7 hours ago Click login to the Patient Portal. Enter your Login ID, which is the email address you provided at the doctor’s office. Enter your temporary password you received at your office visit. Click Login. Create a new password and answer the two hint questions. Click Edit Patient Account. >> Go To The Portal
St. Peter's Health Partners is transitioning to a new patient portal – Trinity Health MyChart – in May 2021. After the transition, any new information, including prescription refills, visit notes and lab results, will be in your new MyChart patient portal.
The Patient Portal provides an electronic method for you to be involved in your health care. You can request appointments, review portions of your health information, send secure messages to your physician, request prescription refills, review clinical notes and much more. Already have a Patient Portal account?
Their electrophysiologist and cardiac surgeons visit St. Peter’s Health once a month to make initial consultation or follow-up care with them more convenient. Heart failure clinic: Patients with congestive heart failure need ongoing monitoring to make sure their heart failure symptoms stay in check.
All Trinity Health facilities are moving to a new electronic health record and billing system that will allow us to better meet your needs. St. Peter's Health Partners made this change in May 2021. Our previous patient portals are still accessible but as read-only.
St. Peter’s Health Partners is a member of Trinity Health, one of the nation’s largest Catholic health systems. With 12,000 employees in more than 170 locations, St. Peter’s Health Partners is the Capital Region’s most comprehensive not-for-profit integrated health care network.
Trinity Health is the parent company of St. Peter's Health Partners. Trinity Health is one of the largest multi-institutional Catholic health care delivery systems in the nation, serving diverse communities that include more than 30 million people across 22 states.
If you have questions about MyChart, your health information or how to access your previous portal, please visit our Frequently Asked Questions page.
St. Peter's Health Partners has transitioned to a new patient portal – Trinity Health MyChart – to better meet your needs. Any new information from visits to a St. Peter's Health Partners doctor’s office or hospital from May 8 and beyond, including prescription refills, visit notes and lab results, will now be in your new MyChart patient portal.
St. Peter's Health Partners is transitioning to a new patient portal – Trinity Health MyChart – in May 2021. After the transition, any new information, including prescription refills, visit notes and lab results, will be in your new MyChart patient portal.
Signal-averaged EKG. A signal-averaged electrocardiogram (ECG) captures all the electrical signals from the heart and averages them to provide the physician more detail regarding how the heart's electrical system is working. Electrodes (small, plastic patches) are placed at certain locations on the chest, arms and legs.
This test may show the heart's rate and rhythm. It can also detect decreased blood flow, blockage of the coronary artery, enlargement (hypertrophy) of the heart, or the presence of either current or past heart attacks. EKG's are quick, safe, painless and inexpensive tests. 3-D Echocardiogram.
An echocardiogram generates images of the heart through the use of sound waves (ultrasound). With these images, a doctor can determine how well the heart is moving, chamber dimension, wall thickness and valve function. Our echocardiography laboratory offers all aspects of cardiac ultrasound including:
Transesophageal Echo cardiogram (TEE) In some patients, closely positioned ribs, obesity and emphysema may create technical difficulties that limit the transmission of the standard echocardiogram ultrasound beams to and from the heart. If this happens, your physician may request a transesophageal echocardiogram (TEE).
Your doctor can use these images to identify various abnormalities in the heart muscle and valves. Some heart problems occur only during exercise. In a stress echocardiogram, ultrasound images of the heart are taken before, and immediately after the patient walks on a treadmill or rides a stationary bike.
EKG's are quick, safe, painless and inexpensive tests. 3-D Echocardiogram. Images captured by a 3D echocardiogram can help diagnose various causes of chest pain, breathing difficulties and dysrhythmias. During a 3-D echocardiogram, patients feel no discomfort at all.