Full-Time
Integrated health system delivering connected care
$317.6k - $539.9k/yr
Cambridge, MA, USA + 4 more
More locations: Boston, MA, USA | Framingham, MA, USA | Needham, MA, USA | Newton, MA, USA
In Person
Tufts Medicine is an integrated health system in Massachusetts that combines academic medical centers, community hospitals, a large home care network, and a clinically integrated physician network to deliver coordinated care. It includes Tufts Medical Center, Lowell General, MelroseWakefield, home health services, and a broad physician network, enabling care across settings. The system coordinates hospitals, doctors, and home care under one strategy to manage the patient journey, reduce fragmentation, and control costs while maintaining quality. Its goal is to deliver high-quality care at the lowest possible cost, expand access, and transform how people engage with healthcare.
Company Size
501-1,000
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
N/A
Headquarters
Burlington, Massachusetts
Founded
2014
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401(k) Company Match
403(b) Retirement Plan
Tuition Reimbursement
Persistent inequity in survival after atrial fibrillation. Atrial fibrillation, also known as AF or Afib, is one of the most common cardiovascular diseases. In fact, one in three individuals can expect to be diagnosed by the condition, which increases the risk of serious complications such as heart failure and stroke. Despite significant advances in the treatment of atrial fibrillation, a new Danish study from Aalborg University shows that social inequities in survival have remained virtually unchanged over the past 20 years. The article has just been published in the internationally recognized journal The Lancet Public Health in collaboration with the University of Liverpool, Tufts Medical Center in Boston, and Boston University. The study is based on nationwide Danish registry data from more than 380,000 patients diagnosed with atrial fibrillation between 2000 and 2022 and documents inequities in income, education, and social relationships still have a major impact on life expectancy after diagnosis. Individuals diagnosed with AF who have a low income live on average 2.5 years shorter than those with high income. Low educational level results in a loss of 1.8 years of life, while living alone costs about 1.6 years. "Advances in the management and treatment of atrial fibrillation have improved survival for everyone but have not closed the gap between social groups. This is clearly a problem in a tax-funded universal healthcare system with formally equal access to treatment for all - especially when we know how much prevention can actually matter," says the study's lead author, Nicklas Vinter, MD, PhD, and postdoctoral researcher at the Danish Center for Health Services Research at Aalborg University. He also points out that the global incidence of atrial fibrillation is rising, making the results relevant far beyond Denmark's borders. This is clearly a problem in a tax-funded universal healthcare system with formally equal access to treatment for all - especially when Adsl Aau know how much prevention can actually matter. Social and structural barriers must be addressed. According to Nicklas Vinter, the causes of inequity are not only linked to medical treatment but also to social and behavioral factors. For some patients, treatment guidelines can be difficult to understand and translate into concrete action, and many lack a social network that can provide practical support in everyday life. Therefore, the researchers behind the study propose a new tool, FAIR-PRO-AF, which can help decision-makers and researchers across sectors systematically reduce inequity and create continuous improvements. The tool is designed as a circular work cycle: first, the social factors associated with survival are mapped. Next, the barriers that hinder equity in access, quality, and effectiveness of treatment are identified. In the third step, concrete initiatives are prioritized and implemented, and finally, the effect is evaluated before the cycle moves on to the next round. "The social and structural barriers that limit patients' access to knowledge, resources, and support must be addressed if we want to improve prognoses for all. This requires a broader effort where the healthcare system collaborates with social and political actors," says Nicklas Vinter. Facts: Atrial fibrillation * Atrial fibrillation is the most common cardiac arrhythmia. * Symptoms of atrial fibrillation include shortness of breath, palpitations, and chest pain. * The condition is associated with increased mortality - on average, a patient with atrial fibrillation loses about two years of expected lifespan compared to individuals without the diagnosis. * In Denmark, more than 170,000 people live with the condition, * Each year, more than 20,000 Danes receive the new diagnosis. Read the scientific article: Temporal trends in associations between social drivers and life-years lost in newly diagnosed atrial fibrillation in Denmark, 2000 - 22: a nationwide cohort study Published in The Lancet Public Health, December 2025. Authors: Nicklas Vinter, Søren Paaske Johnsen, Gregory Yoke Hong Lip, Ludovic Trinquart, Lars Frost and Emelia J. Benjamin.
Former Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health Chief Executive Officer John Herman has been appointed as the new President of Tufts Medical Center in Boston, the health system's academic medical center.
Dr. Soma Sengupta, MD, PhD, MBA, FRCP, FANA, FAAN will join Tufts Medical Center (Tufts MC) as Chair of the Department of Neurology and Neurologist-in-Chief in September 2025.
After a challenging year for Lawrence General Hospital and Holy Family Hospital, former Tufts Medical executive Diana L. Richardson will take over as interim president and CEO next month, the hospital system announced Thursday.
US-based CereVasc collaborated with researchers from the UMass Chan Medical School and Tufts Medical Center for the study.