183
183
Feb 13, 2014
02/14
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KQEH
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when my grandfather had alzheimer's, it was back in the late 80's. diagnosed until he died and had an autopsy. my grandmother was very private and did not let anyone know what is going on. the things that we saw that or just quirks or him getting forgetful were serious. having had that experience, when my dad got dementia, he got vascular dementia. he had heart surgery and had complications and strokes. essentially, dementia is the death of brain cells. that is how that started. we recognized what he was going through and we were better equipped to deal with it. we took turns after my mom passed away staying with dad. he went to live with my brother, then went to a fantastic assisted living place where he had lots of people to be social with. at the end, the dementia started increasing where the alzheimer's crept in. the flu and he died, and we were glad because we knew -- he still knew us when he died unlike my grandfather. tavis: your dad got to see some of the best of your work on "frasier." >> yes. tavis: since you were on last? 20 years. the cov
when my grandfather had alzheimer's, it was back in the late 80's. diagnosed until he died and had an autopsy. my grandmother was very private and did not let anyone know what is going on. the things that we saw that or just quirks or him getting forgetful were serious. having had that experience, when my dad got dementia, he got vascular dementia. he had heart surgery and had complications and strokes. essentially, dementia is the death of brain cells. that is how that started. we recognized...
89
89
Feb 27, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN2
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alzheimer's. we used census estimates to s. make up annual cost of dementia in the united states and we found actual spending attributable to dementia was $109 billion in 2010. this cost place is dementia as the most costly disease in the united states in terms of actual spending. adding in costs for informal care increased its estimate to a range of $160 million and $250 billion per year. because the prevalence of dementia sharply increases with age and the aging of the population itself particularly when the baby boom generation reaches an advanced age will increase future costs. the cost for care purchase the marketplace while increased in real terms from the 2010 value of $109 billion to $260 billion in 2040 and that's in real terms. adding in the cost of the informal care increases the cost estimate to the range of 380 billion to $510 billion per year in 2040. we are extending this research in two directions. dementia is very costly on average but these costs are unequally distributed. some households than nothing while ot
alzheimer's. we used census estimates to s. make up annual cost of dementia in the united states and we found actual spending attributable to dementia was $109 billion in 2010. this cost place is dementia as the most costly disease in the united states in terms of actual spending. adding in costs for informal care increased its estimate to a range of $160 million and $250 billion per year. because the prevalence of dementia sharply increases with age and the aging of the population itself...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
52
52
Feb 10, 2014
02/14
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SFGTV
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eye 52
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in your 30's and 40's and you have them into your aging process, you are not going to have a comfortable old age. you are also seeing in terms of epidemics, an increase in alzheimer's and it is going to increase as the population increases. there are quite a few seniors who have mental health problems but they are also, the majority of seniors, who are hard-working, who had minimum wage jobs their whole lives, who paid social security. think about living on $889 a month in the city of san francisco needing to buy medication, one meal a day, hopefully, and health care. if we could provide health care early on we might prevent (inaudible) and people would be less likely to end up in the emergency room with a drastic outcome. we could actually provide prevention and health care to people who had no other way of getting health care, those without insurance, it might be more cost effective >> welcome to the san francisco historic preservation commission regular meeting. for wednesday, february 5, 2014. please be aware that the commission did not trotter any disruptions and when speaking before the commission if you care to do state your name for the record. i'd like to
in your 30's and 40's and you have them into your aging process, you are not going to have a comfortable old age. you are also seeing in terms of epidemics, an increase in alzheimer's and it is going to increase as the population increases. there are quite a few seniors who have mental health problems but they are also, the majority of seniors, who are hard-working, who had minimum wage jobs their whole lives, who paid social security. think about living on $889 a month in the city of san...
316
316
Feb 21, 2014
02/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 316
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s first words in the financial crisis. ashley: technology able to protect the likelihood of alzheimer's, diabetes and heart disease among otherket cornered. how it managed to hold on at 90% of the genome markets. sandra: the city struggles to $18 billion in debt. details on that ahead. ♪ [ male announcer ] this m has an accomplished research and analytical group at his disposal. ♪ but even more pressive is how he puts it to work fohis clients. ♪ morning. morning. thanks for meeting so early. oh, it's not a big deaat all. come on in. [ male announcer ] it's how edward jones makes sensof investing. ♪ ashley: of fox business news alert, federal reserve releasing transcripts of its meetings at the very height of the financial crisis in 2008. i am sure it makes interesting reading. peter barnes coming through hundreds of pages. peter: the fed releasing transcripts of 14 scheduled an emergency policy meetings it held in 2008. at the beginning of the financial crisis former chairman ben bernanke and his colleagues feared to to the economy into a second great depression and the transcripts bring home a point that i catch a lot of fla
s first words in the financial crisis. ashley: technology able to protect the likelihood of alzheimer's, diabetes and heart disease among otherket cornered. how it managed to hold on at 90% of the genome markets. sandra: the city struggles to $18 billion in debt. details on that ahead. ♪ [ male announcer ] this m has an accomplished research and analytical group at his disposal. ♪ but even more pressive is how he puts it to work fohis clients. ♪ morning. morning. thanks for meeting so...
235
235
Feb 18, 2014
02/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 235
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s&p. the nasdaq doing the best of the bunch, up 0.5%. >> carl icahn's latest grand slam to my home run, knocked out of the park -- forest labs. forest labs is the makers of alzheimer'sgs and has been a huge positive today. carl icahn waited it out and it seemed to pay off. >> and lexapro, right? >> yes. let's take a look at coke. >> shares and coca-cola are now down 3.33%. that was the story i was buzzing about this weekend. the comeback of global markets and the rally you may not have expected from emerging markets. they have really powered up. >> when you see a company like coke have a billion dollar cost-cutting plan, the question is, is it a positive? or negative because they need to do that? stay with us. we are talking candy crush. is it a new model for game makers? ♪ >> live from bloomberg headquarters in new york, this is "market makers," with erik schatzker and stephanie ruhle. >> welcome back to market makers. i am filling in with erik schatzker -- for erik schatzker while he stays him in place candy crush. no. >> maybe. >> chances are that you know one of the people playing candy crush were you sat next to one of them on the subway this morning. the maker
s&p. the nasdaq doing the best of the bunch, up 0.5%. >> carl icahn's latest grand slam to my home run, knocked out of the park -- forest labs. forest labs is the makers of alzheimer'sgs and has been a huge positive today. carl icahn waited it out and it seemed to pay off. >> and lexapro, right? >> yes. let's take a look at coke. >> shares and coca-cola are now down 3.33%. that was the story i was buzzing about this weekend. the comeback of global markets and the...
136
136
Feb 27, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN
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eye 136
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my s this trip when i met now mother-in-law laura admitted to me and herself something was off with her mother. both of her parents had alzheimer's disease. soon after this trip her mother was diagnosised with early on set alzheimer's. at this point my impression of alzheimer's is what i assume most people's impression is. i thought it was something only really old people got and i thought the way the disease showed its was in the form of forgotten keys, wearing mismatched shoes and being asked the same question over and over. this period which was the only way i had seen it displayed was the way it lasted for a few years. after that is when i saw the real ugly truth of the disease. after forgetting who she and her loved ones are forgot how to speak, feed herself, dress herself and go to the bathroom herself all by the age of 60. lauren's father and a team of care givers dedicate their lives to letting her be as comfortable azshek be. there is no way to prevent, cure or even slow the progression of alzheimer's disease. another thing i didn't realize until i was personally affected is the shame and stigma associated with the disea
my s this trip when i met now mother-in-law laura admitted to me and herself something was off with her mother. both of her parents had alzheimer's disease. soon after this trip her mother was diagnosised with early on set alzheimer's. at this point my impression of alzheimer's is what i assume most people's impression is. i thought it was something only really old people got and i thought the way the disease showed its was in the form of forgotten keys, wearing mismatched shoes and being asked...