Intermountain Health

Intermountain Health

Hospitals and Health Care

Murray , UT 98,038 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 33 hospitals, 300+ 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

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    As a large rural hospital, Cassia Regional Hospital helps its community in Burley, Idaho access safe, best-in-quality care. Carly Nelson, environmental services manager, meets patient needs by taking care of them and their families, and by making sure her team and the whole hospital know they have each other's backs. “I come to work with the expectation that I’m going to do the best possible in my job and support other caregivers by giving them the tools to give 100%,” she said. #TogetherForTheHealthiestLives

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    Select Health’s chief medical officer, Dr. Heather O'Toole, keeps a busy work schedule. Despite her meeting-filled workdays, Dr. O’Toole finds time for some of her favorite hobbies. She enjoys cooking and learning to prepare a variety of culturally diverse foods. During the pandemic, she took virtual cooking classes that ranged from pasta to soul food. These varied cooking classes were right up her alley, she loves to try new types of foods from all over the world. This seems to be a character trait of Dr. O’Toole; she seeks to learn and try new things. One of the greatest influences in her life is her father. Dr. O’Toole credits her father, a retired Air Force pilot, for instilling in her a strong work ethic. After his career in the Air Force, her father retired to the family farm and worked long days. She learned from him during this time that there will never be a smooth road in life, and to expect obstacles. Whether it is a hailstorm that destroys the crops, a disease passing through the livestock, or farm equipment that breaks down, she learned from her father to think creatively and differently about problems. Dr. O’Toole’s father was influential in her decision to join the Air Force after completing her family medicine residency. As a military officer and primary care physician, she cared for active duty, dependents, and retirees at Luke Air Force Base in Arizona for three years. The advice that she would give to all Select Health caregivers is to never stop learning. She is a big proponent of learning, even if you don’t know what you want to do for a career. She suggests just beginning by picking something to learn about it. Dr. O’Toole has found that there have been project assignments that she did not think she was interested in, but once she dug in and learned about the project, she found it fascinating. These opportunities opened her eyes to other opportunities and fields of interest. She also advises to always be open to trying something new, whether it is food, music, cultures, new locations, or work assignments. Always be open to learning, even if it doesn’t sound interesting, it may turn out to be the best decision you have ever made. #TogetherForTheHealthiestLives

    Get to know Dr. Heather O’Toole, Select Health’s chief medical officer

    Get to know Dr. Heather O’Toole, Select Health’s chief medical officer

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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    WEEK 10 Mental Health Exercise Drawing attention to the sense of touch brings us into the present moment. It is in these moments we can reduce stress and anxiety. 1-Minute Meditation with Sense of Touch Close your eyes and pay attention to your body’s sense of touch. Notice what your body feels like, what sensations you can feel, and what different parts of your body are feeling or touching (hands, arms, feet, legs, etc.).

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    If you hear growling coming from Riverton Hospital’s NICU these days, it’s not cause for concern; it’s probably just a caregiver demonstrating a lion’s roar or an elephant’s trumpet. Little Rori was born in March, but had lingering health issues and hasn’t been released to go home yet. Most infants in newborn intensive care units don’t stay long, but Rori has spent more than three months in Riverton’s NICU. That has given caregivers there a unique opportunity to watch her develop, and they have gone out of their way to foster that development and bond with her. Nurse coordinator Leanna Immenschuh said she tries to visit Rori daily, whether or not she is assigned to her care. On one beautiful spring day, Leanna asked if she could take Rori to the zoo. It wasn’t possible to leave the care site, so Leanna decided to bring the zoo to the hospital by cutting out and laminating pictures of animals to put up around the baby’s crib. Leanna rotates in new animals for variety, and caregivers take turns introducing Rori to the new animals and teaching her what sounds they make. AnnJanette Jenson, the Riverton NICU nurse manager, said that her staff members have essentially adopted Rori. It is not, however, the first time AnnJanette’s team has made special efforts for a patient. When the older brother of a newborn was sick and couldn’t visit the NICU, a nurse dressed the baby as a whale and drew a card with a message for the brother: “I whaley love you.” With 19 beds, a staff of 42 nurses, and an average daily census of 10 (and rising), Riverton’s NICU is somewhere between small and medium, but its impact on patients and families is large. #TogetherForTheHealthiestLives

    Riverton Hospital NICU team creates ‘zoo’ to bond with baby

    Riverton Hospital NICU team creates ‘zoo’ to bond with baby

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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    As a clinical communications manager at Intermountain Health, Jef Otte gets to talk to a lot of caregivers who are doing extraordinary, life-saving work. But it’s not that often he gets to talk to the doctor who saved his own life. In early February, Jef was in a bicycle crash that crushed his helmet and fractured his skull in three places. A runner found him and called an ambulance, and the ambulance took him to Good Samaritan Hospital in Lafayette, Colorado. Around midnight, Jef's condition took a turn for the worse. Neurosurgeon Chih-Ta Lin, MD, was on call that night. Within the hour, he performed a procedure he’s done dozens of times – one Jef needed to survive. A few months later, he was kind enough to chat with Jef about how he became a neurosurgeon, what he remembers about that night, and why neurosurgery is really a team sport.

    An interview with Chih-Ta Lin, the doctor who saved my life

    An interview with Chih-Ta Lin, the doctor who saved my life

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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    First aid isn’t just for the body – with Stress First Aid, our caregivers are learning to check on themselves and each other and to connect with resources to help cope with stressful periods. Learn how two Intermountain Health caregivers helped their fellow caregivers during challenging times. #WeServeWithEmpathy

    Stress First Aid in action: caregivers check on each other, help each other cope

    Stress First Aid in action: caregivers check on each other, help each other cope

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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    Kim Plaggemeyer has dedicated her entire career to clinical practice management, first as a clinic manager, then a practice administrator, and most recently as a manager of ambulatory quality under clinical excellence. She recently celebrated 23 years with the organization (which was St. Vincent Regional Hospital in Billings, MT when she started). Here, she talks about closing care gaps, planning a good scrapbook, and why her favorite Intermountain Health value is “We do the right thing.” #WeDoTheRightThing

    Fifty-two clinics: Kim Plaggemeyer makes the rounds

    Fifty-two clinics: Kim Plaggemeyer makes the rounds

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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    Today, crews placed the final beam on the new, family-centered Intermountain Primary Children’s Hospital Behavioral Health Center in Taylorsville, Utah. Starting in 2025, the new Intermountain Primary Children’s Behavioral Health Center will expand access to critically needed behavioral health services for young children and teens. Why is this access so important? Here is Liz's story.

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    Imaging now closer to home for rural Utahns and those out enjoying the recreation our state has to offer. “When people can get the care they need closer to home the less likely they are to skip important screenings,” said Brian Osborne, imaging manager at Intermountain Sanpete Valley Hospital. “Whether it’s preventive or emergency care having the latest imaging technology is changing rural healthcare as we know it.” Colby Mower moved back home to Fairview last year. Four years ago, Mower was living in North Carolina when he was diagnosed with stage 3 colon cancer. His cancer is now in remission, but Mower must do two scans per year to ensure his cancer hasn’t come back. He says it’s much easier to do those scans at the hospital 10 minutes away then having to drive two hours round trip. Those images are sent to his oncologist who can review and do a follow up appointment using telehealth. These imaging services aren’t just good for routine health scans but can make a huge difference in emergencies. In the past, if someone was having a stroke or other major emergency that required a transfer to another hospital, caregivers would have to take scans and send the negatives with the helicopter to be reviewed. Now, Osborne says they can take the necessary imaging at their hospital and send them electronically to the team at the hospital where the patient is being transferred. This way a doctor has time to look over the scans and plan out treatment before the patient arrives.

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    A good garden provides more than just vegetables, and the LiVe Well Garden at Orem Community Hospital in Orem, Utah has had a major impact on one local couple. Anne and Dan Pierce purchased a house that shares a fence with Orem’s LiVe Well Garden because they were interested in gardening there. After moving in, they joined a wait list for a plot, and four years ago, they were granted a space. The opportunity is particularly valuable to them because, for the last decade, Dan has required an organic diet as he copes with liver cancer and cirrhosis of the liver. Dan entered hospice care this spring, and Anne struggles with her own health issues, so when she arrived at the garden last month to prep her soil and plant, she didn’t have the strength to pull it off. What followed was, according to Anne, “a wonderful miracle.” Learn more about how our volunteer team at Orem Community Hospital stepped in to support Anne and Dan during this difficult time in their lives in the article below. #WeServeWithEmpathy

    Orem volunteer team preps garden for patient’s spouse

    Orem volunteer team preps garden for patient’s spouse

    Intermountain Health on LinkedIn

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Funding

Intermountain Health 1 total round

Last Round

Grant

US$ 1.9M

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