Canada’s Aging Baby Boomers: Planning Health Insurance for the FutureWritten by Anna Dorbyk
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Opting for supplemental health insurance allows you to customize your plan to suit your individual needs. For many seniors, prospect of spending time in a hospital is not a pleasant one, but with supplemental coverage, a private room in a health care facility can make stay more comfortable. Not only does health insurance ease worry that individuals may have concerning their own personal welfare, but it also helps to assuage fears of family members on whom burden of long-term care would fall. As ten million Canadians begin to approach time in their life when retiring is imminent, it becomes a necessity to plan for whatever eventualities future might hold. Thinking ahead to answer various demands of aging helps guarantee a peace of mind for yourself and your family and ensures that you are ready to face challenge of life’s milestones.

Anna Dorbyk is the editor for Canada Health Insurance and is a graduate student in Communication Studies at Concordia University. For more information on health insurance for Canadians please visit www.canada-health-insurance.com.
| | Shareholders meeting changing with timesWritten by Eric Newman
Continued from page 1 Attention is being focused on how shareholders on both sides--those attempting takeovers and individual shareholders in target firms--will judge defense measures proposed at meetings. At one technological company’s shareholders meeting this past spring in San Francisco, managers hoped to obtain shareholder approval for business integration with another company. But major stokeholder, James Harold Garrison, 61 of Palo Alto, California has called on other shareholders to oppose plan, drawing attention to result of shareholders meeting. Another trend is increasing number of companies using information technology for voting and other purposes. Systems on shareholders voting via internet were liberalized sometime in 2002, and according to four major trust banks, number of corporations offering online voting increased from 403 last year to 698 this year. The number of firms allowing voting by cell phone increased from 59 last year to 354. Many corporations also plan to adopt live internet broadcasts of their shareholders meetings.

Eric Newman is an author for Teanobi.com. All articles may be used and reprinted as long as they have an active link at the bottom pointing to http://www.teanobi.com with the anchored text: Teanobi - Green Tea
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