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Mar 14, 2010
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and parkinson's disease had been around for over 100 years and like today it was a disease associated with that chance in decades in life people usually call it in their seventies, eighties, nineties. it became so prevalent at this time with this epidemic the average age was 32-years-old. it continued to about 36-years-old during the late 1920's and then took decades to once again be considered disorder that was associated with advancing years. you may have heard of the word awakening were seen the movie will then williams actually plays oliver sacks in the movie and he encountered a group of these extreme parkinson's patients in the late 1960's. he was a young neurologist who never learned about this disease and he found them in a chronic hospital. they were appearing to be catatonic for the most part. they couldn't speak or move. they were wheelchair-bound and what he found out was looking through all of their old medical history they had all been survivors of this sleeping sickness 40 years before so he decided that this was some kind of extreme form of parkinson's that have litera
and parkinson's disease had been around for over 100 years and like today it was a disease associated with that chance in decades in life people usually call it in their seventies, eighties, nineties. it became so prevalent at this time with this epidemic the average age was 32-years-old. it continued to about 36-years-old during the late 1920's and then took decades to once again be considered disorder that was associated with advancing years. you may have heard of the word awakening were seen...
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Mar 28, 2010
03/10
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and so the most prevalent disorder and what became the hallmark of the disease was parkinson's and parkinson's disease had been around for over 100 years and like today it was a disease associated with advancing decades and life. people usually caught it in their seventies, eighties, nineties. it became so prevalent at this time with this epidemic that the average age of onset was 32-years-old. it continued to about 36-years-old during the late 1920's and then it took decades to once again be considered a disorder that was associated with advancing years. you may have heard of the book awakenings written by oliver sacks or seen the movie, robin williams actually plays him in the movie. and he encountered a group of these extreme parkinson's patients in the late 1960's. he was a young neurologist who never learned about this disease and he found them in a comic hospital. they were all appearing to be catatonic for the most part. they couldn't speak, they couldn't move, they were wheelchair-bound and what he found was looking for their medical histories they had all been survivors of the sleepin
and so the most prevalent disorder and what became the hallmark of the disease was parkinson's and parkinson's disease had been around for over 100 years and like today it was a disease associated with advancing decades and life. people usually caught it in their seventies, eighties, nineties. it became so prevalent at this time with this epidemic that the average age of onset was 32-years-old. it continued to about 36-years-old during the late 1920's and then it took decades to once again be...
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Mar 21, 2010
03/10
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CNN
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like diuretics, alpha blockers, drugs for parkinson's. blood less, lack of nutrients in your diet. as always, direct any questions to your doctor. now for fit nation this week we're going to talk about something i'm interested in. people say they don't have enough time to exercise. a lot of people say that's not an excuse anymore. some research says you can exercise less and get just as fit. this is going to sound gimmicky. stay with me. the key is known as h.i.t. high interval training. 20 minutes of high intensity exercising does burn more calories and build more muscle than someone who jogs leisurely for even an hour. here's why. you exercise very intensely for a minute, take a break for a minute, exercise for a minute, take a break, and so on and so forth. so you get ten minutes of heart exercise and ten minutes of more reps. what they found was first of all your heart rate, while it dropped during the rest periods, did not drop significantly. so you are continuing to have an aerobic workout. the second thing was endurs measured after a period of time seemed good as someone who
like diuretics, alpha blockers, drugs for parkinson's. blood less, lack of nutrients in your diet. as always, direct any questions to your doctor. now for fit nation this week we're going to talk about something i'm interested in. people say they don't have enough time to exercise. a lot of people say that's not an excuse anymore. some research says you can exercise less and get just as fit. this is going to sound gimmicky. stay with me. the key is known as h.i.t. high interval training. 20...
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Mar 20, 2010
03/10
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medications like die retdices, alpha blockers, beta blockers, drugs for parkinson's disease, anti-depressants, pregnancy, heart problems, allergic reaction, severe infections, blood loss, of course, lack of nutrients in the diets. this affects a lot of people and consult with your doctor and direct any questions if you have any concerns. >>> now for fit nation this week, we talk about something i'm very interested in. i think about this all the time. people say they don't have enough time to exercise. a lot of people say, look, that's not an excuse anymore. there's research saying you can exercise less and get just as fit. now, this is going to sound gimmi gimmicky. the key is known as h.i.t. high interval training. high intensity training burns more calories and possibly build more muscle than someone that jogs leisurely for even an hour. here's why. the dper size very intensely for a minute, take a break for a minute, exercise for a minute and take a break and so on and so forth for 20 minutes for hard exercise and ten minutes of a little bit more rest. what they found was, first of all, th
medications like die retdices, alpha blockers, beta blockers, drugs for parkinson's disease, anti-depressants, pregnancy, heart problems, allergic reaction, severe infections, blood loss, of course, lack of nutrients in the diets. this affects a lot of people and consult with your doctor and direct any questions if you have any concerns. >>> now for fit nation this week, we talk about something i'm very interested in. i think about this all the time. people say they don't have enough...
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Mar 24, 2010
03/10
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MSNBC
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left for the wedding this weekend, that guy yelling, making fun of the guy who was suffering from parkinson'svictim was sitting on the ground. obviously a guy in desperate shape. you may not agree with him, but that kind of ugliness -- what do you think of that, pat? it fits with this. i understand why middle class people are worried. they may have health insurance. they may pay taxes that are too high for their ability to pay. people may figure there's freeloaders out there, they may have all kinds of regular republican attitudes, but this goes beyond that. >> the behavior toward that guy sitting there. i don't know who put that guy there. >> i think he crawled there. >> he crawled all the way out there? >> it looks like it. >> who made the sign? >> it doesn't matter how he got there. >> he had to bring us together. the behavior -- >> here we go. >> we're going back to outside agitators. >> okay, i don't know -- >> let's assume he got there on his own. >> let's assume that. the behavior was contemptible by those few individuals calling the congressman names. even calling barney frank names.
left for the wedding this weekend, that guy yelling, making fun of the guy who was suffering from parkinson'svictim was sitting on the ground. obviously a guy in desperate shape. you may not agree with him, but that kind of ugliness -- what do you think of that, pat? it fits with this. i understand why middle class people are worried. they may have health insurance. they may pay taxes that are too high for their ability to pay. people may figure there's freeloaders out there, they may have all...
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Mar 20, 2010
03/10
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CNN
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my husband has parkinson's disease.going progressive disease and in the future we know that our medical care is going to be limited. it's already happened and with medicare and medicaid and they're very fearful of their coverage and what's going to happen to them. >> reporter: this is not the only protest that's going to take place. this group is going to go to their house of representatives all throughout the day to pressure them to vote this bill down and they're planning a candlelight vigil later this evening. they say they will be here for the vote tomorrow. >> wow. it looks like quite the scene out there. thank you so much, sandra. >>> now, for the latest on the health care debate and if you want to find out where every house member stands on the plan, go to cnn.com/healthcare. >>> pope benedict xvi is breaking his silence on the child abuse scandal that's hit the catholic church in ireland. today releasing an 18-page pastoral letter apologizing to the victims. he says i have been deeply disturbed by the informatio
my husband has parkinson's disease.going progressive disease and in the future we know that our medical care is going to be limited. it's already happened and with medicare and medicaid and they're very fearful of their coverage and what's going to happen to them. >> reporter: this is not the only protest that's going to take place. this group is going to go to their house of representatives all throughout the day to pressure them to vote this bill down and they're planning a candlelight...
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Mar 20, 2010
03/10
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CSPAN
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tossing money at a guy who is crippled with parkinson's disease. the second thing.e said 200,000 people were at a rally last year. but it is happy but the tea party. that is a buy. i wish to call this people. they have 84,000 or 50,000 people there. who are the health care corporations that back americans for prosperity? guest: there are three questions in there. i will address each of them. the demand in cents a hannay -- cincinnati was reprehensible. when you have large crowds, someone acts out of line. that is the situation there. it is inappropriate. i do think that if we are going to address people who have diseases, which should have a positive vision for research and development in finding new cures. i worry we are going to discourage a lot of this development if we had more government controls and centralize authority. in the rest the world, there is little innovation because there is not access to the market. if we go down the path of this bill, we will not be able to address incurable diseases. regarding how many people wear here september 12, i'm not an e
tossing money at a guy who is crippled with parkinson's disease. the second thing.e said 200,000 people were at a rally last year. but it is happy but the tea party. that is a buy. i wish to call this people. they have 84,000 or 50,000 people there. who are the health care corporations that back americans for prosperity? guest: there are three questions in there. i will address each of them. the demand in cents a hannay -- cincinnati was reprehensible. when you have large crowds, someone acts...
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Mar 14, 2010
03/10
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CSPAN2
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has parkinson's disease, and he was, he was really reagan's, sounds to matter, but secret weapon, soto speak. he's the man who, for all of 1982 and 83, worked at reagan's national security council and laid out -- there's a paper trail of this -- very specific directives with the intention of peacefully taking down the soviet union and bringing democracy, or as they put in the document, political pluralism, to eastern europe and the soviet union. so that was a joy, because myself, my family, we spent a couple of summers spending at clark's ranch in of event data, getting to know him and his family. and that's a case where it wasn't just a matter of looking at documents and looking at books and other things and that people have been, i actually got to know the figure is a lot of time with him. >> had you come to write about hillary clinton? >> yes, that's -- the god of ronald reagan books started a trend i guess. my editor at harpercollins, your next book onto the the faith of george w. bush that he was the current president. and at the time it had been any books. stephen mansfield boo
has parkinson's disease, and he was, he was really reagan's, sounds to matter, but secret weapon, soto speak. he's the man who, for all of 1982 and 83, worked at reagan's national security council and laid out -- there's a paper trail of this -- very specific directives with the intention of peacefully taking down the soviet union and bringing democracy, or as they put in the document, political pluralism, to eastern europe and the soviet union. so that was a joy, because myself, my family, we...
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Mar 28, 2010
03/10
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really, i guess specifically to race, but you know, we all seen the video where the person with parkinson'sas like, i guess uninvite edly treated. we all seen that. this is not a grass roots organization in my opinion. it's sponsored by yours and other conservative organizations so to say, well, you know this is built for the ground up and that and the other it's really not genuine. host: thanks. matt kibbe? guest: we are a grass roots organization. our job has always been to put people together that share our views of less government and more freedom and less taxes. that's the ultimate goal of a democracy society. in terms of relationships to tea partys a lot of our members would be self described tea party leaders and members. i could point to early grass roots programs against big government spending both in the ending days of bush and obama administration. i would say today the grass roots operation in terms of growing government and the process by which their doing sit not just about the tea party movement or freedomworks members. this is the very center of public opinion today. americ
really, i guess specifically to race, but you know, we all seen the video where the person with parkinson'sas like, i guess uninvite edly treated. we all seen that. this is not a grass roots organization in my opinion. it's sponsored by yours and other conservative organizations so to say, well, you know this is built for the ground up and that and the other it's really not genuine. host: thanks. matt kibbe? guest: we are a grass roots organization. our job has always been to put people...
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Mar 18, 2010
03/10
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engaged in abusive language directed at one of my constituents who suffers the terrible ravages of parkinson's disease. they treated him like a beggar, they threw dollar bills at him, they did not respect his humanity. they did not respect his rights to give his opinion on the health care bill. this type of protest goes too far. it has crossed the line. the health care debate reform -- the health care legislation -- the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady's time has expired. ms. kilroy: when it comes to medical care, it should respect our rights as citizens to express our opinions. the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentleman from indiana rise? >> i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute. revise and extend my remarks, madam speaker. the speaker pro tempore: so ordered. mr. pence: this is a remarkable moment in the life of our nation. after years of run away federal spending, deficits, debt, borrowing, bailouts, and takeovers against the opposition of a clear majority of the american people, the democrats in congress and in this administration are prepared to
engaged in abusive language directed at one of my constituents who suffers the terrible ravages of parkinson's disease. they treated him like a beggar, they threw dollar bills at him, they did not respect his humanity. they did not respect his rights to give his opinion on the health care bill. this type of protest goes too far. it has crossed the line. the health care debate reform -- the health care legislation -- the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady's time has expired. ms. kilroy: when it...
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Mar 20, 2010
03/10
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health care even though they have asthma, even though they have diabetes, even though they have parkinson's, whether they are republicans or democrats or red and blue states, all americans deserve to be able to have insurance in this country. that's what we're going to do tomorrow. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back. the gentleman from colorado. >> thank you, madam speaker. there are some important and vital and principled reasons why this side of the aisle will be opposing the health care plan should it come to a vote tomorrow. and just briefly let me recap these. it raises taxes by $570 billion over 10 years. it will cost the taxpayers $1.2 trillion, not to mention the so-called doc fix of about $371 billion, a massive increase of government spending. it's also a takeover by the government. a dramatic step away from personal-private coverage and choice to a government-run system that will end up rationing care. it's unconstitutional. there's nowhere in the constitution that says the government has the power to require every single person to go out and buy insurance whether
health care even though they have asthma, even though they have diabetes, even though they have parkinson's, whether they are republicans or democrats or red and blue states, all americans deserve to be able to have insurance in this country. that's what we're going to do tomorrow. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back. the gentleman from colorado. >> thank you, madam speaker. there are some important and vital and principled reasons why this side of the aisle will be...