Area employers make mental health benefits a priority for 2019
Local employers are working together to ensure their employee health benefit plans offer the same affordability and access to mental health services as they do to primary care.
Reporter
Michelle Corbet covers business for The Daily Memphian. Prior to, she was a reporter at the Memphis Business Journal. A native Memphian and University of Memphis graduate, Michelle covered business in Conway, Arkansas after college. Michelle got her start covering business as an intern at The Commercial Appeal.
There are 256 articles by Michelle Corbet :
Local employers are working together to ensure their employee health benefit plans offer the same affordability and access to mental health services as they do to primary care.
A 20-year broadcast media sales manager has accepted a newly created position at the Greater Memphis Chamber.
Although LEDIC announced its Memphis headquarters more than three years ago, it is just now getting started.
On a bus ride spanning one end of Downtown to the other, Downtown Memphis Commission board members got a tour of projects Thursday they have helped along through financial incentives.
Tennessee Taco Co., a street taco concept developed by Belly Acres co-founders Ben McLean and Chef Rob Ray, has closed.
Phil Trenary is honored by the Memphis City Council with the 2018 Humanitarian Award for his unifying spirit and promotion of racial harmony among all men.
ALSAC has added a digital news platform to reach new donors and better connect with current supporters of St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
Cash Saver brought a grocer to the Southgate Shopping Center after Kroger closed its store last year. Now, Regional One Health is filling the pharmacy void.
A Cordova-based company's model of outsourcing and automating genetic testing has it poised for growth in 2019.
The University of Memphis has renovated the former library on Highland Street into the first phase of an effort to drive more companies to the University District.
Facing an opioid addiction crisis, surgeons, insurance providers and patients themselves are exploring pain management alternatives, including nerve freezing and cold-water therapy.
Benefits of telehealth moving beyond access to more comprehensive health care management, including pharmacy and optometry services.
The University of Memphis may take the first step Tuesday to become active in the real estate market, taking advantage of a provision in the tax reform package Congress passed in 2017.
Expect to hear more about a new cardiovascular institute in Memphis now that its leadership team is in place.
The University of Memphis board of trustees approved a proposal Tuesday that will create a foundation enabling the university to get into the real estate business.
A local woman with brain aneurysms had two completely different experiences when the FDA approved a medical device alternative in time for her second surgery.
With limited resources, several local small businesses have figured out how to give back in a way that adds value.
Plans to redesign Tom Lee Park will bridge the disconnect between Downtown Memphis and the Mississippi Riverfront using nature-inspired elements and permanent infrastructure.
Aerosmith lead singer Steven Tyler has opened his second Janie's House for abused and neglected girls at Youth Villages' campus in Bartlett.
More housing for the families of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital patients could be coming soon to the Pinch District Downtown.
Infant deaths from critical heart diseases have declined 33 percent in eight states where the American Heart Association was successful in passing laws to require mandatory testing for heart defects before newborns leave the hospital.
Developers of an apartment complex on South Cooper in Cooper-Young received an extension on tax incentives for adding a public art element, a tribute to Johnny Cash, who played his first gig near the property.
After canceling its inaugural advisory board meeting in Nashville last month, the University of Tennessee Health Science Center has rescheduled the historic meeting for next week in Memphis.
A procedure to insert the world's first commercially-approved heart device for babies weighing less than two pounds was performed at Memphis' Le Bonheur Children's Hospital.