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  2. Duty of care (business associations) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duty_of_care_(business...

    v. t. e. In United States corporation and business association law (particularly Delaware law and the Revised Model Business Corporation Act ), a duty of care is part of the fiduciary duty owed to a corporation by its directors. The other aspects of fiduciary duty are a director's duty of loyalty and (possibly) duty of good faith.

  3. Concentra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Concentra

    Concentra Inc., is a national health care establishment founded in 1979 in Amarillo, Texas. The headquarters of the corporation is in Addison, Texas, and runs approximately 520 urgent care locations across 44 states. The company is linked with over 1,000 physicians and 1,285 physical therapists. Concentra also offers a variety of health ...

  4. HCA Healthcare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HCA_Healthcare

    HCA Healthcare, Inc. is an American for-profit operator of health care facilities that was founded in 1968. It is based in Nashville, Tennessee, and, as of May 2020, owned and operated 186 hospitals and approximately 2,000 sites of care, including surgery centers, freestanding emergency rooms, urgent care centers and physician clinics in 21 states and the United Kingdom. [6]

  5. Corporate child care - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_child_care

    Corporate child care. Corporate child care is a specific form of child care sponsored or managed by an employer. [ 1] It may be a perk or a part of the corporate social responsibility policy of the company. It can provide the working parents with an opportunity to find work–life balance. The corporations sponsor child care as it may increase ...

  6. Corporate headquarters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_headquarters

    Corporate headquarters is the part of a corporate structure that deals with tasks such as strategic planning, corporate communications, taxes, law, books of record, marketing, finance, human resources, and information technology. [4] [5] Corporate headquarters takes responsibility for the overall success of the corporation and ensures corporate ...

  7. Corporate social responsibility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_social...

    Corporate social responsibility. Employees of a leasing firm taking time off their regular jobs to build a house for Habitat for Humanity, a non-profit that builds homes for needy families using volunteers. Corporate social responsibility ( CSR) or corporate social impact is a form of international private business self-regulation [ 1] which ...

  8. Acts Retirement-Life Communities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACTS_Retirement-Life...

    Acts Retirement-Life Communities ( Acts ), based out of Fort Washington, Pennsylvania, is the third largest not-for-profit owner, operator and developer of continuing care retirement communities (CCRCs) in the United States. [1] Acts Life Care® communities provide independent living residences for people age 62 and above, with access to ...

  9. To further understanding of the complex issues regarding the provision of day care services, this paper presents an historical overview of national child care policy in the United States, and discusses the dimensions of working families' need for child care; the central policy issue of the relationship between work and the family; and incentives, including increased productivity, reduced ...