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Apr 5, 2011
04/11
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KNTV
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eye 60
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many of the patients were under anesthesia when they were abused. >>> the hole in the southwest airliner was caused by simple wear and tear forcing an emergency landing and international investigation. the faa has issued an emergency directive to check for cracks in all 737 jets that have taken off or landed more than 30,000 times. the order affected 80 jets registered in the u.s., most of them operates by southwest. three had cracks similar to those found on the problem plane. planes used on short haul flights have greater met alpha teague. >> the faa doesn't know what the failure time will be. the manufacture will do the tests and come up with an idea. it's not going to be perfect. they will live with the idea until something happens like happened on southwest. >> now, this is not the first time a 737 cracked open leaving a hole. in 1988 a plane had explosive decompression which killed a flight attendant. she was blown out through the hole. >>> the quake in japan has us wondering how a big one would hit. cheryl hurd reports there are big holes in the emergency response systems. >> repo
many of the patients were under anesthesia when they were abused. >>> the hole in the southwest airliner was caused by simple wear and tear forcing an emergency landing and international investigation. the faa has issued an emergency directive to check for cracks in all 737 jets that have taken off or landed more than 30,000 times. the order affected 80 jets registered in the u.s., most of them operates by southwest. three had cracks similar to those found on the problem plane. planes...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 29, 2011
04/11
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SFGTV
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and practices that have nothing to do with recent allegations regarding false anesthesia billings. supervisor campos: don't be shy. >> the experience that my family has had with services for very young children, my daughter was born premature. we looked at the facility. every aspect of the care that they need is essential. losing a specialist is something that can really put a family in jeopardy of losing a life. it is the critical and they are so young and so small. they want to provide the high quality care. they rely on the care to live more peaceably with what the outcomes will be about. it is really unfortunate that these of the conditions being forced upon you. i think we can do better as a society. >> and the evening, supervisors. my name is donald armstrong. by working with a lot of the populations, i am seeing the effects of the high cost of the health-care field. some are going without procedures because of the high cost. they either can't afford it. some of the other things i am saying as far as identical vision, they can't even get glasses now or even get dental care. i
and practices that have nothing to do with recent allegations regarding false anesthesia billings. supervisor campos: don't be shy. >> the experience that my family has had with services for very young children, my daughter was born premature. we looked at the facility. every aspect of the care that they need is essential. losing a specialist is something that can really put a family in jeopardy of losing a life. it is the critical and they are so young and so small. they want to provide...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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111
Apr 6, 2011
04/11
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SFGTV2
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luke's, staff leadership positions, including chair of anesthesia, chief of the medical staff, and medical director of the st. luke's campus. as an emissary envoys of the physicians of saint luke, i wish to acknowledge and thank cpmc and the city of san francisco for saving some lives. the blue-ribbon panel achieve by and from all interested parties, medical, political, community, and a remarkable result. over the last two years, the department chairs have been working with architects and planners on our new facility. the medical staff from a supports the proposed plans. as this plan has crystallized, we see it does what it was supposed to do. it preserves critical service lines to a state of the art facility through tertiary distribution of services. st. luke's can access and a bill itself of incredible support from the other campuses, which is already happening. lastly, while maintaining critical inpatient service lines, it also includes a robust plan for the direction medicine is taking, which is an outpatient and preventative care. in all my time, i have never seen the quality of care
luke's, staff leadership positions, including chair of anesthesia, chief of the medical staff, and medical director of the st. luke's campus. as an emissary envoys of the physicians of saint luke, i wish to acknowledge and thank cpmc and the city of san francisco for saving some lives. the blue-ribbon panel achieve by and from all interested parties, medical, political, community, and a remarkable result. over the last two years, the department chairs have been working with architects and...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 29, 2011
04/11
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SFGTV
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alleged in the complaint is, essentially, sutter, in this case, is charging for services related to anesthesia basically, they were overcharged, or they are charging for services that were, in fact, not provided to the patient. is that happening? is that part of the reality of what is happening out there? what does the hospital association have to say? that is a pretty serious charge. the california insurance commissioner says hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent that way. i wonder what your response is to that? >> i can respond briefly and say that california hospital association does not condone any fraudulent activity among hospitals in california. we will let the facts speak to the case. we do not represent sutter. we do not represent them legally and we are not taking a position and legally. we do not know the facts. the facts will come out in the judicial system. supervisor campos: i agree with that. we have to allow the court proceedings take place, but we, as policy-makers, are being asked to make important decisions. one of the things that the complaint points out is a cert
alleged in the complaint is, essentially, sutter, in this case, is charging for services related to anesthesia basically, they were overcharged, or they are charging for services that were, in fact, not provided to the patient. is that happening? is that part of the reality of what is happening out there? what does the hospital association have to say? that is a pretty serious charge. the california insurance commissioner says hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent that way. i wonder...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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126
Apr 28, 2011
04/11
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SFGTV
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eye 126
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alleged in the complaint is, essentially, sutter, in this case, is charging for services related to anesthesia basically, they were overcharged, or they are charging for services that were, in fact, not provided to the patient. is that happening? is that part of the reality of what is happening out there? what does the hospital what does the hospital association have to say?
alleged in the complaint is, essentially, sutter, in this case, is charging for services related to anesthesia basically, they were overcharged, or they are charging for services that were, in fact, not provided to the patient. is that happening? is that part of the reality of what is happening out there? what does the hospital what does the hospital association have to say?
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Apr 21, 2011
04/11
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KTVU
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the commissioner zestier hospitals across northern california have charged as much as $5,000 for anesthesia when they should be charging about $250. he says that's driving up the premiums businesses and consumers pay for insurance. sutter health denies and says that the bills are "appropriate." >>> a big scare in colorado. what was found inside a mall on the anniversary of the columbine shootings and why investigators believe it may be linked to the tragic event. >>> and what's going on at a south bay dog park today where a dog died suddenly from what was believed to be poisoning. >>> welcome back to the morning news. take a look at this. an immigration detention center in sydney, australia, is badly damaged after a night of riots. police say set fire to several buildings and threw tiles and sharp objects off of rooftops. rioters say they've been held at the center for two years and they want to know why. no one was killed or injured in the riots. >>> the f.b.i. is launching an investigation into a bomb and propane tank found at a colorado mall. the items were found yesterday after a small
the commissioner zestier hospitals across northern california have charged as much as $5,000 for anesthesia when they should be charging about $250. he says that's driving up the premiums businesses and consumers pay for insurance. sutter health denies and says that the bills are "appropriate." >>> a big scare in colorado. what was found inside a mall on the anniversary of the columbine shootings and why investigators believe it may be linked to the tragic event. >>>...
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Apr 14, 2011
04/11
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KPIX
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the suit alleges that sutter hospitals engaged in false billing practices for anesthesia services. jones says through false and overblown bills, sutter allegedly bilked patients out of hundreds of millions of dollars. >> we found this in invoice after invoice after invoice. and when brought to the attention of sutter, no reasonable explanation to explain it was provided. >> sutter denies the allegations saying the plaintiffs in the lawsuit haven't provided evidence to support their claims of billing improprieties. >>> he is accused of several murders spanning three decades. coming up, new disturbing revelations on how that suspected serial killer chose his victims. >>> animals beaten and neglected. the plan to keep track of animal abusers before they strike again. >>> lost, late, luggage? good luck getting your money back. how the government is trying to change that. ,,,,,,,,,,,, for three decades. 77-year-old joseph naso was >>> for the very first time, we are seeing the senior citizen accused of going on a murder spree for three decades. 77-year-old joseph naso was arraigned this
the suit alleges that sutter hospitals engaged in false billing practices for anesthesia services. jones says through false and overblown bills, sutter allegedly bilked patients out of hundreds of millions of dollars. >> we found this in invoice after invoice after invoice. and when brought to the attention of sutter, no reasonable explanation to explain it was provided. >> sutter denies the allegations saying the plaintiffs in the lawsuit haven't provided evidence to support their...
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Apr 10, 2011
04/11
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CSPAN2
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there was six or seven people around, anesthesia in the front. people from the outside looking think it's a very chaotic event, but it's not. everybody has a job to do, and they're moving very quickly to get the job done. and within a relatively short period of time, his blood pressure started coming up. we knew because he had lost blood and there was no breath sounds on the left side of the chest and the bullet wound went in the chest that he had bleeding into his left thoracic cavity. >> so how long before there was surgery to try to remove the bullet? >> well, the first thing you have to do is put a chest tube in. the way you treat most of these patients -- successfully this way -- is you put a chest tube in. the idea is to put the tune in the thoracic cavity, draw out the blood and the air, and the lung reexpands. the lung is a low pressure system. and once it reexpands and goes up against the chest wall, it usually stopped 35, 90% of the time -- 85, 90% of the time. this time it did not. >> so there was that preliminary by, what, 3:30 he was
there was six or seven people around, anesthesia in the front. people from the outside looking think it's a very chaotic event, but it's not. everybody has a job to do, and they're moving very quickly to get the job done. and within a relatively short period of time, his blood pressure started coming up. we knew because he had lost blood and there was no breath sounds on the left side of the chest and the bullet wound went in the chest that he had bleeding into his left thoracic cavity....
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Apr 9, 2011
04/11
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CSPAN2
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anesthesia in the front. people from the outside looking in think it was very chaotic. it was not. everybody had a job to do and it was moving very quickly. in a small period of time blood pressure was coming. we knew because he lost blood, the left side of the chest and the bullet went into the chest, he had bleeding into his left thoracic cavity. >> how long before there was surgery? >> the first thing you do is put a chest tube in. the way you treat most of these patients successfully is put a chest tube in. the idea is to put the tube in the forensic cavity and draw out the blood and the longer expand. the lawn is a low pressure system. not like the arterial system. once it expands, usually stops 90% of the time. decided did not. >> there was that preliminary but by what? 3:30 he was under? >> he was in the emergency room in 30 minutes. a bunch of saline and the test tube and and you watch the blood come out of the tuned. all the blood was accumulating in the thoracic cavity and once that is out you hope that blood loss is less and less and this did not happen. it got more. tha
anesthesia in the front. people from the outside looking in think it was very chaotic. it was not. everybody had a job to do and it was moving very quickly. in a small period of time blood pressure was coming. we knew because he lost blood, the left side of the chest and the bullet went into the chest, he had bleeding into his left thoracic cavity. >> how long before there was surgery? >> the first thing you do is put a chest tube in. the way you treat most of these patients...
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Apr 17, 2011
04/11
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 173
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or seven people around, anesthesia in the front. people from the outside looking at it think it's very chaotic event. but it's not that anybody has a job to do and they're moving very quickly to get the job done. and within a relatively short printed on his blood pressure started coming up. we knew because he had lost blood and the bullet on one in the chest that he had bleeding into his left breast cavity. >> how long before there was surgery to try to remove the bowl and? >> the first thing you have to do is put chest to been. the way you treat most of these patients and most of these patients treated success with is what issue put a chest tube in. the idea is to put the tube in the thoracic cavity, draw out the blood and air, and then the lung we expand. long is a low pressure system, not like the arterial system. wants it we expand and goes up against the chest wall, it usually stops 85, 90% of the time. this time it did not. >> so there was that preliminary, but by what, 330 time that he was -- >> he was in the emergency room a
or seven people around, anesthesia in the front. people from the outside looking at it think it's very chaotic event. but it's not that anybody has a job to do and they're moving very quickly to get the job done. and within a relatively short printed on his blood pressure started coming up. we knew because he had lost blood and the bullet on one in the chest that he had bleeding into his left breast cavity. >> how long before there was surgery to try to remove the bowl and? >> the...