- Corporate Cost-Cutting: Will Early Gains Turn to Pain?
- Earnings Woke Up the Market, but Can It Continue?
- China Regulator: Bank Lending May Be Overheating
- The 15 Most Expensive Cities on Earth
- Box Office: 'Potter' Hauls in $160 Million in 5 Days
- Healthcare Debate: Obama Tries to Regain Upper Hand
- Berkshire Hathaway Rallies for Best Week Since March
- Cramer: Know When to Go Long—I Haven't Always
- Think the Best Earnings Are Yet to Come? Think Again!
- Market 360: The Week's Best & Worst
- How Bad is the DVD Decline and Who Suffers?
- Teva, Propofol And Michael Jackson
- Pros Say: US Market Rally Likely to Continue
- Gold Miner Attracting Big Bull Interest
- Dick Bove: Next Week’s Bank Earnings Will Be ‘Terrible’
- Jesuthasan: 'Deleveraging Pay-The Proof is in the Bathwater'
- Art Cashin: Traders Don't Trust 'Short Term' Earnings
- Chadwick: National Health Care Plan – Dead On Arrival
- SF train operator’s actions come under scrutiny
- Indiana Harbor East to restart blast furnace
- Mich. agency worried over Delphi bankruptcy plan
- Teenagers may receive pay raise this week
- Burn ban casts pall on grass seed growers' future
- Giant, Stop & Shop recall sorbet
- 4 dead after building collapse in Brazil
- Retail already feeling effects of CIT’s faltering
- Federal stimulus money for Illinois roads, bridges
Health care overhaul seen as `a work in progress'
WASHINGTON - The president's health secretary says the Obama administration's health care overhaul is "a work in progress."
Health and Human Services chief Kathleen Sebelius says President Barack Obama remains committed to a plan that would provide health care for all Americans. She says the status quo is unacceptable and she is waiting to see the final version of legislation Congress produces — already several plans are being worked on.
Sebelius says Obama's plan would increase competition among insurers and would not limit people's choices.
She says costs must be contained and any overhaul must be paid for.
She was interviewed Sunday on NBC television's "Meet the Press."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




