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CBS Evening News With Norah ODonnell

than current methods. >> reporter: it's cutting-edge research. artificial intelligence is significantly better at predicting a patient's cancer risk, according to a new study out today. >> the role of ai in protecting breast cancer risk is definitely in our future. >> reporter: dr. polly niravath is a oncologist with houston methodist. >> assesses a person's risk, the ai can do it probably a lot cheaper, and a lot faster, as well. >> reporter: front of my current clinical models use a patient's age, family history, and breast density to determine risk fear of artificial intelligence is able to get biomarkers, more information from the mammogram. helping doctors make personalized recommendations. kaiser permanente research analyzed the mammogram's more than 18,000 women. ai took just seconds to determine their five-year breast cancer risk, and it was up to 25% more accurate whencoi. the american cancer society

Reporter , Artificial-intelligence , Ai , Cancer-risk , Research , Study , Patient , Methods , Role , Risk , Breast-cancer-risk , Lot

The Big Weekend Show

i had a concussion that could've been game over. in actual reality, you've only got one life. don't mess with your melon. if you hit it, get it checked. my name is john david carpten dr. kimberly stegmaier dr. edith perez i'm a medical oncologist and i focus on cancer prevention. people are always asking me two words come to mind for me. one is responsibility, the other is purpose. there was a child that you know i took care of and adored and she said to me dr. kim, you know, will you remember me forever? sorry, it's been a hard year. every day i think of the faces of patients when i see their smiles, when i tell them that new treatments are helping their lives. it's just so inspiring to do research that impacts human lives. stand up to cancer has been a critical partner

Life , John-david-carpten , Children-don-t , Reality , Concussion , Mess , Melon , Game-over , My-name , One , People , Kimberly-stegmaier

Special Report With Bret Baier

good as far as you guys are working together, but is it going to pass? >> i'm always proud of the work that we do on the agriculture committee. peter meijer on the agriculture committee, the house now, the senate. we have a long history of working together. the last bill passed, 85 of the 100 senators voting. that's a challenge but for us this time around, getting to 85. i have a lot of faith in -- and the committee chairman and ranking member. i think it has a great chance of passing. >> bret: another thing you are working on is this drug parents drug transparency. this is a drug transparency medicaid act. here's an oncologist testifying house-side about why this is good. >> a critical component of the patient's treatment out of our hands simply so they can profit. as any oncologist will tell you, forcing patient portal is to use

White-house , Senate , Work , Guys , History , Agriculture-committee , Peter-meijer , Bill , Lot , Committee-chairman , Challenge , Ranking-member

New Jersey physician admits to buying, selling oncology medication for profit

NJ oncologist Anise Kachadourian, MD pleads guilty to using her medical license to purchase expensive prescription drugs to resell for profit.

Justice-department , New-jersey , Oncologist , Ew-jersey , Rescription , Ncology , Ancer-medications , Harmacy , Holesale-distributors , Ancer-prescription , Ancer-fraud

Leguizamo Does America

>> it was a lonely road. until i found others. >> the oncologist said it looked like someone had taken kate and dipped her in cancer. >> we know he struggles with brain injury, the b.a. actually considers him 350% disabled. >> constant alertness, watchfulness, inability to sleep. >> sometimes he wakes up crying. >> bowman. my mind was a mess. >> in this house, we say the word cancer. cancer, with a little lot in our voice. like he knows that something is not good. >> you did get? hey, pastor louis? >> i'm not ready to be a single parent. >> that if you recognize me, blank once. >> we only get one of these in

Someone , Cancer , Road , Oncologist , Others , Brain-injury , B-a- , Disabled , Inability , Watchfulness , Constant-alertness , 350

Ayman

before we go. the feature documentary, unconditional, is coming up tonight at 11 pam. msnbc's very own richard louis chronicles the uplifting caregiving journeys at three different families, including his own. the film fallout these families as they fight through physical and mental health challenges over the course of several years. >> richard louis live in new york city. i have been a journalist for 15 years. biden got diagnosed with alzheimer's. >> richard. >> good to see you too. >> it was a lonely road until i found others. >> the oncologist said that it looks like someone had taken k in deterring cancer. >> he struggled with brain injury. the va considers him 350%

Unconditional , Msnbc , Richard-louis , Families , Challenges , Journeys , Mental-health , Film , Pam , Own , Three , 11

Unconditional

well i appreciate you being here. it's so hard to sit still for this whole thing. - the oncologist said that it looked like somebody had taken kate and dipped her from head to toe, every bone in her body. she said, "we're looking at about six to 10 years." and my initial response was, "you mean six to 10 years for the treatment to finally take effect or what do you mean?" and she didn't answer. i realized that that was how long kate's gonna be on this planet. cancer attacks the person and it only has one mission. and you don't know when it's gonna complete that mission. (bird squawks) - chemotherapy is expensive. - just a little bit. - we need to keep this for kindling.

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Fox News Live

shortages progress oncologist among alarm bells about the shortage of key chemotherapy drugs used to treat the cancers in the u.s. >> ovarian uterine cervix cancers cancers of the bladder, the esophagus, testicles head and neck cancers are also an important group of cancers which is a mainstay progress other instances of shortages doctors have been relying on workarounds for alternatives or second choice of drugs reported to the record cancer society oncologist do not have that luxury. execute residents are set up for a reason. you really don't want workarounds with chemo or immunotherapy. >> is part of a larger crisis about 300 drugs are in short supply across the u.s. right now. the root cause according to bipartisan senate study nearly 80% of manufacturing facilities that produce active pharmaceutical ingredients are located outside the u.s. ninety -- 95% of generic

Shortages , U-s- , Cancers , Drugs , Shortage , Alarm-bells , Oncologist , Chemotherapy , Bladder , Ovarian , Doctors , Group