COVID-19 | A Message from Primary Care Progress and A Community of Support
PCP values the relationships between and among patients, healthcare providers, and staff on the frontlines who are giving their all to fight this pandemic.
PCP values the relationships between and among patients, healthcare providers, and staff on the frontlines who are giving their all to fight this pandemic.
Brian Souza has worked with healthcare non-profits for more than two decades. As PCP’s Chief Executive Officer, he brings his vision and expertise into PCP’s work of infusing Relational Leadership™ throughout primary care.
Connection and vulnerability builds teams. We need to keep making the case in a way healthcare’s leaders can understand, with the hard data to get their attention.
Are the challenges of our dysfunctional healthcare system grave enough — and the existential challenges to health professionals dire enough — to take action — not as individuals, but as a collective?
2017 was unprecedented. This year, let’s rock the boat by doing something bold, provocative, and maybe just a little crazy. Let’s launch a thousand movements. #WeCanDoThis
Please join me in reflecting on our collective luck at being a part of a network and movement connected to such an amazing person as Gregg Stracks, who gave so much of himself, at such a difficult time. Let’s commit to using PCP’s Gregg Stracks Leadership Summit to reconnect with the values that brought us into primary care.
With so much in flux in healthcare, many of us are scratching our heads about how to make meaningful change in the midst of the uncertainty. After nearly 20 years in community advocacy and primary care, PCP Founder Andrew Morris-Singer shares his thoughts.
In our last post of 2015, PCP President and Founder Andrew Morris-Singer sends us off with a call for leaders that focus on the “who” not the “what” of change in the health care system.