attacks in california since 1951 when records began. but no doubt the man who was injured yesterday, very, very scary stuff. dominic there in l.a. we re out of here. sunday house call is up next.
injured. those numbers, officials say, are sadly expected to rise. the 11-story building was under construction, and police believe nearly 90 workers were in the basement, collecting their paychecks when that building fell. i ll be back with arthel neville at noon eastern. join us two hours from now for a sunday house call at 12:30 eastern. i m eric shawn. now back to sunday morning futures and maria. thank you. this upcoming week while we have seen some 200,000 new jobs created on average for several months now, last week s grim gdp report showing the economy contracted almost 3% in the first quarter has some on edge about what to expect this week. joining me now to discuss the state of the economy and the federal reserve policy is the president of the st. louis federal reserve, james bullard. president bullard, good to have you on the program. great to be here.
enjoy the relief. back now on sunday house call. symptoms resemble the common cold, but now a new study says that about one-fifth of children who are persistent coughs, they may be suffering from whooping cough. doctor, whooping cough. what is it? i mean, it sounds like it s from the 19th century. yes, it s a respiratory infection caused by bacteria, extremely contagious, and it s transferred from one person to another person by these respiratory droplets. exactly the way you describe it had. it starts like a cold, runny nose, congestion. and then after two weeks, you start having these hacking coughs that s not going away, so you have the cough and then followed by this whooping noise. and that s why they call them whooping cough.
back now with sunday house call in our weekly segment called should i wore? medical mistakes affect 12 million patients a year. 12 million people, that s a lot of people and this is rather frightening. that s it. recent pain just published. looking at 12 million people that went to all the urgent cares and outpatients. they walked out with the wrong diagnosis, and half of those, about 6 million of those were serious problem and medical issues. now we always like to kind of blame the doctors, but i have to tell you this is one time that i want to be their advocate. we are working hard. the exposure to the patients are getting less and less. we re seeing more and more patient so the mistake can happen. that s one thing. the other thing is that the patients have to be their own doctor.
car, ever put those little ever put those things in your ear, the ear buds. can you share them? can you share them. coming up the doctors will give us the answer whether we really should be sharing them. you see college kids and teens doing that sometimes. you think that s a good idea? sunday house call back in a flash. i know a thing about an ira and i got the tools to do it my way i got a lock on equities that s why i m type e that s why i m tyyyyype eeeee, i can do it all from my mobile phone that s why i m tyyyyype eeeee, if i need some help i m not alone we re all tyyyyype eeeee, we ve got a place that we call home we re all type e