Target is one of those discounters, and its Houston-area stores seemed to benefit from shoppers'cost consciousness, said Sid Keswani, manager of a SuperTarget store.
12.
Across the country, the increasing cost consciousness in the health-care industry has forced many hospitals to scale back their nursing staffs in favor of lower-paid technicians.
13.
"What's changing is the cost consciousness that we have in higher education, " said Berkey, the provost, who has taken his children to games for years.
14.
From its start in 1979, Boston Scientific has been a bet on medical care evolving toward the sort of cost consciousness that has fully taken hold only in the last few years.
15.
Raising the deductible would increase cost consciousness, because the patient would pay for more services out of his / her own pocket, and it would lower the taxpayers'share of the cost of Medicare.
16.
"General Ashy's flight reflects a culture that apparently lacks adequate cost consciousness in providing services to senior officials, " the Defense Department's inspector-general, Eleanor J . Hill, said in a report issued on Tuesday.
17.
Managers of the next wave of Internet companies have to return to basics : They need to build for the future, emulating the flexibility and cost consciousness that have long characterized successful new ventures.
18.
D . Hanania and B . Akasheh, " Cardiac Surgery in Jordan,'A Developing Country .'" In " Surgery for All : Surgical Cost Consciousness in the Developing World " ( Ferozons Limited & MacMillan Publishers Ltd .)
19.
In 1995, Po decided to apply the discipline, cost consciousness and competitiveness of the fish processing industry to the meat processing business and Argentina was introduced with the establishment of the "'Pacific Meat Company Inc . "'( PMCI ).
20.
And with increased cost consciousness has come a new appreciation of the problem of " noncompliance, " as medicine has labeled the phenomenon of skipping some doses, doubling up on others, forgetting to refill at the end of the month, or taking a few of a family member's antibiotics on the chance they will work better than the ones prescribed.