37
37
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
mammograms themselves dr steven rose radiologist an expert crusher of coconuts received 37900000 dollars from solar smog a company pushing its 3 d. product so what is thomas at the surface it's also known as 3 d. biography and what it is is a revolutionary new way to screen for breast cancer to the patient feels and looks the same as a regular digital mammogram well that's good news but also equally importantly is to reduce those false positives 201630 in the land set on college the found that women screened with remember grams had more false alarms but i guess having those sweaters structures behind. didn't make him seem a little more convincing thinking adding these books. and now where was i phones positives alone diagnosis could have a negative effect on her quality of life but also national expenditure for false positive mammograms and breast cancer over diagnoses was estimated at $4000000000.00 a year in 2016 maybe 3 d. imaging could really help us discover more cases however there's so little research that isn't funded by the companies themselves in the meantime won't have to pay
mammograms themselves dr steven rose radiologist an expert crusher of coconuts received 37900000 dollars from solar smog a company pushing its 3 d. product so what is thomas at the surface it's also known as 3 d. biography and what it is is a revolutionary new way to screen for breast cancer to the patient feels and looks the same as a regular digital mammogram well that's good news but also equally importantly is to reduce those false positives 201630 in the land set on college the found that...
30
30
Nov 27, 2019
11/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
rose by 29%. professor steven woolf is director emeritus at the center on society and health at the virginia commonwealthmortality study. he's just outside washington. i think this goes against global trends, historic patterns of increasing longevity and against trends in this particular age group? it certainly doesn't stop life expectancy has been increasing in industrial countries around the world. —— it certainly does. we have been losing ground compared to other wealthy nations since the 1980s. been losing ground compared to other wealthy nations since the 1980sm it as wealthy nations since the 1980sm itasa wealthy nations since the 1980sm it as a prize? it is quite a surprise. —— is it a surprise. life expectancy in other countries continues to rise. what is going on, do you think? it has been increasing in working age adults. children and older adults are seeing their death rates decline, as we would like to see, but there is something terribly wrong going on for working age adults where death rates have climbed significantly. your study seems to point to opioid abuse, poverty, drug overdoses? drug
rose by 29%. professor steven woolf is director emeritus at the center on society and health at the virginia commonwealthmortality study. he's just outside washington. i think this goes against global trends, historic patterns of increasing longevity and against trends in this particular age group? it certainly doesn't stop life expectancy has been increasing in industrial countries around the world. —— it certainly does. we have been losing ground compared to other wealthy nations since...
34
34
Nov 27, 2019
11/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 34
favorite 0
quote 0
rose by 29%. i spoke to the lead author of the study, professor steven woolf. at the center on society and health at the virginia commonwealth university school of medicine. i asked him if the us results go against what is happening in the rest of the world. it certainly does. life expectancy has been increasing in industrialised countries around the world. and this used to be true for the united states as well, but we've been losing ground compared to other wealthy nations since the 1980s. is it a surprise? it is quite a surprise. the recent news has shown that life expectancy has been decreasing for the past three years while life expectancy in other countries continues to rise. so what's going on, do you think? our study found that this is really being driven by an increase in death rates in working age adults. by that, i mean people aged 25—64 years. children and older adults are seeing their death rates decline, as we'd like to see, but there is something terribly wrong going on for working age adults where death rates have climbed significantly. your stud
rose by 29%. i spoke to the lead author of the study, professor steven woolf. at the center on society and health at the virginia commonwealth university school of medicine. i asked him if the us results go against what is happening in the rest of the world. it certainly does. life expectancy has been increasing in industrialised countries around the world. and this used to be true for the united states as well, but we've been losing ground compared to other wealthy nations since the 1980s. is...
71
71
Nov 2, 2019
11/19
by
KPIX
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
steven colbert is up next. >> have a great weekend. take care. >> good night. captioning sponsored by cbs rose from the sea and destroyed tokyo.ike godzilla. and in 2019, godzilla is still king of the monsters! ( roars ) ( glass breaking ) ( sizzling )
steven colbert is up next. >> have a great weekend. take care. >> good night. captioning sponsored by cbs rose from the sea and destroyed tokyo.ike godzilla. and in 2019, godzilla is still king of the monsters! ( roars ) ( glass breaking ) ( sizzling )
175
175
Nov 17, 2019
11/19
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 175
favorite 0
quote 0
steven. >> i was very proud of steph. i thought it was a cool thing. >> reporter: stephanie lazarus quickly rose through the ranks of lapdol officer to detective and she was popular, friendly, and well-regarded. her assignments also included project d.a.r.e., a drug prevention program aimed at kids and twice named detective of the year. later she worked at internal affairs investigating other officers accused of wrongdoing or corruption and then promoted to the lapd's art theft unit. her personal life was good, too. in 1996, lazarus got married to another lapd detective. together, they adopted a baby daughter. life both at home and on the job never seemed better. >> she was a happy person. she loved what she did for work. she loved her husband. loved their life. >> reporter: but in 2009 this high achieving cop became the focus of a homicide investigation. jim nutall and his team of three detectives had to be mindful that lazarus had many friends on the force, her husband worked at the same station as nutall did. >> we were going to work behind closed doors and work after hours. we would never leave a paper trail of what
steven. >> i was very proud of steph. i thought it was a cool thing. >> reporter: stephanie lazarus quickly rose through the ranks of lapdol officer to detective and she was popular, friendly, and well-regarded. her assignments also included project d.a.r.e., a drug prevention program aimed at kids and twice named detective of the year. later she worked at internal affairs investigating other officers accused of wrongdoing or corruption and then promoted to the lapd's art theft...
75
75
Nov 29, 2019
11/19
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
rose to a record 12.4 6 million barrels a day, according to the eia. rising output, as we know, means falling prices. guy: taylor, thank you very much indeed. still with us, steven, chief u.s. economist at ts lombard. let's talk about what the growth story is going to look like next year in more detail. do using the u.s. economy downshifts to a 1% handle or moves to 80% handle -- to a 2% handle? steven: i think it is a tale of v.o hal the story shifts to the second half of the year as the tightening of financial conditions from a year ago start to dissipate in terms of its impact on real economic activity. is 75 basiss place points of fed rate cuts, plus $480 billion increase in balance sheet. the risk on you are seeing in terms of benefiting risk markets, financial markets. towards the second half of the year, i think you back down, by the end of the year getting a little bit about that. the pattern is never quite neat in reality, but that is a good way to thing about it. guy: have you got any fed rate cuts priced in for next year? steven: no, i think they are done. remember, they said material change. what would constitute a material signs ofr the fed is reces
rose to a record 12.4 6 million barrels a day, according to the eia. rising output, as we know, means falling prices. guy: taylor, thank you very much indeed. still with us, steven, chief u.s. economist at ts lombard. let's talk about what the growth story is going to look like next year in more detail. do using the u.s. economy downshifts to a 1% handle or moves to 80% handle -- to a 2% handle? steven: i think it is a tale of v.o hal the story shifts to the second half of the year as the...