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Sep 27, 2015
09/15
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KPIX
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it's a special pleasure to introduce you to dr. eric berlin who is a professor at the university of california berkeley. one of the many people in the bay area makes it so -- such a fascinating place to. he is here to talk to us about the antiquity around mentoring. sir you look at the world around today and the new look back in your discipline of study and you have come to some descriptive conclusions to share with us. >> well, i have always been prompted or provoked to look into the past because of contemporary circumstances. sometimes consciously sometimes not. in my recent work, it has been motivated -- or at least in large part stimulated by some rather cream infants that the world is going through in the last 20 years or more. you can read about it in any newspaper. i'm the only one reading the newspaper everyone else was reading on my pants -- iphones or other instruments. type in particularly concerned with ethnic conflicts that our company -- country has been wrapped up in. people think about the syrups and muslims -- and kurds
it's a special pleasure to introduce you to dr. eric berlin who is a professor at the university of california berkeley. one of the many people in the bay area makes it so -- such a fascinating place to. he is here to talk to us about the antiquity around mentoring. sir you look at the world around today and the new look back in your discipline of study and you have come to some descriptive conclusions to share with us. >> well, i have always been prompted or provoked to look into the...
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Sep 12, 2015
09/15
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CNNW
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dr. eric will ke will con son w another. >> his scar is nicely healing up. >> reporter: dr. wilkinson is a lead investigator. children of los angeles and the university of southern california are not the first to be performing auditory brain stem implants. in fact, surgeons in italy have been doing this procedure for more than ten years. but this trial is the only fda approved one in the united states funded by the national institutes of health. >> do you want that? do you want that? >> reporter: they are also focusing on one particular age group. >> we know from cochlear implant studies that the earlier the auditory system in the brain can be stimulated, the better the children will do. in our study we actually have the ages of 2 through 5, so we feel that that's a balance between finding a safe age to do it but also doing it at a young enough age the child will benefit from the device. >> reporter: caden just made the age cutoff, turning 5 one month after his surgery. the operation was a success, but the work is only just beginning. caden has spent his entire young life wi
dr. eric will ke will con son w another. >> his scar is nicely healing up. >> reporter: dr. wilkinson is a lead investigator. children of los angeles and the university of southern california are not the first to be performing auditory brain stem implants. in fact, surgeons in italy have been doing this procedure for more than ten years. but this trial is the only fda approved one in the united states funded by the national institutes of health. >> do you want that? do you...
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Sep 22, 2015
09/15
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CSPAN2
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includes an article by dr. eric j. cassels professor of public health at the cornell university medical college. he writes the obligation of physicians to relieve human suffering stretches back into antiquity. he calls the leave of ciphering quote one of the primary ends of medicine unquote. the clinical guidelines for pain published by the -- states that the ethical obligation to manage pain and relieve the patient's suffering is at the core of the health care professionals commitment unquote. the american academy of pain medicine has publicized an ethics chapter or charter i guess i would say which outlines how physicians must implement both the ethical imperative to provide relief from pain and unquote. as medical professionals have the fundamental obligation to relieve human suffering they should be prohibited from imposing human suffering before birth. in its most recent abortion decision supreme court acknowledges certain ethical and moral concerns justify a specific abortion prohibition. the prevention of an int
includes an article by dr. eric j. cassels professor of public health at the cornell university medical college. he writes the obligation of physicians to relieve human suffering stretches back into antiquity. he calls the leave of ciphering quote one of the primary ends of medicine unquote. the clinical guidelines for pain published by the -- states that the ethical obligation to manage pain and relieve the patient's suffering is at the core of the health care professionals commitment unquote....
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Sep 22, 2015
09/15
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WRC
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so they allowed dr. eric wish at the university of maryland's center for substance abuse research to analyze their leftover samples to see what they might be missing. >> among young men in the district, as much as 50% of the people who passed the limited drug test test positive for synthetic cannabinoid. it's so amazing. >> reporter: the doctor says it quickly became apparent why the number is so high. >> if people are aware that they're going to be part of a drug monitor organize drug testing program, they're smart. they though what drugs are being tested for. they know marijuana is being tested for but not synthetic cannabinoid. so they switch and use only the synthetic cannabinoid during that period when they know they're going to be tested. >> that led him to sample test violent offenders this past july which revealed 20% were on synthetic drugs when they were taken into custody. but these new tests are expensive. keenan says it costs $1.60 to test for the traditional drugs. but a private lab charges abou
so they allowed dr. eric wish at the university of maryland's center for substance abuse research to analyze their leftover samples to see what they might be missing. >> among young men in the district, as much as 50% of the people who passed the limited drug test test positive for synthetic cannabinoid. it's so amazing. >> reporter: the doctor says it quickly became apparent why the number is so high. >> if people are aware that they're going to be part of a drug monitor...
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Sep 29, 2015
09/15
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CNBC
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i think this book is revelatory and plain smart which is why i'm so thrilled to have dr. eric toeber here tonight. >> thank you. >> you have explained it. i saw the gizmo, so i'm going to start with one of mine. i wanted to know because you talk about the fitbit specifically and all the things we talk about. will we have devices that tell us realtime whether the blood pressure is exploding or if we have diabetes. we have a lot of stuff that you brought. walk me through it. >> you've got it. medicine today is one off, you go to the doctor, get a lab test and what is starting right now is realtime streaming in your real world. a blood pressure watch -- it gets your every heart beat. >> we don't have it yet. >> it's coming. >> i heard a lot of false positives. >> device wow a cuff -- it's coming. and the glucose, the glucose, you can look at your watch and pull up your glucose, a hundred right there, 93, so you can get your glucose through your watch. >> and we had them on. >> these sensors are getting smaller and smaller. less expensive. so, you know, that's pretty remarkable. t
i think this book is revelatory and plain smart which is why i'm so thrilled to have dr. eric toeber here tonight. >> thank you. >> you have explained it. i saw the gizmo, so i'm going to start with one of mine. i wanted to know because you talk about the fitbit specifically and all the things we talk about. will we have devices that tell us realtime whether the blood pressure is exploding or if we have diabetes. we have a lot of stuff that you brought. walk me through it. >>...
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Sep 30, 2015
09/15
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FBC
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dr. doolittle. ericwant to europe money for you and children in madagascar, have you a go fund me campaign. >> so, i am paying for my own plane ticket, go fund me slash ofic theverric the -- eric the e guy, this is a shirt from -- i am sorry. >> i love it. children are your world. >> i actually have a picture of kelly here. she died of malaria last time i was there. the real purpose to be there for kids, we put concrete floors in for a hundred families, we're building a school because the kids need to learn, they put up band-aids but our herringizatiol build something they can learn from there is is eating the giant tortoise. thank you eric. >> thank you i want grateful. kennedy: i hope you fly to madagascar on angel's wings and they all heed the call. >> thank you. kennedy: coming up. in moments, the night cap, i'm going to need a stiff kennedy: if you are a parent, you know tomorrow is the last day of september, that means halloween is in full swing. a holiday that celebrating creativity is a recipe fo
dr. doolittle. ericwant to europe money for you and children in madagascar, have you a go fund me campaign. >> so, i am paying for my own plane ticket, go fund me slash ofic theverric the -- eric the e guy, this is a shirt from -- i am sorry. >> i love it. children are your world. >> i actually have a picture of kelly here. she died of malaria last time i was there. the real purpose to be there for kids, we put concrete floors in for a hundred families, we're building a school...
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Sep 29, 2015
09/15
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CNBC
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novavax off a phase two adjustment this morning and dr. eric topol from medscape is going to be on as well. "power lunch" is back in two. awe believe active management can protect capital long term. active management can tap global insights. active management can take calculated risks. active management can seek to outperform. because active investment management isn't reactive. it's active. that's the power of active management. this bale of hay cannot be controlled. when a wildfire raged through elkhorn ranch, the sudden loss of pasture became a serious problem for a family business. faced with horses that needed feeding and a texas drought that sent hay prices soaring, the owners had to act fast. thankfully, mary miller banks with chase for business. and with greater financial clarity and a relationship built for the unexpected, she could control her cash flow, and keep the ranch running. chase for business. so you can own it. >>> pinera hitting session highs, up 2%. new coverage pointing to optimism about recent changes in food, marketing a
novavax off a phase two adjustment this morning and dr. eric topol from medscape is going to be on as well. "power lunch" is back in two. awe believe active management can protect capital long term. active management can tap global insights. active management can take calculated risks. active management can seek to outperform. because active investment management isn't reactive. it's active. that's the power of active management. this bale of hay cannot be controlled. when a wildfire...
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Sep 10, 2015
09/15
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FOXNEWSW
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eric mentioned. donald trump and dr. ben carson. >> i realize where my success has come from. and i don't in any way deny my faith in god. that's a very big part of who i am. humility and the fear of the lord. i don't get that impression with him. maybe i'm wrong. >> who is he to question my faith? when i am -- you know, he doesn't even know me. he was a doctor, perhaps an okay doctor by the way. you can check that out, too. we did not talk about a great -- he was an okay doctor. because he's a doctor and he hired one nurse he's going to end up being the president of the united states? >> i don't think that works, greg. he's an okay doctor? he was the first to separate conjoined twins. >> 22 years ago. >> as amy levy said he's a very divisive person, ben carson. this is why trump, you know that's a joke when he's saying he's not a very -- i laugh when i hear that. trump to me is the howard stern candidate. remember how howard stern would talk about "the five" he would say he loved "the five" because it was fun, real and exciting. not because he agreed with us. i don't think he
eric mentioned. donald trump and dr. ben carson. >> i realize where my success has come from. and i don't in any way deny my faith in god. that's a very big part of who i am. humility and the fear of the lord. i don't get that impression with him. maybe i'm wrong. >> who is he to question my faith? when i am -- you know, he doesn't even know me. he was a doctor, perhaps an okay doctor by the way. you can check that out, too. we did not talk about a great -- he was an okay doctor....
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Sep 12, 2015
09/15
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CSPAN3
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studies fellowship at monticello, and is also the recipient of the 2015 eric kurtz memorial award for german american history. [applause] dr. selig: thank you for coming tonight to one of the prime places to do research on the american war of revolution, and particularly on the french role in the war of independence. that is not just because the society of the cincinnati has a wealth of primary resources from the subject, but also because, day, 230ned, to the three years ago, there was an for frenchhere infantry, and an assortment of other personnel that had crossed almost in and camped the backyard of where we are now. as, french such forces in your backyard literally, could be made for about 60 different locations in the united states, between boston and yorktown. it usually raises some eyebrows and a number of questions when i gave a presentation -- i give a presentation like this. questions like, what were the french soldiers doing here? where are they coming from? where are they going? thathort answer to this is these french forces had crossed the atlantic to assist the american levels in their struggle for independen
studies fellowship at monticello, and is also the recipient of the 2015 eric kurtz memorial award for german american history. [applause] dr. selig: thank you for coming tonight to one of the prime places to do research on the american war of revolution, and particularly on the french role in the war of independence. that is not just because the society of the cincinnati has a wealth of primary resources from the subject, but also because, day, 230ned, to the three years ago, there was an for...
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Sep 6, 2015
09/15
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FOXNEWSW
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eric shawn. time for "sunday housecall." >> and i'm molly line in for or they will neville. joining us dr. david samadi, chairman and professor of urology at lennox hill hospital and chief of robotics surgery. >> and dr. marc sgeel, professor of medicine at nyu's langone medicine and author of "the secret code, unlocking the sacred code of sickness and health." >> scientists say they have discovered a blood test that can detect breast cancer dna months, they say, before it will show up on medical scans. dr. siegel, can you get this now, and how important is this? >> can you not get this now. it's in early stages of research, but the research is extremely promising. it's coming out of london this study. they looked at 55 people, and they first analyzed the dna, eric, that was abnormal, in the tumor itself. they took early tumors, and they said here's what the mutations are because all cancer has mutations. it has dna that went awry. the cell's machinery is going awry and that's why you get this rapidly growing tumor so they isolated it, which is expensive, and then created a blood test to f
eric shawn. time for "sunday housecall." >> and i'm molly line in for or they will neville. joining us dr. david samadi, chairman and professor of urology at lennox hill hospital and chief of robotics surgery. >> and dr. marc sgeel, professor of medicine at nyu's langone medicine and author of "the secret code, unlocking the sacred code of sickness and health." >> scientists say they have discovered a blood test that can detect breast cancer dna months,...
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Sep 6, 2015
09/15
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FOXNEWSW
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eric shawn. time for "sunday housecall." >> and i'm molly line in for or they will neville. joining us dr. david samadi, chairman and professor of urology at lennox hill hospital and chief of robotics surgery. >> and dr. marc sgeel, professor of medicine at nyu's langone medicine and author of "the secret code, unlocking the sacred code of sickness and health." >> scientists say they have discovered a blood test that can detect breast cancer dna months, they say, before it will show up on medical scs.
eric shawn. time for "sunday housecall." >> and i'm molly line in for or they will neville. joining us dr. david samadi, chairman and professor of urology at lennox hill hospital and chief of robotics surgery. >> and dr. marc sgeel, professor of medicine at nyu's langone medicine and author of "the secret code, unlocking the sacred code of sickness and health." >> scientists say they have discovered a blood test that can detect breast cancer dna months,...
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Sep 13, 2015
09/15
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FOXNEWSW
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eric shawn. time now for "sunday housecall." >> and i'm arthel neville. welcome. joining susdr. david samadi, chairman and professor of urology at lenox hill hospital and chief of robotic surgery. >> and dr. marc siegel professor at langone medical center and author of "the inner pulse, "unlocking the secret code of sickness and health" which is what we do every sunday. >> great to see you both. >> this is a great topic we're starting with. we'll begin today with a ground breaking new study recommending that doctors take a more aggressive approach to treating blood pressure. right now guidelines suggest that the systolic pressure on the top number of 150 to 160 is a good target, but this study recommending that doctors try to keep that number under at least 120, especially in people over the age of 50. dr. samadi, you're up first, what do you think about this approach? >> big news. huge news for medical community and for patients out this. this was on the cover of "new york times" and "wall street journal" which is extremely rare to see this on the front cover. spent clinical trial was basically looked at about 9,300 people out there. they divide them into two groups, a group with a bloo
eric shawn. time now for "sunday housecall." >> and i'm arthel neville. welcome. joining susdr. david samadi, chairman and professor of urology at lenox hill hospital and chief of robotic surgery. >> and dr. marc siegel professor at langone medical center and author of "the inner pulse, "unlocking the secret code of sickness and health" which is what we do every sunday. >> great to see you both. >> this is a great topic we're starting with. we'll...
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Sep 13, 2015
09/15
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FOXNEWSW
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eric shawn. time now for "sunday housecall." >> and i'm arthel neville. welcome. joining susdr. david samadi, chairman and professor of urology at lenox hill hospital and chief of robotic surgery. >> and drmarc siegel professor at langone medical center and
eric shawn. time now for "sunday housecall." >> and i'm arthel neville. welcome. joining susdr. david samadi, chairman and professor of urology at lenox hill hospital and chief of robotic surgery. >> and drmarc siegel professor at langone medical center and
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Sep 10, 2015
09/15
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FBC
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eric holder with me now. what do you think of this functionality? >> it has tremendous promise. the question is if the information will get to the dr. or nurse.toring a babies fetal heartbeat remotely without the woman in the hospital is a tremendous idea because it is what obstetricians will want. if you suddenly are having chest pain, this is the wave of the future. they can also put together this information and do studies this way, which is what research kid does. the question is, we will it get to the right hands? deirdre: this is where i want to bring un. does a little bit of information become more dangerous than a lot? what do you think about these capabilities? will it flood ers? >> ii don't think that it will flood emergency departments. i think it does the opposite , putting patients in control of there own health information. with a littlea little bit of medical guidance they can monitor things like heart rate. if i put someone on medication they can easily check this on there own rather than just ignoring it completely for having a need for a follow-up office visit it really puts this information in the hands of people so that th
eric holder with me now. what do you think of this functionality? >> it has tremendous promise. the question is if the information will get to the dr. or nurse.toring a babies fetal heartbeat remotely without the woman in the hospital is a tremendous idea because it is what obstetricians will want. if you suddenly are having chest pain, this is the wave of the future. they can also put together this information and do studies this way, which is what research kid does. the question is, we...
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Sep 14, 2015
09/15
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CSPAN2
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dr. witt at the table. we have council like me. we had security officers from higher ed eric we had survivors and victims of rape, male and they know both represent. we get advocacy groups at the table. and we did very hard work. we came together over a three-month period, and we looked at proposed language brought by the department of education and by the opportunity to talk about whether we should drill down in a particular area and impose a single standard on a particular issue and talk about them as dr. rue mentioned earlier, the fact that we need language which is good because colleges and universities are so different across this country, large, small, public, private, online, commuter come all the different issues and it difficult work but am confident that the product we ended up with at the end of that process was a better reflection of the wider community in rules and regulations t that work on colle campuses than without it. >> thank you very much. mr. hinojosa, i recognize you for five minutes. >> thank you. my first question is do ms. lisa maatz. you state in you
dr. witt at the table. we have council like me. we had security officers from higher ed eric we had survivors and victims of rape, male and they know both represent. we get advocacy groups at the table. and we did very hard work. we came together over a three-month period, and we looked at proposed language brought by the department of education and by the opportunity to talk about whether we should drill down in a particular area and impose a single standard on a particular issue and talk...
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Sep 14, 2015
09/15
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FOXNEWSW
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eric: a shocking poll that shows donald running neck-and-neck with hillary. we'll look at hillary's ever-changing narrative on that server. but first donald trump taking aim at dr. ben carson. >> i don't think ben has the energy. ben is a nice man. when you are negotiating against china and these japanese guys. we need people who are really smart and tremendous deal making skills with great energy. i was diagnosed with lung cancer. as a firefighter approaching a fire i had to confine it, contain it and attack it. and i went to cancer treatments centers of america. we were able to do a thoracoscopic surgery where we could use tiny incisions, we put a camera inside the chest and tony was able to go home three days after surgery. we have excellent technology that allows us to perform very specialized procedures for patients who have lung disease. our individualized care model gives each lung patient specific treatment options with innovative procedures that are changing the way we fight lung cancer. we have targeted therapies looking for a specific molecular target and then matching the patient to that treatment. to learn more about precision cancer treatment, adv
eric: a shocking poll that shows donald running neck-and-neck with hillary. we'll look at hillary's ever-changing narrative on that server. but first donald trump taking aim at dr. ben carson. >> i don't think ben has the energy. ben is a nice man. when you are negotiating against china and these japanese guys. we need people who are really smart and tremendous deal making skills with great energy. i was diagnosed with lung cancer. as a firefighter approaching a fire i had to confine it,...