Health & Fitness
Tufts Officially Takes Control Of Framingham MetroWest Cancer Center
Tenet Healthcare has officially handed over operations to Tufts, keeping the cancer center open and operating in Framingham.
FRAMINGHAM, MA — Tufts Medical Center has officially taken control of MetroWest Cancer Center in Framingham. The news was first confirmed by Framingham Source.
Officials say the cancer center will continue to provide medical oncology and radiation oncology services for more than a thousand patients primarily from Framingham, Marlborough and Natick.
Cancer care at MetroWest will continue to specialize in breast cancer, gynecologic oncology, and men’s health, and those services will continue in the same location. Tufts Medical Center hopes to add surgical oncology on-site at MetroWest Medical Center, allowing patients in the area to receive treatment closer to home.
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Tufts Medicine has long-standing relationships with physicians in the MetroWest community. One of the largest groups of physicians in the area, the MetroWest Healthcare Alliance, has been participating in the planning process, officials said.
“We are pleased that we have found a respected provider such as Tufts Medicine to partner with us to continue to provide quality oncology care at MetroWest,” Carolyn Jackson, CEO of Saint Vincent Hospital and the Massachusetts Market, which includes MetroWest, said. “The completion of our agreement will ensure the continuation of these important services in the region, providing patients with quality care close to their homes.”
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This comes after Tenet Healthcare, a multinational healthcare company based in Dallas, Texas that owns the facility, had proposed to cut some oncology services.
Tenet and Tufts were in discussions to turn over operations at least since July 2022 when a meeting with the state Department of Health was held in Framingham, and after a public outcry from healthcare professionals and politicians alike.
The reception of the change in operational leadership has been met with praise from many of those same community stakeholders.
"I am pleased these critical services will remain in our community, so that patients fighting cancer can focus on what’s most important. I thank our community doctors and partners at Tufts Medicine and MetroWest for doing all they can to keep care in the community," said State Representative Jack Lewis (D-Framingham).
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