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Health November 30, 2015

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4 HEALTH • November 30, 2015 C E N T R A L M A S S A C H U S E T T S Executive Editor Brad Kane, bkane@wbjournal.com HEALTH Editor Emily Micucci, emicucci@wbjournal.com Contributors Edd Cote, Livia Gershon, Christina P. O'Neill Susan Shalhoub Research Director, Stephanie Meagher smeagher@nebusinessmedia.com Research Assistant, Heide Martin hmartin@wbjournal.com Production Director, Kira Beaudoin kbeaudoin@wbjournal.com Art Director, Mitchell Hayes mhayes@wbjournal.com Manager of Video/Multimedia Services, Matthew Volpini mvolpini@nebusinessmedia.com Senior Accounts Manager Matt Majikas, mmajikas@wbjournal.com Custom Publishing Project Manager Christine Juetten, cjuetten@wbjournal.com Marketing & Events Manager Kris Prosser, kprosser@wbjournal.com Chief Financial Officer, Mary Rogers mrogers@nebusinessmedia.com Accounting Assistant, Valerie Clark vclark@nebusinessmedia.com Collections Manager, Raki Zwiebel rzwiebel@nebusinessmedia.com Human Resources, Donna Currie dcurrie@nebusinessmedia.com Publisher, CEO, Peter Stanton pstanton@nebusinessmedia.com Associate Publisher, Mark Murray mmurray@wbjournal.com Group Publisher, Joseph Zwiebel jzwiebel@nebusinessmedia.com Central Massachusetts HEALTH is published 4 times a year by New Engand Business Media LLC. Postmaster: Please send address changes to: Worcester Business Journal P.O. Box 15088; Portland, ME 04112 508-755-8004 Email: circulation@wbjournal.com To reach us: Visit www.WBJournal.com Email: editorial@wbjournal.com Call: 508-755-8004 ext. 227 A division of: HEALTH { From The Editor } Who among us has not, on occasion, questioned their sanity at work? Project deadlines, staffing changes and IT glitches -- plus balancing fam- ily responsibilities -- can push you to the brink. For the lucky ones, it's a temporary state. But for a sizeable number of people, persistent mental illness is a difficult reality they must cope with, while also trying to earn a living. Though stigma remains, there's a region-wide effort afoot to crack it and help people suffering with men- tal illness be successful on the job. We chose to lead off our November issue of Central Massachusetts HEALTH, which focuses in part on mental and behavioral health, with a feature by writer Livia Gershon that highlights that effort. See Page 14 to learn about how companies are stepping up, with anecdotes from people living with mental illness. The problem of how to meet the needs of people with more severe mental illness requiring hospitalization may be more complex, but local healthcare providers are trying. Read our Page 18 feature, which highlights some key inpatient psychiatric facility projects sprin- kled throughout Central Massachusetts intended to reduce waiting and travel time for mental health patients that need to be admitted. A third story providing a roundup of local hospitals that stopped hiring cigarette smokers and those who use other nicotine products touches on the addiction side of behav- ioral health. On Page 16, find out why local hospital administrators think the hiring policy, which is becoming more popular, is more exemplary than discriminatory. The other focus of our November issue is the business of health care. On that front, writer Christina O'Neill examines how area healthcare companies are reaching out to a demographic that has become increasingly important in the last few years: the patient. Before healthcare reform, patients were less inclined to shop around for healthcare services because their out-of-pocket costs were relatively small. As costs grow, consumers are wising up and marketing efforts are increasingly geared towards them. See Page 20 for the full story. Regularly featured content In this issue, we're pleased to have another all-star lineup of columnists contributing their knowledge and experience in the areas of benefits administration; healthcare innovation and consumer advice. We also got a chance to sit down with Central Massachusetts native Renee Bazinet Nelson, who leads adolescent programming in Worcester as well as other loca- tions for an eating disorder treatment company, for our Provider Profile on Page 34. And be sure to catch up on healthcare news highlights and happenings in our Page 5 Briefs, as well as in our Newsworthy section on Page 25. Rounding out year one I want to extend warm thanks to our readers, as we conclude the first year publishing Central Massachusetts HEALTH. Your enthusiasm for our new quarterly magazine since we launched in March has been gratifying, and we look forward to a second year of delivering strong healthcare content to you in 2016. Here's to a healthy holiday season! Mental health is top of mind

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