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BusinessWeek March 15, 2004 Roger O. Crockett |
Why Are Latinos Leading Blacks In The Job Market? The booming Hispanic labor force turns out to have an unexpected side effect: Latinos are outperforming blacks in the job market. Part of the reason stems from the fact that many Hispanics have less education or are vulnerable illegal immigrants willing to work for less pay. |
InternetNews December 22, 2009 |
Latinos Closing Digital Divide: Pew New report finds rising Internet usage among minority segment. |
Managed Care February 2007 |
Employer-Sponsored Insurance Coverage Rates Falling A new report says that that 61 percent of non-elderly Americans had employer-sponsored insurance in 2004, compared to 66 percent in 2000. |
Financial Planning September 1, 2005 Kathy Gevlin |
White Paper Race and retirement planning attitudes: Only 65% of higher-income African-American households invest in the stock market, compared with 80% of whites. Financial planners may help with these obstacles. |
Managed Care November 2000 |
Rise in employer-based coverage spurs drop in ranks of uninsured The Census Bureau reports that the number of Americans without health insurance dropped from 44 million in 1998 to 42 million in 1999, thanks in large part to a boost in the share of employers offering job-based coverage... |
Managed Care November 2001 Michael D. Dalzell |
The Uninsured: How Health Plans Can Do Well By Doing Good While health plans battle for market share, 38 million Americans are uninsured. At least some could be signed up, but pursuing them is not without risk... |
Registered Rep. October 23, 2003 |
Learn Spanish: Grow Your Business Hispanics are woefully underserved by the financial services industry. With rising incomes and a growing population Latinos are now being targeted by financial services companies. |
Managed Care December 2001 |
Tie to Employers Stresses Fragility Of Health Coverage About two thirds of Americans receive health insurance through their employers or families, and many gain or lose coverage when they marry, divorce, or move to new jobs... |
Managed Care August 2002 |
Patients' unpaid bills come from physicians, hospitals With health care costs rising and the number of uninsured Americans close to 40 million, physicians and hospitals are feeling the pinch. |
Managed Care March 2007 |
1 in 5 Non-Elderly Women Are Uninsured More than 17 million American women are uninsured. These women are more likely to postpone care and to forego filling needed prescriptions than insured women, and they often delay or go without important preventive care services. |
InternetNews January 2, 2004 Robyn Greenspan |
Ethnic Personalities Apparent Online An examination of the African-American, white, and English-speaking Hispanic Internet population revealed as much diversity online as there is offline. |
AFP eWire April 20, 2010 |
2009 Saw Record Decline in Foundation Giving The recent economic crisis caused the more than 75,000 grantmaking foundations in the United States to cut their 2009 giving by an estimated 8.4 percent -- by far the largest decline ever tracked by the Foundation Center. |
Salon.com June 15, 2000 Suzy Hansen |
Annals of biz idiocy: Get ready for your five-figure "cultural audit" Sensitivity training is now a $10 billion industry. |
Managed Care November 2001 |
For Now, at Least, Fewer People Lack Insurance The Census Bureau says the number of uninsured Americans dropped in 2000, for the second year in a row -- a trend many experts doubt will continue, thanks to a weakening economy... |
Managed Care May 2005 |
Health Care Remains a Major Concern Health care ranks fourth on a list of problems that the public thinks the government should tackle, according to a report. |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Roger O. Crockett |
For Blacks, Progress without Parity Fewer are poor, but blacks are no closer to economic equality |
Managed Care May 2002 |
Small employers plan to shift increased costs to workers Small companies -- those with 3 to 24 employees -- are bracing for continuing health care cost increases, and indicate that they may have to shift more of that expense to workers |
Salon.com January 21, 2000 Dena Bunis |
Making health an issue Clinton continues to push for reforms. |
AskMen.com May 6, 2013 |
Favoritism Nancy DiTomaso, who conducted research on the unemployment disparity between whites and blacks, finds that the driving but unspoken force behind it is often the favoritism that results from social networking. |
Reason February 2009 Ronald Bailey |
E.R. Crowding A study blames a rising population, a falling number of emergency departments, and understaffing that prevents stabilized patients from being admitted to other parts of the hospital. |
Managed Care September 2000 John A. Marcille |
Kaiser, Aetna Keep Eyes On Health Care Consumer Sometimes breaking old ground can be just as satisfying as breaking new. What these two plans are looking at, experts believe, is a health care system moving toward defined contributions... |
Investment Advisor February 2010 |
Invest Globally, Advise Locally Why alpha will be found overseas in 2010, and why back home, USC Professor Jody Agius Vallejo's research can help you add clients. |
Salon.com April 5, 2001 Dalton Conley |
How to widen the black-white wealth gap Ignore the claims of rich, black estate-tax foes. The tax is good for African-Americans... |
Managed Care March 2000 |
Americans favor reform - but not too much Momentum is building in Washington to address numerous health care issues this year... |
Salon.com October 1, 2002 Earl Ofari Hutchinson |
"Barbershop" doesn't need a trim Beneath the furor over the film's wisecrack about Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King Jr. lies a real crisis in black leadership. |
Salon.com November 1, 2000 Earl Ofari Hutchinson |
Killer cops The slaying of actor Anthony Dwain Lee by a black officer is evidence that many black cops have the same prejudices as their white colleagues... |
Managed Care December 2007 |
Privately Insured Use Emergency Room Less A recently issued brief from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation seeks to characterize and analyze persons who frequently, or infrequently, use hospital emergency department. |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Roger O. Crockett |
How to Narrow the Great Race Divide Progress in narrowing the economic divide between blacks and whites has stalled, and the time has come for a new national effort. Unlike in the 1960s, though, the battle can't be run out of DC. It will require the efforts of all levels of government, as well as companies, schools, and individuals. |
Salon.com May 9, 2001 Earl Ofari Hutchinson |
The McVeigh effect The media buzz over the white Oklahoma City bomber's execution is eclipsing the truth about federal death-row inmates: Most are black or Latino... |
Job Journal September 17, 2006 Julia Hollister |
Latinos Cultivate Influence Amid Business Growth California's Hispanic population exercises business and political clout. |
Reason July 2002 Mike Lynch |
Data: Can't Give It Away An Urban Institute study released in March indicates that lack of access to taxpayer-funded health insurance isn't the problem. |
Managed Care December 2004 |
Kaiser Official Defends Decision To Launch HSAs In what appears to be a wrenching decision, Kaiser Permanente is gearing up to begin offering health savings accounts. |
Salon.com May 30, 2001 Richard Rodriguez |
Black and tan fantasy The Census says Hispanics are poised to outnumber blacks as America's largest "minority" -- but can Hispanics really be compared to African-Americans? |
The Motley Fool July 11, 2011 Aimee Duffy |
What Every Company Can Learn From Kraft Kraft's renewed focus on the U.S. Hispanic market is a brilliant move. |
American Family Physician March 15, 2004 |
Medicine and Society According to figures released by the U.S. Census Bureau in September 2003, 1 43.6 million Americans did not have health insurance in 2002, a figure that represents an increase of 2.4 million persons from 2001 |
Salon.com October 6, 2000 Annie Murphy Paul |
"An American Health Dilemma" By W. Michael Byrd & Linda A. Clayton Long before the horror of the Tuskegee experiments, blacks were suspicious of the white medical establishment -- with good reason... |
Salon.com July 20, 2000 Philip A. Klinkner |
Will whites ever vote to improve life for black Americans? David Horowitz called me anti-American, anti-white and ignorant for saying no, but history says I'm right. |
Managed Care June 2002 John A. Marcille |
Lawrence Accomplished Much As Kaiser Permanente's CEO A look at the outgoing CEO of a health plan. |
Managed Care June 2002 Frank Diamond |
A Look at Kaiser CEO's Legacy: Faith in Quality Never Waned David M. Lawrence, MD, MPH, guided the country's largest not-for-profit health plan through the tumultuous managed care decade. |
Salon.com June 28, 2000 Earl Ofari Hutchinson |
Race has everything to do with it In the wake of the Central Park assaults, it's time to pay attention to black violence against women -- and a murder rate that's still seven times that of whites. |
Managed Care February 2001 |
Rate of uninsured falls, but underlying factors remain shaky The percentage of uninsured Americans fell from 1998 to 1999, for the first time in a decade. But, according to a study prepared by the Health Insurance Association of America, the underlying factors affecting coverage have not changed -- and that could mean the decline is just an illusion... |
Managed Care April 2007 |
Comparing Congressional Health Care Proposals A review of health care reform bills proposed by Congress shows that many of them would cover more uninsured Americans than the current administration proposal. |
Salon.com December 16, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
Two nations, once again Black and white America are worlds apart in the way they view President-elect Bush, and how he came to power... |
Managed Care February 2007 |
Companies Complain About Costs A survey of 12,000 top-level benefit and human resource managers reveals the impact of high health care costs on their company. |
Managed Care October 2007 |
CDHPs Aren't Catching On Despite the extensive attention paid to consumer-directed health plans, a survey conducted by the Kaiser Family Foundation shows that these types of plan arrangements have made only small inroads in the employer market. |
Bank Technology News March 2001 Daniel Joelson |
U.S. Financial Firms Cater To Latinos How to serve the burgeoning Hispanic population in the U.S.? Offer more comfortable ways to manage finances... |
IDB America August 2001 Charo Quesada |
A revolution sparked by numbers The latest United States census catapults the Hispanic population into the headlines -- and into the political big leagues... |