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Apr 15, 2017
04/17
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CNNW
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ebola is transmitted through bodily fluid, saliva, feces and urine. >> ebola surfaced in west africa in a remote world community but are ins creasingly connecting world. this outbreak did not stay in the countryside. the virus found its way to the region's angelina jollargest ci health systems that were completely unprepared. >> i graduated from nursing school two years ago. the reason why i am here, i was the only one available. >> i am a general practitioner and i got one day training to get prepared for this. >> sit up for me. >> when we started on august 17th, the following morning, there were ambulances lining up our gates. we were not prepared. before we knew it, we are already overwhelmed with so many patien patients. >> how many you got more? i can take four. >> i will take one or two. he said give me that -- that impression i was in haiti. the patients are vomiting and bleeding and diarrhea on the floor. in three day's time the entire unit was full. they are begging every time, they are begging to come in. >> you zrodon't have beds but y have a group of people who are dying.
ebola is transmitted through bodily fluid, saliva, feces and urine. >> ebola surfaced in west africa in a remote world community but are ins creasingly connecting world. this outbreak did not stay in the countryside. the virus found its way to the region's angelina jollargest ci health systems that were completely unprepared. >> i graduated from nursing school two years ago. the reason why i am here, i was the only one available. >> i am a general practitioner and i got one...
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Apr 16, 2017
04/17
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CNNW
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i got information yesterday that the ebola virus is here. >> ebola is transmitted through bodily fluids, saliva, blood, urine, feces. >> ebola first surfaced in west africa in a rural community. but this ebola outbreak didn't say in the countryside. the virus quickly found its way to the region's largest cities and health systems that were completely unprepared. >> i graduated from nurse school two years ago. the reason why i'm here is quite different because i was the only one available. i'm a general practitioner and i got one day training to get prepared for this. we started our mission. the following morning there were ambulances lined up at our gates and we were not prepared. before we even knew it, we already were overwhelmed with so many patients. >> have a nice visit. i will take one or two. >> i got that impression i was in hades, because it was a makeshift structure. the patients are vomiting, bleeding and having diarrhea on the floor and two or three patients have already died, bodies were still there. in three days time, the entire unit was full. meanwhile, there was still p
i got information yesterday that the ebola virus is here. >> ebola is transmitted through bodily fluids, saliva, blood, urine, feces. >> ebola first surfaced in west africa in a rural community. but this ebola outbreak didn't say in the countryside. the virus quickly found its way to the region's largest cities and health systems that were completely unprepared. >> i graduated from nurse school two years ago. the reason why i'm here is quite different because i was the only...
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Apr 8, 2017
04/17
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CNNW
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. >> my whole family got ebola. eight died, two survived. after i survived, i voluntarily decided to give care to these children. hello, everybody. lunch is ready, we're going to have our lunch. these children are here because they have lost everything from ebola and the community has a responsibility to take care of them. in taking care of these children, they are risking their lyes. since we are survivors, we cannot infect them and we cannot get infected by them. so these children are brought here to be under quarantine. in entering the home, they can really, really be afraid. not wanting to talk to anybody, not wanting to share their problems. they don't know who to trust. by time goes by, while talking to them, one-on-one, they start talking back to us. >> when ebola ends, every day is going to change, families are apart for good. my daughter is 4 years old. i called on my best friend in life, and my son is also very brilliant. because i was so afraid of them becoming infected, i had to stay away from them for a long while. people only s
. >> my whole family got ebola. eight died, two survived. after i survived, i voluntarily decided to give care to these children. hello, everybody. lunch is ready, we're going to have our lunch. these children are here because they have lost everything from ebola and the community has a responsibility to take care of them. in taking care of these children, they are risking their lyes. since we are survivors, we cannot infect them and we cannot get infected by them. so these children are...
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Apr 15, 2017
04/17
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CNNW
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. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> my whole family got ebola. eight died, two survived. i survived, i voluntarily decided to give care to these children. hello, everybody. lunch is ready, we're going to have our lunch. these children are here because they have lost everything from ebola and the community has a responsibility to take care of them. in taking care of these children, they are risking their lives. since we are survivors, we cannot infect them and we cannot get infected by them. so these children are brought here to be under quarantine. in entering the home, they can really, really be afraid. not wanting to talk to anybody, not wanting to share their problems. they don't know who to trust. by time goes by, while talking to them, one-on-one, they start talking back to us. >> when ebola ends, everything is going to change, families are apart for good. my daughter is 4 years old. i called on my best friend in life, and my son is also very brilliant. because i was so afraid of them becoming infected, i had to stay away from them for a long while. people only see t
. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> my whole family got ebola. eight died, two survived. i survived, i voluntarily decided to give care to these children. hello, everybody. lunch is ready, we're going to have our lunch. these children are here because they have lost everything from ebola and the community has a responsibility to take care of them. in taking care of these children, they are risking their lives. since we are survivors, we cannot infect them and we cannot get infected by them. so these...
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Apr 12, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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also this hour — she survived ebola —
also this hour — she survived ebola —
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Apr 20, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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mcneill itch want to ask you about the ebola virus. i understand the federal government spent a great deal of money on the -- weren't too many cases of the ebola virus. >> guest: well, there is no cure. there is a vaccine against it. it's too bad that vaccine wasn't ready ten years ago because it -- that vaccine was designed ten years ago by a doctor in texas, proven to be safe in humans and worked in monkeys, but because there was no money to be made on the vaccine nobody went ahead and made a few million doses which have been helpful when it happened in africa. it don't know what you mean by not many cases. 11,000 people in west africa got ebola. 6,000 of them died. that's a pretty substantialout break, and it did come to the united states and killed somebody in texas and before he dried he transmitted to two i'm poo. and ebola is a horrific death. so, you don't want a disease like that spreading. you don't want a disease like that changing so it can spread more easily inmakes do in mosquitoes or through sneezes. in bieb -- ebola you
mcneill itch want to ask you about the ebola virus. i understand the federal government spent a great deal of money on the -- weren't too many cases of the ebola virus. >> guest: well, there is no cure. there is a vaccine against it. it's too bad that vaccine wasn't ready ten years ago because it -- that vaccine was designed ten years ago by a doctor in texas, proven to be safe in humans and worked in monkeys, but because there was no money to be made on the vaccine nobody went ahead and...
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Apr 10, 2017
04/17
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FBC
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but only two people caught ebola in america. neither died.n in west africa where there was an epidemic, more people were killed by other diseases, like the flu. when the scare was at its peak, i tried to provoke the women on the fox show by saying this. >> this is an overhyped risk being pumped by news media like us and especially you women more scared of ebola than men. i'm being sexist here. >> why is it wrong to be safe than stronger? >> i would like to see extra screenings. >> what would that cost? again, without putting up walls, no american caught ebola here and died from it. by contrast, 100 americans were killed by deer this year. aren't they cute? deer kill lots of people because we drive into them in our cars. no one proposes killing out the deer. we worry about ebola, sharks, tiny amounts of chemicals in food. nobody gets in their car and say, gee, what if i hit a deer today. >> deer collisions can be a real concern. it happens more than a million times a year. so why do we worry about the wrong things? this book, how risky tries t
but only two people caught ebola in america. neither died.n in west africa where there was an epidemic, more people were killed by other diseases, like the flu. when the scare was at its peak, i tried to provoke the women on the fox show by saying this. >> this is an overhyped risk being pumped by news media like us and especially you women more scared of ebola than men. i'm being sexist here. >> why is it wrong to be safe than stronger? >> i would like to see extra...
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Apr 2, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN
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military invested in ebola research. community,litary they have been concerned for a while that it's an agent terrorists could use. viruses or bacteria as weapons. that is another reason we need to invest in the science, because it's a security issue. host: is this your portfolio as well? guest: very much so. after 9/11, when we had the anthrax attacks, the united states government put an extraordinary amount of investment, in the form of $1.6 billion, to develop countermeasures against agents that could be deliberately released in a bioterror way. we do have a good portfolio for that, but i want to emphasize that, historically, looking back now and in the future, the threat of a naturally occurring outbreak that has a bad effect on the global community is much, much more of a threat than a deliberate release. although we have to keep our radar screens up as a possibility of it being delivered bioterrorism, i worry more about a new pandemic abo ar another respiratory illness that naturally spreads in the community. both.
military invested in ebola research. community,litary they have been concerned for a while that it's an agent terrorists could use. viruses or bacteria as weapons. that is another reason we need to invest in the science, because it's a security issue. host: is this your portfolio as well? guest: very much so. after 9/11, when we had the anthrax attacks, the united states government put an extraordinary amount of investment, in the form of $1.6 billion, to develop countermeasures against agents...
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Apr 2, 2017
04/17
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FOXNEWSW
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we were asked to take the lead and taking care of ebola setting an etu, ebola treatment unit. other things and we stopped everything we were doing and focused on how to treat people that had the disease ebola and one of our doctors, the man in charge, doctor got ebola and the story of god and saved -- >> missionary nurse. >> missionary nurse that was helping dr. bradley. we didn't know if ebola was airborne, how it was being transmitted at the time and i have no way of get him back home. no way. an airlines wasn't going to bring him, nothing, god worked it out and we got him back. abby: when you say that god saved their lives, you know what happened on the ground. walk us how he saved their life? >> this film is a story about time, okay, because once you get ebola you have about ten days if you're healthy and then you're death. if you're not healthy you have about four days. he was healthy and got sick on a wednesday and by monday we thought we had an airplane, monday night, no, the plane said, no, we are not going to pick him up. a lady showed up with an experimental drug cal
we were asked to take the lead and taking care of ebola setting an etu, ebola treatment unit. other things and we stopped everything we were doing and focused on how to treat people that had the disease ebola and one of our doctors, the man in charge, doctor got ebola and the story of god and saved -- >> missionary nurse. >> missionary nurse that was helping dr. bradley. we didn't know if ebola was airborne, how it was being transmitted at the time and i have no way of get him back...
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Apr 24, 2017
04/17
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LINKTV
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one of the biggest problems with the ebola crisis is there was such a high rate of infection for healthe workers, and a lot of that was from ineffective decontamination. man: so one bottle... jin: so our idea was initially to colorize the solution so you could see where you're spraying the transparent disinfectant bleach and, therefore, have a good idea of what surfaces you've covered and what surfaces you haven't. we also learned that bleach needs to remain on the surface for 10 minunutes for the pathogn to be kikilled, so we also addea color marker that would tell you when you can take off the suit. so the cool thing about the color is that once it's completely faded to clear, you'll know that you don't-- you can touch the surface, and it'll be safe to touch, and while it's still blue, you'll know that it still has active pathogens on it. it's really amazing to be able to improve the confidence of these people that are already sacrificing so much. right now, the technology is limited to bleach sprays, which is usually used in the ngo epidemic context. we're expanding it to wipes and h
one of the biggest problems with the ebola crisis is there was such a high rate of infection for healthe workers, and a lot of that was from ineffective decontamination. man: so one bottle... jin: so our idea was initially to colorize the solution so you could see where you're spraying the transparent disinfectant bleach and, therefore, have a good idea of what surfaces you've covered and what surfaces you haven't. we also learned that bleach needs to remain on the surface for 10 minunutes for...
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Apr 20, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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. >> caller: i want to ask about the ebola virus i understand the government spent a great deal of money but they were not too many cases of the ebola virus.cure. >> guest: is no cure there is a vaccine against it. it's too bad it wasn't ready ten years ago because it was designed ten years ago by a doctor in texas and it was proven to be safe in humans and worked in monkeys that there was no money to be made in the vaccine nobody went ahead and whewent to dig a protected i dot know what you mean by not very many cases.w 1,000 people in africa can'teb ebola and i think 6,000 of them died. that is a pretty substantial outbreak and did it come to the united states and killed somebody in texas and before he died it was transmitted to two other people and it's a pretty horrific death. you don't want a disease like that spreading or changing so that it can spread more easily. you don't want to have physical contact with someone in order to pass it on and we are pretty good about isolating patients and if you know a disease is around in your town you will take precautions. i don't subscribe to
. >> caller: i want to ask about the ebola virus i understand the government spent a great deal of money but they were not too many cases of the ebola virus.cure. >> guest: is no cure there is a vaccine against it. it's too bad it wasn't ready ten years ago because it was designed ten years ago by a doctor in texas and it was proven to be safe in humans and worked in monkeys that there was no money to be made in the vaccine nobody went ahead and whewent to dig a protected i dot know...
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Apr 30, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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and by the way, ebola never crossed the ghanaian border. so where to start?lace, as it plays a crucial role in the country's colonial past. this is jamestown, and it's the first place that the british came to when they arrived here on the gold coast. and while relics of that time still dominate the skyline, jamestown‘s managed to carve itself a little sporting niche. for some reason, these few streets have churned out champion boxers like nowhere else. ghana's produced seven world champions, and most of these trained in the gyms here. hello. how are you? nice to meet you. you must be samuel. on sunday evenings the streets become packed. makeshift rings are set up and people come to watch challenge fights. what is it about jamestown, why do you create such good boxers and why has it become popular? the mainjob is fishing. we have the boxers, the musicians and the dancers. at the ages of nine years, they have to learn the boxing like this. this is great, but they look very young to me, you know, to be fighting. sometimes you see their parents, their parents has
and by the way, ebola never crossed the ghanaian border. so where to start?lace, as it plays a crucial role in the country's colonial past. this is jamestown, and it's the first place that the british came to when they arrived here on the gold coast. and while relics of that time still dominate the skyline, jamestown‘s managed to carve itself a little sporting niche. for some reason, these few streets have churned out champion boxers like nowhere else. ghana's produced seven world champions,...
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Apr 20, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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at the who is essential for doing things like biting ebola.they did a bad time, it took them months to get them cranking, doctors without borders was fighting the disease alone in africa. the who used to have teams, rapid teams, rapid response team that would leave geneva to tackle ebola after. they isolated patients by burying the dead and by decontaminating them with bleach. but the last one in 2014 got away from them and the people who fled from the villages where the epidemic, fled to the capitals. the disease began to spread from the capitals and from that.was out of control for quite a while >> in the field in central africa, you are living in tents, driving a jeep i imagine what the weather was like we have steak, we have alligators, and you are having a pitched battle over postage stamps. >> at the same time, the who is the only organization i can declare a public emergency which you need to do to get it alerted. it gets a lot of countries cranking there own equivalent cdc to fight the disease. also, when you have an epidemic they over
at the who is essential for doing things like biting ebola.they did a bad time, it took them months to get them cranking, doctors without borders was fighting the disease alone in africa. the who used to have teams, rapid teams, rapid response team that would leave geneva to tackle ebola after. they isolated patients by burying the dead and by decontaminating them with bleach. but the last one in 2014 got away from them and the people who fled from the villages where the epidemic, fled to the...
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Apr 21, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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i was atjordan, to help ebola, syrian refugees. help ebola, syrian refugees. i was atjordan, meeting some youngsters who have been given good quality education. that is one of the things that the united kingdom is providing. we maintain that commitment but want to make sure that we're spending that money as effectively as possible. that "but". exactly. i have spoken to a senior conservative source, who knows about international development, to ask about that particular caveat. and without disappearing into the nerdiness of accounting practices, this boils down to the government saying, are they going to stick with the definition of what counts as international aid, and then determine what they think is the best use of that money? 0r trying to broaden the definition, some have suggested it could include security spending, from the foreign office. and if so, those who want to see some watering down could cheer it is not what it was. no commitment, no direct answer, sources have said just wait for the manifesto. and the question from
i was atjordan, to help ebola, syrian refugees. help ebola, syrian refugees. i was atjordan, meeting some youngsters who have been given good quality education. that is one of the things that the united kingdom is providing. we maintain that commitment but want to make sure that we're spending that money as effectively as possible. that "but". exactly. i have spoken to a senior conservative source, who knows about international development, to ask about that particular caveat. and...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 23, 2017
04/17
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SFGTV
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in fact, we just finished the ebola crisis when the national cdc said that ebola was no longer a epidemic in the west african region, they called off their alerts saying travellers to west africa no longer needed surveillance that was done urltier last year. staff had a two week break and zekey oughtbreak came so got a quick haveication and back to work. we talked about how this strains or stresses the servicess kw staff says we have good people and have what it takes to manage including work wg the airport for example if there is a threat of asian flu going on and i think we have seen them now work across systems, the helt system with zika and pregnancy and ebola system across multiple hospitals so very proud of this division because if there is a question of travel related disease or communeicable diseases i think the evidence is our department is ready in a prevention matter and interventional. any questions othen cdcp division? if not i go to-again, i want to thank dr.s cora hoover and susan phillip for excellent job and leadership of their division. we heard from haly hammer who is d
in fact, we just finished the ebola crisis when the national cdc said that ebola was no longer a epidemic in the west african region, they called off their alerts saying travellers to west africa no longer needed surveillance that was done urltier last year. staff had a two week break and zekey oughtbreak came so got a quick haveication and back to work. we talked about how this strains or stresses the servicess kw staff says we have good people and have what it takes to manage including work...
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Apr 20, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 46
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[laughter] he covers diseases of the world including aids, ebola, malaria, swine and bird flu, mad cow disease and sars. he joined the times and 1976 is a copy boy and has been an environmental reporter, theater columnist and editor. that is like another hour for this session. he has won awards for stories about cities that have successfully fought aids, about patent monopolies that keep drug prices high and africa and about diseases that cannot be eradicated. this afternoon we are talking about epidemics, old and new. iran ever present place for our panelists this afternoon. [applause] >> benjamin, before we really dig into these diseases i would like to invite you to offer some introductory remarks about your works. we are talking about here and really what you set out to accomplish with them. >> there is a well-known phenomenon among journalists. known as a medical writer's syndrome. that when you read about a disease he is a symptoms of it. you must have a heckuva life. [laughter] >> i wrote the book about smallpox at the time that it had enough that was eradicated. it turns it the
[laughter] he covers diseases of the world including aids, ebola, malaria, swine and bird flu, mad cow disease and sars. he joined the times and 1976 is a copy boy and has been an environmental reporter, theater columnist and editor. that is like another hour for this session. he has won awards for stories about cities that have successfully fought aids, about patent monopolies that keep drug prices high and africa and about diseases that cannot be eradicated. this afternoon we are talking...
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Apr 1, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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process that insured as best we could to try the navigate a wide range of risks from terrorism to ebola and reassert american leadership and now about two and a half years ago i was leading the white house to move over the state department and just before i left i was sitting with then president obama and i asked him, what did he want me to focus on in the new assignment as tp secretary of state and we didn't lack for priorities or opportunities leading a coalition of 66 countries to defeat isil, resisting russian aggression in ukraine, the list goes on and on and given everything that we hat on our plates, i wanted to get guidance on the president, is there one thing that you want me to focus on. his answer is immediate, asia. when i got to the department, i asked the same question of secretary of state kerry and happily i got the same answer. i think it was clear evidence that both the president and secretary kerry attached to the region and again with very good reason no. where in world are the economic and strategic opportunities of the united states clearer or more compelling than
process that insured as best we could to try the navigate a wide range of risks from terrorism to ebola and reassert american leadership and now about two and a half years ago i was leading the white house to move over the state department and just before i left i was sitting with then president obama and i asked him, what did he want me to focus on in the new assignment as tp secretary of state and we didn't lack for priorities or opportunities leading a coalition of 66 countries to defeat...
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Apr 16, 2017
04/17
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KNTV
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eye 112
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think how panicked we were about ebola and zika. we have more people dying of opioid overdose in a year than were killed in the entire vietnam war. han were killed in the entire vietnam war. this is an issue that has been covered more recently than it ever has before, but we are still not seeing the response commensurate with if this were any other set of illnesses. we would be reacting a lot more aggressively. soledad: you wrote a book about your addiction called "common struggle addiction." it really works through your personal story. it seems to me the kennedys, as i'm sure you heard a million times, are addiction." it really works through your personal story. america's royalty, and if you are well off in america and you are an addict, you have a different path compared to if you have no money and no assets and you are an asset -- addt. rep. kennedy: what is common about being a kennedy? the irony is, i kept my family secrets, my mother's alcoholism, my dad self-medicating through posttraumatic stress, all to myself, not realizin
think how panicked we were about ebola and zika. we have more people dying of opioid overdose in a year than were killed in the entire vietnam war. han were killed in the entire vietnam war. this is an issue that has been covered more recently than it ever has before, but we are still not seeing the response commensurate with if this were any other set of illnesses. we would be reacting a lot more aggressively. soledad: you wrote a book about your addiction called "common struggle...
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Apr 1, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 52
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that insured as best he could do we try to navigate a wide range of risk everything from terrorism to ebola and sees opportunities to reassert american leadership on the global stage. now about two and half years ago i was leaving the white house to move to the state department and just before i left i was sitting with then president obama and i asked him what did he want me to focus on in this newest site and asked deputy secretary of state? we didn't lack for opportunities. leading a coalition of countries to to fight iso- resisting destruction in ukraine and the list goes on and on. he said one thing that you particularly might need to focus on and his answer was immediate, asia. then when i got to the department i asked the same question of secretary of state character and happily i got exactly the same answer. which was a very good sign. i think it was a clear sign of the importance that both the president secretary kerry attached to the region and again with very very good reason. nowhere in the world on economic and strategic interest and opportunities in the united states is clearer
that insured as best he could do we try to navigate a wide range of risk everything from terrorism to ebola and sees opportunities to reassert american leadership on the global stage. now about two and half years ago i was leaving the white house to move to the state department and just before i left i was sitting with then president obama and i asked him what did he want me to focus on in this newest site and asked deputy secretary of state? we didn't lack for opportunities. leading a...
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Apr 15, 2017
04/17
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WUSA
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eye 95
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looks like ebola. is it something new? thornton: try something old. 30,000 years old.elieve this virus is the biological weapon. macgyver: stopping the bomb is out of the questi on. jack: then get the virus and get out of there! (man singing call to prayer) (muffled grunting) jack: ♪ now, when he was a young man ♪ ♪ he never thought he'd see ♪ ♪ people stand in line to see the boy king ♪
looks like ebola. is it something new? thornton: try something old. 30,000 years old.elieve this virus is the biological weapon. macgyver: stopping the bomb is out of the questi on. jack: then get the virus and get out of there! (man singing call to prayer) (muffled grunting) jack: ♪ now, when he was a young man ♪ ♪ he never thought he'd see ♪ ♪ people stand in line to see the boy king ♪
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114
Apr 6, 2017
04/17
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CNNW
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we add bohad ebola in africa.ult in the broad population to spread something like ebola. whereas with influenza because of the speed of travel throughout the world, 18 hours you're on the other half of the world, that's what we worry about. >> how do we prevent a pandemic like that from occurring. >> outbreaks you cannot prevent, the emergence of a new in23eks. the trick is to keep it from going from an outbreak to a epidemic ajds from an epidemic to a pandemic. having a good vaccine capability is one of the answers. in china there's a bird flu smoeltderring there, not spreading very rapidly. we're developing a vaccine so that if it develops the ability to go from human to human we have a head start. >> first of all, is there a vaccine for zika in the works? >> more than in the works. we actually started an advanced phase two study about a week and a half ago in the united states and puerto rico and we'll be going into south america with it as we get into the summer. we're well on the way to a zika vaccine. >> is
we add bohad ebola in africa.ult in the broad population to spread something like ebola. whereas with influenza because of the speed of travel throughout the world, 18 hours you're on the other half of the world, that's what we worry about. >> how do we prevent a pandemic like that from occurring. >> outbreaks you cannot prevent, the emergence of a new in23eks. the trick is to keep it from going from an outbreak to a epidemic ajds from an epidemic to a pandemic. having a good...
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Apr 1, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 82
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from terrorism to ebola, and seize strategic opportunities to reset american readership on the goal stage. now, about to and a half years ago i was leaving the white house to move over to the state department. and just before i left i was sitting with then president obama and i asked him, what did he want me to focus on in the new assignment as deputy secretary of state? and he didn't lack for priorities or opportunities. leading a coalition of 66 countries to defeat isil, resisting russian aggression in ukraine. but given everything on the plates i want tote get guidance from the president, one thing you want me to focus on. his answer was immediate. asia. then when i got the department, i asked the same question of secretary state kerry. and happily i got exactly the same answer. which was a very good sign. i think it was a clear evidence, clear sign of the importance that both the president and secretary kerry attached to the region, and again with very, very good reason. nowhere no where in the world, are the economic and strategic interests and opportunities of the united states clea
from terrorism to ebola, and seize strategic opportunities to reset american readership on the goal stage. now, about to and a half years ago i was leaving the white house to move over to the state department. and just before i left i was sitting with then president obama and i asked him, what did he want me to focus on in the new assignment as deputy secretary of state? and he didn't lack for priorities or opportunities. leading a coalition of 66 countries to defeat isil, resisting russian...
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Apr 19, 2017
04/17
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address ebola, disaster relief. there's hardware behind it, but i've been struck at how much diplomacy our american men and women in the service do and if you conceive of that as part of a soft power side of things, all you're talking about is augmenting that with other experts who have language skills and experience and so on to make the whole package work together extremely well. >> i think it's a wonderful point. i think you've seen this sort of slow, quiet shift since 2003 in which the military has outsourced sort of traditional military work to the covert agencies and the state department has outsourced diplomacy to the military and the one group left without much to do these days is the state department because much of their work has been shipped off to somebody else and they're underfunded to do what they need to do today. i think that's part of the argument. as rosa brooks points out about all things becoming military part of the reason we channel so much traditional diplomacy through the military is because
address ebola, disaster relief. there's hardware behind it, but i've been struck at how much diplomacy our american men and women in the service do and if you conceive of that as part of a soft power side of things, all you're talking about is augmenting that with other experts who have language skills and experience and so on to make the whole package work together extremely well. >> i think it's a wonderful point. i think you've seen this sort of slow, quiet shift since 2003 in which...
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Apr 10, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN3
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if you are talking about a crisis that is at the scope of ebola and you don't keep residential treatment as part of the essential benefits package of insurance, i don't think you are taking it as seriously as you would an ebola-level crisis. i want to talk about something more maybe in your purview, which is naloxone, which you haven't mentioned either. if you are taking an all-above approach, i think you would talk about naloxone. i spent a minute on beer, mr. chairman. so i want 30 seconds. a two-pack dose of the auto injector for naloxone rose from $690 in 2014 to $4500 today. this goes to the price of drugs, which everyone in minnesota talks about when i go around the state. you didn't mention naloxone. this saves a tremendous number of lives. it is part of the all above, believe me. what are you going to do to keep to down the costs of drugs? >> thank you, senator for the questions. i talked about the importance of mat, so i share your concerns. i think with respect to naloxone, that falls into the combination of complex drugs, a drug device combination. it is hard to end those proc
if you are talking about a crisis that is at the scope of ebola and you don't keep residential treatment as part of the essential benefits package of insurance, i don't think you are taking it as seriously as you would an ebola-level crisis. i want to talk about something more maybe in your purview, which is naloxone, which you haven't mentioned either. if you are taking an all-above approach, i think you would talk about naloxone. i spent a minute on beer, mr. chairman. so i want 30 seconds. a...
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Apr 12, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN2
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the billions spent on ebola could have just been a million if they had the money to spend a year earlier. as you read through this report in the executive summary, i hope you'll think i haven't gone mad because i'm arguing for a doubling of the foreign affairs budget over the course of five years. at a political moment in time when our president is calling for the same budget to be cut by 30% this year alone. i understand this is not a realistic proposal but it's a marker. it's a marker for where we should be at a marker for the coming debate. flat funding is on one side and it devastating 30% cut is on the other. for those who know that our foreign account is badly underfunded, we need to be on offense. president trumps mid- evil view of the world in which the u.s. can protect itself with the big army and a big moat is wrong and dangerous. what's happened over this weekend's missile strike in syria will just fan the flames of his backwards view on national security. syria is just a big mess as it was, maybe even a bigger mess if ashad or russia respond with an escalation of their own. t
the billions spent on ebola could have just been a million if they had the money to spend a year earlier. as you read through this report in the executive summary, i hope you'll think i haven't gone mad because i'm arguing for a doubling of the foreign affairs budget over the course of five years. at a political moment in time when our president is calling for the same budget to be cut by 30% this year alone. i understand this is not a realistic proposal but it's a marker. it's a marker for...
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Apr 3, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN
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still, and it -- s irrationale to me that for your that mean husband's work in trying to eradicate ebola, will that at all?im i think they had quite a do with the to leadership of the liberian government and how cooperative have been, but the post pakistanat, we were in killedfter bin laden was and let's just say the pakistani wasn't very open to our foreign policies theome ways are helpful for united states, but now with mr. consensus itude, the of very, professional foreign around the world s we're becoming a laughing stock and governments don't know longer, to trust us any they don't know if the united tates is willing to help them or support them and the moral is quite low and i think they're discouraged because of was picked to ho of state and i trying to what he is cuts is his budget really going to damage the a long nd that takes time to build back up -- thanks for sharing your story from west virginia. lucy in auburn, new york, an lucy, good morning. caller: good morning. 'm calling in regard to the sanctuary cities. since they are not following the the and violating overnment la
still, and it -- s irrationale to me that for your that mean husband's work in trying to eradicate ebola, will that at all?im i think they had quite a do with the to leadership of the liberian government and how cooperative have been, but the post pakistanat, we were in killedfter bin laden was and let's just say the pakistani wasn't very open to our foreign policies theome ways are helpful for united states, but now with mr. consensus itude, the of very, professional foreign around the world s...
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Apr 17, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN3
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eye 194
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i think this is a public health emergency on the order of ebola. think we need to treat it as a public health crisis. i think for a long period of time we didn't fully recognize the scope of this evolving problem and our actions to try to address it might have been too incremental in nature and i don't say this to try to pass judgment on people who proceeded me at fda. i was at fda for part of that time, as well. i don't think we fully recognize the scope of the emerging problem. i think clinical medicine and physician and i've prescribed these drugs are partly responsible for that. i think it's a big enough problem and might have been within the scope of fda to address the problem in a more robust way. i don't want to say solve the problem but address it in a more fullsome. this is a public health challenge that we need to address through the full gamut of the full health resources. i will say from the stand point of fda i think in order to address it now the types of actions we're going to need to take are going to be far more dramatic perhaps th
i think this is a public health emergency on the order of ebola. think we need to treat it as a public health crisis. i think for a long period of time we didn't fully recognize the scope of this evolving problem and our actions to try to address it might have been too incremental in nature and i don't say this to try to pass judgment on people who proceeded me at fda. i was at fda for part of that time, as well. i don't think we fully recognize the scope of the emerging problem. i think...
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115
Apr 7, 2017
04/17
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CSPAN3
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i've stated here a number of times i think this is a public health emergency on order of ebola. i think we need to treat this as a public health crisis that's going to require dramatic action. for a long period of time we didn't fully recognize the scope of this evolving problem and our actions to try to address it might have been too incremental in nature and i don't say this to try to pass judgment on people who proceeded me at fda. i was at fda for part of that time as well. i don't think we fully recognized the scope of the emerging problem, the true addictive nature of these products. i think clinical medicine and i'm a physician whose prescribed these drugs are partly responsible for that. i think to your point, this is now a problem that's big enough that whereas one time it might have been within the scope of fda to address this problem in a more robust way. i don't want to say solve the problem but address it in a more fullsome way. it's now grown so large that it's grown outi'd of fda's ability to address it by itself. we're going to need to address it through the full
i've stated here a number of times i think this is a public health emergency on order of ebola. i think we need to treat this as a public health crisis that's going to require dramatic action. for a long period of time we didn't fully recognize the scope of this evolving problem and our actions to try to address it might have been too incremental in nature and i don't say this to try to pass judgment on people who proceeded me at fda. i was at fda for part of that time as well. i don't think we...
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Apr 25, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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eye 59
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think it's slow but it's coming and we are beginning to recognise that our problems with disease, hiv, ebolave been caused by new things that have evolved and changed. and that only science will deal with them. we have our young scientists, we have our laboratories, and we recognise this is the way to tackle the future rather than the relying on aid from other countries. we are a long way from where i want to be but i think it is coming and i think it will come. more and more young people are beginning to recognise that we cannot expect the british for americans or chinese to constantly bail us out of our own problems. it's degrading. it comes down to this very personal issue of the degree to which you are working from the inside or the degree to which for some kenyans sometimes see you like an outsider. i have seen no sign of that, either favourable or negative. but you have lots of enemies. you have talked yourself to the degree to which some of the things you have said, particularly about the wildlife issue in kenya, you have had people out to kill you. if you pick on the criminals in eng
think it's slow but it's coming and we are beginning to recognise that our problems with disease, hiv, ebolave been caused by new things that have evolved and changed. and that only science will deal with them. we have our young scientists, we have our laboratories, and we recognise this is the way to tackle the future rather than the relying on aid from other countries. we are a long way from where i want to be but i think it is coming and i think it will come. more and more young people are...
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Apr 21, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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. —— ebola crisis. i was meeting youngsters giving a good quality education. the uk provides that. the uk provides that. i am proud of the record we have. we maintain that commitment but we have to spend the money as effectively as possible. then, do i see ben? apologies for micro device. why are you chickening out of head to head tv debates?” why are you chickening out of head to head tv debates? i have been doing head—to—head debates with jeremy corbyn since i became prime minister! . but in the campaign i will get out and talk to voters, listen to voters, and shearing and answering their questions. i am out there taking my message to the people of this country. i believe thatis people of this country. i believe that is important. the gentleman here? this will have to be the last question. as a recent graduate, the idea of owning a house down south has become unrealistic. what with the government's plan b to facilitate us into getting on the property ladder? we have published a housing white paper looking at how we can bring a number of changes into the housing market. partly it
. —— ebola crisis. i was meeting youngsters giving a good quality education. the uk provides that. the uk provides that. i am proud of the record we have. we maintain that commitment but we have to spend the money as effectively as possible. then, do i see ben? apologies for micro device. why are you chickening out of head to head tv debates?” why are you chickening out of head to head tv debates? i have been doing head—to—head debates with jeremy corbyn since i became prime minister!...
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Apr 12, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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with scottish nurse pauline cafferkey, who tells us she's going to sierra leone where she contracted ebolaad a terrible couple of years since then so it would be good
with scottish nurse pauline cafferkey, who tells us she's going to sierra leone where she contracted ebolaad a terrible couple of years since then so it would be good
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Apr 12, 2017
04/17
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BBCNEWS
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also this hour — she survived ebola — now pauline cafferkey is planning a return to sierra leone.h nurse says she has no fears about going back, three years after becoming ill, when she returns to raise funds for children living there. it would be good to go back, just for things to come full circle for me and get a bit of closure and end up with something good, something positive as well. melania trump accepts damages and an apology from the publisher of the daily mail over allegations about her work as a professional model. good morning. welcome to bbc newsroom live. police in germany believe the three explosions which hit a bus carrying the borussia dortmund football team, were directly targeting the club. local media reports the police are investigating an "islamic link" to the incident after a letter was found near the blast sight. but police have yet to confirm the validity of the letter. the team were on their way to its champions league match against monaco. one player has undergone surgery after the blast shattered windows on the coach. jane—frances kelly reports. forensi
also this hour — she survived ebola — now pauline cafferkey is planning a return to sierra leone.h nurse says she has no fears about going back, three years after becoming ill, when she returns to raise funds for children living there. it would be good to go back, just for things to come full circle for me and get a bit of closure and end up with something good, something positive as well. melania trump accepts damages and an apology from the publisher of the daily mail over allegations...
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57
Apr 27, 2017
04/17
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BLOOMBERG
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hardliners favorite ebola before the 100 day in office.t a measured nafta on sixdump months notice. national security leaders are emphasizing sanctions between north korea to drop the nuclear program. region, assets in the north korea showed pictures of kim jong-un marking his countries largest ever fire drill. it coincided with wargames between south korean and u.s. forces. pyongyang says it is a prelude to invasion. the chinese president has called for better financial security saying it is the foundation of a stable time -- stable, healthy economy. the president said authorities will conduct a comprehensive review of the financial markets. iterated that china's risks are controllable. global news 24 hours a day powered by more than 2600 journalists and analysts in more , i endeavorntries mao,- i am deborah this is bloomberg. shery ahn: nothing really much coming out of that. no wonder the japanese yen is at similar levels to before the announcement about an hour ago. it is falling .2%. the japanese equity markets are still in it the red
hardliners favorite ebola before the 100 day in office.t a measured nafta on sixdump months notice. national security leaders are emphasizing sanctions between north korea to drop the nuclear program. region, assets in the north korea showed pictures of kim jong-un marking his countries largest ever fire drill. it coincided with wargames between south korean and u.s. forces. pyongyang says it is a prelude to invasion. the chinese president has called for better financial security saying it is...
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Apr 19, 2017
04/17
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 44
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you can catch them before they get completely out of control. , which did of ebola not spread very quicklyss, we still had to dispatch military act committee to try and avoid it covering all of africa, and even getting into the richer countries, so if we underspending on health, we will have a flu epidemic, and epidemic of some unknown pathogen that within economically and for military activity, be very expensive. we have had some leaders like now secretary of defense in the united states, talk about how if you don't have that aid budget, it forces the military to buy more weapons, so the balance of soft power and hard power, particularly being ready for health crises, that if there is anything that could horrifically kill millions of people, it would be an epidemic, so you don't want to get out of balance. in thehave been vocal foundation has been vocal and deeply troubled about the potential cuts in health funding and united states of america. when i see donald trump on china, syria, north korea, what is the possibility that the cuts , the threat and cuts to health, may be scaled back? >
you can catch them before they get completely out of control. , which did of ebola not spread very quicklyss, we still had to dispatch military act committee to try and avoid it covering all of africa, and even getting into the richer countries, so if we underspending on health, we will have a flu epidemic, and epidemic of some unknown pathogen that within economically and for military activity, be very expensive. we have had some leaders like now secretary of defense in the united states, talk...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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126
Apr 26, 2017
04/17
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SFGTV
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eye 126
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in fact, we just finished the ebola crisis when the national cdc said that ebola was no longer a epidemic african region, they called off their alerts saying travellers to west africa no longer needed surveillance that was done urltier last year. staff had a two week break and zekey oughtbreak came so got a quick haveication and back to work. we talked about how this strains or stresses the servicess kw staff says we have good people and have what it takes to manage including work wg the airport for example if there is a threat of asian flu going on and i think we have seen them now work across systems, the helt system with zika and pregnancy and ebola system across multiple hospitals so very proud of this division because if there is a question of travel related disease or communeicable diseases i think the evidence is our department is ready in a prevention matter and interventional. any questions othen cdcp division? if not i go to-again, i want to thank dr.s cora hoover and susan phillip for excellent job and leadership of their division. we heard from haly hammer who is director of p
in fact, we just finished the ebola crisis when the national cdc said that ebola was no longer a epidemic african region, they called off their alerts saying travellers to west africa no longer needed surveillance that was done urltier last year. staff had a two week break and zekey oughtbreak came so got a quick haveication and back to work. we talked about how this strains or stresses the servicess kw staff says we have good people and have what it takes to manage including work wg the...
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Apr 18, 2017
04/17
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CNBC
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eye 73
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disney too is extremely opportunistic, it bought a lot of its stock back in the ebola scare of 2013, because people were staying away. autozone, there's one that's always been a buyer on weakness. it shrinks the float and it also has worked if you take a look at the long-term chart for azo. buy backs by themselves are no reason to buy a stock, and in some cases are actually reason to sell it. no company is wasting money it needs to survive on buy backs, or spending money it doesn't even have has proven fruitless. and you shouldn't rely on even the largest buy back to help prop up a stock if the situation is dire. the way i see it, these are false signs of health and too often just a darn waste of shareholders money. "mad money" is back after this. >>> now after a selloff, in order for stocks to reverse and move higher, they need to have fuel. the fuel necessary for a rally and what that fuel, what is it? it's cash. sometimes fuel comes from retail investors who are taking money off the sidelines and putting it back in the market. with hedge funds desperate to own stocks rather than s
disney too is extremely opportunistic, it bought a lot of its stock back in the ebola scare of 2013, because people were staying away. autozone, there's one that's always been a buyer on weakness. it shrinks the float and it also has worked if you take a look at the long-term chart for azo. buy backs by themselves are no reason to buy a stock, and in some cases are actually reason to sell it. no company is wasting money it needs to survive on buy backs, or spending money it doesn't even have...
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89
Apr 11, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN
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eye 89
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estimates are that the billions spent on ebola could have been just the millions is the obama administrationad the money to spend one year earlier. as you read through this report or the executive summary, i do hope that you will not think i've gone mad. i understand what i'm doing here. i'm arguing unapologetically for doubling of the foreign affairs budget over the course of five years at a political moment in time when the president is calling for the same budget to be cut by 30% this year alone. i understand that today this is not a realistic proposal. but it is a marker for where we should be. and a marker for the coming debate so that the terms don't start such that flat funding is on one side with a devastating 30% cut on the other. for the majority of smart thinkers on global security, that know that our foreign affairs budget is badly underfunded and we need to be on offense. president trump's medieval view of the world, in which the u.s. can protect itself of the big army and a bigger moat is wrong and dangerous. and the fawning, frankly over the missile strike in syria will just f
estimates are that the billions spent on ebola could have been just the millions is the obama administrationad the money to spend one year earlier. as you read through this report or the executive summary, i do hope that you will not think i've gone mad. i understand what i'm doing here. i'm arguing unapologetically for doubling of the foreign affairs budget over the course of five years at a political moment in time when the president is calling for the same budget to be cut by 30% this year...