clothing from the patient s chest. cut clothing if needed. gives you live feedback, pads here, you re able to stick the pads, put on it, start your cpr compressions. reporter: 326,000 out of hospital cardiac arrests happen each year. only a little over 10% of people survive, and many of those are left with serious neurological issues. but the numbers are much better if a bystander is there with 1 in 3 surviving. the foundation has donated nearly 300 aeds to school and public places like rec centers so more bystanders can jump into action, and she s done this all with no employees, just help from her mother. playing for the liberty, you have this foundation, how are you balancing both? it s really hard to balance both, but again, if whatever i put my mind so, i definitely do it. i m not going to give up on the foundation. having some help would definitely put the foundation in a better position. reporter: as charles looks to grow her foundation while
i will be the greatest jobs president that god ever created. i tell you that. [applause] steve: that is what he said about a year ago. former nominee for secretary of labor, former chief executive officer of cke restaurants, member of the job creators networks andy puzder joins us from nashville. good morning. steve: 105 days into the added administration but is president trump the best jobs creator? he has done a very spectacular job in that respect. if you look at the unemployment numbers, unemployment rate numbers for february, for example, for march, we createdded 472,000 more people were employed. 326,000 fewer people were unemployed. 200,000 fewer people had part-time jobs.
andy: it was the tale of two surveys. if you look at the household survey it was good. the employment rate went down to 4.5% 4.5%.ion didn labor participation didn t drop. we created 326,000 fewer people were unemployed. when you look at the establishment survey it was a big departure from a.d.p.m i m shopeing that number will be adjusted up. paul: we have had a lot of hard data and some of the softer stuff. are we in another economic slow patch as everybody waits to see what kind of policy changes we are going to get out of this new wait tment? andy: there is policy changes
this as the labor department announced applications for unemployment benefits went up last week to 326,000, still low enough to suggest hiring should hold steady. last month unemployment was at 6.3%, the lowest since 2008. but when you take into account those who would like a job and who work part time, the real unemployment rate for april was 12.3%, or 19.5 million americans. wow, 19.5 million americans, sandra. i guess one of the questions about unemployment, people are saying, they re not looking for work. there are no jobs. also there are no jobs, right? isn t that part of the problem? part of the problem is laziness as well because they are accepting these unemployment benefits for very long periods of time. in this survey it backs that up, saying polls suggest the aid may be diminishing their incentive to find employment. 82% of those surveyed unemployed, if their aid was to run out prior to finding a job
the floor of the new york stock exchange with the information. give it to us. good morning. not good news this week. we don t want to see claims on the rise and that s exactly what we saw. claims increased by 28,000 for the latest week to 326,000. so obviously more weakness in the labor market. that is not good news ultimately. you want to see those claims going to the down side. as far as what we ve been seeing on wall street this week, lots of m and a activity, merges acquisitions, from the drug category, at & t, direct tv. we ve also seen others such as reynolds american, as well as camel and newport. we ve had a long of activity. marathon oil jumping in. we ve had a lot of news on the retailers, such as urban outfitters and dirk s sporting goods. and tiffany s. we ve had a lot of action this week. plus we understand that when you look at surveys, apparently the people who are unemployed,