Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wisconsin Physicians Service Insurance Corporation (WPS Health Solutions) is a not-for-profit service insurance corporation based in Madison, Wisconsin. WPS offers health insurance plans for groups and individuals and benefit plan administration for businesses. WPS also provides insurance claims processing services under various U.S. government ...
Integris Health was created in 1983 in order to serve as the parent corporation and to provide management and administrative support to Integris Baptist Medical Center Inc. [5] However, the network of hospitals that now comprises Integris Health, was born out of a series of Oklahoma healthcare providers merging over the span of three years from 1992 to 1995, with additional hospitals brought ...
The county with the least population is Menominee County with 4,226 residents; the Menominee Indian Reservation is co-extensive with the county. [2] Pepin County is the smallest in area, with 231.98 square miles (600.8 km 2 ); Marathon is the largest, having 1,544.91 square miles (4,001.3 km 2 ).
Integris issued its own notice over the Christmas weekend to patients it knows were affected by the data breach. The data breach apparently did not include payment information, passwords or other ...
Were you affected by the Integris Health data breach late last year? The FBI wants to talk. Oklahoma City's FBI field office is asking for victims of the data breach to come forward to help with ...
Milwaukee County Behavioral Health Division – Milwaukee Milwaukee: Milwaukee: 120/144 [1] [2] Milwaukee County General Hospital – Milwaukee [note 2] Milwaukee: Milwaukee: River Woods Urgent Care Center – Milwaukee [17] Milwaukee: Milwaukee: St. Francis Medical Center: Milwaukee: Milwaukee: 29 [1] [2] St. Joseph's Regional Medical Center ...
Waukesha County does play a role in "The Prison Confessions of Gypsy Rose Blanchard," Lifetime's new, six-hour documentary on the much-discussed true-crime story. But it's not a big role.
The insurance business was first authorized and regulated in Wisconsin in 1870 (1870 Wisc. Act 56). The original law vested insurance regulation as a power of the Secretary of State of Wisconsin. These powers were transferred to a separate commissioner of insurance by an act of the Wisconsin Legislature in 1878 (1878 Wisc. Act 214).