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May 29, 2014
05/14
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experimente usted también el descubrimiento que está cambiando al mundo: bioxtron.de afa, la superalga que actúa como biomodulador, logrando que nuestro cuerpo produzca células madre para aliviar terribles males como la diabetes, la artritis, la hipertensión, los dolores musculares, la osteoporosis y muchos más. bioxtron, la revolución del siglo xxi. bioxtron es 100% natural y solamente puede adquirirse a través de este programa especial. ¡llame ya al número en pantalla! y recibirá su tratamiento regenerador de bioxtron para un mes, y solo por ahora llévese el segundo frasco sin costo alguno. pero si marca en los próximos cinco minutos, le enviaremos el tercer mes con la dosis intensiva totalmente gratis; además, nosotros pagamos manejo, seguro y envío. satisfacción garantizada o le devolvemos su dinero. no deje pasar la oportunidad de una vida con el bienestar que usted se merece. estar completamente sano depende de una llamada. bioxtron, el alga de la vida. >>tantos beneficios son realmente sorprendentes, sobre todo en casos como la diabetes que es una enfermedad
experimente usted también el descubrimiento que está cambiando al mundo: bioxtron.de afa, la superalga que actúa como biomodulador, logrando que nuestro cuerpo produzca células madre para aliviar terribles males como la diabetes, la artritis, la hipertensión, los dolores musculares, la osteoporosis y muchos más. bioxtron, la revolución del siglo xxi. bioxtron es 100% natural y solamente puede adquirirse a través de este programa especial. ¡llame ya al número en pantalla! y recibirá...
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May 22, 2014
05/14
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CNNW
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her husband nick lost his battle with melanoma while seeking access to an experimental treatment. >>ve been trying for over six months to get on one of the trials. >> reporter: at just 41 years old nick a successful businessman outdoors pane and devoted dad had tumors in his spine, arm, leg and eventually his brain. he didn't qualify for the drug trials because his cancer kept spreading. >> to be told that for business reasons, supply issues and safety concerns you can't have the drug, you know, is devastating. >> reporter: it's people like nick that state lawmakers want to help. >> i think the one thing that people would agree to is that when you are terminal, you really still need hope. >> reporter: patients should be able to try a treatment. >> reporter: colorado governor john hickenlooper signed it a right to try bill saturday. similar bills are on the governors' desks in louisiana, missouri, and a right to try bill goes before voters in arizona this fall and gives termically ill patients the right to try a treatment without fda approval, potentially cutting months of waiting whe
her husband nick lost his battle with melanoma while seeking access to an experimental treatment. >>ve been trying for over six months to get on one of the trials. >> reporter: at just 41 years old nick a successful businessman outdoors pane and devoted dad had tumors in his spine, arm, leg and eventually his brain. he didn't qualify for the drug trials because his cancer kept spreading. >> to be told that for business reasons, supply issues and safety concerns you can't have...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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May 29, 2014
05/14
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SFGTV
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experimental music concert, and also readings. >> give us this day our daily bread at least three times a day. and lead us not into temptation to often on weekdays. [laughter] >> meridians' stands apart from the commercial galleries around union square, and it is because of their core mission, to increase social, philosophical, and spiritual change my isolated individuals and communities. >> it gives a statement, the idea that a significant art of any kind, in any discipline, creates change. >> it is philosophy that attracted david linger to mount a show at meridian. >> you want to feel like your work this summer that it can do some good. i felt like at meridian, it could do some good. we did not even talk about price until the day before the show. of course, meridian needs to support itself and support the community. but that was not the first consideration, so that made me very happy. >> his work is printed porcelain. he transfers images onto and spoils the surface a fragile shes of clay. each one, only one-tenth of an inch thick. >> it took about two years to get it down. i would say
experimental music concert, and also readings. >> give us this day our daily bread at least three times a day. and lead us not into temptation to often on weekdays. [laughter] >> meridians' stands apart from the commercial galleries around union square, and it is because of their core mission, to increase social, philosophical, and spiritual change my isolated individuals and communities. >> it gives a statement, the idea that a significant art of any kind, in any discipline,...
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26K
May 14, 2014
05/14
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KQED
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the experimental program could monitor massive amounts of data, but the encryption would protect the privacy of individual americans. he took it upstairs to the top deck. >> in those short days and weeks after 9/11, i put together a two-page classified implementation plan to put
the experimental program could monitor massive amounts of data, but the encryption would protect the privacy of individual americans. he took it upstairs to the top deck. >> in those short days and weeks after 9/11, i put together a two-page classified implementation plan to put
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May 19, 2014
05/14
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KGO
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they ask why americans are kept from using experimental drugs if it's their only chance. >> i love my dad. >> tonight, the debate here. we want you to weigh in. >>> and the dream dashed? will he race after all? triple crown favorite california chrome. the rags to riches story. the one thing we have learned tonight that could keep the horse off the track. >>> good evening. it's great to have you with us here on a sunday night. we begin with new details on the new infection. it turns out the patient never knew he was infected with mers. his body fighting it off. if this virus is now invisible for some, authorities want to know, are there others infected? is the virus changing in nature? spreading more easily? and this question tonight. is there any good news in all of this since the patient fought it off without even knowing? our dr. richard besser is standing by here. he just spoke with the cdc. but first, steve osunsami retracing the path of the latest infection. >> reporter: tonight, an unidentified illinois businessman is believed to be the first mers infection transmitted in the u.
they ask why americans are kept from using experimental drugs if it's their only chance. >> i love my dad. >> tonight, the debate here. we want you to weigh in. >>> and the dream dashed? will he race after all? triple crown favorite california chrome. the rags to riches story. the one thing we have learned tonight that could keep the horse off the track. >>> good evening. it's great to have you with us here on a sunday night. we begin with new details on the new...
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May 1, 2014
05/14
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sort of human experimentation, untested drugs doing something they're not desteigned for in combinationspt secret does that end up being a legal linchpin here. en ened -- for frz. >> well you would think. the supreme court has then't shown a lot of interest in taking up these cases. and the loper courts aren't much better. the eighth circuit i think in looking at the secrecy law in missouri said, well, you know, the -- lethal injection with the drugs might be painful. might not be. but not as bad as the electric chair. or not as the bad as the firing squad. what's the problem sneer and so, i think there are lots of legal arguments to the be made whether the courts are willing to listen to them is a totally different question. >> stephanie, mother jones legal affairs reporter who again deserves credit for having anticipated this potential problem that have shocked the nation, what happened last night in oklahoma, thank you for being with to us night. appreciate it. >> thank you for having me. >> lots more ahead, stay with us. since the day you met. but your erectile dysfunction - it could
sort of human experimentation, untested drugs doing something they're not desteigned for in combinationspt secret does that end up being a legal linchpin here. en ened -- for frz. >> well you would think. the supreme court has then't shown a lot of interest in taking up these cases. and the loper courts aren't much better. the eighth circuit i think in looking at the secrecy law in missouri said, well, you know, the -- lethal injection with the drugs might be painful. might not be. but...
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May 20, 2014
05/14
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and it basically allows for access to experimental drugs outside of a clinical trial. the patients must have a life-threatening disease or condition and no therapeutic alternatives. a manufacturer and the doctor then would make special arrangements. why isn't that enough if that's current federal law? >> well, we've got two questions there. so i'll try to go with the first one. and first of all, no one was listening to what i was saying when i first spoke tonight, and that is every drug we've pushed for is now approved. what we've been talking about is promising investigational drugs, drugs that show promise. the other thing is that you can have the fda doing careful studies, at the same time granting earlier access to people who've run out of options in their battle to live. >> and speak to the -- i'll go to you in a second, zeke. speak to the state-federal point. some people say this is a lot of false hope because the states don't regulate the way the fda does. >> again, we're talking about promising -- this is a good point, though. let me put this in. what we have f
and it basically allows for access to experimental drugs outside of a clinical trial. the patients must have a life-threatening disease or condition and no therapeutic alternatives. a manufacturer and the doctor then would make special arrangements. why isn't that enough if that's current federal law? >> well, we've got two questions there. so i'll try to go with the first one. and first of all, no one was listening to what i was saying when i first spoke tonight, and that is every drug...
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May 26, 2014
05/14
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KNTV
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experimentation is the most important thing. thank you for joining me.er the break, cory booker helps "george to the rescue" poll often excising surprise for her new jersey teenagers >> welcome back. with the help of cory booker, george comes to the rescue of the boys and girls club of newark, new jersey. from a new floor and tvs and a little something extra for the kids who love music, it will put a smile on just about anybody space. -- anybody's face. the boys and girls club of newark, new jersey. no room is more important than the teen center because the kids are exposed to so many outside influences that a place like this keeps them on the right track. unfortunately it has fallen by the wayside. i am here to let them know they are being rescued. how is everybody doing? [applause] i am thrilled to be here. i wanted to come. my attention was to tell you the story and let you know some of the lessons my elders gave me when i was growing up. and i thought i could make it better and more exciting. i have a big surprise. there is a friend of mine with the
experimentation is the most important thing. thank you for joining me.er the break, cory booker helps "george to the rescue" poll often excising surprise for her new jersey teenagers >> welcome back. with the help of cory booker, george comes to the rescue of the boys and girls club of newark, new jersey. from a new floor and tvs and a little something extra for the kids who love music, it will put a smile on just about anybody space. -- anybody's face. the boys and girls club...
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May 1, 2014
05/14
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all that has gone wrong with the way that they've been trying to kill people, and all that is experimental and based on lord knows what, oklahoma would not explain how they came upon these supposed drugs that they cooked up as their experimental way of trying to kill people. they wouldn't explain where they got the drugs or why anyone should believe that these drugs were what they said they were. and it was on that base that the oklahoma supreme court ruled that the legal issues around the secrecy of the execution process, those issues needed to be worked out before the state's latest two executions went ahead. before you kill people using this protocol you just invented, using these drugs you won't explain, let's sort out these legal issues around the secrecy. they issued that order, issued that state on the most recent executions in the state. they issued it last monday. the next day, last tuesday, the oklahoma governor mary fallin said the supreme court was out of line. she said, she was going to ignore their ruling and insist that the executions go ahead anywhere, on a date of her choo
all that has gone wrong with the way that they've been trying to kill people, and all that is experimental and based on lord knows what, oklahoma would not explain how they came upon these supposed drugs that they cooked up as their experimental way of trying to kill people. they wouldn't explain where they got the drugs or why anyone should believe that these drugs were what they said they were. and it was on that base that the oklahoma supreme court ruled that the legal issues around the...
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May 17, 2014
05/14
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ALJAZAM
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. >> honda is not releasing the cost of their smart home, without his experimental technology, it woulde similar to other high-end homes in davis. >> what is it like for people to come and stay the night? >> this will be the first night for anyone besides myself to stay here. >> we are doing the first outside slumber party. >> you are the first overnight gets. >> i get the big room. >> once i'm at the big bedroom... ..in the name of science i decided to take the fit ev for a spun. [ ♪ music ] >>> with most cars you have to drive to a gas station to fill up and re-energise. with this guy i drive it home, plug it in, and the sun does the rest of the work. i'm kinda digging it. hopefully carol will let me drive this around for a while. that must be cara. >> hello. i'm having way too much fun driving around town right now. >> i want to drive the electric car, bring it back. >> you got it. see you soon. while cara took a spin. >> bye. don't wait up. >> michael showed me how the house is built to make the most of the sun - whether it's low in winter or high in summer. >> we have all these lov
. >> honda is not releasing the cost of their smart home, without his experimental technology, it woulde similar to other high-end homes in davis. >> what is it like for people to come and stay the night? >> this will be the first night for anyone besides myself to stay here. >> we are doing the first outside slumber party. >> you are the first overnight gets. >> i get the big room. >> once i'm at the big bedroom... ..in the name of science i decided to...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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May 21, 2014
05/14
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experimental real world learning and of course, the sfusd graduate profile. so what do we want that student to look like when he hor she exits our classrooms in the year 2025. we know there's going to be social emotional learning. we know our educators will not be bound by the constraints of their current credential and not bound by the current constraints of what they do currently so we talk about career lattices for career educators. not everybody wants to be an what are the opportunities for leadership for our educators in the next 12 years? and then community hubs, the sense of our schools are the center of the community. and how do we provide access for all of our communities to be part of the school community. and of course the big one, how do we align our resources to that vision of the graduate in 2025. our profile of our graduate and what we value should be very important in how we funds what we fund to get us the graduate in 2025. so all of that is very important, but it forms the basis for what we're calling our investment in the technology of the
experimental real world learning and of course, the sfusd graduate profile. so what do we want that student to look like when he hor she exits our classrooms in the year 2025. we know there's going to be social emotional learning. we know our educators will not be bound by the constraints of their current credential and not bound by the current constraints of what they do currently so we talk about career lattices for career educators. not everybody wants to be an what are the opportunities for...
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May 12, 2014
05/14
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it's a very experimental technique. it has to be developed individually for each patient. >> how long does that take if it's specific to each patient? >> from the time we actually resect the cancer and begin to do the sequencing, one can have the treatment ready in about five to six weeks. but it's a very complex kind of treatment. and in the first patient in which we demonstrated this kind of approach can work, it took about two months to develop the treatment for that individual patient. but it represents a blueprint for how to do this for other individuals as well. >> all right, so you've only had one patient, as you mentioned. why is this so ground-breaking? >> one of the major problems we have in cancer is the fact that although we can cure about half of all patients that develop cancer in this -- in 2014, half of the patients that develop cancer will ultimately die of that disease. we don't have cures for most cancers once they've spread throughout the body. when we apply treatments like surgery, radiation, chemot
it's a very experimental technique. it has to be developed individually for each patient. >> how long does that take if it's specific to each patient? >> from the time we actually resect the cancer and begin to do the sequencing, one can have the treatment ready in about five to six weeks. but it's a very complex kind of treatment. and in the first patient in which we demonstrated this kind of approach can work, it took about two months to develop the treatment for that individual...
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May 19, 2014
05/14
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KGO
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lawmakers make it easier to be treated with experimental drugs but only for certain people. >>> later stole the show. the high-tech resurrection of michael jackson at last night's billboard music awards. you are watching "world news now." ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by lysol no mess max. by lysol no mess max. i'd say i clean the toilet 6 or 7 times a day. like clockwork, every 20 minutes i clean the toilet. sometimes i get up in the middle of the night and clean the toilet. now every time you go, lysol cleans for you. new lysol no mess max gives you max cleaning with every flush. while its fragrance gels release 4 weeks of max freshness. that's what i like to hear. someone cleaning the toilet for me. lysol. start healthing. but only for certain people. no mess max. ♪ ♪ >>> this morning colorado is now the first state in the nation to allow terminally ill patients to get experimental drugs without federal approval. >> it was families desperate for their loved ones who lobbied for the right. abc's clayton sandell is in denver with one family's plea. >> report
lawmakers make it easier to be treated with experimental drugs but only for certain people. >>> later stole the show. the high-tech resurrection of michael jackson at last night's billboard music awards. you are watching "world news now." ♪ >> announcer: "world news now" weather brought to you by lysol no mess max. by lysol no mess max. i'd say i clean the toilet 6 or 7 times a day. like clockwork, every 20 minutes i clean the toilet. sometimes i get up in...
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May 2, 2014
05/14
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MSNBCW
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at a moment when states around the country are on shaky constitutional ground with these new experimental combinations they're trying on these guinea pig prisoners, where the question of whether the supreme court ruling blessing the legality of lethal injection executions even applies to these new experimental drug combos they're now trying in the states, with all of that in motion now today the state of oklahoma released new granular details about what they say happened. they released their own new account of what happened and a lot of it is very different from what we understood from eyewitnesses on tuesday night. or in fact from what the state had previously explained. before they released this new timeline today, this was what was on the record from the state explaining what happened. >> ladies and he-j i'm going to make this a short statement. i will not be taking any questions. so please don't scream and holler at me. but i'm going to let you know what i know at this point in time. as those that were inside witnessed, it was determined that he was sedated at approximately seven minu
at a moment when states around the country are on shaky constitutional ground with these new experimental combinations they're trying on these guinea pig prisoners, where the question of whether the supreme court ruling blessing the legality of lethal injection executions even applies to these new experimental drug combos they're now trying in the states, with all of that in motion now today the state of oklahoma released new granular details about what they say happened. they released their...
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May 5, 2014
05/14
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she heard about an experimental drug that may cure it. she tried to get them into a study.ax could get into the study. austin could not. after six weeks, she could see the drug was working. max can walk, dance, and swim. but austin continues to get worse. jen joins us now. people who are dying should have the right to try any drug, even if it's not government approved. you heard the congressman. it's to protect you. >> this is about saving lives. what the gold water institute is working on is an initiative where the states can give anyone with a terminal illness the right to try an experimental drug before the fda has approved it. usually a manufacturer discovers a drug and it takes 10 to 15 years before it can get into hands. >> if she wants it, she should be able to get it. this right to try act has passed parts of legislatures in several states, but it didn't just breeze through as i think it would. >> it's moving pretty quickly in multiple states across the country. it polls at about 85%. this is true on the left and the right. this is a no-brainer for people, john. eve
she heard about an experimental drug that may cure it. she tried to get them into a study.ax could get into the study. austin could not. after six weeks, she could see the drug was working. max can walk, dance, and swim. but austin continues to get worse. jen joins us now. people who are dying should have the right to try any drug, even if it's not government approved. you heard the congressman. it's to protect you. >> this is about saving lives. what the gold water institute is working...
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May 13, 2014
05/14
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KDTV
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usted vive en la costa es probable que sufra inundaciones si vive en el oeste es mÁs probable que experimente historia de los estados unidos. el reporte es un llamado de alerta para toda la poblaciÓn del paÍs. >> las comunidades latinas porque sabemos que los latinos sufren mÁs de asma, y tambiÉn sabemos que el 50% de los latinos o mÁs viven en zonas que no tienen aire limpio. >> sequÍas en estados de texas y california estÁn afectando a trabajadores hispanos que laboran al aire libre. >> nosotros tendemos a vivir en las regiones del paÍs mÁs afectadas por el cambio climÁtico y los dos mejores ejemplos son florida y california. >> el reporte fue recibido con escepticismo en sectores conservadores contrarios al -- a la teoria del cambio climÁtico y reacios a las regulaciones de emisiÓn de gases tÓxicos. desde washington fernando pizarro univisiÓn. >> legisladores de california promover un proyecto para defender la informaciÓn de los consumidores que pagan con tarjeta. >> los presidentes de uruguay y de estados unidos mujica y obama se reunieron en la casa blanca. durante el encuentro de esta m
usted vive en la costa es probable que sufra inundaciones si vive en el oeste es mÁs probable que experimente historia de los estados unidos. el reporte es un llamado de alerta para toda la poblaciÓn del paÍs. >> las comunidades latinas porque sabemos que los latinos sufren mÁs de asma, y tambiÉn sabemos que el 50% de los latinos o mÁs viven en zonas que no tienen aire limpio. >> sequÍas en estados de texas y california estÁn afectando a trabajadores hispanos que laboran al...
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May 17, 2014
05/14
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> and patients could soon have access to experimental drugs. colorado governor signed the right to try bill, becoming the first state to open up the drugs to patients. terminally ill patients have turned to the government because no changes coming out of the fda. >> what are the critics saying about this? >> the critic is the fda, they are concerned about efforts that might undermine the authority. >> reporter: to protect the public from authorities that are not safe and effective. critics are saying it circumvents federal law and undermines the drug development process. a lot of doctors say perhaps these drugs that are not approved yet by the government could reduce the person's life. some of the drugs are useless and can harm more than good. that is one reason why the process is so lengthy, they have to assure the drugs are safe. >> it so manies that other states are trying to follow colorado's lead, is that right? >> reporter: that's right, julie. besides colorado, a woman whose brother is dying of blood cancer on his deathbed today. arizona
. >> and patients could soon have access to experimental drugs. colorado governor signed the right to try bill, becoming the first state to open up the drugs to patients. terminally ill patients have turned to the government because no changes coming out of the fda. >> what are the critics saying about this? >> the critic is the fda, they are concerned about efforts that might undermine the authority. >> reporter: to protect the public from authorities that are not safe...
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May 5, 2014
05/14
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FOXNEWSW
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law makers are pushing legislation that would give patients the right to on get experimental drugs before fda. >> jenna, terminally ill patients have a right to die and also a right to live and promising drugs that are yet to receive full fda approval. >> people die from not being able to access the strategies. i don't want to be one of them. >> she is doing sadly. >> reporter: they want a live to give terminally ill patients to use experimental drugs. max got into a clinical trial and got healthy and austin did not. >> we know with 100 percent certainty he will die. every day thousands of americans are dying when there is life saving drugs they could take. >> reporter: it takes ten years for the fda to get the krugs. only three percent get the trials. >> the amount of effort is far too much in this time when you want to slow things down and just enjoy being together. >> reporter: millions of patients want access to the drugs. the current federal law will not allow it. >> all this bill does is to allow the medications to be available. >> reporter: some doctors think it is a bad idea. >> y
law makers are pushing legislation that would give patients the right to on get experimental drugs before fda. >> jenna, terminally ill patients have a right to die and also a right to live and promising drugs that are yet to receive full fda approval. >> people die from not being able to access the strategies. i don't want to be one of them. >> she is doing sadly. >> reporter: they want a live to give terminally ill patients to use experimental drugs. max got into a...
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and haven't gone through i mean there's as i recall four levels of experimental notice you know is it does it kill you if you try it does it actually work against this is ease what's the dosage and then you know. one of the side effects of if i'm remembering correctly and i've known a couple of people involved in these trials. what level of experimental are you proposing here that people be able to try for example drugs that haven't even been tested for safety or african c. no not at all tom and you're right there's three to four levels of the f.d.a. approval process and what right the tribe does and every state that's passed it so far what the legislation does is allow people with the advice in the prescription the consent whatever you want to call it of their doctors to access experimental drugs designed to help them in whatever situation they may be that has passed that initial phase which i think you termed the phase where the drug doesn't kill you in and of itself so that's phase one of the f.d.a. process so these drugs that the law allows patients access to have actually passed
and haven't gone through i mean there's as i recall four levels of experimental notice you know is it does it kill you if you try it does it actually work against this is ease what's the dosage and then you know. one of the side effects of if i'm remembering correctly and i've known a couple of people involved in these trials. what level of experimental are you proposing here that people be able to try for example drugs that haven't even been tested for safety or african c. no not at all tom...
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May 15, 2014
05/14
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WGN
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an experimental treatment has *cured a woman of a deadly cancer. we'll tell you how. plus -- angry protests break- out in turkey after hundreds of workers were killed in a coal mine explosion. and -- a couple in iowa got a special ingredient in their mc- donald's cheeseburger. piayoll, we say ♪ ♪ we want you to be okay ♪ enroll, we say ♪ take care people for goodness sake ♪ turkish government for the coal mine explosion. 282 mine workers were killed after a power distribution unit exploded in the mine. 120-more workers are still trapped inside. one miner says he doubts any of them are alive. an angry mob formed when the prime minister arrived. they blame the ruling party for being too lax when it comes to enforcing safety in the mining industry. inspectors say the air system was insufficient, which pushed the flames and smoke farther into the mine. the captain and three senior crew members of a south korean ferry that capsized last month, killing more than 280 passengers, were indicted for homicide. another eleven crew members were indicted on negligence charges. pros
an experimental treatment has *cured a woman of a deadly cancer. we'll tell you how. plus -- angry protests break- out in turkey after hundreds of workers were killed in a coal mine explosion. and -- a couple in iowa got a special ingredient in their mc- donald's cheeseburger. piayoll, we say ♪ ♪ we want you to be okay ♪ enroll, we say ♪ take care people for goodness sake ♪ turkish government for the coal mine explosion. 282 mine workers were killed after a power distribution unit...
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May 24, 2014
05/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 24
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remember i had three components of innovation, experimentation, learning and evolution. the evaluations by external contractors is part of the learning process and i didn't say that there is -- that ve
remember i had three components of innovation, experimentation, learning and evolution. the evaluations by external contractors is part of the learning process and i didn't say that there is -- that ve
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May 5, 2014
05/14
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the by's mom heard about an ex p spur -- experimental drug that was going through fda trials that was told max could be in the study but austin could not. after 16 weeks jen could see the drug was working. max can walk. he can dance. he can swim. but austin continues to get worse. >> jen joins us along with darcie olson of the gold watter institute which is a think tank that ooargues people dying shou have the right to dry any drug even if it is not government approved. you heard the congressman to protect you. >> this is about saving lives. with the gold watter institute is working on is an initiative before the states can give any one with a terminal illness the right to try an experimental drug before withe fda has approd it. usually manufacturer discovers the drug it takes 10-15 years before it can get into will havendz of her son. >> once we get an awareness access should be immediate. >> if she wants it should she be able to get it? the right to try act is passed parts of legislatures in several states. it didn't breeze through as i think it would. >> it is happening quickly in
the by's mom heard about an ex p spur -- experimental drug that was going through fda trials that was told max could be in the study but austin could not. after 16 weeks jen could see the drug was working. max can walk. he can dance. he can swim. but austin continues to get worse. >> jen joins us along with darcie olson of the gold watter institute which is a think tank that ooargues people dying shou have the right to dry any drug even if it is not government approved. you heard the...
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May 22, 2014
05/14
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LINKTV
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what we see proceeding here and which is very disturbing is experimentation on human subjects.k that is essentially what it is. ande are not time-tested vetted methods. >> a new state halt execution of russell bucklew. we will speak with his lawyer about the case and the ongoing
what we see proceeding here and which is very disturbing is experimentation on human subjects.k that is essentially what it is. ande are not time-tested vetted methods. >> a new state halt execution of russell bucklew. we will speak with his lawyer about the case and the ongoing
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May 17, 2014
05/14
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FOXNEWSW
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snshg the fda has a compassionate use clause and they approve the request for experimental medicationer work to fill out. i am not sure how much gets done. they get and release the drugs. but the problem is, pharmaceutical companies need to be releasing the medications. and many of them cost billions to manufacture and do they want them to be given away for free? it will hopefully open the channel for dialogue. >> if you don't live in missouri or louisiana or colorado. do you have to go there to be treated. >> when i trained it was difficult to find out what happened in the other parts of the country. in one evening with the internet you can find out what is happening in the world. people travel across the globe for medical therapies and many form suiticals are tested in the third world or europe orazzia where fda doesn't have jurisdiction. >> say you need something in france. they go there or canada that you can't get here? >> if you have the means and money. if i was facing the end of my life with a wonderful family and children that i have, i would do anything possible to prolong m
snshg the fda has a compassionate use clause and they approve the request for experimental medicationer work to fill out. i am not sure how much gets done. they get and release the drugs. but the problem is, pharmaceutical companies need to be releasing the medications. and many of them cost billions to manufacture and do they want them to be given away for free? it will hopefully open the channel for dialogue. >> if you don't live in missouri or louisiana or colorado. do you have to go...
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May 28, 2014
05/14
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MSNBCW
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never allowed, prisons, mental hospitals, we wouldn't allow experimentation.es are looking to what they can find available on the shelf. or having it made ad hoc for a particular execution. not knowing if that will work well. or be a disaster like happened in oklahoma, a few weeks ago. >> since what happened in oklahoma a few weeks ago there have been, at least, three stays of execution just senate we have reported on this show. we don't typically, report stays of execution on this show. as a national story, national news story, national significance. what seems important about the stays that we have reported is that since oklahoma, there has effectively been a moratorium, nationwide on lethal injection since then. with states looking for alternative methods to kill their prison and renewed worry in oklahoma do you feel like the lethal injection system is collapsing. >> it is right now. it doesn't mean the end of capital punishment. i think there might be some drug out there that has been really tested. and, been, is available, is made, or could be made in the
never allowed, prisons, mental hospitals, we wouldn't allow experimentation.es are looking to what they can find available on the shelf. or having it made ad hoc for a particular execution. not knowing if that will work well. or be a disaster like happened in oklahoma, a few weeks ago. >> since what happened in oklahoma a few weeks ago there have been, at least, three stays of execution just senate we have reported on this show. we don't typically, report stays of execution on this show....
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May 5, 2014
05/14
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KCSM
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airlines has begun testing the cars compete as an nfl team to the efficiency of the black i make an experimental with purple lines and in enforcing home i just got the test is being conducted. don't even know what research institutes we could browse mechanics to take photos and videos of background and exchange information in real time with the maintenance hatch cortez he doesn't disclose information from headquarters on the lenses allowing the canucks defeating piece that happens. we will try to adopt this advanced technology before others and hope it will lead to improvements in services and productivity. the goal was to introduce the system within five he has is considering its use in its other operations. i made this decision is lying ninety nine chief. meeks chiba japan the amount of sheer coastal cliffs. it's a renewed for us to join us on the journey to japan spoiled from two years and he didn't see me on a journey to extreme to pay still we didn't visit to promote violence so that she was so nice to dip into the urine. with its prey people natural wonders and talk to the team. it was kno
airlines has begun testing the cars compete as an nfl team to the efficiency of the black i make an experimental with purple lines and in enforcing home i just got the test is being conducted. don't even know what research institutes we could browse mechanics to take photos and videos of background and exchange information in real time with the maintenance hatch cortez he doesn't disclose information from headquarters on the lenses allowing the canucks defeating piece that happens. we will try...
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May 7, 2014
05/14
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BLOOMBERG
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. >> we wanted to do some experimentation. yahoo! has been a leader in video content to support the vertical, finance, news, sports, etc., but also doing original series. we had some success shortly before i joined in the form of a sitcom called "burning love," that made the leap from digital onto television and was nominated for an emmy, etc. we do not want to do a lot with the early experiment, but we found two series we were excited about. trek-stylestar parody romantic comedy that we are excited about, and there is a great producer who is going to bring a series to life called ahe sin city saints," fictitious nba expansion team said in las vegas, a behind the scenes look at that. >> doesn't have a racist owner? -- does it have a racist owner? [laughter] >> they might try to weave that into the plot. >> it was not a serious question. what does it cost to make a series, one of these shows, tens of millions of dollars, less? is the videous content budget has remained year, but it is a matter of using them in a different way. now we
. >> we wanted to do some experimentation. yahoo! has been a leader in video content to support the vertical, finance, news, sports, etc., but also doing original series. we had some success shortly before i joined in the form of a sitcom called "burning love," that made the leap from digital onto television and was nominated for an emmy, etc. we do not want to do a lot with the early experiment, but we found two series we were excited about. trek-stylestar parody romantic...
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40
May 8, 2014
05/14
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LINKTV
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we are experimental animals. >> bees are symptoms of something larger. a broken federal regulatory system that fails to provide protection for us and our food. >> we are on a crash course. i think the bees and their demise is that message to us. >> my grand kids and their kids -- are we going to be able to fix this before, you know -- i do not have any answer. [captions made possible by kcet television] gg99Ññwçça7guc [applause] >> oh, this is a big audience. >> [laughter] >> [laughs] you can put the lights down now. [laughing] i'm sorry. um, you know, this is my first bioneers, number one, and, uh-- >> [cheering and applauding] >> and i've been hearing about you all since i started doing this, a while back. and, uh, we're good? okay? and, uh, i was, like, thinking, it's got to be some kind of weird cult. it's just got to be.
we are experimental animals. >> bees are symptoms of something larger. a broken federal regulatory system that fails to provide protection for us and our food. >> we are on a crash course. i think the bees and their demise is that message to us. >> my grand kids and their kids -- are we going to be able to fix this before, you know -- i do not have any answer. [captions made possible by kcet television] gg99Ññwçça7guc [applause] >> oh, this is a big audience....
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May 13, 2014
05/14
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FOXNEWSW
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how does this go from being in the experimental stage to being prime time?jor reason for the publication was the demonstration of a technique that could be used to identify a patient's own individual mutations that we could target the immune system against and this just showed it was possible but it's going to require a lot of development now before this can be used to treat large numbers of patients. this was in a sense a proof of the principle that you could specifically target the cancer and not the normal tissue. jenna: it's incredible. you've been working so many years on this disease as we mentioned, one of the leading researchers in the country. just for you personally, what was it like to see these results and to see this work? >> well, this is what i do as a rollercoaster. everybody i take care of has advanced cancer. we've tried a lot of things that haven't worked but it's thrill to go see this new approach work and this one patient and we're now aggressively around the lock trying to simplify the procedure and use it for other patients. certainly
how does this go from being in the experimental stage to being prime time?jor reason for the publication was the demonstration of a technique that could be used to identify a patient's own individual mutations that we could target the immune system against and this just showed it was possible but it's going to require a lot of development now before this can be used to treat large numbers of patients. this was in a sense a proof of the principle that you could specifically target the cancer and...
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101
May 21, 2014
05/14
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CNNW
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eye 101
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much faster access to experimental drugs.ut colorado's eliminating a heck of a lot of the paperwork that requires them, or that they're required to do, to actually get their hands on the drugs. the governor, john hickenlooper, signed the bill, and it is called the right to try law. though some refer to it as the dallas buyers club law. which is named after the movie about hiv patients smuggling in illegal drugs from abroad. one of the bill's sponsors says for people who are facing death and have one last hope, they should have a choice to try every possible drug. joining me to talk about this, cnn legal analyst jeffrey tuoobn and from atlanta, our chief medical correspondent. if you're dying, why shouldn't you have every chance to try everything? why is this only colorado? >> yeah, i mean, the appeal, when you put it like that, is indeniable. philosophically, what they're pinning against is no hope against possibly false hope. it's worth pointing out these drugs, these investigatal drugs, they haven't been studied. they haven
much faster access to experimental drugs.ut colorado's eliminating a heck of a lot of the paperwork that requires them, or that they're required to do, to actually get their hands on the drugs. the governor, john hickenlooper, signed the bill, and it is called the right to try law. though some refer to it as the dallas buyers club law. which is named after the movie about hiv patients smuggling in illegal drugs from abroad. one of the bill's sponsors says for people who are facing death and...
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May 18, 2014
05/14
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CNNW
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vaccine, it's an experimental, new treatment doctors at mayo clinic tried. they gave the woman enough measles virus to vaccinate 10 million people and ended up killing her cancer. stacey talked about her recovery with freed rika whitfield. >> overjoyed. i had been tracking the news of it for a couple of years. my doctor and his colleagues were working on such a study. when it was my turn, i was more than excited. yeah. >> yeah. we described it ace megadose of the measles. so this treatment actually made you very sick at first, right? did you think, this isn't going to work, or this is what i have to get through in order to get to the other side, so to speak? >> well, it really was an intense dose. i received enough to inoculate 10 million people, i didn't learn the terms until after the fact, which was good. i had a horrific headache and spiked a high five somewhere naus nausea. those side effects are short-lived. the day i was able to walk across the street to my hotel. >> wow. the doctors told you you were cancer-free, at least temporarily. how did that ne
vaccine, it's an experimental, new treatment doctors at mayo clinic tried. they gave the woman enough measles virus to vaccinate 10 million people and ended up killing her cancer. stacey talked about her recovery with freed rika whitfield. >> overjoyed. i had been tracking the news of it for a couple of years. my doctor and his colleagues were working on such a study. when it was my turn, i was more than excited. yeah. >> yeah. we described it ace megadose of the measles. so this...