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With above-average temperatures predicted for this summer, New Yorkers are bracing for a scorcher. Air conditioning, for those fortunate enough to have it, drives up electricity bills and carbon emissions, exacerbating climate change, which is what is fueling the extreme heat to begin with. Shade in New York City, it must be said, is a hot commodity. For this reason, architects, urban planners, developers and environmentalists have been working on ways to temper heat and glare. Updated awningsAlthough window awnings took a hit with the advent of air conditioning in the 20th century, they are still prevalent in neighborhoods with one- and two-family homes.
Persons: awnings, Jay LoIacono Organizations: Air, Acme Locations: New York City, Bronx
Americans are clamoring for new weight-loss drugs, but companies aren't rushing to pay for them. At most, half of US employers help pay for weight-loss drugs for their workers, according to several estimates. "The drug companies, providers, and patient groups are insisting that weight loss will improve health and therefore offset these massive costs. Known as GLP-1 agonists, the drugs — Wegovy and Ozempic from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly's Mounjaro — mimic a gut hormone known as glucagon-like peptide 1, helping to suppress people's appetites and slow their digestion. Brent Eberle, the chief pharmacy officer at Navitus, said very few of the employers that worked with his pharmacy-benefit manager paid for weight-loss drugs.
Persons: that's, They're, AJ Loiacono, Li Ran, James Gelfand, Eli Lilly's, Ozempic, drugmakers, Brent Eberle, Navitus, Eberle, it's, Pat Gleason, Gleason, Wegovy, Eli Lilly, Lilly, Florian Gaertner, Loiacono Organizations: Morning, Novo Nordisk, Getty, Workers, Drugmakers, Therapeutics, Blue, Mayo Clinic, and Drug Administration, Capital Locations: Novo, Xinhua
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