Health Care Climbs as Sector Recoups Some Losses Health-care companies rose, recouping some of their recent losses. Shares of UnitedHealth Group, CVS Health and Cigna moved into the green for 2025 after a punishing fourth quarter. 01/3/2025 - 9:06 am | View Link
Nashville's newest public company Ardent Health makes its first acquisition of 2025 Nashville’s newest public company made its first acquisition of 2025. Brentwood-based Ardent Health acquired 18 urgent care clinics in New Mexico and Oklahoma from Arizona-based NextCare Urgent Care, ... 01/3/2025 - 4:46 am | View Link
Wall Street's Most Accurate Analysts Spotlight On 3 Health Care Stocks Delivering High-Dividend Yields Below are the ratings of the most accurate analysts for three high-yielding stocks in the health care sector. Piper Sandler analyst David Amsellem maintained an Overweight rating and cut the price ... 01/2/2025 - 10:39 pm | View Link
Health Care Flat as UnitedHealth, CVS Still Under Pressure Health-care companies were more or less flat as the sector's 2024 fall from grace appeared to carry through to the New Year. Shares of CVS Health, UnitedHealth Group and Cigna, owners of the leading ... 01/2/2025 - 9:04 am | View Link
Top U.S. health care mid-cap stocks and their Quant Ratings Trump’s presidency may bring uncertainty within the health care sector (NYSEARCA:IYH), but certain pockets of the industry could offer the fundamentals for investors to stay afloat. “We believe ... 12/31/2024 - 2:46 am | View Link
Sarah Palin wasn't born until five years later, but in 1959, Pres. Eisenhower made it official.
In 1867, Secretary of State William Seward closed the deal acquiring Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million under Pres. Lincoln's purview. It was dubbed Seward's Folly.
Seward negotiated the deal in an extended bargaining session with Russian minister to the United States Eduard de Stoeckl on March 30, 1867.
Since its launch in 1996, Fox News has been the leading source of conservative misinformation and propaganda. As part of its mission to bolster the right and attack the left, the cable news network frequently ventures into strange territory that’s more cringeworthy than politically effective. And that was truer than ever during its slanted coverage of the 2024 election.
Here are 13 of the worst full-cringe moments from this past election cycle.
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On Jan. 3, the U. S. Surgeon General issued a sobering report about the cancer risks linked to something that most Americans enjoy frequently: an alcoholic beverage.
In the advisory, Dr. Vivek Murthy outlined the substantial evidence behind the increased risk of developing seven types of cancers among people who consumed as little as one daily drink, or even fewer.
“What we know with a high degree of confidence is that there is a causal link between alcohol and cancer risk,” says Murthy.
Scott Morgenstern, University of Pittsburgh
Donald Trump has made clear his intent to supercharge his “America First” approach to foreign policy in his second term – and Mexico looks set to be at the tip of the spear.
While many of Trump’s predecessors have also followed a “realist” strategy – that is, one where relative power is at the forefront of international relations, while diplomatic success is viewed through how it benefits one’s own nation – the incoming president has displayed an apparent unwillingness to consider the pain that his plans would inflict on targeted countries or the responses this will engender.read more
A former prosecutor in the Denver District Attorney’s Office will be disbarred after she framed a colleague for sexual harassment, a state disciplinary panel ruled this week.
Yujin Choi falsely accused Dan Hines, a criminal investigator in the district attorney’s office, of sexually harassing her, according to the Tuesday ruling from the Office of Presiding Disciplinary Judge, which handles professional discipline for Colorado attorneys.
Choi created fake text messages, altered her cellphone records and ultimately destroyed her laptop and phone to try to sell her deceit, the 26-page ruling found.
Colorado’s public health experts are urging awareness of the symptoms of norovirus, saying infections are climbing along with cases of seasonal respiratory illnesses.
The virus primarily affects the digestive system — causing nausea, diarrhea and vomiting — and can be transmitted by coming into contact with or eating food prepared by an infected person.