CEO of Amazon’s One Medical steps down

The CEO of Amazon’s One Medical has stepped down after less than two years in the role, employees were informed in an internal email Tuesday.

Trent Green had been CEO of One Medical since September 2023, taking over shortly after Amazon purchased the primary care company for $3.9 billion

In an announcement, Green stated that he will be taking over the CEO role at National Research Corporation, a data analytics company. He will begin his new position June 1.

His replacement at One Medical has not yet been named, and Green’s final day in his current role was not disclosed.

Since the Amazon takeover, One Medical has expanded its telehealth operations, partnering with major health systems, including Duke University Health, Mass General Brigham and Emory Healthcare. 

However, the company has been embroiled in a serious scandal in California after a provider allegedly told an emergency patient who was coughing up blood to buy an inhaler. The patient died in an Oakland emergency room hours later, leading his family to file a lawsuit accusing One Medical of lacking “adequately trained and qualified staff.”

The outcome of that lawsuit is still pending.

One Medical, founded in 2007, provides both virtual and in-person primary and urgent care services to patients. Amazon purchased the company in February 2023.

Chad Van Alstin Health Imaging Health Exec

Chad is an award-winning writer and editor with over 15 years of experience working in media. He has a decade-long professional background in healthcare, working as a writer and in public relations.

Around the web

American College of Cardiology Board of Trustees Chair David E. Winchester, MD, MS, examines the many benefits of working with the American Medical Association House of Delegates to bring about significant change.

“Without a more concrete and stable policy on these tariffs from the current American administration, it is likely that most manufacturers will be forced to continuously change their internal forecasts and production plans," one analyst said.

SCAI and other healthcare groups want changes made to how healthcare providers are paid after performing office-based lab procedures. "As much as we love delivering care as doctors, if we are losing money doing something, we cannot sustain it," one cardiologist explained.