
Former X CEO Linda Yaccarino takes eMed top job
Aug. 5 (UPI) -- The eMed Population Health digital health platform announced Tuesday that former X Chief Executive Officer Linda Yaccarino has been appointed its new CEO.
"Yaccarino's hiring is a game changing moment in eMed's mission to make safe, effective, and sustainable chronic care accessible directly through an all-in-one, digital-first experience," eMed said in a press release. "Her unparalleled experience in leading paradigm shifting transformations will bring a new dimension to the company."
Yaccarino had stepped down from her post at X in July after a two-year stint without an explanation, but her resignation came a day after the X chatbot Grok had gone on an anti-Semitic tirade.
EMed is currently at work on a population health management platform for the GLP-1 weight loss and diabetes drugs. Goldman Sachs researchers have estimated that about 15 million adults in the United States alone may be treated with anti-obesity medications, or AOMs by 2030, and that the industry could reach $100 billion in annual revenue by that year.
"The healthcare industry has been disrupted by technology, but not yet completely transformed by it," Yaccarino said in the release. "There is an opportunity to combine technology, lifestyle, and data in a new powerful way through the digital channels that impact consumers directly in ways that have never been done before."
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UPI
an hour ago
- UPI
Denmark, Sweden, Norway to provide Ukraine with U.S.-made weapons
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine listens during an event hosted by President Joe Biden on the Ukraine Compact at the 2024 North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) Summit in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, July 11, 2024. On Tuesday, it was announced that Denmark, Sweden and Norway would provide Ukraine with a $500 million weapons package through a new NATO initiative. Photo by Chris Kleponis/UPI | License Photo Aug. 6 (UPI) -- Denmark, Sweden and Norway said they will provide Ukraine with a $500 million package of lethal equipment to be bought from the United States under a new NATO initiative. U.S. President Donald Trump, who has been a critic of the United States' backing of Ukraine, last month announced that the 32-member defensive alliance would be purchasing weaponry from the United States for their besieged ally. Though Trump offered no specifics, NATO on Monday unveiled the NATO Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List initiative to better provide Kyiv with military equipment, in particular regular packages worth about $500 million that will include capabilities bought from the United States. Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store of Norway said in a statement it was "an important initiative" of NATO and the United States that "helps ensure Ukraine quickly receives crucial military equipment to defend themselves." It also strengthens the U.S.-Europe relationship, he said, which had been uncertain during the first few months of the Trump administration, as it had taken a drastically different position on Ukraine than its predecessor -- suggesting that Kyiv would have to give up land to Russia in a cease-fire, while demanding that Europe do more to protect their ally while stating it would be lessening its contribution to its defense. Norway said its contribution to the package was $135 million. Denmark said it was contributing $84 million. And Sweden said it was contributing $275 million. "It is a strength that Sweden, together with Norway and Denmark, could quickly come together and co-finance a support package to Ukraine," Denmark's Minister for Energy, Business and Industry Ebba Busch said in a statement. "The U.S. can assist with unique defense material for which Ukraine has a major need." Danish Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen said the package will be made immediately available. "Speed is absolutely critical," Poulsen said in a statement. "If the Ukrainians later find they need further funding, we are also willing to consider that." The announcement came a day after the Netherlands announced the first $500 million package under the new initiative. In Washington, State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce hailed the two packages during a press conference as commitments delivering on "Trump's initiative to facilitate billions of dollars in investment to the United States defense industry and create American jobs while ensuring Europe can ultimately defend itself long term." President Volodymyr Zelensky described the initiative as "very strong" and one that will boost Ukraine's defensive capabilities. "These steps are a new, real foundation for long-term security across all of Europe," he said on X. "Russia will never turn Europe into a continent of war, and it is precisely through our joint efforts that we are ensuring peace will prevail."


UPI
2 hours ago
- UPI
4 dead after medical transport plane crashes in Arizona
A medical transport plane crashed Tuesday in northeastern Arizona, killing four people on board. Photo courtesy of Navajo Police Department/ Facebook Aug. 6 (UPI) -- Four medical personnel died Tuesday when their medical transport plane crashed in northeastern Arizona en route to pick up a patient, officials said. The Beechcraft 300 aircraft crashed while landing at Chinle Municipal Airport, located about 325 miles northeast of Phoenix, at about 12:35 p.m. MST, the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement, adding that it and the National Transportation Safety Board would investigate. Though the FAA said three people were on board, Navajo Nation President Buu Nygren said the aircraft's four medical personnel had died. "These were people who dedicated their lives to saving others, and their loss is felt deeply across the Navajo Nation," Nygren said in a statement posted to Facebook. "Our prayers are with the families of those on the plane as investigations continue. May the Creator bring comfort and strength in the days ahead for the friends and families involved." The identities of the deceased were not made public, but Nygren described them as "non-local." The Navajo Police Department said in a statement that the aircraft was landing to pick up a patient from a nearby hospital. It said next-of-kin notifications had been conducted by the aircraft company, CIS Aviation, out of Albuquerque, N. M. UPI has contacted CIS Aviation for comment.


CNBC
2 hours ago
- CNBC
War-weary Syria will be hurt further by Trump's 41% tariff rate — the highest on earth
In May, speaking to a rapt crowd in the Ritz-Carlton Riyadh, U.S. President Donald Trump stunned listeners by announcing he would be ordering the full lifting of U.S. sanctions on Syria, many of which had been in place for decades. "Now, it's their time to shine ... Good luck Syria," Trump said. Less than three months later, the Trump administration hit Syria with the highest tariff rate of any country in the world: 41%. Syria has very little trade with the U.S. because of long-held sanctions, but some trade between the two does exist. In 2023, Syria exported $11.3 million worth of goods to the U.S., according to the Observatory for Economic Complexity, and imported $1.29 million worth of American goods, technically giving the U.S. a trade deficit with the impoverished Middle Eastern country. Trump says the levies his administration imposes — which were based on a widely criticized calculation applied to each country in April using trade deficit figures — are meant to address trade imbalances. He has not commented specifically on the case of Syria. But as it faces the specter of rebuilding its devastated state after 13 years of war under a new government with a very shaky hold on power, the country needs all the help it can get, regional analysts say — not further punishment. "After years of devastating civil war, the country is in urgent need of substantial foreign direct investment to begin the long and difficult process of reconstruction and development," Giorgio Cafiero, CEO of risk consulting firm Gulf State Analytics, told CNBC. "While the recent lifting of many U.S., U.K., and EU sanctions was a welcome development for Damascus' economic ambitions, Washington's imposition of steep tariffs now threatens to restrict any potential for meaningful trade with the United States." Syria had been designated a state sponsor of terrorism by the U.S. government since 1979. U.S. sanctions were imposed on the country in 2004 and again in 2011, after the regime of then-President Bashar Assad launched a brutal crackdown on anti-government uprisings. In the roughly 14 years since, the country has been devastated by civil war, sectarian violence and brutal terrorist attacks, with the Islamic State taking over parts of the country in 2014 and a subsequent Western-led bombing campaign to eradicate the extremist group. The toppling of the Assad regime during a shock offensive by anti-Assad militia groups in December 2024 stunned the global community and brought about the prospect of a new beginning for the devastated country. Syria's new President Ahmed al-Sharaa — a former al-Qaeda member who describes himself as reformed — currently leads the country's transitional government. Syria remained under myriad international sanctions, but those imposed by the U.S. were the most severe, as they applied to third parties as well, deterring other countries and groups from transacting with the country. Most recently, since Trump's official lifting of sanctions in June, Syria has hosted delegations from several countries including the U.S. and wealthy Gulf states pledging support and investment for reconstruction. At the same time, it's been beset by outbursts of sectarian violence in different parts of the country and volleys of Israeli bombings. More than two-thirds of Syria's electricity grid is non-functional, according to aid organizations, with major cities like Aleppo and Damascus facing blackouts for more than 20 hours a day. In many rural and conflict-ridden areas, there is no power at all. "This isn't an economy that is struggling as much as it's an economy that seems to be almost constantly over the last few months, on the verge of collapse, unless very active steps are taken in order to buttress it and give it a chance to recover," said H.A. Hellyer, a senior fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London. "So any step that deviates from that, I think, is very dangerous." Qatar recently announced a project by which its development fund will purchase gas and provide it to Syria — transported via Azerbaijan and Turkey — to support more than 5 million people, with the expectation of improving daily power supply by as much as 40%. Fahad Al-Sulaiti, the director general of Qatar Fund for Development, described how Damascus will need to lean heavily on aid from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Nations — particularly now that tariffs will harm the possibility of developing beneficial trade ties with the U.S. He also said Qatar was in close contact with the U.S. government to enable support for Syria. "We work very closely with our partners in the United States. That's why from day one ... we work very close with the Treasury Department ... we're taking with them to create a good economic system," Al-Sulaiti told CNBC. Economic observers note that the 41% tariff itself will have little actual impact on Syria's devastated economy, since bilateral trade between the two countries is so negligible. "But the symbolism behind this decision carries far greater weight than the trade figures suggest," Cafiero said. "The fact that Syria was singled out for the highest tariffs — even after the easing of most sanctions — sends a clear and calculated message from the Trump administration: Washington is willing to loosen its economic grip on a post-regime change Syria, but only under conditions defined by the White House." One interpretation, Cafiero suggested, is that the tariffs could be a way to pressure Damascus into normalizing relations with Israel, which has been attacking and occupying parts of Syria. "In this sense," he said, "the economic policy resembles a kind of 'leash,' designed to be adjusted in response to the political behavior of the al-Sharaa government and broader developments on the ground." Security analysts warn that instability in parts of the country could tip it back into outright war and far greater humanitarian crisis if it does not get the support — economic, humanitarian and diplomatic — that it needs. U.S. envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack, has expressed his and Washington's full support for Syria and the Al Sharaa government, and recently announced U.S. and Qatari-backed investment initiatives into the country. It is not clear whether he supports his administration's imposition of tariffs on the country; the State Department and White House did not respond to CNBC requests for comment. Ultimately, the tariffs themselves may have limited immediate economic consequences, but "their psychological and diplomatic impact should not be underestimated," Cafiero cautioned. "My read is that they reflect Washington's intent to retain leverage over Syria's future."