Palo Alto, Calif.-based Stanford Health Care is taking a unique approach to home care to maneuver around state regulations. The health system plans to launch advanced care at home May 1, serving up to ...
The Mercury News: Stanford partners with Alameda Health System to expand specialty medical care at St. Rose Hospital
Stanford partners with Alameda Health System to expand specialty medical care at St. Rose Hospital
Fierce Healthcare: Stanford Health Care teams up with Atropos Health to embed real-world evidence into physician workflows
Stanford Health Care is stepping up its partnership with startup Atropos Health to integrate real-world evidence into physicians' workflow and clinical notes. The pilot project builds on the two ...
Stanford Health Care teams up with Atropos Health to embed real-world evidence into physician workflows
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. Stanford Health Care serves the San Francisco Bay Area through its main campus at Stanford ...
To really answer your question... "Interested in" is used when what comes after it is a noun, or a verb acting like a noun (known as a gerund). "Interested to" is used when what comes after it is a verb in its "to form" (known as an infinitive). "I am interested in starting my career in your company" is the preferred construction.
Partnership represents a turnaround for St. Rose, which had faced closure before Alameda Health System’s intervention.
I am interested to know if, for some, there is a subtle difference between the two phrases in the title. I am equally interested in knowing if there is a subtle difference.