Wfli Evers to deliver State of State address virtually
Markets sold off worldwide on mounting signs the global economy is weakening just as central banks raise the pressure even more with additional hikes to interest rates. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at its lowest point of the year Friday. The SP 500 fell 1.7%, close to its 2022 low. Energy prices also closed sharply lower as traders worried about a possible recession鈥擳reasury yields, which affect rates on mortgages and other kinds of loans, held at multiyear highs. U.K. government bond yields snapped higher after that country s new government announced a sweeping plan of tax cuts.Stocks tumbled worldwid
stanley us e Friday on more signs the global economy is weakening, just as central banks raise the pressure even more with additional interest rate hikes.The SP 500 fell 2% in afternoon trading, adding a dismal cap on what s already been a rough week. It s close to its low point of the year in mid-June.European stocks fell just as sharply or more after preliminary data there suggested business activity had its worst monthly contraction since the start of 2021. Adding to the pressure was a new plan announced
stanley mugs in London to cut taxes, which sent U.K. yields soaring because it could ultimately force its central bank to raise rates even more sharply.The Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world aggressively hiked interest rates this week to undercut high inflation, with more big increases promised for the future. But such move
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DENVER, Colo. 鈥?The pandemic gave us a whole new vocabulary: almost everyone is ready to Zoom, social distancing is welcome, and N95s are a popular accessory. But, theres an old concept thats gotten new life in the face of COVID-19. Telehealth will be here to stay, said Dr. Patrick Ryan, an internal medicine physician at Denver Health in Colorado.Telehealth has been available for years, but it took a pandemic for doctors and patients alike to fully adopt this contactless connection. Before the pandemic started, we had not done any telehealth at all, said Dr. Ryan.That changed within a matter of weeks for Dr. Ryan and his team at Denver Health. Theyve now had more than 200,000 appointments over the phone or on video chat since the pandemic started. Almost 40 percent of our patients through this pandemic were accessing our system through telehealth,
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stanley cup th and an infectious disease specialist.Both Ryan and P
stanley hrnek rice are working on building the telehealth program for their hospital.Once COVID-19 hit, they knew they had two big problems: keeping hospital beds open for COVID patients and making sure other patients could get care without coming into the office. Patients still have routine conditions such as diabetes hypertension, heart failure and those don t go away during a pandemic, said Dr. Ryan.Those appointments were the first to go online: Dr. Ryan started calling and video chatting patients every day. Weve served