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Ffhx This Morning from CBS News, May 26, 2015
Anna Sutton was shocked when she received  <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.ca>stanley cup</a> a letter from her husband s job-based health plan stating that Humira, an expensive drug used to treat her daughter s juvenile arthritis, was now on a long list of medications considered  nonessential benefits. The July 2021 letter said the family could either participate in a new effort overseen by a company called SaveOnSP and get the drug free of charge or be saddled with a monthly copayment that could top $1,000. It really gave us no choice,  said Sutton, of Woodinville, Washington. She added that  every single FDA-approved medication for juvenile arthritis  was on the list of nonessential benefits.                                        Sutton had unwittingly become part of a strategy that employers are using to deal with the high cost of drugs prescribed to treat conditions such as arthritis, psoriasis, cancer, and hemophilia.Those employers are tapping into dollars provided through prog <a href=https://www.stanleycups.com.mx>stanley cup</a> rams they have previously criticized: patient financial assistance initiatives set up by drugmakers, which some benefit managers have complained encourage patients to stay on expensive brand-name drugs when less expensive options might be available.        Now, though, employers, or the vendors and insurers they hire specifically to oversee such efforts, are seeking that money to offset their own costs. Drugmakers object, saying t <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.pl>stanley cup</a> he money was intended primarily for patients. But some benefit brokers and companies like SaveOnSP say they can help t Jhso Colorado baker to stop making wedding cakes after losing discrimination case
POCAHONTAS, Ark. -- In Walnut Ridge, Arkansas, farmer Greg Gill used a motorboat instead of a tractor to sail over his rice, corn, soybeans and peanuts. More than 5,000 acres of crops have drowned in 16 feet of water.                Greg Gill on his farmland                                                      CBS News                                         This is definitely not normal. They say it  <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.de>stanley cup</a> was a hundred-year flood, but this is the fourth one in my lifetime,  Gill said.Bit by bit, Kim and Greg Chaffin are mopping up the last of 19 inches of floodwater that drenched their Pocahontas furniture store. We probably lost about 15 percent of our inventory,  Kim said.  We re hoping in two weeks we ll be back up and running.                                         The shop was in its new <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.us>stanley cup</a>  location for only two months when torrential rain swelled the nearby Black River 9 feet over cresting levels and caused major levee bre <a href=https://www.adidas-originals.es>adidas originals</a> aches.Eighty-seven-year-old Charlie Rose is making the most of his time at a shelter, entertained by a Boy Scout volunteer.         I don t know how much water. It s in the house, but I don t know how much,  Rose said.                Charlie Rose                                                      CBS News                                        He s not sure when he gets back to his flooded home. You know, you got to think on the positive end of things. Negative will get you in trouble. And that s what it is here, it s all very positive,  he said.Even though
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