- Wed Sep 8 1999 Short Take: WebMD partners with health-services provider
WebMD signed an agreement today with St. Luke's Episcopal Health System to give the company's over 1,800 doctors access to WebMD's Internet services, which include medical communications, searchable information, and healthcare services. St. Luke's will work with WebMD to provide physicians, administrators, and their patients with the latest medical information and professional services available. WebMD's Internet-based suite of products is designed to help streamline business and clinical transactions and enhance patient care.
Posted by Stefanie Olsen
- Tue May 11 2004 Diagnosing WebMD
The health care company has survived the dot-com bust via a steady stream of acquisitions that has given it three principal means of support--and a lot of options.
Posted by CNET Staff
- Wed Nov 15 2000 Insurers concoct a system to ward off WebMD
Seven major health insurance companies formally outline their plans to provide a Web-based transaction system to speed the movement of paperwork among physicians, insurers and hospitals.
Posted by Sandeep Junnarkar
- Tue May 4 2004 WebMD problems proliferate
Posted by null Letters to the Editor
- Tue Mar 27 2001 WebMD starts to recuperate
Posted by Tiffany Kary
- Mon Apr 26 2004 WebMD may be due for a checkup
The one-time dot-com darling is facing a host of complaints about lost and incomplete claims that have jeopardized critical payments to health care providers that rely on its software and services.
Posted by Karen Southwick
- Wed May 19 1999 Healtheon, WebMD in merger talks
Healtheon confirms that the Internet health sites are in merger talks but added that no agreement has been reached.
Posted by Sandeep Junnarkar
- Thu May 20 1999 Healtheon shares jump on WebMD deal
Healtheon and closely held WebMD say they will merge to create the largest Internet company serving the health-care industry, with Microsoft investing $250 million in the venture.
Posted by Kim Girard
- Fri May 14 1999 Report: Healtheon, WebMD to merge
The health-care firms will join forces on the Net, sources familiar with the deal tell Bloomberg. WebMD yesterday withdrew its planned IPO.
Posted by Troy Wolverton
- Thu Nov 30 2000 WebMD misses 3Q forecasts
Posted by Sergio G. Non