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The Biden administration is pressuring UnitedHealth to speed up payments following a cyberattack that has disrupted payments to providers.According to the Department of Health and Human Services, Change Healthcare, which UnitedHealth Group owns, processes 15 billion health care transactions annually, handling 1 in 3 health care transactions in the U.S. The attack has impacted payments to hospitals, physicians, pharmacists, and other health care providers across the country. Many of these providers are concerned about their ability to offer care in the absence of timely payments, but providers persist despite the need for numerous onerous workarounds and cash flow uncertainty, HHS Secretary Xavier
stanley cups Becerra and acting Labor Secretary Julie A. Su wrote in a joint letter.UnitedHealth said it expects to begin testing and reestablish connectivity to its claims network and software on March 18, restoring service throughout next week.Payments started being disrupted last month, and officials released a notification that a cybersecurity incident was to blame. In the days following, a Temporary Funding Assistance Program was launched to bridge the gap in short-term cash flow for health care pr
stanley cup oviders. We are committed to providing relief for people affected by this malici
stanley flasche ous attack on the U.S. health system, said Andrew Witty, CEO of UnitedHealth Group. All of us at UnitedHealth Group feel a deep sense of responsibility for recovery and are working tirelessly to ensure that providers Uleq Total lunar eclipse happening the night of May 15 in Wisconsin
Editor s note: A full statement from the head of IU H
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stanley cup ory. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. 鈥?A Black Indianapolis physician died on Sunday with COVID-19 after she complained of racist treatment from IU Health North Hospital, according to her family. In a now-viral video, Dr. Susan Moore recorded her every step when seeking treatment after contracting COVID-19 on Nov. 29. Moore claimed she had to beg for CT scans and a drug that could significantly reduce her recovery time called remdesivir. Why do I have to prove that t
stanley termosar heres something wrong with me in order for my pain to be treated, Moore wrote on her Facebook post. After receiving two transfusions of remdesivir, Dr. Moore asked for a third because she was in so much pain. But, the white doctor on her case denied her request. Moore said the doctor claimed he didn t feel comfortable giving her any more narcotics. The doctor even tried to send her home after she complained of excruciating neck pain. I was crushed. He made me feel like I was a drug addict, and he knew I was a physician, Dr. Moore said in a Facebook video posted on Dec. 4from her hospital bed. I don t take narcotics. After speaking with a patient advocate, Moore said she asked to be moved to another hospital. If they re not going to treat me here properly, send me to another hospital, she claimed. Next thing I know, I m getting a stat CT of my neck with and without contras