Abstracts - faqs.org

Abstracts

Literature/writing

Search abstracts:
Abstracts » Literature/writing

Veterans care: records detail nation's treatment, oversight gaps

Article Abstract:

The VA is the one with more than 170 hospitals across the country and is the largest care system in the United States. Doctors not doing their jobs, unsupervised residents rotating in and out of the VA, leaving veterans' medical care postponed again and death rates for open-heart surgery centers that would unacceptable at any other hospital are the problems noticed at Cleveland Veterans Affairs Center.

Author: Mazzolini, Joan
Publisher: Investigative Reporters & Editors Inc.
Publication Name: The IRE Journal
Subject: Literature/writing
ISSN: 0164-7016
Year: 2003
Services information, General Medical and Surgical Hospitals, General medical & surgical hospitals, Veterans, Veterans & Military Hospitals, Care and treatment, Services, Hospitals, Veterans', Veterans hospitals

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


Don't count on federal oversight: skyrocketing complaints serve as red flag to reporters

Article Abstract:

Gross corporate dishonesty, a federal investigation which abrupted the resignation of three CEO's from two of the largest financial institutions in America and perhaps billions of dollars wrongly taken from millions of credit card consumers were just some of the discoveries that resulted in nine-month WFAA-TV investigation.

Author: Williams, Valeri
Publisher: Investigative Reporters & Editors Inc.
Publication Name: The IRE Journal
Subject: Literature/writing
ISSN: 0164-7016
Year: 2000
Corporations

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


Salaries, Perks, and Pensions: Corporate collapse: challenging assumptions was key to pursuing Enron's shaky, but often legal, steps

Article Abstract:

The Enron seemed to be massive mismanagement at an unconscionable scale, with executives taking advantages of the rules. Kurt Eichenwald, the investigative reporter at The New York Times, believes that Enron proved to be both one of the most frustrating and rewarding corporate fraud stories he had handled.

Author: Eichenwald, Kurt
Publisher: Investigative Reporters & Editors Inc.
Publication Name: The IRE Journal
Subject: Literature/writing
ISSN: 0164-7016
Year: 2003
Management dynamics, Natural gas transmission, Management, Company business management, Gas transmission industry, Enron Corp., ENRNQ

User Contributions:

Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:

CAPTCHA


Subjects list: United States, Evaluation, Corporate corruption
Similar abstracts:
  • Abstracts: Felons avoid deportation, slip back into community. Parental rights. Foster care
  • Abstracts: The big one: trials and tribulations of high-stakes journalism. Attacks on style and substance
  • Abstracts: Appeals court affirms contempt citations. Between a Roche and a hard place. Student jailed for refusing to identify sources
  • Abstracts: Newspaper averts restraint requested by Church of Scientology over copyright claim. King estate's copyright in 'Dream' speech upheld on appeal
  • Abstracts: Philadelphia police: the artful dodgers. Chopper wars: competition for patients becomes dangerous game
This website is not affiliated with document authors or copyright owners. This page is provided for informational purposes only. Unintentional errors are possible.
Some parts © 2025 Advameg, Inc.