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We are bringing 10 clinics together under one roof at the new 90,000‑square‑foot Intermountain Health Badura Clinic in Las Vegas, Nevada, creating a true one‑stop model for coordinated, multidisciplinary care. With shared space, standardized technology, and streamlined workflows, our teams can collaborate more efficiently across primary care and multiple specialties. Find out how this model strengthens coordination across the continuum of care.
Thom Forster is a critical care technician at Intermountain Health Alta View Hospital in Sandy, Utah. Thom is an emergency department frontline worker who makes each of his patients feel safe and taken care of. He is known for his warmth, kindness, and contagious smile and helps his patients overcome fear in the face of critical situations. We salute you, Thom, and all those caregivers making a difference!
For many people in Jefferson, Arapahoe, and Douglas counties, the first step toward better health isn’t a doctor’s visit — it’s understanding how to get and use insurance coverage. That’s why Intermountain Health Lutheran Hospital in Wheat Ridge, Colorado is proud to partner with Doctors Care Colorado, a safety‑net clinic that treats coverage support as a core part of care. Through enrollment assistance, year‑round case management, and a growing network of community ambassadors, Doctors Care is helping people navigate Medicaid, CHP+, and Marketplace plans with confidence. Families are learning where to go for care, how to keep coverage from lapsing, and what it means to have a trusted primary care provider. Last year, nearly 1,000 community members received this kind of hands‑on support, and together, we’re expanding access even further. This is what it looks like when we remove barriers, build trust, and strengthen the health of our communities.
Intermountain Health and National Jewish Health are expanding hope for people living with severe COPD through a breakthrough, minimally invasive therapy designed to help patients breathe easier and reclaim more of their daily lives. At Intermountain Saint Joseph Hospital in Denver, Colorado, specialists are now offering bronchoscopic lung volume reduction (BLVR)—an advanced procedure that uses tiny one‑way valves to reduce lung hyperinflation and improve airflow. For the right patients, this innovative approach can lead to meaningful improvements in breathing, mobility, and overall quality of life. Because every patient’s journey is unique, experts at Intermountain and National Jewish Health provide a comprehensive evaluation to determine who may benefit most. When BLVR is the right fit, it offers a powerful new option for a chronic condition with limited treatments. This collaboration reflects Intermountain’s commitment to helping people live the healthiest lives possible—through evidence‑based care, leading‑edge innovation, and a patient‑centered approach that brings advanced therapies closer to home.
When life takes an unexpected turn, staying committed to your health can feel overwhelming. For Trudy Carey of Billings, Montana, that commitment became even more meaningful after the loss of her husband of 50 years. Despite her grief, she kept up with preventive care—including a routine colonoscopy that revealed something she never expected: early‑stage colon cancer. Thanks to timely screening and the expertise of her Intermountain Health care team at Intermountain St. Vincent Regional Hospital, Trudy received minimally invasive, robotic‑assisted surgery and avoided additional treatment. Today, she’s healing well, staying active, and encouraging others to take charge of their health, no matter their age or circumstances. Her story is a powerful reminder that colorectal cancer often develops silently, and that early detection saves lives. Screening starting at age 45 gives most adults the best chance for early diagnosis and effective treatment. Trudy’s resilience shows what’s possible when compassionate care meets proactive prevention.
Every three weeks, Matt Jensen walks into the Intermountain Health Cancer Centers of Colorado with the same steady routine — a check‑in, lab work, and a quick conversation about the snow report. It’s a rhythm he never expected to learn at 42, when a sudden illness revealed advanced colorectal cancer and upended life as a single dad and small‑business owner. Five years later, Matt is still doing what matters most to him: showing up for his kids, planning a wedding, and carving out time for mountain days when the snow is good. With the support of his care team, he’s navigating treatment one cycle at a time while protecting the parts of life that make him feel like himself. As more younger adults face colorectal cancer, Matt hopes his story encourages others not to ignore symptoms or delay care. His message is simple — listen to your body, and get checked.
Intermountain Health recently hosted a ceremonial ribbon-cutting for the new Intermountain District Clinic in Henderson, Nevada. This new medical office building brings together five existing clinics and introduces three new ones. The state-of-the-art 45,000-square-foot facility brings together senior primary care, oncology, and children’s health under one roof—creating a comprehensive and convenient hub for families across southern Nevada. The District Clinic will also introduce wound care and palliative care, two new service lines, expanding the reach of Intermountain Health’s offerings in the community. “What the District Clinic provides is a beautiful, single, modern location designed to strengthen access, improve coordination, and support long-term growth,” said Trevor Smith, Intermountain region vice president of Medical Group Operations. “We know that as our lives become busier than ever and our days fill with activities, it is more vital than ever to make world-class care as convenient as possible.” With this facility, Intermountain is increasing access to high-quality, preventive, and specialty care to help meet the growing healthcare needs of the community—ensuring people can receive the care they deserve close to home.
Austin Holder is an occupational therapy assistant at Intermountain Medical Center in Salt Lake City. Austin was recently recognized with an Intermountain Health L.O.V.E. Award for the quality of care, compassion and empathy he shows his patients. Austin is an amazing example of embodying Intermountain's mission and goes above and beyond for his patients and colleagues. He helps everyone feel seen, heard, and loved.
Bereavement has been recognized as both the most common – and most distressing – form of trauma in Utah and nationwide. While experts say grief is a natural response to bereavement, children who experience grief without adequate support are at greater risk for a range of negative outcomes, including academic challenges, relationship difficulties, substance use, post-traumatic stress, depression, and increased suicide risk. That’s why a new national initiative to standardize and implement best-practice treatments for high-quality trauma and bereavement care at children’s hospitals across the United States is so vital. The Trauma and Grief Center (TAG Center) at the Meadows Mental Health Policy Institute, which is based in Dallas, Texas, is responding to this need. As a national leader in advancing best-practice treatments for youth who have experienced significant trauma or the loss of a loved one, The TAG center is establishing a national network of children’s hospitals dedicated to best practice care in trauma and grief. As part of that initiative, Intermountain Children’s Health and Primary Children’s Hospital campuses in Utah (SLC, Lehi, and Taylorsville), have earned the honor as the first member of the national Trauma and Grief (TAG) Network in the Western United States – and the fourth in the United States.
This month, we celebrate the rich traditions, stories, and contributions of Arab American communities.