Female executives are more likely to focus on customer relationships, thus bettering their company’s financial performance according to a recent study published in the Journal of Marketing.
Many Americans have lost trust in the healthcare system, but organizations can take steps to gain it back, according to Richard Isaacs, MD, CEO and executive director of Oakland, Calif.-based Permanente Medical Group.
Masculine job titles such as chairman, alderman and councilman contribute to assumptions about the titleholder’s gender, according to a study published in The Leadership Quarterly.
Jeanette Filpi was CEO of Pioneer Community Hospital in Stuart, Va., when it declared bankruptcy in 2017. Now, she is director of development for a team that plans to reopen it, Cardinal News reported Sept. 8.
A new hospital board is being proposed as Orangeburg, S.C.-based Regional Medical Center is planning a partnership with Charleston-based Medical University of South Carolina, The Times and Democrat reported Sept. 6.
Saying “female CEO” instead of simply “CEO” perpetuates the idea that women in the C-suite are outliers, according to a Sept. 6 article in Forbes by Saundra Pelletier, CEO of Evofem Biosciences, a company that specializes in women’s healthcare.