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Bozita

(26,955 posts)
Thu Mar 8, 2012, 03:02 PM Mar 2012

Kentucky company sues to stop name airing on Limbaugh

Source: AP

MARCH 8, 2012 AT 1:27 PM
Kentucky company sues to stop name airing on Limbaugh
BY BRETT BARROUQUERE ASSOCIATED PRESS


Louisville, Ky.— A Kentucky-based health care company has sued to protect its name after being involuntarily drawn into the backlash over Rush Limbaugh's derisive comments about a Georgetown law student.

Louisville-based Humana, the parent company of Concentra Health Services, filed on Thursday for a preliminary injunction to stop the Preval Group of Portland, Maine, from using the name Concentra to market memory aid pills.

Humana said in court filings it received angry phone calls, emails and web postings after an ad for Concentra pills aired on Limbaugh's show Monday. Concentra Health and the Preval Group are not related.

Limbaugh has been criticized for attacking student Sandra Fluke over contraception. He apologized but has lost some advertisers in the backlash.


Read more: http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20120308/NATION/203080452/1361/Kentucky-company-sues-to-stop-name-airing-on-Limbaugh

14 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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LynneSin

(95,337 posts)
1. Clearly it's a product we know Rush Limbaugh doesn't use
Thu Mar 8, 2012, 03:32 PM
Mar 2012

Else he'd remember a slut better defines a man who goes to the Dominican Republic with a bottle of of illegal Viagara prescription than a woman who simple want to see birth control afforably available.

FLyellowdog

(4,276 posts)
2. Looked up Preval on google.
Thu Mar 8, 2012, 03:36 PM
Mar 2012

I'll be contacting someone about their "Be Better" motto. If they want to be better, they should steer away from Limbaugh products.
Contact
jackie@prevalgroup.com

Bozita

(26,955 posts)
9. here...
Thu Mar 8, 2012, 07:06 PM
Mar 2012

See MadFloridian's post here:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=104x3569138
HCA was the Frist family business.


from Wiki:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Scott

In April 1987, Scott made his first attempt to buy the Hospital Corporation of America (HCA). While still a partner at Johnson & Swanson, Scott formed the HCA Acquisition Company with two former executives of Republic Health Corporation, Charles Miller and Richard Ragsdale.[13] With financing from Citicorp conditional on acquisition of HCA,[14] the proposed holding company offered $3.85 billion for 80 million shares at $47 each, intending to assume an additional $1.2 billion in debt, for a total $5 billion deal.[15] However, HCA declined the offer, and the bid was withdrawn.[16]

In 1988, Scott and Richard Rainwater, a multimillionaire financier from Fort Worth, each put up $125,000 in working capital in their new company, Columbia Hospital Corporation,[17] and borrowed the remaining money needed to purchase two struggling hospitals in El Paso for $60 million.[18] Then they acquired a neighboring hospital and shut it down. Within a year, the remaining two were doing much better.[11] By the end of 1989, Columbia Hospital Corporation owned four hospitals with a total of 833 beds.[18]

In 1992, Columbia made a stock purchase of Basic American Medical, which owned eight hospitals, primarily in southwestern Florida. In September 1993, Columbia did another stock purchase, worth $3.4 billion, of Galen Healthcare, which had been spun off by Humana Inc. a few months before.[19] At the time, Galen had approximately 90 hospitals. After the purchase, Galen stockholders had 82 percent of the stock in the combined company, with Scott still running the company.[18]

In 1994, Columbia purchased Scott's former acquisition target, HCA, which had approximately 100 hospitals. In 1995, Columbia purchased Healthtrust, which had approximately 80 hospitals, primarily in rural communities. By 1997, Columbia/HCA had become the world's largest health care provider with more than 340 hospitals, 130 surgery centers, and 550 home health locations in 38 states and two foreign countries. With annual revenues in excess of $23 billion, the company employed more than 285,000 people, making it the seventh largest U.S. employer and the twelfth largest employer worldwide. Based on market capitalization, Columbia ranked in the top 50 companies in America and top 100 worldwide. That same year, the company was recognized by Business Week magazine as one of the 50 Best Performing Companies of the S&P 500.





-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

For Rick Scott, success and scandal are inseparable
By Marc Caputo, Times/Herald Tallahassee Bureau
Posted: Aug 07, 2010 02:55 PM


-snip-

As head of the mammoth Columbia/HCA hospital chain in the 1990s, Scott acknowledges, he was "responsible'' for what became the largest Medicare fraud case in U.S. history, totaling $1.7 billion. McCollum and a coterie of well-financed Capitol insiders are bombarding television airwaves and mailboxes with ads and flyers to make sure every Florida voter knows about the scandal.

Scott, 57, brushes it off – sometimes literally, by waving his hand as if shooing gnats.

"Attacks are life," Scott said when asked about the negative ads. Last month, voters asked him about the fraud case at nearly every stop of a six-day bus trip.

The questions underscore a conflict inherent in Scott's campaign: His business background and the Medicare scandal are inseparable. Scott – who was not charged or fined – said he didn't know about the troubles that unfolded on his watch, which raises questions about his leadership.

"We could have done things better," Scott acknowledged at Thursday's debate in Tampa. "When you have 285,000 employees, you have to trust people."

-snip-

more, lots more...
http://www.tampabay.com/news/politics/stateroundup/for-rick-scott-success-and-scandal-are-inseparable/1113883

blm

(113,079 posts)
13. Looks like they're all one and the same. Cripes, these fascists keep popping up - Frist, Scott, Bain
Fri Mar 9, 2012, 03:05 PM
Mar 2012

Capital (Romney). Creepy. They buy and sell to each other.

Bozita

(26,955 posts)
14. It's all a board game to these 1%ers, like Monopoly only with a lot more variables.
Sat Mar 10, 2012, 01:40 AM
Mar 2012

They don't see human beings, only numbers, ... money numbers.

We are kinda like pieces on the game board, like pawns in chess, only with less power.

IggleDoer

(1,186 posts)
10. Humana never sponsored Rush
Thu Mar 8, 2012, 07:07 PM
Mar 2012

Concentra is a division of Humana. Another company is using the Concentra name to feel their pills. Humana is suing them to stop using the Concentra name for their pills. It's a trademark infringement issue not a sponsorship issue.

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