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Funding for Alzheimers has lagged behind other medical issues, advocates say, and the disease is now the sixth-leading cause of death in the United States. Without breakthroughs, the number of those affected aged 65 and older will double by 2050.
March 20 -
International rules designed to make derivative transactions safer by increasing collateral requirements may lead pension plans to take unnecessary risks, according to the National Association of Pension Funds
March 20 -
Mayor Michael Bloomberg called for legislation to make New York the first U.S. city to require stores to conceal tobacco products, a week after a court struck down his ban on the sale of large sugary beverages.
March 19 -
Labor groups applauded the nomination of Thomas Perez, saying he has been a champion for working people who sought to eliminate discrimination in housing, provide access to education and health care, and crack down on employers who try to avoid paying fair wages.
March 19 -
President Barack Obama named Thomas Perez, an assistant U.S. attorney general, as his choice for labor secretary in his second term. Perez would replace Hilda Solis, ensuring that the Labor Department is led again by a Hispanic, helping the president maintain diversity in his cabinet. Solis resigned in January.
March 19 -
A federal judge has issued a preliminary injunction on PPACAs contraception requirement, saying an employers First Amendment rights could be irreparably harmed if the mandate was enforced while a lawsuit was pending.
March 18 -
Ford Motor Co., while moving to close a growing deficit in its pension, will shift more of its plans assets to fixed income to shield against changes in interest rates.
March 17 -
California should force state workers to use up their vacation time rather than bank it until retirement, the Legislative Analysts Office said after finding the cost to taxpayers has reached a historic high.
March 15 -
The Los Angeles Fire and Police Pension System, with about $15.7 billion in assets, is allocating about $785 million for commodities, its first investment in the asset class.
March 15 -
Governors who refuse to expand their Medicaid programs for the poor may cost employers in their states as much as $1.3 billion in federal fines, according to a new study.
March 14 -
Air Canada stock gained the most in a week after the carrier reached an agreement with the Canadian federal government to extend a cap on pension funding by seven years, vividly demonstrating the impact of pension obligations and the price of publicly traded sponsors common stock shares.
March 14 -
New Jerseys public pension deficit swelled 13% to $47.2 billion in fiscal 2012 as the state continued to make partial contributions to its retirement plans.
March 13 -
Older U.S. adults may get too many colonoscopies, costing Medicare an estimated $500 million a year and putting patients at an increased risk of side effects such as bleeding, researchers found.
March 13 -
Illinois became the second state to settle with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over charges it misled investors about a growing shortfall in its employee pension funds as it sold $2.2 billion in bonds.
March 12 -
If a new potential therapy for slowing the onset of Alzheimers disease is successful, the use of PET scans which cost $1,500 to $3,500 apiece will explode, says one scientist involved in the research.
March 11 -
While experts once predicted savings of as much as $81 billion a year from electronic records, U.S. health care spending has continued to increase, partly because of systems that dont share information, they say.
March 11 -
By the time Astra Augustus left Virtua Memorial Hospital in New Jersey after the last of four surgeries, shed run up about $255,000 in bills.
March 11 -
Insurer Boasts 2% Average Fees on Annuity Assets.
March 8 -
New York Citys police pension wont sell about $10 million in gun-related holdings, the president of the biggest officer union says.
March 7 -
Bacteria including E. coli resistant to all or nearly all antibiotics are being seen in increasing numbers, according to news this week from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Worse, the most dangerous kind of bacteria are growing in proportion.
March 6