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Welcome to Hallmark Health's Media Coverage section. This section is designed to assist patients and journalists seeking information about our current news and to introduce our healthcare experts. We are also available to assist you by providing information about Hallmark Health and its members, including Lawrence Memorial of Medford and Melrose-Wakefield Hospitals.
To arrange an interview or photo shoot, contact
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
, Communications Specialist for public and media relations, at 781-979-3243. We also maintain a 24-hour media on-call system. If you are on deadline after normal business hours, call the Hallmark Health operator at 781-979-3000 and ask them to page the marketing/communications team member on-call.
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Hallmark nurses continue Haiti mission |
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Media Coverage
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Thursday, 04 March 2010 10:35 |
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Medford Transcript
By Nell Escobar Coakley
March 4, 2010
With the world rebounding from yet another earthquake in Chile, nurses at the Lawrence Memorial Hospital/Regis College Nursing Program recall responding to the devastation in Haiti just two months ago.
The nursing program is part of Hallmark Health System, which also includes Lawrence Memorial Hospital of Medford and Melrose-Wakefield Hospital.
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Find out why Olympic hockey great Mike Eruzione has all his orthopedic procedures performed at Melrose-Wakefield Hospital, orthopedic care which he describes as "spectacular"! |
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Media Coverage
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Monday, 11 January 2010 10:34 |
Three Generations of Eruziones choose Hallmark Health for their care
Hallmark Health’s Bone & Joint Program has a close tie to the ‘Miracle on Ice’ that happened 30 years ago this February. The captain of the hockey team who scored the winning goal that finally beat the invincible Russian team and led to the final round and a U.S. gold medal, chooses Hallmark Health as his main preference for quality health care.
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Hallmark MD opposes new guidelines |
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Media Coverage
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Tuesday, 01 December 2009 15:12 |
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Wakefield Daily Item
By Gail Lowe
Nov. 27, 2009
At least one local physician opposes the new guidelines issued by the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) that women between the ages of 40 and 50 should not receive mammograms for breast cancer screening.
Dr. Catherine Tucker, a surgical oncologist specializing in breast health for Hallmark Health, said she does not agree at all with the guidelines.
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Federal agency's breast cancer report causes uproar |
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Media Coverage
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Tuesday, 24 November 2009 15:29 |
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Medford Transcript
By Nell Escobar Coakley
Nov. 24, 2009
National statistics currently state that one out of 10 women will develop breast cancer within her lifetime. A new federal study pushing back current standards for mammogram screenings from 40 to 50 could push that number up.
A report issued last week by the U.S. Preventative Services Task Force recommends that women wait to have a breast cancer screening until age 50 and then follow up every two years. Monthly self-exams are also discouraged.
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BREAST CANCER AWARENESS: Love, lost and found |
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Media Coverage
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Thursday, 15 October 2009 13:19 |
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Winchester Star
By Brad Petrishen
Oct. 15, 2009
Winchester resident Patricia Loric has a broad, cheerful smile that accompanies almost everything she does.
So when she was diagnosed with cancer in 2007 — a disease that claimed her husband’s life 10 years before — she decided to keep on smiling.
“All I could think of was that my husband was looking for me,” she said with a laugh, three weeks after undergoing successful breast reconstruction surgery.
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