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Jul 22, 2012
07/12
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KRCB
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dr. hyman. so, please let us hear from you at e number on the screen, or donate to this station's website. dr. hyman, this is such an incredible idea. you've taken two of america's biggest problems -- obesity and diabetes -- and wove them together. why? >> well, you know, we were taught in medical school they're different. you know, on one end, you're overweight or obese. on the other end, you're diabetes. the reality is that they're connected. they're the same problem, and they actually should not be distinguished, really, 'cause anywhere along that spectrum, you're at risk for heart attack, strokes, cancer, depression, dementia, infertility, acne. you name it, diabesity is at the root. >> and that's what's amazing. it's a little amazing when you stand before us -- and i know the science is behind it -- to say so many different diseases have, essentially, a couple of root causes. >> that's right. you know, we're trained to treat downstream problems in medicine. we treat the diseases and the symptoms with medication. we don't treat the upstream causes, and the upstream cause of most chronic dis
dr. hyman. so, please let us hear from you at e number on the screen, or donate to this station's website. dr. hyman, this is such an incredible idea. you've taken two of america's biggest problems -- obesity and diabetes -- and wove them together. why? >> well, you know, we were taught in medical school they're different. you know, on one end, you're overweight or obese. on the other end, you're diabetes. the reality is that they're connected. they're the same problem, and they actually...
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Jul 8, 2012
07/12
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FOXNEWSW
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house call@fox news.com, this viewer rights and, dr. got this, i i've idiopathic neuropathy and is so bad, i can hardly use my hands and have lost most of the feeling in both feet and hands. do you have in a answers? dr. siegel frngs h, how did i d. the first word, idiopathic. >> that means we don't know where it comes from and neuropathy, on "sunday house call" we explain what something is to people. it is easy. simply damage to the nerves in your hands and your feet. the peripheral nerves, those that are way out there. that part of the body. now, what is damaging them? that is the first question. and the answer has to come from a neurologist. i see patients with neuropathy, with stocking glove where they literally lose sensation in their hands and feet but it could be weakness as well and i see those patients i think, vitamin b 12 deficiency which we talked about on the show and diabetes, enormous cause of this. sometimes the neuropathy comes before the diabetes and the blood sugar problems and i think of an immunological problem and
house call@fox news.com, this viewer rights and, dr. got this, i i've idiopathic neuropathy and is so bad, i can hardly use my hands and have lost most of the feeling in both feet and hands. do you have in a answers? dr. siegel frngs h, how did i d. the first word, idiopathic. >> that means we don't know where it comes from and neuropathy, on "sunday house call" we explain what something is to people. it is easy. simply damage to the nerves in your hands and your feet. the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 3, 2012
07/12
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SFGTV2
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and i was terrified i was about to lose another baby, and then i found out about this program called tamar children, and dr. gillece is one of the founders of this program. and they said it helps you work on your trauma. i didn't know what trauma was. i figured i had it. i had everything else, your addiction, your mental health, and your recovery. i had a substance abuse problem. they kept diagnosing me with all these mental health illnesses, so a perfect program, and i was able to keep my baby. and this program was also a program based on how to create and develop a secure attachment with your children, because if you don't know, you don't know. if you don't know how to be nurturing and loving, you come from an abusive household, it takes work sometimes not to be abusive. and i think about what dr. clark said and talking about, i don't think trauma so much as dr. clark would say is not in any other cultures. i just think there were different supports in place for those that had been traumatized and, you know, the caucasians or, you know. it was as important to place, as african american, where something h
and i was terrified i was about to lose another baby, and then i found out about this program called tamar children, and dr. gillece is one of the founders of this program. and they said it helps you work on your trauma. i didn't know what trauma was. i figured i had it. i had everything else, your addiction, your mental health, and your recovery. i had a substance abuse problem. they kept diagnosing me with all these mental health illnesses, so a perfect program, and i was able to keep my...
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Jul 4, 2012
07/12
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CURRENT
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katie thomas wrote about this on today's front page and dr. sidney wolfe. th for your time this evening. katie, let me begin with you. quickly, tell us what did they do that evoked this rather massive complaint against them? >> well, there's a lot of stuff in here. but some of the main portions are about these anti-depressant drugs paxil and wellbutrin and also about the diabetes drug avandia. what the prosecutors allege is that they market it, as you said just know, they marketed it for several different uses, everything from sexual dysfunction to weight loss, some of the drugses and that they supplied doctors with gifts and trips to jamaica and bermuda and to try to entice them to prescribe it. >> also suppressing the data that the downside, the risks of the prescription purposes were significant and dangerous. >> yeah. specifically with the drug paxil. what the prosecutors say is that they did clinical trials of paxil and looked at the use of the drug in adolescents and it didn't show good results and in fact, it showed -- it showed some signs that it act
katie thomas wrote about this on today's front page and dr. sidney wolfe. th for your time this evening. katie, let me begin with you. quickly, tell us what did they do that evoked this rather massive complaint against them? >> well, there's a lot of stuff in here. but some of the main portions are about these anti-depressant drugs paxil and wellbutrin and also about the diabetes drug avandia. what the prosecutors allege is that they market it, as you said just know, they marketed it for...
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Jul 15, 2012
07/12
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FOXNEWSW
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dr. siegel, this is exciting, isn't it?> its so important because we thought for a long time, a protein, beta amyloid which builds in the brain of people with alzheimer's patients, remember the word, beta amyloid, it clogs the nerves and, 5 million people have it and probably more undiagnosed, beta amyloid, by the time you see in the brain is too late to do anything and there is another m enzyme, amyloid precursor protein, and it causes the amyloid to form and and a study out of iceland found if you have a mutation or change to that protein you don't make the amyloid and guess what? you have over a 7 times less chance of getting alzheimer's. 7 times less and they studied it in over a thousand people and it was very convincing. for all of the new drugs out there, targeted therapy, antibiotics targeting this amyloid there's a lot of success, possibly on the horizon. we're looking at now how you block the gene. how you get the same thing, in the rare segment of the population, it is very rare that you have the mutation. >> jam
dr. siegel, this is exciting, isn't it?> its so important because we thought for a long time, a protein, beta amyloid which builds in the brain of people with alzheimer's patients, remember the word, beta amyloid, it clogs the nerves and, 5 million people have it and probably more undiagnosed, beta amyloid, by the time you see in the brain is too late to do anything and there is another m enzyme, amyloid precursor protein, and it causes the amyloid to form and and a study out of iceland...
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Jul 8, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN3
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dr. martin luther king. he escaped out of this prison april 1967, and he actually got out through the prison's sally port, that's the point of ingress and egress and got in a giant bread box somewhere between here and across the river, he got off that truck, and at the time, the reward for james earl ray was $50, and that was the standard amount for any inmate. well, after he killed dr. king, of course, the u.s. government had a real high price on his head, and we still had an active warrant for james earl ray right up until the time he died down in tennessee. sonny listen did time here, he was in a-hall, cell 33, came here in 1950 for armed robbery, i believe 13 or 15 children, he was illiterate. the staff here helped him with his boxing career and helped him obtain parole because they saw this man had tremendous talent. this institution is a piece of national history, and i guess sometimes people want history to be all about the good things, but history is, as it happened, and this facility is a sociological classroom, and to me
dr. martin luther king. he escaped out of this prison april 1967, and he actually got out through the prison's sally port, that's the point of ingress and egress and got in a giant bread box somewhere between here and across the river, he got off that truck, and at the time, the reward for james earl ray was $50, and that was the standard amount for any inmate. well, after he killed dr. king, of course, the u.s. government had a real high price on his head, and we still had an active warrant...
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Jul 13, 2012
07/12
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MSNBC
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sohe omaampanqutiserv th an ologto wh i'm onockgn dr this is week, i'm going to be talking about thett romn s, n getngur naonalefen tha bum nts bri, nllowg u to uurreurce our tion resrcesoffshore. when you have an obama campaign, obama told us four years ago, when you can tal abo you rerd y hav t py gam ke is. hean'talk out eirecor de wilbe hpy to th's tirampannd it' sa and pathetic and delusional. >> before you go, i want ask you about the latest rumors rrouing cdoleza re f romn's pick hous morit lear ec caor ge wha souedike a pret resndinendoemen lastight >> i'm a big fan ofondi rice. she bri -- i tnk the's a t ofeoplhat e alifd. ceainlshe uld be alifd. is she a top candidate? >> here's the great thing, on the republican p side as opposed to the democrats,e have so manygrea tenepubcans t the. i'not ivy hevp pic a no osside froitt roey. whenou lk at marco rubio, paul ryan, rob portman, we have a eatalenpool d, youknow at's why, agai the don wano tk abt th turewe'rhappto ta abo theutur >>u're nven ansring the condrice esti,re you, barbara? >> because i'm not privy to that. but we hav
sohe omaampanqutiserv th an ologto wh i'm onockgn dr this is week, i'm going to be talking about thett romn s, n getngur naonalefen tha bum nts bri, nllowg u to uurreurce our tion resrcesoffshore. when you have an obama campaign, obama told us four years ago, when you can tal abo you rerd y hav t py gam ke is. hean'talk out eirecor de wilbe hpy to th's tirampannd it' sa and pathetic and delusional. >> before you go, i want ask you about the latest rumors rrouing cdoleza re f romn's pick...
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Jul 7, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN3
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dr. wise. [ applause ] >> to this right is dr. w. marvin delaney. he is the former executive director of the reserve center at the center. he teaches american history, african-american history, public history an the history of the american civil-rights movement in uta's graduate programs. he is a graduate of central state university. he earned his master of arts and doctor of philosophy degrees at ohio state university in columbus, ohio. he has published several books including black police in america, essays and born to serve. he is completing a book for texas a & m university press. he also combined the traditional role of the am becomic historian and documenting and preserving the african-american experience. please join me in welcoming dr. delaney. >> last but not least is elaine nichols. she is the senior cure rater at the smithsonian institute. she is helping to develop an inaugural exhibition that will be included on the culture floor when the museum opens in 2015. it will focus on a dornment relir religion and performing arts. elaine has an
dr. wise. [ applause ] >> to this right is dr. w. marvin delaney. he is the former executive director of the reserve center at the center. he teaches american history, african-american history, public history an the history of the american civil-rights movement in uta's graduate programs. he is a graduate of central state university. he earned his master of arts and doctor of philosophy degrees at ohio state university in columbus, ohio. he has published several books including black...
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i wish i could keep it this way. [ dr. rahmany ] you see, even after a dental cleaning...que quickly starts to grow back.
i wish i could keep it this way. [ dr. rahmany ] you see, even after a dental cleaning...que quickly starts to grow back.
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Jul 15, 2012
07/12
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FOXNEWS
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eye 162
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dr. siegel, this is exciting, isn't it?s so important because we thought for a long time, a protein, beta amyloid which builds in the brain of
dr. siegel, this is exciting, isn't it?s so important because we thought for a long time, a protein, beta amyloid which builds in the brain of
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Jul 4, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
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eye 394
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paicularly in a national rionxt, is i solyti ifar dr,this a atm rnna rrts is s e rnnarrts may be hiding in communities, ofrab americans and muslims the oplee ne rt as r neik her ne otn op ihoab aca mimmues d ntsaatse coithaeero effective, continuously helpful partners to law enforcement in case after case across the country. e uns hd. bu wt ta o prin t w coit wllagr ability to colle intelligence from them because fear will replace trust. in response to some of the coentsade y ow li al -1 icse srtno sug awornt it's all about accountability. and everybody who is in law enforcement or any other pursuit needaccotabi jli s ofr,t ybeloe ra iifio nn su yoll hpo fi ag let their race or ethnic group is. in fact, that's not what we wod want at all because it's all about the perception of th officer. 's twohao co. blst c it thsu thsu he oy laenforcement officers in ways that are effective, fair and carry out the most important idealsf our societ so t rnswo sut efs as 70e rl il acd to revise the department of justice's profiling guidance. i thank you very much for the opportunity talk to you and i
paicularly in a national rionxt, is i solyti ifar dr,this a atm rnna rrts is s e rnnarrts may be hiding in communities, ofrab americans and muslims the oplee ne rt as r neik her ne otn op ihoab aca mimmues d ntsaatse coithaeero effective, continuously helpful partners to law enforcement in case after case across the country. e uns hd. bu wt ta o prin t w coit wllagr ability to colle intelligence from them because fear will replace trust. in response to some of the coentsade y ow li al -1 icse...
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Jul 1, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN
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. >> dr. thies, could use some of quickly? >> we want to have an integrated approach with a robust incentive to work at every phase of the income distribution. >> thank you. dr. steuerle? >> members of the two committees, thank you for your virginity to appear before you. the nation's real tax system is different than the tax system we know by looking at direct statutory rates such as the income tax and the social security tax. expenditure taxes remain largely hidden from government. they actually are major influences on behavior. these expenditures, i want to be clear, our a classical liberal conservative compromise. you commented about needing to work together to solve this problem. one reason we need to do that is because it is a liberal- conservative compromise in the sense that liberals have favored the steps of implicit texas as a way of increasing productivity. conservatives have said their ways on saving budget revenues. have resulted in very high tax rates. lower income households are especially affected. i remind you
. >> dr. thies, could use some of quickly? >> we want to have an integrated approach with a robust incentive to work at every phase of the income distribution. >> thank you. dr. steuerle? >> members of the two committees, thank you for your virginity to appear before you. the nation's real tax system is different than the tax system we know by looking at direct statutory rates such as the income tax and the social security tax. expenditure taxes remain largely hidden...
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Jul 3, 2012
07/12
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KPIX
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dr. chase. this e-mail indicates a wells fargo representative at his file assigned to the office of the president yet wells fargo says it has no record of receiving the modification or that dr. chase requested any assistance >> no help whatsoever >> wells fargo says that dr. chase's foreclosure was handled appropriately following all state and local foreclosure laws but we now know they are about to change. dr. chase will soon be evicted and forced to live in his car with his dogs but late last week wells fargo did offer him $5,000 of relocation assistance. >> a group of south bay teenager's allowed inside the walls of one of the biggest technology businesses in the world. >> people heading home on bart muni and c,,,,,,,,,,,, >> lights are still on for millions on the east coast three days after a deadly storm swept through the region. without power or air conditioning in the triple digit heat people are seeking refuge in malls and churches but some are stuck due to huge fallen trees. >> we have peop
dr. chase. this e-mail indicates a wells fargo representative at his file assigned to the office of the president yet wells fargo says it has no record of receiving the modification or that dr. chase requested any assistance >> no help whatsoever >> wells fargo says that dr. chase's foreclosure was handled appropriately following all state and local foreclosure laws but we now know they are about to change. dr. chase will soon be evicted and forced to live in his car with his dogs...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jul 27, 2012
07/12
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WHUT
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dr. jeffrey laurence into this conversation, a leading aids researcher and professor at while cornell medicalge in new york. talk about what happened next, dr. gero hÜtter wanted to put out his research. explain the repercussions of this and how it came out into the medical feeling, what has happened to timothy >> the problem is, cure has been a four-letter word for a long time. there have been promises before that had not really panned out about 10 years before this. certain groups suggested maybe you could be treated for a short time with these potent anti-age of the medicines we have and get cured just because of that. that did not work. people were reticent to talk about a cure. we heard about this remarkable pace, which to me was prove he could cure aids, in february 2008, as a poster in an aids meeting in the united states and boston, i got together a group of a dozen scientists. we held a session at mit, from industry, academia, to help, and dr. gero hÜtter from germany to talk about this case, to go over all the information we had to find out how closely they looked at the virus to re
dr. jeffrey laurence into this conversation, a leading aids researcher and professor at while cornell medicalge in new york. talk about what happened next, dr. gero hÜtter wanted to put out his research. explain the repercussions of this and how it came out into the medical feeling, what has happened to timothy >> the problem is, cure has been a four-letter word for a long time. there have been promises before that had not really panned out about 10 years before this. certain groups...
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Jul 29, 2012
07/12
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FOXNEWS
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dr. john sharp. i got to tee this one up for you.he nine-year-old is caught on tape beating the babies. the grandfather said he told the teacher he had been scratched by the toddler and they didn't do nothing so the provirginiaave provirginia teched him that day and do something like that. the aunt said he bad he fight but don't fight little babies but he has a problem he takes medicine he is just a normal kid. >> are they saying that the kid was provoked? >> so going to go and drop kick people and do all this. >> they are not even people they are babies. >> it is learned behavior. what is he going to be like as a teenager are adult? shoot and kill people. this is unacceptable? it might have been learned before. where did he learn how to do this. i'm concerned about the whole family system and his need for medical and psychiatric evaluation. >> this kid did not just walk in there one day and do this. you see him look the other way so that and then when the -- when it calmed down he starts patting the kid like he is his best friend. i
dr. john sharp. i got to tee this one up for you.he nine-year-old is caught on tape beating the babies. the grandfather said he told the teacher he had been scratched by the toddler and they didn't do nothing so the provirginiaave provirginia teched him that day and do something like that. the aunt said he bad he fight but don't fight little babies but he has a problem he takes medicine he is just a normal kid. >> are they saying that the kid was provoked? >> so going to go and drop...
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Jul 9, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN3
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dr. king. that's what we're going to show you in this area today.t i'm going to pull here is the classification book for james earl ray. it actually has the marks and scars that he had for identification purposes, and since he escaped from the missouri state penitentiary, that was important for identifying him once that the national authorities determined who that they were looking for in the manhunt for the killer of dr. king. this is actually the criminal identification for james earl ray. it gives all the statistics for him. if you see here, it kind of lists, like, his birth date, where he was born, his mother's name, his address, then down on the page further it also talks about what he was actually charged for, why he was in the missouri state penitentiary, those kind -- that kind of information. he'd actually stolen a motor vehicle, so he was in for auto theft, basically. these came as a transfer from the missouri state penitentiary. we have a number of series here we pulled some other volumes already that relate to james earl ray as well. and
dr. king. that's what we're going to show you in this area today.t i'm going to pull here is the classification book for james earl ray. it actually has the marks and scars that he had for identification purposes, and since he escaped from the missouri state penitentiary, that was important for identifying him once that the national authorities determined who that they were looking for in the manhunt for the killer of dr. king. this is actually the criminal identification for james earl ray. it...
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i wish i could keep it this way. [ dr. rahmany ] you see, even after a dental cleaning...o grow back. but new crest pro-health clinical plaque control toothpaste can help. it not only reduces plaque... it's also clinically proven... to help keep plaque from coming back. plus, it works in these other areas dentists check most. ♪ new crest pro-health clinical plaque control toothpaste. life opens up when you do. for extra plaque protection try new crest pro-health clinical rinse. i wish i could keep it this way. [ dr. rahmany ] you see, even after a dental cleaning... plaque quickly starts to grow back. but new crest pro-health clinical plaque control toothpaste can help. it not only reduces plaque... it's also clinically proven... to help keep plaque from coming back. plus, it works in these other areas dentists check most. ♪ new crest pro-health clinical plaque control toothpaste. life opens up when you do. for extra plaque protection try new crest pro-health clinical rinse.
i wish i could keep it this way. [ dr. rahmany ] you see, even after a dental cleaning...o grow back. but new crest pro-health clinical plaque control toothpaste can help. it not only reduces plaque... it's also clinically proven... to help keep plaque from coming back. plus, it works in these other areas dentists check most. ♪ new crest pro-health clinical plaque control toothpaste. life opens up when you do. for extra plaque protection try new crest pro-health clinical rinse. i wish i could...
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Jul 29, 2012
07/12
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CNNW
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we don't want to speculate about how much this psychiatrist, dr.ave known about james holmes. but i'm curious what you say about the limits of confidentiality. when do you have to disclose? when does patient/doctor privilege no longer apply? >> there were laws passed in the '70s that states when a patient states a clear and present danger to a person we have the obligation to warn that person, warn family, people who might be related to them, and authorities. so the issue of this and what comes up is how are we compromising our relationship with that client that they might withhold information from us because they know what we have to do, but we also -- some therapists also sometimes don't know what to do in those situations because they don't want to compromise the therapist relationship. they feel they might be able to help before something happens. but it's not our call to make. there's legal and ethical issues to follow. >> isn't there -- it must be hard to tell if you're talking with someone, not saying you've been in this situation, but to so
we don't want to speculate about how much this psychiatrist, dr.ave known about james holmes. but i'm curious what you say about the limits of confidentiality. when do you have to disclose? when does patient/doctor privilege no longer apply? >> there were laws passed in the '70s that states when a patient states a clear and present danger to a person we have the obligation to warn that person, warn family, people who might be related to them, and authorities. so the issue of this and what...
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88
Jul 10, 2012
07/12
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CNBC
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eye 88
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i don't want this dip. >> let's look at the fxi. dr. jay, this must be somewhat related to the trade data that came out over night. what dooupg about that and any unusual activity you look for? >> this was wufr those, scott, opened right around 33, etf for the chinese market and then you take a look it traded all the way down into the 50s, like 32.55 or something like that was the low. i saw a number over 350,000 share blocks of this etf going off bang, bang, bang, bang, down there around those levels within the first hour of trade and then a whole bunch of puts when you put together a long put with an etf or stock and somebody is making a big bet this thing may have bottomed, scott. >> the home builder index trading at a four-year high and beaster home drops after announcing plans to issue more stock. >> as bullish as i am in the long-term on the housing stocks, when you start to see a company selling their own stock which is essentially what they're doing here, that gets me concerned. i would rather be a name where there are buybacks.
i don't want this dip. >> let's look at the fxi. dr. jay, this must be somewhat related to the trade data that came out over night. what dooupg about that and any unusual activity you look for? >> this was wufr those, scott, opened right around 33, etf for the chinese market and then you take a look it traded all the way down into the 50s, like 32.55 or something like that was the low. i saw a number over 350,000 share blocks of this etf going off bang, bang, bang, bang, down there...
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Jul 15, 2012
07/12
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CNNW
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and remember, this is a part of the world where bird flu and sars originated. still, right away, dr. richner knew this was different. >> it's a new picture for us. we've never seen this before -- >> he's the head of the hospital and allowed us into the icu where the patients were treated. give to see give you an idea of how busy this is, as we were talking, did richter got called because another child needed help. dr. richter said 66 children came to the hospital with the mystery illness. for 64 of them, it was 24 hours of hell before they died. you heard right -- all but two died. [ crying ] >> in many of these children, it started off rather mild. a mild fever. but then things progressed quickly from there. for example, in this 2-year-old's case, we don't know what's causing his encephalitis. but this is typically what happens. the fontenell start to bulge and the eyes become disconginate, as well, going from the head to the brain to the lungs. >> you see this, 842, and five hours later, his lungs -- >> in the last few hours of life, this unknown illness completely destroyed the c
and remember, this is a part of the world where bird flu and sars originated. still, right away, dr. richner knew this was different. >> it's a new picture for us. we've never seen this before -- >> he's the head of the hospital and allowed us into the icu where the patients were treated. give to see give you an idea of how busy this is, as we were talking, did richter got called because another child needed help. dr. richter said 66 children came to the hospital with the mystery...
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this is why you should care. all right welcome back i gave a pretty lengthy explanation of what dr roberts is going to be talking talking about so let's get right to this paul craig roberts joins us he's economist former treasury official and dr roberts please do tell us what is your thesis on the libel or rigging and how it would help improve banks' balance sheets. well a lot more relates to almost all of the debt instruments or loans and the collateral debt obligations and a lot of the failings that are on the books of the banks whose values is questionable are linked to live or so when the lived or rate goes down the lower it goes and it pushes up the price of those instruments and therefore it improves you see the price of the debt instrument and the interest rate on it move in opposite directions so the lower the interest rate the higher the price so by fixing the right low their way will be to boost the prices of the instruments on their books and make them look healthier than they actually are aha so that that is how they really gain they gain much more from that than from lending to one another at lower i
this is why you should care. all right welcome back i gave a pretty lengthy explanation of what dr roberts is going to be talking talking about so let's get right to this paul craig roberts joins us he's economist former treasury official and dr roberts please do tell us what is your thesis on the libel or rigging and how it would help improve banks' balance sheets. well a lot more relates to almost all of the debt instruments or loans and the collateral debt obligations and a lot of the...
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Jul 10, 2012
07/12
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CSPAN
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you came up with this particular measure, i think heard you say dr. price, takes $500 million out of medicare. ryan's plan pretty much eliminates medicare. who cares, what we need to do is get busy here. there's enough intelligence in this -- this institution to modify this plan. i want to say one thing about dr. foxx and see keeps saying all of these divisive things and what we are doing. the device has been degrading. it's political posturing. i was thinking last night there was a right wing university, then a whole lot of my republican colleague and some of my democratic colleagues that eligible to be the dean of colleges of hypocrisy. we carry on as if there isn't a real world out here. everybody knows how difficult and complex this issue is. we seen it in more ways than one. we don't have enough nurses. we don't have enough doctors. you see all of this business about jobs. 660,000 new healthcare jobs have been created since and before the affordable care act came into existence. the third highest profession is healthcare delivery for these young p
you came up with this particular measure, i think heard you say dr. price, takes $500 million out of medicare. ryan's plan pretty much eliminates medicare. who cares, what we need to do is get busy here. there's enough intelligence in this -- this institution to modify this plan. i want to say one thing about dr. foxx and see keeps saying all of these divisive things and what we are doing. the device has been degrading. it's political posturing. i was thinking last night there was a right wing...
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125
Jul 24, 2012
07/12
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WETA
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dr. stevens, this libor scandal the latest for the banking industry, subprime lending, trading scandals. what are the cultural conditions that may be fueling this? >> well, it actually is fueled by what i view as the fundamental business dogma of the time which is that only thing that matters is shareholder value. or if not the only thing, the single most important thing. ultimately, when the profit is the driving and exclusive driving factor you're going to end up with greed is good. that as cliched as that sounds, that is in fact an element of what's contributing to these astonishing scandals. >> tom: you're speaking to an audience of shareholders out there and it's got to be heresy for them to hear shareholder value is not the ultimate rule here. so what are you trying to say to them? >> well, what i say to them is that the irony is that when you focus on the growth of the development of the people and you do it driven toward excellence, not focusing on the shareholder value, the irony is that the shareholder value increases, profits go up. >> tom: how else do you measure that if not
dr. stevens, this libor scandal the latest for the banking industry, subprime lending, trading scandals. what are the cultural conditions that may be fueling this? >> well, it actually is fueled by what i view as the fundamental business dogma of the time which is that only thing that matters is shareholder value. or if not the only thing, the single most important thing. ultimately, when the profit is the driving and exclusive driving factor you're going to end up with greed is good....
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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74
Jul 16, 2012
07/12
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SFGTV2
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dr. clark correctly said this is our chance to show real value to the rest of medicine. if we can show improved outcomes in general health by showing that when you do it with the kind of innovative programs that candice is talking about you get better cost savings, you get better access, you get better adherence to treatment, now, you've got something. i would add to what tom is saying is it's not only a matter of-although critical-not only a matter of helping physicians and other healthcare professionals see that they are going to get better outcomes, in the long run, it's going to be more cost effective. yes. absolutely. but it's also a matter of really helping people understand on a very deep level that addiction is not about a failure of the will. it's a brain disease, and it must be treated as a medical condition on parity with other kinds of chronic conditions. i think that really plays into stigma when people do not see it as a- absolutely. and, dr. clark, i want to go back and, as we're offering the audience a sense of where they can look for information and for
dr. clark correctly said this is our chance to show real value to the rest of medicine. if we can show improved outcomes in general health by showing that when you do it with the kind of innovative programs that candice is talking about you get better cost savings, you get better access, you get better adherence to treatment, now, you've got something. i would add to what tom is saying is it's not only a matter of-although critical-not only a matter of helping physicians and other healthcare...
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this mystery illness has killed 64 children, all of them in cambodia. dr. just landed there. i talked with him a few minutes ago about this. >> it's something known as virus 71. it's a particular type of virus that can cause something known as hand, foot, mouth disease. they've seen outbreaks of this disease in various parts of the world. oftentimes it can be contained. it certainly doesn't have the same degree of lethality as this. so that's where a little bit of the mystery still remains. why is this killing children so universally, and could this potentially be a mixture of this virus with something else? >>> in other news, a hollywood legend of the big screen and small screen, ernest borgnine, has died. did you know that he won an oscar? he did in 1955. best actor for the movie "marty." but he was really known for guest starring in a bunch of tv shows like "air wolf" and mchale's navy." he died in a homt in los angeles. he was 95 years old. >>> john rocker, his baseball career ended in controversy. not shying away from controversy, he's now a political
this mystery illness has killed 64 children, all of them in cambodia. dr. just landed there. i talked with him a few minutes ago about this. >> it's something known as virus 71. it's a particular type of virus that can cause something known as hand, foot, mouth disease. they've seen outbreaks of this disease in various parts of the world. oftentimes it can be contained. it certainly doesn't have the same degree of lethality as this. so that's where a little bit of the mystery still...
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Jul 18, 2012
07/12
by
CNBC
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this story. cledene died not long after dr. walton's house call. ys whispers about programs like this, that they can't outlive the people the people that founded the place. that when the paul farmers move on, p.i.h. will be done. >> paul, part of his genius is that he has set up a system that doesn't depend on his presence or absence. haiti is run by haitian physicians. in rwanda, the rwandan hospitals should be run by rwandan physicians. and so, when the paul farmers of the world aren't around anymore, this place will still be here providing great care. >> you know that or just hope that? >> i know it. i know it. >> but there's no question, paul farmer has been a driving force. take aids, for example. in the late 1990s, the disease was ravaging the people of haiti. conventional medical wisdom was, there's no point in giving aids drugs to the poor in third-world countries. but dr. farmer wouldn't give up on his patients. he raised money and gave them drugs anyway. and look what happened. this is joseph. and this is joseph just six months after start
this story. cledene died not long after dr. walton's house call. ys whispers about programs like this, that they can't outlive the people the people that founded the place. that when the paul farmers move on, p.i.h. will be done. >> paul, part of his genius is that he has set up a system that doesn't depend on his presence or absence. haiti is run by haitian physicians. in rwanda, the rwandan hospitals should be run by rwandan physicians. and so, when the paul farmers of the world aren't...
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Jul 12, 2012
07/12
by
CSPAN2
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eye 148
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we have great concerns about this, and i would agree with dr. mcaneny, but we must look at the balance of this because there are some systems out there working to make it better for physicians and hospitals and patients, most importantly, to get the job done. >> i just, um, add to what my colleague said here. there's been a major change in cardiology. it isn't everywhere, but in indiana 95% of the cardiologists work for some health system or hospital. and there's been a great move. and as best we can measure a lot of it is due to just the uncertainty right now in finances, you know? it's like if you have a practice and these are small businesses, what are you going to do at the end of the year if there's a huge change in physician payments? i saw people in the detroit area, some physician practices, for instance, when we had a delay in kicking sgr down the road, and there was nothing coming from medicare, it was either -- it was, like, they were worried about paying their staff. they didn't want to lay their staff off whose husbands may already n
we have great concerns about this, and i would agree with dr. mcaneny, but we must look at the balance of this because there are some systems out there working to make it better for physicians and hospitals and patients, most importantly, to get the job done. >> i just, um, add to what my colleague said here. there's been a major change in cardiology. it isn't everywhere, but in indiana 95% of the cardiologists work for some health system or hospital. and there's been a great move. and as...
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83
Jul 29, 2012
07/12
by
KTVU
tv
eye 83
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and motivate people to push back and resist this yesterday vision of america and i think we have to replace it with a future vision. >> do we have the strength, dro a full fledged movement? we have seen troy davis, tooky williams, we have seen black people executed by the state without a full-fledged response. is this a different time? >> well, i think it is the potential to be as the mayor just indicated. the moment is luminous, but the movement has to be extended. it's based z on a couple of things. it's not just an isolated and extraordinary event. it's extraordinary in the sense that it was brought to our attention by means of trayvon martin, but there are so many other trayvon martins out there. >> you're part of the greater project. resurrecting the movement and tell us what you're doing there. >> we are understanding the genius of the civil rights movement was not just marching and sitting at lunch counters. we want the laws to be repealed, we want a greater sense of justice in our community and the second step of voter registration, we have to educate why we're going to the polls in november because stand your ground has been on the book
and motivate people to push back and resist this yesterday vision of america and i think we have to replace it with a future vision. >> do we have the strength, dro a full fledged movement? we have seen troy davis, tooky williams, we have seen black people executed by the state without a full-fledged response. is this a different time? >> well, i think it is the potential to be as the mayor just indicated. the moment is luminous, but the movement has to be extended. it's based z on...
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830
Jul 14, 2012
07/12
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 830
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gen eune, a jrnalt, d mi romy cle an drs day thi sto o doet ntin on i dn'tearnyoors ose. at i hrd was him being very precise in his language in talking about, well, i didn't participate in the bn enterise i dot kn wthatans. on'tecal a sgle instme cisi. i don kno exaly wt tha mes. bu ihink he is slicing the onion awfully thin, and be very, very specific abilityhat he' lingut wne innds- wh he tri to leahe preson tt heft in. i tnk tommo sen esti ishy oarth wld you sign your name to forms to the s.e.c. saying you were ceo and managing dector a everhinglsefhisompa if yidn' knonythg abouit if yerenacally respsibland llin to te reonsilityor wt th compy wadoin th wou be a verwise thinto do, and i think mitt romney is more meticulous than that. this doesn't square. we, thiteouse ss toght at ty areot sasfiewithitt mney aners day. eyay tt th sti wanto seeore taxeturndinut fr mney meetings at bain capital. michael steele, your thouts, did he close any doors today or is itore mplited? t's ltle me mplited ere,ed. iree wheune,,he door wen'tclos. i n'tink,s tiglys theyouldike. in fact, t
gen eune, a jrnalt, d mi romy cle an drs day thi sto o doet ntin on i dn'tearnyoors ose. at i hrd was him being very precise in his language in talking about, well, i didn't participate in the bn enterise i dot kn wthatans. on'tecal a sgle instme cisi. i don kno exaly wt tha mes. bu ihink he is slicing the onion awfully thin, and be very, very specific abilityhat he' lingut wne innds- wh he tri to leahe preson tt heft in. i tnk tommo sen esti ishy oarth wld you sign your name to forms to the...