Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Need to find a GOOD doctor in Phoenix AZ husband has been ill for six years.?

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gammy8


He has been through so much and he is only 54 years old but to look at him and watch him you'd think he was in his 80's! He has always been a happy guy and healty but for some reason 6 years ago he lost over half of his blood supply. After many blood transfutions and 8 doctors from AZ to WA state, no one is getting close to why he isn't getting any better. We need to find a GOOD CAREING doctor here in Phoenix before it's too late. An Internal Med. Doctor does anyone know of one, Please write me back. We have insurance through the military. He was in for 20 years, and the VA can't seem to help him eaither.


Answer
I work at Good Samaritan Hospital and our reputation is one of the best. We are one of the top level 1 trauma hospitals in the nation. U.S News and World Reports magazine listed us FOUR times in their Best Hospitals of 2007 report. So it's safe to say our doctors have a good reputation. below i have attached the link of the magazine report.

http://health.usnews.com/usnews/health/best-hospitals/directory/hospital.php?id=6860250

most of the internal doctors that i work closely with are ones that primarily take patients with no insurance. They are referred to as hospitalists. We do have some excellent internal med drs that see patients outside the hospital. I can attach their info for you as well.

Dr. Jasser (well known within our hospital and has been practicing for 15+ years)

Dr. M Zuhdi Jasser
1301 East Mcdowell Road, Ste 202
Phoenix, AZ
(602) 251-3122

Dr.Lipschitz i know from working on the medical floor-nice dr and good reputation.

Dr. Barbara Lipschitz
4444 North 32nd Street,
Phoenix, AZ
(602) 200-3800

Dr. Rice would be the dr i would go with. This woman is a sensational dr. One of the best I've seen. She's very thorough-she will check everything to get to the route of your husband's problems. The only thing I'm not sure of is whether or not she takes patients outside the hospital (she is a hospitalist). She does have an office though so please call and check. She has an awesome personality to go with her skills.

Dr. Lynn A Rice
2020 North Central Avenue,
Phoenix, AZ
602-553-8400

these are just a few of the internal med doctors we have at good samaritan. you can always call the hospital at 602-239-3000 and ask for the social services department. The social workers can give you a more detailed list of doctors close to your area.

good luck with your search and i'll be praying for your husband's recovery.

Why are all of the Democrats who did what Obama said, using a Right that came from Republican Arizona in 1966?




GRETA The


The IRS official over the division that reviews tax-exempt applications will invoke her Fifth Amendment right not to testify before Congress, her lawyer says.

Lois Lerner was scheduled to appear Wednesday before the House Oversight Committee. But in a letter to committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., her lawyer says she will not offer testimony under her constitutional rights against self-incrimination, the Los Angeles Times reports.

"She has not committed any crime or made any misrepresentation but under the circumstances she has no choice but to take this course," said the letter from Lerner's defense attorney William W. Taylor III.

Taylor says in the letter that the Department of Justice has launched a criminal investigation into why conservative groups were targeted for extra scrutiny and that Issa's committee has asked Lerner for an explanation why she gave "false or misleading information" four times in 2012.

Taylor asked that Lerner be excused from appearing since she will not be answering questions. Since she will not testify, Taylor argued that making Lerner appear would "have no purpose other than to embarrass or burden her."

The inspector general's report said Lerner was made aware in June 2011 that agents had used terms such as "tea party" and "patriot" to single out groups for additional scrutiny.

MIRANDA VS ARIZONA: THE CRIME THAT CHANGED AMERICAN JUSTICE - Your Miranda Rights

Downtown Phoenix Arizona - Night Life In The Big AZ City
http://movies.yahoo.com/movie/the-longest-day/

The young woman working at the concession stand at the Paramount Theater in downtown Phoenix watched as the last of the Saturday night crowd filtered out beneath the hundreds of lights on the theaters marquee into the cool March evening. The movie that was playing that night was the World War II epic, The Longest Day, and as a result of the shows extra long running time, she was forced to close down the movie theater and walk home along the darkened downtown thoroughfares much later than she was used to. It was shortly after 11 p.m. on March 2, 1963, and in a few moments the 18-year-old woman would become a central character in a criminal act that would have ramifications far beyond her small world.

Patricia McGee sat next to a male co-worker for much of her bus ride home, but when their bus reached northeast Phoenix, the two separated and Patty transferred to another route. She got off at her normal stop near Seventh and Marlette streets, on the edge of a commercial district and headed up Marlette toward home.

As she walked down the street, a car pulled out from a driveway, nearly hitting her, and headed in the same direction as Patty east. The car stopped about a block in front of her and a man got out and started toward her. Even at 11 p.m. it wasn't unusual for people to be out on Marlette, but this night, just Patty and the tall, slim dark-haired man were on the street. She glanced at him as they got nearer, but paid little attention.

They drew abreast of each other, not making eye contact, and just as she was about to pass the nondescript man, he reached out and grabbed her. His other hand reached over her mouth and he warned her not to make any move, or I'll.

Patty begged him to let her go, but the attacker dragged the 18-year-old to his car. He tied her hands behind her before pushing her into the backseat and forcing her to lie down on the floor. The terrified woman did as she was told, and once she was inside, her captor bound her ankles, as well.

As they drove away from Phoenix into the desert, Patty continued to plead for her freedom, and the man replied that he wasn't going to hurt her. He drove for about 20 minutes into the high desert, once he reached his chosen spot, the Democrat Miranda raped Patty McGee R-Phoenix..

After the assault, the rapist asked Patty for money, and she gave him the four dollars she had in her purse. He then ordered the violated girl back into the car, threw his jacket over her head and drove back into Phoenix. About a half-mile from her home, he dropped Patty off and sped away into the night.

Rape was becoming an ever-increasing problem in Phoenix in the early 1960s. There were 152 rapes in the city the year Patty was attacked, up 20 percent from the year before and 33 percent from 1961, according to Liva Baker, the reporter who wrote the definitive book on the Miranda case. By 1970, Baker wrote, the number of rapes in Phoenix would nearly double from the 1963 figure.

Based on her statements, police began looking for a 27 or 28-year-old Mexican man with a mustache, a little less than six feet tall, weighing 175 pounds.

Know your Democrat History....Don't become a victim of Obama & Holder.



Answer
Just to answer the actual question you asked, the right to remain silent did not come from Arizona. That comes from the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution adopted in 1791. You are thinking of Miranda v. Arizona, which established that a person subjected to custodial interrogation cannot be found to have waived that right unless he is expressly advised of of the right and expressly waives it.

You might take a shot at knowing your U.S. history, and not become a victim of Fox News.




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