Health Care Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Health Care stocks.

Health Care Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 22 ACXP MicroStrategy Copycats Are Buying Bitcoin as Price Nears $100,000
Nov 22 RXRX 2 Innovative Stocks That Could Deliver Outsize Returns
Nov 20 RXRX Recursion: No News Isn't Good News When It Comes To Vanilla Pipeline
Nov 20 ACXP Acurx Board of Directors Approves Bitcoin as Treasury Reserve Asset
Nov 20 RXRX Recursion and Exscientia, two leaders in the AI drug discovery space, have officially combined to advance the industrialization of drug discovery
Nov 20 CMAX CareMax, dragged by Steward, files for bankruptcy
Nov 19 AIM AIM ImmunoTech Announces Publication of Breast Cancer Data from Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center in The Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Nov 19 CMAX CareMax Seeks Restructuring Amid Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
Nov 19 AIM Kellner Group Urges Stockholders of AIM Immunotech to Vote Gold Card Now for Desperately Needed Change to the AIM Board
Nov 18 ACXP Acurx Sponsored and Participated in the Peggy Lillis Foundation Inaugural CDI Scientific Symposium and Presented Ibezapolstat Ph2b Clinical Data Update
Nov 18 CMAX CareMax Files for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy Protection
Nov 18 CMAX CareMax Files for Chapter 11, Plans Asset Sales
Nov 18 CMAX CareMax Becomes Latest Health System to File for Bankruptcy
Nov 17 CMAX CareMax Reaches Agreements to Sell Management Services Organization and Core Centers’ Assets
Nov 17 CMAX Caremax files for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection: reports
Nov 16 TOI Oncology Institute Third Quarter 2024 Earnings: US$0.21 loss per share (vs US$0.19 loss in 3Q 2023)
Health Care

Health care or healthcare is the maintenance or improvement of health via the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of disease, illness, injury, and other physical and mental impairments in human beings. Health care is delivered by health professionals (providers or practitioners) in allied health fields. Physicians and physician associates are a part of these health professionals. Dentistry, midwifery, nursing, medicine, optometry, audiology, pharmacy, psychology, occupational therapy, physical therapy and other health professions are all part of health care. It includes work done in providing primary care, secondary care, and tertiary care, as well as in public health.
Access to health care may vary across countries, communities, and individuals, largely influenced by social and economic conditions as well as the health policies in place. Countries and jurisdictions have different policies and plans in relation to the personal and population-based health care goals within their societies. Health care systems are organizations established to meet the health needs of targeted populations. Their exact configuration varies between national and subnational entities. In some countries and jurisdictions, health care planning is distributed among market participants, whereas in others, planning occurs more centrally among governments or other coordinating bodies. In all cases, according to the World Health Organization (WHO), a well-functioning health care system requires a robust financing mechanism; a well-trained and adequately paid workforce; reliable information on which to base decisions and policies; and well maintained health facilities and logistics to deliver quality medicines and technologies.Health care can contribute to a significant part of a country's economy. In 2011, the health care industry consumed an average of 9.3 percent of the GDP or US$ 3,322 (PPP-adjusted) per capita across the 34 members of OECD countries. The US (17.7%, or US$ PPP 8,508), the Netherlands (11.9%, 5,099), France (11.6%, 4,118), Germany (11.3%, 4,495), Canada (11.2%, 5669), and Switzerland (11%, 5,634) were the top spenders, however life expectancy in total population at birth was highest in Switzerland (82.8 years), Japan and Italy (82.7), Spain and Iceland (82.4), France (82.2) and Australia (82.0), while OECD's average exceeds 80 years for the first time ever in 2011: 80.1 years, a gain of 10 years since 1970. The US (78.7 years) ranges only on place 26 among the 34 OECD member countries, but has the highest costs by far. All OECD countries have achieved universal (or almost universal) health coverage, except the US and Mexico. (see also international comparisons.)
Health care is conventionally regarded as an important determinant in promoting the general physical and mental health and well-being of people around the world. An example of this was the worldwide eradication of smallpox in 1980, declared by the WHO as the first disease in human history to be completely eliminated by deliberate health care interventions.

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