SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 27, 2014
01/14
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SFGTV
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public transit and services to accommodate all the growth and childcare and fireball spaces and a aortas and p dr and benefits around the sustainability and rebuilding. what is the role of a planning department in this interagency effort? specifically planning department staff has been with the development and the schedule. we'll go to the site conversations we'll with work the mayor's office of housing to help lead the affordable housing analysis and we will lead the specific design and the public engagement piece. we're here to provide direction on the program and once we've done some specific work we'll come back for the development entitlement and the packages for individual sites. the rest of this month and february based on your direction and the direction of the mta board we'll go to them, too, and they'll be the first ones out of the gate boutiquely around the stakeholders and open space we know what the needs are but what are some of the strategies. in march we want to initiative the first site meeting we know know exactly which sites but we'll know them later. and following we
public transit and services to accommodate all the growth and childcare and fireball spaces and a aortas and p dr and benefits around the sustainability and rebuilding. what is the role of a planning department in this interagency effort? specifically planning department staff has been with the development and the schedule. we'll go to the site conversations we'll with work the mayor's office of housing to help lead the affordable housing analysis and we will lead the specific design and the...
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Jan 19, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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. >> he had a torn aorta, brain bleeds, a broken wrist, a broken elbow, both femurs were fractured. >reporter: his e.r. doctors told grant's family to let him go. >> the fact that the doctor wasn't fighting for his life just blew my mind. he's not dead yet. why would you just, as a parent, how could you ever let go not knowing that you haven't done every single possible thing that you could do for your son? >> reporter: doing every single possible thing was going to take grant's family on a wild journey. full of twists and turns and some unconventional therapies. two weeks after his accident, after several operations, grant was in a coma. his heart was okay, his brain was not. >> the doctor told me, she said, okay, now we wait. surely something we can do. nope, we just wait. the brain has its own time schedule. >> reporter: in what would become a theme, impatient. grant's family swept aside that doctor's advice. first they tried progesterone that may reduce inflammation in the brain. soon afterward his family said grant began to speak. >> he'd say, let's go. he'd say, i want to go hom
. >> he had a torn aorta, brain bleeds, a broken wrist, a broken elbow, both femurs were fractured. >reporter: his e.r. doctors told grant's family to let him go. >> the fact that the doctor wasn't fighting for his life just blew my mind. he's not dead yet. why would you just, as a parent, how could you ever let go not knowing that you haven't done every single possible thing that you could do for your son? >> reporter: doing every single possible thing was going to take...
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Jan 22, 2014
01/14
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KDTV
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>>> es triste pamela, a las 8:30 de la maÑana el hombre ingresa a una cirugÍa de aorta para corregiro el que lo termina tiene que ser alguien con cualidades para hacerlo. >>> ¿es una cirugÍa complicada? >>> sÍ, pero el problema aqui es que sale antes el mÉdico de la culminaciÓn de la cirugÍa, y despuÉs que lo cerraron y este sangraba ahÍ el problema mÁs importante, porque si tienes un paciente que sangra y estÁ inestable es difÍcil para uno como cirujano salir del hospital, el paciente despuÉs dejÓ de respirar, tienen que darle resucitaciÓn, lo abren de nuevo y lo llaman al cirujano que no vuelve hasta si no mucho tiempo despuÉs. >>> el tiempo es fundamental en estos casos, doctor para una familia o pariente que tienen alguien que estÁ por entrar al quirÓfano ¿quÉ preguntas hay que hacer? >>> es importante saber que cirujano harÁ la cirugÍa y que equipo estarÁ dentro del quirÓfano como el anestesiologo y demÁs que participaran de la operaciÓn, hay muchas cosas que pasan en salas de operaciones y familiares y pacientes no lo saben. >>> porque hubo una cirugÍa de amigdalas de una niÑa
>>> es triste pamela, a las 8:30 de la maÑana el hombre ingresa a una cirugÍa de aorta para corregiro el que lo termina tiene que ser alguien con cualidades para hacerlo. >>> ¿es una cirugÍa complicada? >>> sÍ, pero el problema aqui es que sale antes el mÉdico de la culminaciÓn de la cirugÍa, y despuÉs que lo cerraron y este sangraba ahÍ el problema mÁs importante, porque si tienes un paciente que sangra y estÁ inestable es difÍcil para uno como cirujano...
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Jan 18, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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. >> doctors fold fox his aorta was calcifying over time, and only surgery would correct it.ut fox delayed, season after season. there was always another team to coach. that trophy to chase. >> it's open heart surgery. it's a major, major surgery to go and replace the valves. so it's not a minor surgery. it's not a little affair by any stretch. so i put it off. i thought i was going to make it to the end of the season. >> he didn't. 2 1/2 months ago, in the midst of the broncos' bye week, fox collapsed on the golf course near the house he keeps in charlotte. >> i was literally 200 yards from the backyard of my house, and probably 100 yards to the backyard of one of my better friend's house. i could have very easily been down in marko island fishing 60 miles out, and that wouldn't have been quite the same scenario. >> i imagine when you're an nfl coach and moving these players around like chess pieces, compared to lying on your back in a hospital gown. >> it was pretty humbling and a little bit scary. i had an episode to where i thought i was dying. fortunately i was with frie
. >> doctors fold fox his aorta was calcifying over time, and only surgery would correct it.ut fox delayed, season after season. there was always another team to coach. that trophy to chase. >> it's open heart surgery. it's a major, major surgery to go and replace the valves. so it's not a minor surgery. it's not a little affair by any stretch. so i put it off. i thought i was going to make it to the end of the season. >> he didn't. 2 1/2 months ago, in the midst of the...
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Jan 20, 2014
01/14
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LINKTV
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that blade had gone through, and the x-rays revealed that the tip of the blade was on the edge of my aortae main artery. and once that's punctured, you're drowned in your own blood; that's the end of you. it came out in the new york times the next morning, that if i had merely sneezed, i would have died. well, about four days later, they allowed me, after the operation, after my chest had been opened and the blade had been taken out, to move around in the wheelchair in the hospital. they allowed me to read some of the mail that came in, and from all over the states and the world, kind letters came in. i read a few, but one of them i will never forget. i had received one from the president and the vice president. i've forgotten what those telegrams said. i'd received a visit and a letter from the governor of new york, but i've forgotten what that letter said. but there was another letter that came from a little girl, a young girl who was a student at the white plains high school. and i looked at that letter, and i'll never forget it. it said simply, "dear dr. king, i am a ninth-grade studen
that blade had gone through, and the x-rays revealed that the tip of the blade was on the edge of my aortae main artery. and once that's punctured, you're drowned in your own blood; that's the end of you. it came out in the new york times the next morning, that if i had merely sneezed, i would have died. well, about four days later, they allowed me, after the operation, after my chest had been opened and the blade had been taken out, to move around in the wheelchair in the hospital. they...
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Jan 22, 2014
01/14
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LINKTV
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than that, perhaps, is the fact that the two main arteries, or the main artery of the abdomen, the aorta is giving off branches which are very curly, very tortuous. leonardo found that these arteries were blocked, and he said-- and describes atheroma with narrowing of the arteries, and he attributed, in fact, old age to blocking off of the arteries, thickening, as he says, like the rind of an orange which thickens up so much that there's no pulp left, and with no pulp in the artery, there's no nourishment can get to the tissues, and so the tissues die. and that is, he says, why old people's skin gets tough and hard and why they feel the cold so much and why eventually they die. gielgud: in 1499, the duke of milan's political ambitions ended in failure, and his power over milan came to an end. il moro was deposed and spent his last days as a prisoner of king louis xii in a french castle. on the walls of the prison in which he was confined was found the inscription "in felix sum"-- "i am wretched." with il moro taken captive and milan occupied by french troops, leonardo returned to florenc
than that, perhaps, is the fact that the two main arteries, or the main artery of the abdomen, the aorta is giving off branches which are very curly, very tortuous. leonardo found that these arteries were blocked, and he said-- and describes atheroma with narrowing of the arteries, and he attributed, in fact, old age to blocking off of the arteries, thickening, as he says, like the rind of an orange which thickens up so much that there's no pulp left, and with no pulp in the artery, there's no...
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Jan 6, 2014
01/14
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MSNBCW
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the blade missed his aorta by millimeters, and doctors say even a sneeze would have killed him.out that in his last public speech before his assassination. >> if i had sneezed, i wouldn't have been here in 1963. the black people of birmingham, alabama, aroused the conscience of this nation and brought in to being the civil rights field. if i had sneezed, i wouldn't have had a chance later that year in august to try to tell america about a dream that i had had, if i had sneezed. >> a moment that changed the course of history. if dr. cordis hadn't saved dr. king's life that day, we might never have seen that march from selma to montgomery. we might never have read that letter from birmingham jail. we might never have heard dr. king's dream. dr. cordis saved a life, and he helped save the soul of america. he passed away last week. he was 94 years old. two doctors, one doctor answered the call from brooklyn to go to harlem hospital to save a patient. another to answer the call in birmingham, in selma, in memphis. they just were doing their job. sometimes when you just do your job, y
the blade missed his aorta by millimeters, and doctors say even a sneeze would have killed him.out that in his last public speech before his assassination. >> if i had sneezed, i wouldn't have been here in 1963. the black people of birmingham, alabama, aroused the conscience of this nation and brought in to being the civil rights field. if i had sneezed, i wouldn't have had a chance later that year in august to try to tell america about a dream that i had had, if i had sneezed. >> a...
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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in 2009, she had heart surgery after doctors found hardening in one part of her aorta.italized for abdominal pain and underwent surgery for an ulcer. details are few, but we know she's being treated for a respiratory illness and she's been in the hospital since monday. a family spokesperson would not release additional details on her condition. >> i'm just curious, what are bush family confidantes saying about the former first lady's hospital stay? should we be worried? >> number 42, former president bill clinton is close to the bush family. he sent good vibes through social media. he tweeted, i'll be rooting for barbara bush's full recovery while she's rooting for baylor today. all my best to her and george h.w. bush. also weighing in is a longtime family friend and cnn affiliate, take a listen to what he said. >> i have known barbara bush since 1969. that is 44 years. having known her as i have, i have total confidence in her, period, exclamation mark. >> and i think, martin, it's safe to say that everyone who knows barbara bush is rooting for her and hoping for a spe
in 2009, she had heart surgery after doctors found hardening in one part of her aorta.italized for abdominal pain and underwent surgery for an ulcer. details are few, but we know she's being treated for a respiratory illness and she's been in the hospital since monday. a family spokesperson would not release additional details on her condition. >> i'm just curious, what are bush family confidantes saying about the former first lady's hospital stay? should we be worried? >> number...
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Jan 7, 2014
01/14
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> the aorta, for the blood flow. >> the odds of acting that out and then it actually being diagnoseduy ho saved your life. what do you say to him? >> it's wonderful. i was so pleased that he spoke up. he had the integrity to speak up and say something, you know. then it got passed out and i followed it through. i had the surgery at uva and it actually saved my life. i'm grateful. thank you. >> you know, from my perspective, i just did what uva trained know do and nothing more. i feel like there are countless medical students around the country who deserve as much or more credit for helping patients. it's an extraordinary coincidence. i'm really glad it happened. couldn't have happened to a kinder person. he and his wife are fantastic people. >> jim, we are so glad that you're safe and in great health thanks to your buddy. we'll give you an honorary doctor in front of your name. >> you should. i agree. >> thank you. be well. >> thank you. >>> coming up, her neighbors were so horrible, she took the case to court. but not against them. she is suing the person who sold her the house. you
. >> the aorta, for the blood flow. >> the odds of acting that out and then it actually being diagnoseduy ho saved your life. what do you say to him? >> it's wonderful. i was so pleased that he spoke up. he had the integrity to speak up and say something, you know. then it got passed out and i followed it through. i had the surgery at uva and it actually saved my life. i'm grateful. thank you. >> you know, from my perspective, i just did what uva trained know do and...