Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: James Jaggers


Related Topics

In the News (Mon 4 Jun 12)

  
  James
James, born September 14, 1834 in Izard Cnty, Arkansas; died December 21, 1834 in Izard Cnty, Arkansas.
James W James, born October 22, 1861; died 1955.
Jaggers, born November 28, 1901 in Peck, Idaho; died 1975 in Brookings, Oregon.
www.oz.net /~blueboyz/james.htm   (3540 words)

  
 Anatomy Of A Mistake - CBS News
Jaggers says he was devastated: “It's almost like a death and dying reaction.
Jaggers said he couldn’t use the organs for that patient, and asked the agency if the heart and lungs would be appropriate for Jesica Santillan.
As soon as Dr Jaggers found out that a heart and lungs were available for Jesica Santillan, he sent a member of his transplant team, Dr. Shu Lin, to procure them from the New England Organ Bank in Boston.
www.cbsnews.com /stories/2003/03/16/60minutes/main544162.shtml   (1966 words)

  
 Miscommunication doomed girl - Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
Since the organ-matched Duke patient was a child, Milano referred the call to James Jaggers, the surgeon in charge of pediatric heart transplants.
Jaggers told Carolina Donor Services that the child on the computer's list was not medically ready for the transplant.
The bank assumed Jaggers was aware the organs were of blood Type A, since the bank had turned over all the information about the heart to Duke, according to its chronology.
www.pittsburghlive.com /x/pittsburghtrib/s_120182.html   (1282 words)

  
 James Willis Jaggars   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
James Willis Jaggars was born May 14, 1845 in Morgan Co., Alabama to parents, Thomas Jaggers and Martha Vest Jaggars.
James Jaggars' only child to live to adulthood is Naomi Jaggers Moore.
James Willis Jaggers was the first justice of the peace in Hartselle, Alabama and was also a Methodist minister and a judge.
home.lorettotel.net /~dubluet2/jaggars.htm   (247 words)

  
 WRAL.com - News - Chronology Of Events Regarding Jesica Santillan Transplant Attempts   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
Jaggers declined for the first potential recipient, because that patient was not ready for transplant.
Jaggers inquired as to whether the heart and lungs might be available for Jesica Santillan, specifying the patient by name.
Jaggers does not recall blood-type matching being discussed with CDS but does recall the discussion including the donor's height, weight, organ function and cause of death.
www.wral.com /news/1998198/detail.html   (1090 words)

  
 SignOnSanDiego.com > News > Nation -- Girl in botched transplant now brain dead, family meeting with doctors
In the first operation, Dr. James Jaggers implanted organs from a donor with type A blood that were incompatible with Jesica's O-positive blood.
Hospital chief executive Dr. William Fulkerson said Jaggers wrongly assumed compatibility had been confirmed when he was offered the organs, and later failed to double-check that assumption, a violation of the hospital's procedures.
They said Jaggers declined the organs for one patient who was not ready for transplant and asked Carolina Donor Services, an organ procurement organization, whether they were available for Jesica.
www.signonsandiego.com /news/nation/20030222-0856-transplanterror.html   (661 words)

  
 Customer Support -- Discussion   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
After the compatibility of the organs was confirmed, Santillan's family was notified early yesterday morning, and the second surgery was scheduled to be performed by James Jaggers, who did the first operation.
But Dr. James Jaggers had no sooner completed the long-anticipated procedure when it became clear that Jesica's body was rejecting the donor organs.
Dr. James Jaggers, the transplant surgeon, said in a taped statement released on Saturday by the hospital that he had hoped Santillán would be "one of those lucky few" awaiting heart-lung transplants who actually receive the surgery and do well.
www.mdc.edu /medical/Bioethics/Jessica.htm   (5932 words)

  
 Jaggers Family Genealogy Forum (All Messages)
Re: NETTIE JAGGERS, TENNESSEE, 1901 - JUDY FLATT 3/23/06
Re: Jagger and Jaggers Surname - Hazel Livingston 10/09/00
New Jersey/Ohio Jagger - Judith A Jagger 12/16/98
genforum.genealogy.com /jaggers/all.html   (3427 words)

  
 James Jaggers, MD in Kansas City, Missouri - Medical Doctor / Thoracic Surgery   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
James Jaggers, MD, is currently practicing Thoracic Surgery in Kansas City, Missouri.
James Jaggers, MD, is a medical doctor / physician residing in Kansas City, Missouri and specializing in Thoracic Surgery.
Doctors.Info4Everyone.org: James Jaggers, MD is a Medical Doctor located in Kansas City, Missouri and specializing in Thoracic Surgery.
doctors.info4everyone.org /doctor-191529   (218 words)

  
 Jaggers Family Genealogy Forum
Jaggers of Cumberland County, NJ Minnie Jaggers Hart Co. Ky.
Re: Jaggers in Arkansas and Alabama - Dee Burr 4/24/04
Re: Jaggers in Arkansas and Alabama - Shirley Sealy 9/14/01
genforum.genealogy.com /jaggers   (933 words)

  
 Archives: Story
James Wilford Jaggers, age 67, of Elizabethtown, Ky., died Friday, December 30, 2005 at the Hardin Memorial Hospital in Elizabethtown.
He was born June 3, 1938 in Grayson County, the son of William and Clara Alvey Jaggers.
Georgie "Sis" Jeanette Jordan Woosley, age 62, formerly of Robbinsville, NC, died January 7, 2006 at her residence in Leitchfield.
www.gcnewsgazette.com /articles/2006/01/12/obituaries/obit33.txt   (238 words)

  
 Jesica Santillan
Apparently, Dr. Jaggers neglected to confirm that the organs delivered to him for transplantation into Jesica matched her blood type.
If the reports are correct, Dr. Jaggers' error will probably lead to a lawsuit by Jesica's family, and it should be hoped that the North Carolina Medical Board will consider revoking the doctor's license to practice medicine.
In fact, since Dr. Jaggers is a prominent surgeon, it is not unlikely that he has friends among the physicians who serve on the medical board.
www.iatrogenic.org /Santillan.html   (555 words)

  
 USNews.com: Transplant Tragedy; Nursing Careers Redux; Diabetes Debate
I was very interested to read the story because Dr. James Jaggers, the surgeon, fixed my son's heart twice.
Jaggers is a hero to me and always will be.
I think the greatest mistake Dr. Jaggers made was to try to repair the grave error by performing the second transplant.
www.usnews.com /usnews/culture/articles/030901/1lett.htm   (569 words)

  
 USNews.com: Jesica's Story (7/28/03)
The tragedy grabbed the national imagination, because Jesica's parents had been told of miracles performed at Duke and had risked illegally crossing the Mexican border to bring her to one of the world's leading transplant centers.
The culture of medicine dictates that the surgeon, as commanding officer of the operating room, take the fall when a patient is injured or killed.
Jaggers blundered badly, and Duke failed to catch him.
www.usnews.com /usnews/health/articles/030728/28jesica.htm   (571 words)

  
 NationMaster - Encyclopedia: List of 'years in music'
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, showing Lake Erie in the background The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum is a museum in Cleveland, Ohio, United States, dedicated, as the name suggests, to recording the history of some of the best-known and most influential rock and...
Sir James Paul McCartney, KBE, MBE (born June 18, 1942), better known as Paul McCartney, is a British musician, composer, and producer, who first came to prominence as a member of The Beatles.
Jimi Hendrix James Marshall Jimi Hendrix (November 27, 1942 – September 18, 1970) was an American guitarist, singer, songwriter and producer who is widely considered to be the most important electric guitarist in the history of popular music.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/List-of-%27years-in-music%27   (11164 words)

  
 Anatomy Of A Mistake - CBS News
Nobody knows the answer better than Dr. James Jaggers, the transplant surgeon who put that heart and those lungs into Jesica Santillan.
He says that everything was going smoothly during Jesica Santillan’s operation until five hours into it, when he got a call from a technician in the immunology lab saying that something was terribly wrong.
Jaggers has no memory of them talking about it.
www.cbsnews.com /stories/2003/09/04/60minutes/printable571623.shtml   (1918 words)

  
 Duke Continues Review of Jesica Santillan Case
In the Triangle, concerns about how Duke handled the case were heard alongside a strong outpouring of support for the hospital and Dr.
James Jaggers, the respected transplant surgeon who took responsibility for the mistake.
By all accounts, Jaggers is a compassionate and skillful surgeon who for years has given of his skills by performing free heart surgery in Nicaragua."
www.dukenews.duke.edu /2003/02/santillancase0203_print.htm   (611 words)

  
 Descendants of Simpson Portwood
James Thomas JAGGERS b: November 22, 1856 in Moweaqua Twp., Shelby Co., IL d: March 14, 1939 in Harbor, Curry Co., OR Burial: March 17, 1939 in Ward Cem., Brooklings, Curry Co., OR +Ms.
Lavisa Alice JAMES b: December 26, 1876 in TX d: 1939 in Brookings, Curry Co., OR Burial: 1939 in Ward Cem., Brooklings, Curry Co., OR Father: Mr.
James Madison HAYS b: 1853 in Martin, Vanderburgh Co., IN d: June 17, 1931 in Moweaqua Twp., Shelby Co., IL Father: Mr.
www.geocities.com /heartland/fields/2179/Portwood3.html   (4302 words)

  
 djournal.com
She was preceded in death by her husband, Arlen Walker Johnson; two sisters, Irene Caveness and Pauline Washburn; and four brothers, Ulysses, Neal, Codie Dean "C.D." and James Bluford "Curley" Thompson.
Pallbearers were Jerry Rogers, James "Skeet" Ellis, Preston Sullivan, Mike Sullivan, Ken McCreight, James Jaggers, Junior Roberts and William C. Stewart Jr.
and wife, Lois, of Wren, and James Oneal Nicholson and wife, JoNell, Billy Nicholson and wife, Alice, and Bobby Nicholson and wife, Carolyn, all of Nettleton; three sisters, Lanita Varnum, and Patsy Ann Carter and husband, Hulon, all of Chipley, Fla., and Betty Jean Buse of Nettleton; 20 grandchildren, five great-grandchildren.
www.djournal.com /pages/story.asp?ID=210681&pub=1   (2216 words)

  
 Vietnam War Books
An oral history unlike any other, "Bloods" features twenty fl men who tell the story of how members of their race were sent off in disproportionate numbers and the special test of patriotism they faced.
Doc Lusane, James Jaggers, and Pee Wee Anson struggle to survive in the chaos of a war with no beginning no end and no purpose.
It is a war where the people dance to the rhythms woven in the tears of centuries.
www.vietnamwar.net /vietnambooks/vietnambooks.htm   (3255 words)

  
 Names Index Page
JAMES, James "Jimmie" (1 JUL 1795-18 JUL 1877)
JAMES, James Marion (1 JUL 1844-14 MAR 1921)
JAMES, Jessie Augusta (5 JUL 1888-3 JUN 1970)
www.ericjames.org /html/names69.htm   (4689 words)

  
 Genealogy Index for surnames beginning with J
James, Alice Lavica (26 DEC 1876-12 NOV 1939)
James, Violet Rose (1 JUN 1922-10 MAR 2000)
Johnson, James Benjamin Bennie (24 OCT 1893-29 JUN 1986)
www.jinman.org /inman/idxj.html   (1682 words)

  
 U-WIRE.com/Teen-ager remains in critical condition after transplant error   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-31)
In rapidly declining health and suffering from failing kidneys, Jesica -- who had waited three years for the needed organs -- is not expected to live more than a few days, unless a new set of donated organs can be found in time.
Associate Professor of Surgery Dr. James Jaggers, who performed the operation on Jesica, said Wednesday he mistakenly assumed a blood-type match had been completed.
Early in the morning of Feb. 7, I received a call from Carolina Donor Services and was informed of available organs," Jaggers said in a Wednesday statement.
www.uwire.com /content/topnews022003001.html   (894 words)

  
 DEMOCRATIZATION IN LONG PERSPECTIVE
Democracy is a mechanism of collective choice and a form of social organization that can be considered a superior substitute for other such mechanisms or forms of organization.
For the period 1800-1986 our basic source is the POLITY II dataset (Gurr, Jaggers and Moore 1989); the background to that collection is explained in Gurr, Jaggers, and Moore (forthcoming).
The Polity II survey covers "all independent members of the international system", those that have attained independence by 1975 and whose population exceeded one million by the mid-1980s.
faculty.washington.edu /modelski/DEMO.html   (4891 words)

  
 WebSideStory Board of Directors
Jaggers has served as a member of WebSideStory's board of directors since December 1999.
He is currently a director of PROS Revenue Management, a privately held software company.
Jaggers received a B.S. degree and an M.S. degree in electrical engineering and an M.B.A. from Stanford University.
www.websidestory.com /company/profile/board-of-directors.html   (1019 words)

  
 From
Jaggers first met with Jesica on April 5, 2002.
Jaggers chafes at the suggestion in some accounts that he is a rookie.
At the family's request, Jaggers was still the lead surgeon.
www.msu.edu /course/hm/546/jesica.htm   (5153 words)

  
 Mexican Transplant Girl Dies After Botched Surgery
Her family did not protest the decision, the hospital said.
Santillan's surgeon, Dr. James Jaggers, who had known her since May 2002, said he bore the responsibility for the fatal transplant mistake and expressed his sorrow to her family.
Santillan was given two sets of tests that determined she had no brain activity and no blood flow to her brain.
www.rense.com /general35/mex.htm   (666 words)

  
 Query Page
am searching for more information regarding Calvin JAMES, b abt 1843, ???state and Elizabeth WINN JAMES, b 1847, MO. They were married in Stone Co, MO in 1867.
My paternal grandmother, Alice JAMES WINN JAGGERS, was one of their children and was herself a resident of Umatilla Co in 1900, according to the census.
I believe the Calvin JAMES grave, located in a field near Helix, is that of my gr grandfather.
gesswhoto.com /um-query-page.html   (305 words)

  
 [No title]
"A long-term switch to growing rather than shrinking is going to have all kinds of serious effects, many of which we probably haven't even thought of," said James R. Tallon Jr., president of the United Hospital Fund, a nonprofit group that studies health care issues and finances health care projects.
In the 1990's, New York State and insurance companies put heavy pressure on hospitals in the city to cut costs by downsizing, pointing to the drop in the number of patients they housed.
Company officials were not available to comment on what their next step will be.
www.tricare.osd.mil /eenews/downloads/022403ha_long.doc   (7706 words)

  
 Outcome of unroofing procedure for repair of anomalous aortic origin of left or right coronary artery -- Romp et al. 76 ...
Department of Pediatric Cardiovascular Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, Department of Pediatric Cardiology, The University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama, and Department of Pediatric Cardiac Surgery, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon, USA
Address reprint requests to Dr Jaggers, Pediatric Cardiovascular Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Box 3474, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Presented at the Forty-ninth Annual Meeting of the Southern Thoracic Surgical Association, Miami Beach, FL, Nov 7–9, 2002.
ats.ctsnetjournals.org /cgi/content/abstract/76/2/589   (534 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.