Fred Principles of Risk Management and Insurance Wall Street Journal Assignment 3 Due 16 Jun 05 Dr Deloach Wall Street Journal 1 June 2005 Edition HEALTH-CARE LEADER, WHERE ART THOU? Healthcare reform issues have been in need of leadership from the CEO’s charged with making them viable and so far Washington has failed to provide guidance. Business has taken the lead role in addressing the county’s healthcare worries, but it also needs to be addressed by the political party candidates when assuming the party’s leadership role. With current costs slowing, businesses have taken credit for nearly doubling the amount of firms with “health savings accounts” to their workers from 14% to 26%. This trend allows insurance to return to their classic role of paying for ‘catastrophic’ medical bills while consumers save tax-free to cover routine medical costs and small emergencies. This idea introduces incentives to spend healthcare dollars more wisely. This tax-incentive plan makes two crucial points: The impact on how the healthcare industry organizes, delivers, and prices it services won’t be felt until thousands of companies with millions of employees are doing the same; and companies need to offer such plans not in parallel with conventional plans, but as a sole option.
In closing, will tax incentives figure more prominently in the mainstream? Well until reformers learn how to break the tax code, businesses will have no choice but to provide leadership in coping with the nation’s healthcare economy. Jenkins Jr, Holman W. , Wall Street Journal, 1 June 2005 Edition, pg. A 21.
The Essay on Transformational Leadership Plan
Transformational Leadership Plan Introduction and Leadership Theory The concepts of leadership and management are interrelated, and in order to succeed in the future career, it is very important to be an effective leader. Although there are many theories of leadership (such as transactional, situational, charismatic, etc), transformational leadership is, evidently, the best leadership theory. ...
Fred Principles of Risk Management and Insurance Wall Street Journal Assignment 4 Due 23 Jun 05 Dr Deloach ” Tobacco Accord Seems Likelier As Government Cuts Demands ” Slashing cost to $10 billion for stop-smoking program may help bring a settlement in the anti-smoking case brought about by the US government. The $130 billion lawsuit being trimmed to $10 billion could bring the sides a step closer to settlement and at least give the government’s case a better chance to survive an appeal. This compromise could fund a smoking-cessation program valued at $10 billion over five years instead of $130 billion over 25 years. Experts believe this reduced amount reflects a more realistic view of what tobacco companies might settle for. The requested program would target only current smokers and those who start smoking in the near future, government officials note, but I could be extended repeatedly-if a court-appointed monitor finds continuing industry misconduct.
Tobacco company lawyers say they are preparing briefs arguing that the judge, Gladys Kessler, shouldn’t have allowed government lawyers to reshape their case after the upcoming appellate-court ruling. In addition, the suggested remedies don’t meet the legal standards on restraining future conduct. The suit was originally filed in 1999 by the Clinton administration, as a follow-on to a separate lawsuit brought by 46 states and settled in 1998 for $206 billion. Justice Department officials said its proposed remedies were narrowed in response to the appeals-court ruling, not political pressure. O’Connell, Vanessa, Wilke, John R.
, Wall Street Journal, 13 June 2005 Ed. , pg. B 3. Fred Principles of Risk Management and Insurance Wall Street Journal Assignment 5 Due 30 Jun 05 Dr Deloach ” Shock Treatment for Canadian Health Care ” Supreme Court paves the way for private provider, insurers alongside public system in Quebec — A ruling by Canada’s top court is expected to open the door to broader private health-care services in the country, which often grapples with providing funded health care. Canada’s Supreme Court ruled that the province of Quebec’s prohibition on private insurance for services covered by the public system violates the province’s bill of rights. Many policy experts believe the ruling will eventually spawn legal challenges to legislation in other provinces.
The Essay on Fourteenth Amendment Segregation Ruling Cases
Segregation, in the dictionary, is defined as the act or process of being separated from others of the same kind (Webster 1058). In United States history, the segregation of blacks and whites has been a major issue. The Supreme Court records are filled with many cases dealing with issues of race, discrimination, and segregation. Two of these cases stand out among the rest. Their controversy was ...
Many Canadians take pride in their country’s public funded healthcare system, which provides all citizens with healthcare for no charge beyond the taxed they pay. The down side of these benefits are the long waits in the emergency rooms, the long-awaited appointments in the doctor’s offices and prolonged waits for chronic treatments such as cancer and other fatal diseases. In retrospect, this ruling could lead to “considerable business opportunity for U. S.
Healthcare providers and insurance underwriters who can cover the Canadians healthcare needs. In practice, the demand for private services is likely to revolve around non-urgent care. In these countries that have government-supported healthcare, urgent and expensive life-threatening cases still go back to the public system. Heinz el, Mark, Chip ello, Christopher J.
, Wall Street Journal, 13 June 2005 Ed. , pg. B 3.