55
55
Oct 5, 2014
10/14
by
KNTV
tv
eye 55
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. manuel pastor. he's a protester from usc. and he is right now views on socioeconomic development the impact that it have and the striern, and how the increasing population is changing you know, the -- the way that we are going to be handling our society in the future. >> oh, very interesting. now we do have video. one of my favorite neighborhoods and this is, of course, jaime in east san jose. people who live in a neighborhood like this might say, you know what, i'm living here, i don't have a voice, i don't feel empowered. these are the type of people you're trying to attract to say no you do have a voice, you will be empowered. >> yes. totally. we have from the previous conference we have emerging leaders, and you will be surprised how just coming to and taking one of these workshops will enlighten you to become a neighborhood leader. a neighborhood association president, just to speak on behalf of your fellow neighbors, with the words and build a better neighborhood with them how to communicate with them. so this is a grea
dr. manuel pastor. he's a protester from usc. and he is right now views on socioeconomic development the impact that it have and the striern, and how the increasing population is changing you know, the -- the way that we are going to be handling our society in the future. >> oh, very interesting. now we do have video. one of my favorite neighborhoods and this is, of course, jaime in east san jose. people who live in a neighborhood like this might say, you know what, i'm living here, i...
83
83
Oct 1, 2014
10/14
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. manuel, how did this guy who is here, apparently from liberia, a liberian national, apparently. we're not sure. but certainly not an american. how did he get ebola, and if he got it, why wasn't that information picked up at the airport? apparently he had his temperature taken on takeoff? did he know that he was exposed to it? did he know he might have it and somehow get through the united states immigration, and everything else, and just walk into the country like this? >> chris, it's an important thing. you get exposed and there's a latent period where you're unaware that you have the disease and you're also not infectious at that period. that's obviously what happened. once he got to the united states, once that incubation period is up, he began to feel symptoms and went to the hospital. >> why do we let somebody in the country during their incubation period? if they've been exposed to whatever secretions, why do we let the person in until it's clear the symptoms are not going to turn up, when you say it has an incubation period? >> first of all, we don't have enough informati
dr. manuel, how did this guy who is here, apparently from liberia, a liberian national, apparently. we're not sure. but certainly not an american. how did he get ebola, and if he got it, why wasn't that information picked up at the airport? apparently he had his temperature taken on takeoff? did he know that he was exposed to it? did he know he might have it and somehow get through the united states immigration, and everything else, and just walk into the country like this? >> chris, it's...
134
134
Oct 10, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 134
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. vanita nair talks to the father of a child who died of enterovirus. >> reporter: did he show you any signs of illness? >> pelley: norah o'donnell on the young girl who won the nobel peace prize for standing up to the taliban. karma comes back to bite the c.e.o. of microsoft. anthony mason on the uproar over his comments on women and pay. and steve hartman "on the road" with marissa plank, just 24 and living in a retirement home. so what are you doing here? captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening. the toll in the biggest outbreak of ebola that the world has ever known hit a new milestone today. the world health organization told us that more than 4,000 people have guyed in four west african nations, and one in the united states, thomas eric duncan, wednesday, in dallas. tonight, new documents raise still more questions about how the hospital treated duncan and why it initially sent him home. manuel bojorquez is in dallas. >>
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. vanita nair talks to the father of a child who died of enterovirus. >> reporter: did he show you any signs of illness? >> pelley: norah o'donnell on the young girl who won the nobel peace prize for standing up to the taliban. karma comes back to bite the c.e.o. of microsoft. anthony mason on the uproar over his comments on women and pay. and steve hartman "on the road" with marissa plank, just 24 and living in a retirement...
202
202
tv
eye 202
favorite 0
quote 1
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapookment anna werner on another virus causing respiratory illness in children. >> it's petrifying. it's absolutely the scariest thing ever to see your child not be able to take a breath. >> pelley: and carter evans on an invasion of walrus. why tens of thousands are hitting the shores of alaska. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening. when the president loses confidence in the head of the agency assigned to protect him and his family, it is time for her to go. for julia pierson, that time came today. the first female director of the secret service was forced out after one security lapse after another, including one that was revealed yesterday even as she was being grilled by congress. we'll begin tonight with senior white house correspondent bill plante. >> reporter: support for julia pierson's leadership of the secret service was already waning after her experience before a house committee yesterday. it evaporated w
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapookment anna werner on another virus causing respiratory illness in children. >> it's petrifying. it's absolutely the scariest thing ever to see your child not be able to take a breath. >> pelley: and carter evans on an invasion of walrus. why tens of thousands are hitting the shores of alaska. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening. when the president loses...
94
94
Oct 6, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. jon lapook and manuel bojorquez. as an american allegedly planning to join isis appears in court, we talk to the f.b.i. director about home-grown terror. some people call individuals who are radicalized "lone wolves. " is that the biggest threat we face? accused copkiller eric frein is still on the run, but the police have found a letter they believe he wrote. don dahler on what's in it. and a wake-up call for high school drop-outs.
dr. jon lapook and manuel bojorquez. as an american allegedly planning to join isis appears in court, we talk to the f.b.i. director about home-grown terror. some people call individuals who are radicalized "lone wolves. " is that the biggest threat we face? accused copkiller eric frein is still on the run, but the police have found a letter they believe he wrote. don dahler on what's in it. and a wake-up call for high school drop-outs.
167
167
tv
eye 167
favorite 0
quote 3
dr. jon lapook and manuel bojorquez.s an american allegedly planning to join isis appears in court, we talk to the f.b.i. director about home-grown terror. some people call individuals who are radicalized "lone wolves. " is that the biggest threat we face? accused copkiller eric frein is still on the run, but the police have found a letter they believe he wrote. don dahler on what's in it. and a wake-up call for high school drop-outs.
dr. jon lapook and manuel bojorquez.s an american allegedly planning to join isis appears in court, we talk to the f.b.i. director about home-grown terror. some people call individuals who are radicalized "lone wolves. " is that the biggest threat we face? accused copkiller eric frein is still on the run, but the police have found a letter they believe he wrote. don dahler on what's in it. and a wake-up call for high school drop-outs.
103
103
Oct 7, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 1
dr. jon lapook and manuel bojorquez. as an american allegedly planning to join isis appears in court, we talk to the f.b.i. director about home-grown terror. >> some people call individuals who are radicalized "lone wolves," is that the biggest threat we face? >> pelly: accused cop killer eric frein is still on the run, but the police have found a letter they believe he wrote. don dahler on what's in it. and a wake-up call for high school drop-outs. michelle miller on a program th
dr. jon lapook and manuel bojorquez. as an american allegedly planning to join isis appears in court, we talk to the f.b.i. director about home-grown terror. >> some people call individuals who are radicalized "lone wolves," is that the biggest threat we face? >> pelly: accused cop killer eric frein is still on the run, but the police have found a letter they believe he wrote. don dahler on what's in it. and a wake-up call for high school drop-outs. michelle miller on a...
116
116
Oct 7, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 116
favorite 0
quote 0
dr. jon lapook and manuel bojorquez. as an american allegedly planning to join isis appears in court, we talk to the f.b.i. director about home-grown terror. >> some people call individuals who are radicalized "lone wolves," is that the biggest threat we face? >> pelly: accused cop killer eric frein is still on the run, but the police have found a letter they believe he wrote. don dahler on what's in it. and a wake-up call for high school drop-outs. michelle miller on a program that's giving them a second chance. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening. this is our western edition. until today, everyone who had come down with ebola in the current outbreak had contracted it in west africa. that has just changed. we've learned that a nurse working in spain caught the virus while treating a patient, a spanish priest, seen here arriving in madrid from sierra leone on september 21st. the priest died four days later. the 44-year-old nurse became ill five days after
dr. jon lapook and manuel bojorquez. as an american allegedly planning to join isis appears in court, we talk to the f.b.i. director about home-grown terror. >> some people call individuals who are radicalized "lone wolves," is that the biggest threat we face? >> pelly: accused cop killer eric frein is still on the run, but the police have found a letter they believe he wrote. don dahler on what's in it. and a wake-up call for high school drop-outs. michelle miller on a...
141
141
Oct 13, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 141
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. and deborah patta on the so-far-losing battle against ebola in liberia. while the u.s. attacks isis from the air, it's counting on iraqi soldiers like him to defeat it on the ground. elizabeth palmer is in iraq. more protests in ferguson, missouri. vladimir duthiers looks at what's changed and what hasn't since the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. and michelle miller on the national guard giving high school drop-outs a second chance. >> you're not going to quit on yourself. do you understand me? stay motivated! captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening. the head of the c.d.c. said today that the agency will double down on training after a dallas nurse became the first person to catch ebola in the united states. the nurse helped treat the first ebola patient diagnosed in this country. he caught the virus in liberia. there is a no trespassing sign on the nurse's dallas apartment and hazmat teams have been cleaning
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. and deborah patta on the so-far-losing battle against ebola in liberia. while the u.s. attacks isis from the air, it's counting on iraqi soldiers like him to defeat it on the ground. elizabeth palmer is in iraq. more protests in ferguson, missouri. vladimir duthiers looks at what's changed and what hasn't since the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. and michelle miller on the national guard giving high school drop-outs a second...
119
119
Oct 10, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. vanita nair talks to the father of a child who died of enterovirus. >> reporter: did he show you any signs of illness? >> pelley: norah o'donnell on the young girl who won the nobel peace prize for standing up to the taliban. karma comes back to bite the c.e.o. of microsoft. anthony mason on the uproar over his comments on women and pay. and steve hartman "on the road" with marissa plank, just 24 and living in a retirement home. so what are you doing here?
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. vanita nair talks to the father of a child who died of enterovirus. >> reporter: did he show you any signs of illness? >> pelley: norah o'donnell on the young girl who won the nobel peace prize for standing up to the taliban. karma comes back to bite the c.e.o. of microsoft. anthony mason on the uproar over his comments on women and pay. and steve hartman "on the road" with marissa plank, just 24 and living in a retirement...
136
136
Oct 1, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 136
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapookment anna werner on another virus causing respiratory illness in children. >> it's petrifying. it's absolutely the scariest thing ever to see your child not be able to take a breath. >> pelley: and carter evans on an invasion of walrus. why tens of thousands are hitting the shores of alaska. captioning sponsored by cbs
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapookment anna werner on another virus causing respiratory illness in children. >> it's petrifying. it's absolutely the scariest thing ever to see your child not be able to take a breath. >> pelley: and carter evans on an invasion of walrus. why tens of thousands are hitting the shores of alaska. captioning sponsored by cbs
320
320
Oct 10, 2014
10/14
by
KYW
tv
eye 320
favorite 0
quote 3
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. vanita nair talks to the father of a child who died of enterovirus. >> reporter: did he show you any signs of illness? >> pelley: norah o'donnell on the young girl who won the nobel peace prize for standing up to the taliban. karma comes back to bite the c.e.o. of microsoft. anthony mason on the uproar over his comments on women and pay. and steve hartman "on the road" with marissa plank, just 24 and living in a retirement home. so what are you doing here? captioning sponsored by cbs
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. vanita nair talks to the father of a child who died of enterovirus. >> reporter: did he show you any signs of illness? >> pelley: norah o'donnell on the young girl who won the nobel peace prize for standing up to the taliban. karma comes back to bite the c.e.o. of microsoft. anthony mason on the uproar over his comments on women and pay. and steve hartman "on the road" with marissa plank, just 24 and living in a retirement...
285
285
Oct 13, 2014
10/14
by
KYW
tv
eye 285
favorite 0
quote 5
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. and deborah patta on the so-far-losing battle against ebola in liberia. while the u.s. attacks isis from the air, it's counting on iraqi soldiers like him to defeat it on the ground. elizabeth palmer is in iraq. more protests in ferguson, missouri. vladimir duthiers looks at what's changed and what hasn't since the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. and michelle miller on the national guard giving high school drop-outs a second chance. >> you're not going to quit on yourself. do y u
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. and deborah patta on the so-far-losing battle against ebola in liberia. while the u.s. attacks isis from the air, it's counting on iraqi soldiers like him to defeat it on the ground. elizabeth palmer is in iraq. more protests in ferguson, missouri. vladimir duthiers looks at what's changed and what hasn't since the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. and michelle miller on the national guard giving high school drop-outs a second...
177
177
Oct 13, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 177
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. deborah patta on the so-far-losing battle against ebola in liberia. while the u.s. attacks isis from the air, it's counting on iraqi soldiers like him to defeat it on the ground. elizabeth palmer is in iraq. more protests in ferguson, missouri. vladimir duthiers looks at what's changed and what hasn't since the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. and michelle miller on the national guard giving high school drop-outs a second chance. >> you're not going t
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. deborah patta on the so-far-losing battle against ebola in liberia. while the u.s. attacks isis from the air, it's counting on iraqi soldiers like him to defeat it on the ground. elizabeth palmer is in iraq. more protests in ferguson, missouri. vladimir duthiers looks at what's changed and what hasn't since the fatal police shooting of an unarmed black man. and michelle miller on the national guard giving high school drop-outs a second chance....
230
230
tv
eye 230
favorite 0
quote 5
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapookment anna werner on another virus causing respiratory illness in children. >> it's petrifying. it's absolutely the scariest thing ever to see your child not be able to take a breath. >> pelley: and carter evans on an invasion of walrus. why tens of thousands are hitting the shores of alaska. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley.
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapookment anna werner on another virus causing respiratory illness in children. >> it's petrifying. it's absolutely the scariest thing ever to see your child not be able to take a breath. >> pelley: and carter evans on an invasion of walrus. why tens of thousands are hitting the shores of alaska. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley.
148
148
tv
eye 148
favorite 0
quote 1
manuel, thanks very much. dr. jon lapook, could they have saved this man if they hadn't misdiagnosed him and sent him home for two days? >> reporter: well, scott, we'll never know for sure. but, of course, with any infectious disease, the earlier you treat somebody the better, weps a condition like ebola where dehydration is such a part of the disease, diarrhea, and decreased tblood flow to the orgexpansion those organs can shut down. just giving supportive sthrp with intravenous fluids and electrolights. and, of course, there was the two-day delay where he was sent home by mistake. >> pelley: you have been talking to your source at the c.d.c. what are they doing to make sure this kind of problem that happened at the dallas hospital doesn't happen somewhere ?els. >> reporter: you heard dr. frieden say think ebola. certainly they have been notifying everybody think ebola and i've gotten those directives myself. iin addition, i think we're reaching out to emergency rooms to ask do we have the right protocols in plac
manuel, thanks very much. dr. jon lapook, could they have saved this man if they hadn't misdiagnosed him and sent him home for two days? >> reporter: well, scott, we'll never know for sure. but, of course, with any infectious disease, the earlier you treat somebody the better, weps a condition like ebola where dehydration is such a part of the disease, diarrhea, and decreased tblood flow to the orgexpansion those organs can shut down. just giving supportive sthrp with intravenous fluids...
99
99
Oct 11, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. vanita nair talks to the father of a child who died of enterovirus. >> reporter: did he show you any signs of illness? >> pelley: norah o'donnell on the young girl who won the nobel peace prize for standing up to the taliban. karma comes back to bite the c.e.o. of microsoft. anthony mason on the uproar over his comments on women and pay. and steve hartman "on the road" with marissa plank, just 24 and living in a retirement home. so what are you doing here? captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelle
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. vanita nair talks to the father of a child who died of enterovirus. >> reporter: did he show you any signs of illness? >> pelley: norah o'donnell on the young girl who won the nobel peace prize for standing up to the taliban. karma comes back to bite the c.e.o. of microsoft. anthony mason on the uproar over his comments on women and pay. and steve hartman "on the road" with marissa plank, just 24 and living in a retirement...
111
111
Oct 2, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. anna werner on another virus causing respiratory illness in children. >> it's petrifying. it's absolutely the scariest thing ever to see your child not be able to take a breath. >> pelley: and carter evans on an invasion of walrus. why tens of th are hitting the shores of alaska. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley.
reports from manuel bojorquez and dr. jon lapook. anna werner on another virus causing respiratory illness in children. >> it's petrifying. it's absolutely the scariest thing ever to see your child not be able to take a breath. >> pelley: and carter evans on an invasion of walrus. why tens of th are hitting the shores of alaska. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley.
235
235
Oct 15, 2014
10/14
by
KYW
tv
eye 235
favorite 0
quote 7
reports from manuel bojorquez, anna werner, dr. zero in liberia. the stock market takes a nosedive. anthony mason on wall street's wild ride. agents swoop down on child sex trafficking suspects. and rescue dozens of victims, some as young as 11. elaine quijano reports. and deven's story. don't tell him what he can't do. >> they probably would say, he t
reports from manuel bojorquez, anna werner, dr. zero in liberia. the stock market takes a nosedive. anthony mason on wall street's wild ride. agents swoop down on child sex trafficking suspects. and rescue dozens of victims, some as young as 11. elaine quijano reports. and deven's story. don't tell him what he can't do. >> they probably would say, he t
144
144
Oct 15, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 144
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez, anna werner, dr. lapook and debora patta at ground zero in liberia. the stock market takes a nosedive. anthony mason on wall street's wild ride. agents swoop down on child sex trafficking suspects. and rescue dozens of victims, some as young as 11. elaine quijano reports. and deven's story. don't tell him what he can't do. >> they probably d
reports from manuel bojorquez, anna werner, dr. lapook and debora patta at ground zero in liberia. the stock market takes a nosedive. anthony mason on wall street's wild ride. agents swoop down on child sex trafficking suspects. and rescue dozens of victims, some as young as 11. elaine quijano reports. and deven's story. don't tell him what he can't do. >> they probably d
80
80
Oct 16, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez, anna werner, dr. lapook and debora patta at ground zero in liberia. the stock market takes a nosedive. anthony mason on wall street's wild ride. agents swoop down on child sex trafficking suspects. and rescue dozens of victims, some as young as 11. elaine quijano reports. and jeff pegues on deven's story. don't tell him what he can't do. >> they probably would say, he can't play football no more, and i showed them up. captioning sponsoredcb
reports from manuel bojorquez, anna werner, dr. lapook and debora patta at ground zero in liberia. the stock market takes a nosedive. anthony mason on wall street's wild ride. agents swoop down on child sex trafficking suspects. and rescue dozens of victims, some as young as 11. elaine quijano reports. and jeff pegues on deven's story. don't tell him what he can't do. >> they probably would say, he can't play football no more, and i showed them up. captioning sponsoredcb
146
146
Oct 15, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 146
favorite 0
quote 0
reports from manuel bojorquez, anna werner, dr. jon lapook and debora patta at ground zero in liberia. the stock market takes a nosedive. anthony mason on wall street's wild ride. agents swoop down on child sex trafficking suspects. and rescue dozens of victims, some as young as 11. elaine quijano reports. and deven's story. don't tell him what he can't do. >> they probably would say, he can't play football no more, and i showed them up. >> this is the "cbs evening i showed them up. >> this is the "cbs evening news" with scott captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" this is the "cbs evening news" >> pelley: good evening. the second nurse in dallas diagnosed with ebola is amber vinson, who was among more than 70 workers at texas health presbyterian hospital who treated thomas eric duncan, who died last week. today vinson in the yellow suit was put on a plane to atlanta for treatment at a specialized infectious disease unit at emory university hospital. unfortunately, this is not her first flight this week. monday
reports from manuel bojorquez, anna werner, dr. jon lapook and debora patta at ground zero in liberia. the stock market takes a nosedive. anthony mason on wall street's wild ride. agents swoop down on child sex trafficking suspects. and rescue dozens of victims, some as young as 11. elaine quijano reports. and deven's story. don't tell him what he can't do. >> they probably would say, he can't play football no more, and i showed them up. >> this is the "cbs evening i showed...
252
252
Oct 5, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 252
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel. and joining us here in washington, dr. anthony falchi who heads up the allergy and infectious diseases institute at the national institute of health. doctor, thank you so much for coming, can you say at this point that this situation in dallas has been contained? >> i believe so. right now, the way you classically prevent an outbreaka index person under isolation and care, mr. duncan is in that situation. and then you do what you just heard here is that you do what is called contact tracing. people who have come into direct contact with the patient are observed for a period of 21 days. if they develop symptoms they are put in isolation and if they have ebola, they are treated. and when you put that umbrella over the people who have been the contacts, that is how traditionally over the years in africa outbreaks have been controlled. >> well, is it likely that any of these people, i think there are nine people that had the closest contact, are they likely to come down with ebola? >> well, it depends on what you mean by likel
manuel. and joining us here in washington, dr. anthony falchi who heads up the allergy and infectious diseases institute at the national institute of health. doctor, thank you so much for coming, can you say at this point that this situation in dallas has been contained? >> i believe so. right now, the way you classically prevent an outbreaka index person under isolation and care, mr. duncan is in that situation. and then you do what you just heard here is that you do what is called...
305
305
Oct 13, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 305
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel, thanks. chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook is in washington. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> why is frieden so insist tent that this had to be a break in protocol. >> well, you heard manuel say it's very easy to be infected. it's possible to expose your skin. this happens especially if you're not spefringly trained in how to do this and, of course dallas was -- that hospital did not do specific training beforehand. this was a surprise to them. and i think supporting the fact that the protocol does work if following correctly is the fact that there were two places emery and nebraska, where five people who were infected were treating and none of the health care workers there became infected. they do drill all the time there. >> is there any explanation other than that? >> i don't think you have to invoke that now, charlie. there's four decades of this virus and it is known how it's spread. >> given that and there's an inquiry under way and president obama said this inquiry should happen as quickly as possible, should ebola patients only
manuel, thanks. chief medical correspondent dr. jon lapook is in washington. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> why is frieden so insist tent that this had to be a break in protocol. >> well, you heard manuel say it's very easy to be infected. it's possible to expose your skin. this happens especially if you're not spefringly trained in how to do this and, of course dallas was -- that hospital did not do specific training beforehand. this was a surprise to them. and i...
92
92
Oct 2, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel bojorquez reports. debora patta traces the first u.s. patient's path in west africa. and dr. jon lapook tells us how the deadly disease is spread. a high school football player dies after a hard hit. don dahler looks at a risk faced by hundreds of thousands of young athletes. the airbag that was supposed to save her life nearly killed her. ing jeff glor on a defect in millions of investigation. vehicles. and david martin at the first national memorial to honor america's wounded warriors. >> the last battle isou the last soldier comes home. the war is over. for millions of disabled veterait
manuel bojorquez reports. debora patta traces the first u.s. patient's path in west africa. and dr. jon lapook tells us how the deadly disease is spread. a high school football player dies after a hard hit. don dahler looks at a risk faced by hundreds of thousands of young athletes. the airbag that was supposed to save her life nearly killed her. ing jeff glor on a defect in millions of investigation. vehicles. and david martin at the first national memorial to honor america's wounded warriors....
371
371
tv
eye 371
favorite 0
quote 4
manuel bojorquez reports. debora patta traces the first u.s. patient's path in west africa. and dr. jon lapook tells us how the deadly disease is spread. a high school football player dies after a hard hit. don dahler looks at a risk faced by hundreds of thousands of young athletes. the airbag that was supposed to save her life nearly killed her. ing jeff glor on a defect in millions of investigation. vehicles. and david martin at the first national memorial to honor america's wounded warriors. >> the last battle is fought, the last soldier comes home. the war is over. for millions of disabled veterans, it's not over.
manuel bojorquez reports. debora patta traces the first u.s. patient's path in west africa. and dr. jon lapook tells us how the deadly disease is spread. a high school football player dies after a hard hit. don dahler looks at a risk faced by hundreds of thousands of young athletes. the airbag that was supposed to save her life nearly killed her. ing jeff glor on a defect in millions of investigation. vehicles. and david martin at the first national memorial to honor america's wounded warriors....
396
396
Oct 6, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 396
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> manuel thanks. cdc director dr. tom frieden is with us from atlanta. he's briefing president obama on the ebola outbreak today. doctor, good morning. >> good morning. >> can you tell us the condition of mr. duncan and how he's been treated? >> the patient in dallas is critically ill and we're hoping for progress. what we have seen is that efforts of the dallas and texas state and cdc to track the contacts have been very well done. every contact was identified and measured for temperature yesterday. none of them have symptoms or fever and we're confident if there are any secondary cases there we can stop the chain of transmission. >> doctor, let me ask you. should the cdc now consider a plan to screen everyone coming from these west african countries? >> everyone is being screened when they leave the country. in fact we know mr. -- the patient in dallas's temperature was 97.3 when he left monrovia. in fact about 40,000 people have come in from those countries since the outbreak started and none of them had fever from ebola when they came in. but we will
. >> manuel thanks. cdc director dr. tom frieden is with us from atlanta. he's briefing president obama on the ebola outbreak today. doctor, good morning. >> good morning. >> can you tell us the condition of mr. duncan and how he's been treated? >> the patient in dallas is critically ill and we're hoping for progress. what we have seen is that efforts of the dallas and texas state and cdc to track the contacts have been very well done. every contact was identified and...
215
215
tv
eye 215
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel bojorquez reports. debora patta traces the first u.s. patient's path in west africa. and dr. jon lapook tells us how the deadly disease is spread. a high school football player dies after a hard hit. don dahler looks at a risk faced by hundreds of thousands of young athletes. the airbag that was supposed to save her life nearly killed her. ing jeff glor on a defect in millions of investigation. vehicles. and david martin at the first national memorial to honor america's wounded warriors. >> the last battle is fought, the last soldier comes home. the war is over. for millions of disabled veterans, it's not over. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening. only one case of ebola has been diagnosed in this country, and health health officials are determined to keep it that way. in dallas they are keeping an eye on dozens of people who may have had contact with one patient and so far, they say, none is showing any symptoms. four of his relatives have been confined to their home by court order after they refused a request
manuel bojorquez reports. debora patta traces the first u.s. patient's path in west africa. and dr. jon lapook tells us how the deadly disease is spread. a high school football player dies after a hard hit. don dahler looks at a risk faced by hundreds of thousands of young athletes. the airbag that was supposed to save her life nearly killed her. ing jeff glor on a defect in millions of investigation. vehicles. and david martin at the first national memorial to honor america's wounded warriors....
121
121
Oct 9, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 121
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel bojorquez reports a dallas hospital is defending its treatment of the first u.s. patient to die. dr. jon lapook has the latest on the race to find a vaccine. the chinese buy a u.s. landmark and take america's place as the world's biggest economy. anthony mason has that and what's behind the wild swings on wall street. scientists announce a big step toward the day when diabetics like finn can throw away their insulin. >> pretty much my earliest memories have been with diabetes, and so i don't really know any other way. >> pelley: and jim axelrod with an unlikely journey from the deserts of iraq to the land of 10,000 lakes. >> okay.
manuel bojorquez reports a dallas hospital is defending its treatment of the first u.s. patient to die. dr. jon lapook has the latest on the race to find a vaccine. the chinese buy a u.s. landmark and take america's place as the world's biggest economy. anthony mason has that and what's behind the wild swings on wall street. scientists announce a big step toward the day when diabetics like finn can throw away their insulin. >> pretty much my earliest memories have been with diabetes, and...
484
484
tv
eye 484
favorite 0
quote 5
manuel bojorquez reports a dallas hospital is defending its treatment of the first u.s. patient to die. drjon lapook has the latest on the race to find a vaccine. the chinese buy a u.s. landmark and take america's place as the world's biggest economy. anthony mason has that and what's behind the wild swings on wall street. scientists announce a big step toward the day when diabetics like finn can throw away their insulin. >> pretty much my earliest memories have been with diabetes, and so i don't really know any other way. >> pelley: and jim axelrod with an unlikely journey from the deserts of iraq to the land of 10,000 lakes. >> okay. today is 82 fahre
manuel bojorquez reports a dallas hospital is defending its treatment of the first u.s. patient to die. drjon lapook has the latest on the race to find a vaccine. the chinese buy a u.s. landmark and take america's place as the world's biggest economy. anthony mason has that and what's behind the wild swings on wall street. scientists announce a big step toward the day when diabetics like finn can throw away their insulin. >> pretty much my earliest memories have been with diabetes, and so...
136
136
Oct 8, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 136
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel bojorquez is in dallas. jeff pegues reports the u.s. will take the temperature of air travelers arriving from west africa. perspective on the fast-breaking ebola developments from dr. jon lapook. clarissa ward is inside syria with an american who has joined rebels linked to al qaeda. >> reporter: would you support a terrorist attack on the united states? >> pelley: and as the nfl owners' meeting tackles domestic violence today, elaine quijano talks to abusers who have been through court-ordered intervention. >> reporter: can an abuser be rehabilitated? captioning sponsored by cbs
manuel bojorquez is in dallas. jeff pegues reports the u.s. will take the temperature of air travelers arriving from west africa. perspective on the fast-breaking ebola developments from dr. jon lapook. clarissa ward is inside syria with an american who has joined rebels linked to al qaeda. >> reporter: would you support a terrorist attack on the united states? >> pelley: and as the nfl owners' meeting tackles domestic violence today, elaine quijano talks to abusers who have been...
562
562
tv
eye 562
favorite 0
quote 6
manuel bojorquez is in dallas. jeff pegues reports the u.s. will take the temperature of air travelers arriving from west africa. perspective on the fast-breaking ebola developments from drjon lapook. clarissa ward is inside syria with an american who has joined rebels linked to al qaeda. >> reporter: would you support a terrorist attack on the united states? >> pelley: and as the nfl owners' meeting tackles domestic violence today, elaine quijano talks to abusers who have been through court-ordered intervention. >> reporter: can an abuser be rehabilitated? captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley.
manuel bojorquez is in dallas. jeff pegues reports the u.s. will take the temperature of air travelers arriving from west africa. perspective on the fast-breaking ebola developments from drjon lapook. clarissa ward is inside syria with an american who has joined rebels linked to al qaeda. >> reporter: would you support a terrorist attack on the united states? >> pelley: and as the nfl owners' meeting tackles domestic violence today, elaine quijano talks to abusers who have been...
112
112
Oct 9, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel bojorquez is in dallas. jeff pegues reports the u.s. will take the temperature of air travelers arriving from west africa. perspective on the fast-breaking ebola developments from drn lapook. clarissa ward is inside syria with an american who has joined rebels linked to al qaeda. >> reporter: would you support a terrorist attack on the united states? >> pelley: and as an n.f.l. owners' meeting tackles domestic violence today, elaine quijano talks to abusers who have been through court-ordered intervention. >> reporter: can an abuser be rehabilitated? captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: gd
manuel bojorquez is in dallas. jeff pegues reports the u.s. will take the temperature of air travelers arriving from west africa. perspective on the fast-breaking ebola developments from drn lapook. clarissa ward is inside syria with an american who has joined rebels linked to al qaeda. >> reporter: would you support a terrorist attack on the united states? >> pelley: and as an n.f.l. owners' meeting tackles domestic violence today, elaine quijano talks to abusers who have been...
263
263
Oct 3, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 263
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel, thanks. after leaving liberia two weeks ago duncan traveled on united from belgium to dallas and then on from dallas. dr. jon lapook is with us. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> turning to the united states, who should be at risk? >> the cdc keeps telling us it's those who are in contact with direct body fluids. those people in the apartment. they're in quarantine and the people they had contact with. >> but the story continues to change day by day. yesterday it was 18 people. now we're hearing from health officials that he could have been in contact with as many as 100 people. i know they're casting a wide net but should we be concerned? >> we should be. we're told we have a row best health care system here in the united states. that is true. we're not africa. that is true. if somebody comes here, they'll be identified quickly if they're identified correctly, put into isolation, quarantined, contacts followed. that didn't happen here. the guy came in, said he was from liberia, handshaking. how about walking down the hall and saying, hey, the guy from africa has symptoms. >> and you also have
manuel, thanks. after leaving liberia two weeks ago duncan traveled on united from belgium to dallas and then on from dallas. dr. jon lapook is with us. good morning. >> good morning, charlie. >> turning to the united states, who should be at risk? >> the cdc keeps telling us it's those who are in contact with direct body fluids. those people in the apartment. they're in quarantine and the people they had contact with. >> but the story continues to change day by day....
207
207
Oct 2, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 207
favorite 0
quote 0
manuel, thank you. >>> "usa today" says texas health officials are monitoring a second ebola patient but this morning we're learning from dr. tom frieden that report is not correct. >>> in hawaii they're keeping one patient in isolation. he could have ebola but it could be any number of things. >> dr. jon lapook is here with some answers. good morning. >> good morning. >> what alarms you most and concerns you most at this moment? >> by far what's going on in africa because it's out of control in africa. it's a numbers game. that's part of the reason why it's magical thinking to think there's not going to be other cases. it's an incubation period of 2 to 21 days. it's not a matter of screening. someone gets on a plane, feels fine, comes here, and gets sick. >> 13 people including five children have come in contact with man who may have ebola. how concerned should we be that we could become victims? >> here's the one thing that should calm people down a lot. it's only spread through direct contact with fluids, body fluids. if this were spread through the air the way fluids, there would be millions of people in africa affecte
manuel, thank you. >>> "usa today" says texas health officials are monitoring a second ebola patient but this morning we're learning from dr. tom frieden that report is not correct. >>> in hawaii they're keeping one patient in isolation. he could have ebola but it could be any number of things. >> dr. jon lapook is here with some answers. good morning. >> good morning. >> what alarms you most and concerns you most at this moment? >> by far...