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Oxford Health Plans [1] [2] is an American health care company that sells various benefit plans, primarily in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. [3] [4]As of 2004, it is a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group, the largest healthcare company in the world, [5] claiming to be "among the first" to allow patients to see specialists without a referral and to offer alternative medicine treatments.
Freedom Network may refer to: Freedom Network, an anonymity network controlled by Zero Knowledge Systems from 1997 to 2001; Freedom Network, a series of HMO health insurance plans by Oxford Health Plans in the New York metropolitan area; Texas Freedom Network, an activist organization to counter right-wing Christian social doctrine
On September 13, 2019, three addiction and mental health treatment centers sued United Behavioral Health (UBH), UnitedHealthcare's mental health subsidiary. The centers alleged that UBH wrongfully denied $5 million in behavioral health treatment claims for self-insured and fully insured employer health plans for residential and outpatient ...
The Institute for Health Freedom (IHF) was a nonprofit organization based in Washington, D.C. IHF monitored and reported on national policies that were perceived as affecting citizens' freedom to choose health-care treatments and providers, and sought to bolster health privacy. The president of the IHF was Sue A. Blevins, [1] a former nurse. [2]
Wikipedia [c] is a free-content online encyclopedia written and maintained by a community of volunteers, known as Wikipedians, through open collaboration and the wiki software MediaWiki.
Oxford University Press published Freedom from Fear as part of the Oxford History of the United States in May 1999. [13] The book is 954 pages long, [14] and it weighs approximately six pounds. [15] There are 24 maps of battles, [16] 48 halftone images, [17] a bibliographic essay, [18] and a 59-page index. [19]
The Provisions of Oxford were constitutional reforms to the government of late medieval England adopted during the Oxford Parliament of 1258 to resolve a dispute between Henry III of England and his barons. The reforms were designed to ensure the king adhered to the rule of law and governed according to the advice of his barons. A council of ...
Berlin initially defined negative liberty as "freedom from", that is, the absence of constraints on the agent imposed by other people. He defined positive liberty both as "freedom to", that is, the ability (not just the opportunity) to pursue and achieve willed goals; and also as autonomy or self-rule, as opposed to dependence on others. [5]