2,345 results on '"Rosenblatt, Robert"'
Search Results
52. The World & Nation; U.S. Not as Gray as 31 Other Countries
53. THE NATION; Surgeon General Takes Stern Stance on Obesity; Health: American 'epidemic' is compared to smoking in its health risks. Lifestyle changes are strongly urged
54. THE NATION; Social Security Panel Offers Options but No Fix
55. The Nation; Bush Social Security Plan Faces Early Fight
56. Sept. 11 Dealt Sharp Blow to Output in U.S. Economy: Terrorist attacks, combined with the recession, led to the biggest quarterly drop in a decade. But 'good things' are seen in helping spur a revival
57. The Nation; Options Given to Save Social Security; Privatization: Panel will let President Bush choose among varied plans to restore retirement program to solvency
58. 'Light' Cigarettes Don't Cut Health Risks, Study Says; Tobacco: Users of popular low-tar brands inhale more deeply and smoke more, research shows. Companies say those labels are useful for comparison
59. Medicaid Rule May Cost State $400 Million; Health: Cuts would take effect next year under formula that determines federal contribution toward health program for the poor
60. State's 'Safety Net' Hospitals Face Deep Cuts; Health: U.S. plan to close regulatory loophole could cost the 73 facilities that serve the poor $300 million, officials say
61. Production Sees Biggest Drop Since '90; Economy: Decline in prices provides positive counterpoint to yet another slump in output by U.S. factories
62. Red Cross pledges to deliver all funds to victims, families
63. RESPONSE TO TERROR; Red Cross Answers Critics on Payments; Charity: In a reversal, the organization says all money donated for its Sept. 11 fund will go to victims and families
64. RESPONSE TO TERROR; DISEASE; More Anthrax Traces Found on Capitol Hill
65. Postal worker's cry for help was ignored
66. RESPONSE TO TERROR; THE ANTHRAX SCARE; Two Cases Elevate Fear on Anthrax; Health: Infections with no known sources raise doubts about how spores are thought to spread and general mail safety
67. RESPONSE TO TERROR; THE ANTHRAX THREAT; Hundreds of Postal Centers to Begin Using Radiation to Sanitize Mail
68. RESPONSE TO TERROR; THE ANTHRAX THREAT; Postal Service Weighs Using Radiation on Mail; Technology: Experts say such systems, employed by hospitals and the food industry, can kill viruses and bacteria, such as anthrax
69. RESPONSE TO TERROR; THE ANTHRAX THREAT; 2 D.C. Postal Workers Die; Anthrax Likely; Inquiry: Health officials reevaluate danger posed by tainted envelopes before they are opened. Postal Service takes safety steps
70. U.S. STRIKES BACK; BIOTERRORISM; Tracing Tainted Letters Is Daunting Detective Work; Search: Investigators have many tools, but postal experts say a major break will be needed to find senders
71. THE NATION; U.S. Study to Assess Medicare Drug Prices
72. OPEN ENROLLMENT; Open Questions; Selecting the right health plan is no simple task. Complicating things further are big price increases, instability among plans and a delay in legislative action on managed care reforms
73. Last GI to leave Saigon on list Veteran of two wars dies in attack on Pentagon
74. AMERICA ATTACKED; THE VICTIMS; Last Soldier to Leave Vietnam Is Feared Dead; Victims: Retired Army man Max Beilke, who survived two wars, was enjoying a second career at the Pentagon assisting veterans
75. THE NATION; Health Benefit Costs Soar 11% on Rising Drug Prices
76. Week in Review / TOP 10 STORIES / AUG. 26-31; Market Indicators Sink Near Spring Lows
77. Fed Chairman Talks of Limits to His Powers; Economy: Greenspan says stock market swings, home price fluctuations are making consumer behavior less predictable. (Alan Greenspan)
78. Medicare-patient HMOs to drop coverage for many
79. THE NATION; HMOs Persist in Medicare Pullback; Health: Hundreds of thousands of people will lose coverage next year, the White House says, promising rule changes
80. THE NATION; U.S. Will Take $9 Billion in Surplus Social Security Funds, Figures Show; Finances: Congressional Budget Office report runs counter to White House's scenario. Bush team downplays difference
81. THE NATION; Scarce Funds Imperil Bush Health Goals; Programs: Secretary Thompson pulls back from aid for uninsured children, blaming sour economy. Medicare plan is also endangered
82. THE NATION; White House Sees Shrinking Budget Surplus; Forecast: The projected figure is down $123 billion since April and uses Social Security funds. Stage set for a fight on spending priorities
83. THE NATION; Costly Precedents Seen for Retirement Reform; Social Security: Investment plans similar to those Bush proposes have been far more expensive than expected, experts testify
84. Medicare to cut more outpatient payments
85. Medicare planning outpatient cutbacks; Congress wants to curb high-tech costs
86. THE WORLD; Medicare May Slash Payments for High-Tech Outpatient Care; Health: The proposed cuts, due to mandated caps, could lead to unneeded hospital stays
87. The State; New Bush Policy May Boost Healthy Families; Insurance: California has been waiting for a federal waiver to expand coverage. The president's program may speed up a sluggish bureaucracy
88. THE NATION; Jobless Rate Is Steady at 4.5%; Economy: Experts say the July report offers hope that the downturn has ended and a turnaround may be near. Housing and auto sales remain healthy
89. THE NATION; Democrats Venture Into Realm of Social Security Privatization; Retirement: Their plan, offered to counter Bush's, would allow collective, not individual, stock buys
90. THE NATION; Limited Scope in Patients' Bill; Insurance: Those with coverage may gain from the health care measure before House
91. THE NATION; 'The System Is Broken,' Social Security Panel Declares
92. House OKs buying drugs from abroad by mail, Net
93. House Backs Drug Sales by Net, Mail; Health: The bill would let Americans get cheaper medicines from foreign suppliers. FDA cites safety concerns
94. Economic numbers continue to worsen Signs of recovery not found as service employment slows
95. Jobless Rate Rises to 4.5% as Economic Slide Persists
96. THE NATION; New Privacy Rules to Be Loosened; Medicine: Government says it will still allow routine health care activities without written consent
97. THE NATION; Business' Lobbying Against Patients' Bill of Rights Falls Short; Politics: Insurers and employers failed to prevent passage in the Senate. Now they hope for a House compromise
98. The Nation; Patients' Rights Negotiations Break Down Over Lawsuit Issue; Bill: Talks between the White House and Senate leaders fail to bring compromise. Aggressive, open debate is expected
99. THE NATION; Hurdles Big, Small for Retirement Reform; Social Security: Panel must decide how to handle taxpayers who invest as little as $40
100. THE NATION; A Retirement Revamp in Works; Social Security: Panel begins potentially difficult task of realizing Bush's goal of personal mutual fund accounts
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