Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 5 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 5 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...Web References
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1. Pennsylvania Medical Society:
www.pamedsoc.org/page_detail.c - [Cached]Published on: 9/9/2001 Last Visited: 10/25/2002
"Nursing is a tough career today," says Paul T. Cass, M.D., a Pennsylvania Medical Society member physician and a senior vice president for medical affairs at Genesis Elder Care. "The environment is highly regulated, and the threat of lawsuits is frightening. To attract more people to nursing – and to care for elderly persons – we must implement new initiatives."
To create incentives to pursue a nursing career, Dr. Cass advocates that the government and medical institutions collaborate and establish structured scholarship and loan programs.
The physician picture in Pennsylvania is looking bleak as well.
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Dr. Cass can't emphasize enough the value of planning today for the economic and medical realities of caring for Pennsylvania's expanding senior population. He cautions, "We have to be prepared for the medical needs of the huge volume of elderly patients facing us in the near future. Whether we care for them in our private offices, in hospitals, or in nursing homes, we must address these issues, we must fill in the gaps, and we must be ready."
The Pennsylvania Medical Society, headquartered in Harrisburg, has advocated for patients and their doctors for more than 150 years. Since its beginning, the Society has represented its members throughout the commonwealth on issues that directly affect patient care. Today, the organization continues to promote a strong patient-doctor relationship in the delivery of health care. -
2. WDH introduces Hospitalist Program
www4.fosters.com/april_2004/Ap - [Cached]Published on: 4/12/2004 Last Visited: 4/12/2004
According to Paul Cass, vice president of medical affairs, the first of the five hospitalists will begin this spring to organize the administrative aspects of the program.
"The program will take some time to implement and I expect we will be at a full complement of physicians by this summer," he said. -
3. Continuing Medical Education (CME):Princeton Media Associates- healthcare and managed care courses
www.princetoncme.com/public/20 - [Cached]Published on: 3/1/2004 Last Visited: 2/7/2005
Paul Cass, MD Senior Vice President, Medical Affairs
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Dr. Cass and Ms. Farrell have no financial relationships to disclose.
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Drs. Ansell, Cass, Cornacchione, Forrester, Goldhaber, Jacobs, Leong, and Mr. Hughes, Martin, and Zeman, and Ms. Farrell have disclosed that they will not reference unapproved use of pharmaceuticals and devices.

