Partnership Story: Building a Reputation of Quality for HM, EM, and ICU Programs
Learn how SCP helped implement a new hospital management strategy to improve hospital quality measures for an EM, HM, and ICU program at one facility.
Impactful Strategies Hospitals Can Use to Improve Community Health and Win Back Patient Trust

Hospitals and physicians have accountability to treat the community as their patient, use these strategies to improve community health and patient trust.
National Doctor’s Day 2020: Finding (and Holding on to) Your ‘Why’
Physicians, the path you’ve chosen is not easy. Use the advice shared in this blog post to stay excited about your work and passionate about your purpose.
Best Practice Guide for Virtual Provider-Patient Communications

Learn the advantages and challenges of telemedicine services, tips for how to fulfill HIPAA and HHS requirements, explain how telehealth works, and more.
The Necessity of Developing Teamwork in the ICU
Critical care medicine in the ICU requires dedicated teamwork, deep respect, clear communication, and collaborative attitudes to be truly excellent.
Impact of COVID-19 on Physician Employment: 6 Tips for Practice Management
Learn tips for effective practice management to help improve hospital operations, optimize provider jobs, and generate significant cost savings.
Recognizing Patient Experience Week: The Impact of Hospital Medicine
Educate your hospital medicine teams on how to create positive patient experiences—and recognize them for successful patient experience initiatives.
National Nurses Week: A Time to Thank America’s Most Trusted Professionals
This Nurses Week, SCP Health thanks all the nurses in our company, hospitals, and communities for the incredible work they perform.
Wellness in a Time of Worry: How to Improve Employee Health
Hospital leaders should consider employee wellness programs as a tool to improve hospital recruiting, physician staffing, and patient satisfaction.
The Need for Palliative Care Training in Hospital and Critical Care Medicine
Palliative care is important for all clinicians to understand—but training for hospitalists and intensivists is increasingly essential.