Medicare Part D Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Medicare Part D stocks.

Medicare Part D Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 21 CI The Cigna Group Announces Appearance at Goldman Sachs 45th Annual Global Healthcare Conference
May 21 CVS Real-Estate Downsizing Finally Comes for Your Pharmacy
May 21 CI UnitedHealth’s Optum Rx unveils new drug pricing model
May 20 CVS Top CVS medical officer ties shocking lack of ‘health literacy’ for 90 million Americans to crisis of ‘mistrust’
May 20 CVS CVS Health Corporation (CVS) is Attracting Investor Attention: Here is What You Should Know
May 20 CVS CVS Health to present at the Bernstein 40th Annual Strategic Decisions Conference
May 17 CVS The Weekly Closeout: Dollar General taps store operations exec as PetSmart searches for a chief toy tester
May 17 CVS The Medicare Bubble Has Burst
May 17 CI The Medicare Bubble Has Burst
May 16 CVS CVS Health launches new snack brand called Well Market
May 16 CVS CVS launches Well Market line of new store-brand products
May 16 CVS CVS Pharmacy® introduces Well Market™, a crave-worthy consumables brand
May 16 CI Strategic Shifts in Larry Robbins' Portfolio Highlight Cigna Group's Significant Reduction
May 16 CI The Cigna Group (CI) BofA Securities 2024 Health Care Conference Call Transcript
May 15 CI Cigna Stock Ready to Bounce Off Bullish Trendline
May 15 CVS CVS Health: Secure Dividend And Upside Potential Presents Compelling Opportunity
May 15 CI Burry's Scion Asset adds Cigna, BP, exits Oracle, CVS, among Q1 buys, sells
May 15 CVS Burry's Scion Asset adds Cigna, BP, exits Oracle, CVS, among Q1 buys, sells
May 15 CVS Is CVS Health's High-Yield Dividend in Danger of Being Cut?
May 15 CVS Kansas jilts CVS in new Medicaid contract awards
Medicare Part D

Medicare Part D, also called the Medicare prescription drug benefit, is an optional United States federal-government program to help Medicare beneficiaries pay for self-administered prescription drugs through prescription drug insurance premiums (the cost of almost all professionally administered prescriptions is covered under optional Part B of United States Medicare). Part D was originally proposed by President Bill Clinton in 1999, then by both political parties and Houses of Congress and President Bush during 2002 and 2003. The final bill was enacted as part of the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 (which also made changes to the public Part C Medicare health plan program) and went into effect on January 1, 2006. The various proposals were substantially alike in that Part D was optional, it was separated from the other three Parts of Medicare in most proposals, and it used private pharmacy benefit managers on a regional basis to negotiate drug prices. The differences included consistent benefits nationwide in the Clinton/Democratic proposals (as opposed to multiple options in the Republican plans and the bill finally enacted) and a wide array of deductibles and co-pays (including the infamous "donut hole"); Bush's initial proposal included true catastrophic coverage for middle income seniors, but it was not in the final version and is a feature still not available in Part D.

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