US-based mobile healthcare services company Peak Mobile Holdings has acquired New England Vascular Access, expanding its presence in the Northeastern US.

New England Vascular Access offers mobile vascular access services to patients across New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine.

The company’s services are designed to support the needs of hospitals, hospices, skilled nursing facilities and home health agencies.

The acquisition is part of Peak Mobile’s efforts to enhance its on-demand services across multiple care settings in infusion centres, nursing facilities and patient homes.

Peak Mobile Holdings CEO Tyler Payne said: “We’re thrilled to welcome the outstanding clinicians at New England Vascular Access into the Peak family.

“Their reputation for clinical excellence and regional trust aligns perfectly with our mission to deliver advanced procedures in the most efficient, patient-centred setting possible ‒ inside and outside the hospital walls.”

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New England Vascular Access is led by a vascular access professional team with experience in procedures such as ultrasound-guided peripherally inserted central catheter (PICC) lines, midlines and peripheral intravenous tubes (IVs).

The company provides bedside vascular access services in northern New England, claiming to offer fast response times, safety-first approaches and regional partnerships.

The acquisition has expanded Peak Mobile Holdings’ full-spectrum vascular access services across Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont, furthering the company’s national expansion plans.

By integrating New England Vascular Access into its network, Peak aims to build on its efforts to reduce the strain on inpatient systems by providing timely, hospital-grade procedures more conveniently.

Peak Mobile Holdings and its subsidiaries claim to specialise in programmes designed to prevent hospital admissions and readmissions.

The company works to provide mobile nurses and healthcare providers with the technology, training and equipment needed to carry out treatments usually undertaken by doctors within hospital environments.

This approach is intended to ‘transform’ the delivery of healthcare services by improving patient outcomes and minimising delays.