #bettertogether #healthsystemmerger #clinicalexcellence   https://lnkd.in/gwci53ZD

    Clinical Perspective on Health System Merger

    Clinical Perspective on Health System Merger

    healthleadersmedia.com

  • View organization page for Intermountain Health, graphic

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    The new Intermountain Health Lutheran Hospital will open on Saturday, August 3. Construction on the six-story replacement hospital started in 2021 and will provide a state-of-the-art care site in the West Denver suburbs. All patients will be moved in one day from the existing Lutheran Medical Center in Wheat Ridge, Colorado, to the new campus, three and a half miles away along I-70. Caregivers have contributed at each step of this process — providing input on the design, testing their workflows, and participating in mock moves. More than 175 volunteers will help create a smooth transition on opening day. "We offer excellent patient care services and quality of care found at Lutheran today and are excited to move into this new, beautiful space, which reflects our commitment to the well-being of our patients," said Andrea Burch, MS, RN, NEA-BC, Lutheran president. Learn more about how the innovative design of this new hospital will benefit patients, caregivers, and the community in the article below. #TogetherForTheHealthiestLives #TheFutureofLutheran

    Caregivers prepare for Lutheran Hospital opening on August 3

    Caregivers prepare for Lutheran Hospital opening on August 3

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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    Intermountain Health’s Transplant Program is the first in Utah to use a new state-of-the-art organ-saving device that helps to maintain donated livers outside the body to enhance successful transplantation. By embracing new cutting-edge technology, such as OrganOx, the Intermountain Transplant Program which has seen a 367% growth from 2018 to 2023. That makes it the third-fastest growing liver program in the nation with better than national outcomes and the shortest wait times for a liver transplant. Here's Sophie's story. (CW for video: blood pumping through a machine)

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Funding

Intermountain Health 1 total round

Last Round

Grant

US$ 1.9M

See more info on crunchbase