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tv   Mindset Denmark Jamaica  Al Jazeera  February 3, 2024 7:30am-8:00am AST

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as a full is building club, the members of switched to the winter game talk. this is a strongly republican part of belfast. the club has been around since 19 o 5 as long as shouldn't say it does exist it. so how did people hear still about it's taking a lead role in the developed government that was still part of the united kingdom. i think our community has come to terms with the fact that we are a mixed community. and we do have to sure things which sort themselves and their own time as long as we can keep conflict that i think that's the most important thing. deals the decades to conflict between republicans and union. this was played out in the violence of the troubles. 3500 people were killed. champagne was the political wing to the irish republican army seen a so dangerous u. k band. it's the, the jerry adam's voice from being broadcast for the 1998 the good friday agreement . go to the power sharing government where the 1st and deputy 1st ministers would come from each side of the conflict. and we equal power smashing things. michelle
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o'neill, who become the 1st republican 1st minister, hope body says it brings unification closer. this is the right time pushing for him to be talking about the united on and being in a touching distance. it is the reality of the good friday agreement. and then to make the we all voted for the good for the payments because we believe in the hopes on the opportunity and the democratic a peaceful impact with north or did chief irish unity. champagne is long seen to transition from guns and bombs to negotiation and democracy as a model for other such movements around the world that it states as, as biggest single policy in the assembly doesn't necessarily mean it's close as you have prevailed. this type of champagne is 1st minister isn't really because of a search and support for nationalism is because of a weakening of unionism. and mainly actually with many people saying that that night the union is still nationalist not long ago. the idea should fade taking this symbolic lead. here at the storm on the assembly would have provoked outrage among unionists because of a hard line. you notice that remains the case,
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but there walkable thing about what is a landmark moment is just how broadly it's being accepted. that speaks to 25 years of power sharing shouldn't signs commitment to non violence. and also a she a sense of urgency across the, not in for its government to start working again the baton players in the fulls road. and just some of those waiting to see whether that process stabilizes the state of the quote and organize place within the u. k. will bring the students name closer to its ultimate target. are you close it out to 0 cell phones and as well, the news continues here on al jazeera of the mindset. started with us, the the no cost agent on the way the agent being played here and to tell for a reco good time. 20 full team started the tournament, but only one will be crowned champions. right across the action. on alice's here,
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the will use a freshman anxiety around the rocks, the solutions to this mental health crisis week school. the big question, i mean big approaches to boosting electrical loading on this week. sure. what's the future of psychological treatment we may take, develop is trying to improve mental health outcomes. when i look at you make is pushed to be a will lead us human magic mushrooms therapy, but with a few laws around the use of suicide. and there is a site, this is mine, 624 year old sophie olsen has suffered from skits of friends since early childhood. today in denmark, she's part of the world's largest study, exploring the use of the mess,
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the virtual reality to trace of the condition guided by a therapist headset sessions, i think to help patients safely confront the voices in the head. so many mess. click new hotmail. okay, and what does she need? it begins with designing and avatar that resembles the hallucination. sophie hughes 1st. if she chooses hell, be out of a tile. looks a whole. yeah. the ultimate, the skilled other thing is the. yeah. that's what the show the little street. yes, the then she chooses the albatross down slack pitch. but uh yeah, this wife and get those personal downgrade. yeah. so yeah. so if you didn't put the headset on and start speaking with the advertise, which is voice by the therapist there minutes get on. know, find me
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a little to fix it. the parasitic, the, you know, the cab looked uminski, the sophie's in carriage to speak up against the advertise, so that the hallucinations lose the power or disappear. a sophie in that environment with the headset on being embarrassed or how does that help you cope like can you explain? it really helps because i suddenly have the voice inside my head in front of me and being able to talk directly to it rather than just in my head. it's me who was in control. and it's me who was able to say like, no, don't say that that's not true. that's not the way i am. you don't know that about me. so it sounds as though you feel like strong. yeah, exactly. it feels like suddenly i have the power or myself and not the voices. so it, these tried other types of treatment including medication and speaking with a therapist. that says only virtual reality therapy is what. what surprised me, probably the most was how just through the 1st session,
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how well it made me feel instance they basically at like being able to talk to it that way in my own life nipples safe space. ready the team from the university of copenhagen who are leading the study, say, the oldest gets a friend of patients who have undergone the treatment, have shown some form of improvement. void by their success, the researches and now testing the tech on other mental health conditions. they're hoping they can change more lives, like safety's surfing. what are your dreams? what do you have to do in life? well, i want to be out there and through what i know, whether it's working with animals or with animation or something like that. and how do you hurt these therapy will help you achieve those screens? it will definitely help a lot because with my past it's educational and stuff like that. it was always the battle of or you're going to drop. i'll do never going to become in this thing now i can say like, it's okay. it's all about like taking chances and seeing if they work or not,
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as someone who's benefit from using technology. so she hopes denmark will continue to embrace new innovations to improve mental health and will be the people should have an open mind towards technology when it comes to mental health. because instead of being afraid, we can use it to our advantage. and the technology can help the way it helped me a to truly hope that other people are able to use it soon enough. so they also can feel the relief i have. so the 1st in most schools are racing new technology to improve well being in the classroom. children here use mood monitoring apps such as the wisdom about how they're feeling off to the results or read students and teachers like henrietta of the school can see the overall mood of the class. ok. i got a bad oh
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uh okay. yeah. on the 6 months the, the sofa, the top post to to come with bathroom system in this, in the flat top make it says, so should the job i have a bill. it was, it's got a lemon law position made use of yeah. yeah. and i choose page one another to and then a going give me school to move from there. number one, negative point today of, of social media. and that opens that conversation. sometimes they'll be like all this stream or the did that or this happened on tick tock and then it's good for me to know. oh, okay. something really bad is going on right now. that's good for me to be aware of . maybe also the parents, you know, when you say the screen is kind of gives you the statistical like view of the classroom. why the stats important to you with a school teacher. so as teachers,
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it's become such a multi faceted job and we have a lot of issues with tests or not having a good time and lot more administrative work as well. um, so it's good for me to have a tool that's making sure that i check in with them every week. you date them. yeah . so do you think you can begin? henrietta is part of a small group of teachers could give feedback to the team behind both so they can keep improving the see your, my ts propes shows me how it works. it's super easy to do it what it takes, 3 minutes in the classroom, right? so this is a q r code that you can use with your phone. yeah, it opens up in here. the very 1st thing i do, i choose a dog. and today i have a dog down and i go on and then after that i can choose what impacts me positively
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right now. mm hm. so food was good. yeah. and then what didn't work for me. okay. one thing is, social media impacts me badly right now. so then there's a different thing, this is we call them selections. mm hm. so the classroom here, building their narrative together. what are we like? okay. i like the outdoor and an indoor me that's definite. i also like group work more than working alone. and i also like fairy tales more than harvest or is yeah. now this, this, thank you for me. then generate a mood landscape for the cloth based on their answer. this is how it would look for a teacher, right? so all the kids do this, and then here you see this is the dogs they chose, this is the positive and the negative impact factors. and over here you have the costs of interest. and again, this is building up the narrative of the classroom. what do we like? and this is something that is super important for us. we want the classroom to work on well being together instead of working it individually. if something impacts us
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and we need to, to take the responsibility together and then help each other out. is there any way the ink cartridges children to ensure that they're giving, as honest answers as possible? i a yeah, we chose early on to do this to do everything anonymously. super important because the very difficult thing in a classroom is to speak up on a topic not to use and the other recreations of, you know, the classroom. well, they all talk in denmark, public school system, i'm a frustration with the lack of support. the youth, mental health. we have movers, there's been a lot of other countries. we have one of the best schooling systems. so why do the kids not drive? and they don't, it's been a curve going down for a long time, is the biggest problem that we face the mental health of our youth. that is what drives me. putting my energy towards that in demo is hazy debate surrounding the
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use of technology by children, ranging from screen time to dos of privacy. mathias says move protects children by collecting, noted, post them down, short old, but notes that misapprehensions remain about how the technology works. for instance, we don't do way at all, but you can put us in some kind of situation where you say, hey, i, it's crazy. it's, it's, it's dangerous and you guys are kind of doing it. we're not doing a i'm, we never going to do a i, we do an analysis for the teacher. very different. you would just quite forthright in sign you would never do artificial intelligence. but what, what is your version to that technology? i think it's a early stage technology. there are many problematic fields within a i that we haven't, you know, discovered yet. so i wouldn't, i wouldn't bring that into a fairly new technology. and we've created the my conversation with mathis, i was quite surprised when he said that he wouldn't use any artificial intelligence
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technology in any future software that he develops. but as you will soon discover, not every inventor fuel set why. the technical university of denmark, linux limits, speed, bod use creation. i based systems to help screen and treat children for me to distort is. one of them is a project where people the coach to develop emotional awareness on the beach coach isn't a person. it's an eye on how would checkbox that can respond to voices and facial expressions. hello. i'm here to help guide you through exploring and expressing your emotions. let's start by identifying which emotion you find the most challenging to express. so we could, for example, work on happiness, happiness. yeah. let's see. i'm detecting some angry your facial expression. is that you or is that me?
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no, let's work on the 20. you have it in the shop or asks me to imagine an incident which might make me angry. skipping lunch. that certainly sounds frustrating. now take a moment to really connect with that anger. as you visualize the feeling of hunger, when you've missed lunch, pay attention to how it feels when you let this emotion live on your face. please take your time and let me know when you're ready to move on. i'm ready. wonderful. now i invite you to lift that ink or go allow your body and face to relax, returning to a neutral state. take as much time as you need and let me know when you're ready to continue. please continue. great job. you are doing well learning to express and control your emotions. when you say this technology really helping people in the mental health sector. this specific working on emotions could be more on the autism spectrum, for example,
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where you need to work with how to express emotion. but it could be any of us saying, okay, there is may be, you know, in a work situation where you often look angry, but this is not what you're trying to express. you could also go in and work on that through an app like this of 6 months ago. i, would this be even possible? maybe not to this extent. there's a lot of stuff happening right now in this space. and it's just improving with very high speed. but it's not just new technology that could be developed to improve mental health from denmark. i'm heading to jamaica learn emerging stair nike why it involves using suicide. a compounds found in so called magic mushroom. at this village, these tours are on a full day retreats where they'll take the psychedelic drug for medicinal properties. kirsten was and i was recommended to retrace by her brother. he
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said he was profoundly changed from having done the treatments here. and we have the same childhood traumas. he's a doctor, he's in a nice that has so he has the medical science background. and for him to turn around and say, this just did it. it says it's eyeopening for me. the mother of to has tried separately, therapist is where she lives in america. it takes time to get comfortable with the therapist. where is from my understanding is still assigned and it just basically pushes you through the door and says deal with. it's frustrating because a guest of troy citizens magic mushroom or treat my celia, which started in january 2023. the canadian has a background in real estate to the amazing powerful that is i tried it and yeah, i, it was kind of very scary. the 1st step,
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why do you feel this is the public setting for such a therapy? i find that nature is a better place to do up and it just hasn't been any rules or regulations place that would make it difficult to start off. you know, i retreat here and my celia is one of around 20 companies offering suicide. been assisted therapy in jamaica choice or trait except the 10 guest at a time full screen beforehand with at least one cool and the questionnaire. i've only ever you know, rejected to people on the basis of concerns over their medication. or in one case it was the person's age. they were just too young for us to, to care for the sake of them. that is person. before days, choice stop can give gifts, 3 doses of suicide each increasing in size. today they're
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preparing the largest quantity called her ro is designed to give a psychedelic trip up to 6 hours. if it feels like it's overwhelming, they can like slow the process down. the heroes dose is usually anywhere from $7.00 to $14.00 grounds, depending on the particular client. the deeper you go, the more repairs that the get done. and now we don't this in jamaica there in those laws governing how much suicide and a person can type. it's a stark contrast to other countries where you could be jailed will face the death penalty. the possessing magic mushrooms were changing lives over saving lives. i think that we are, we're way behind this should have been done 40 years ago. really? yeah. i've had people that had suicidal tendencies a couple of times and the mushrooms have takes them that, that desire a way which,
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which is a good thing. how much knowledge did you a mess before opening the doors to, you know, retreats like this. i looked for people in the industry through linkedin, i consulted with doctors, i have doctors who are friends and every time i have a retreat, i learned something new. so we just continue to make it a little bit better each time. do you feel at this retreat there is adequate, you know, supervision when people take the machine. oh yeah. a 100 percent. we usually have one guide for each 2 people. with a master's degree in neuroscience to door, a peck of a is one of those gods. we don't believe and disorders we don't believe in anyone being sick or broken. it's because certain needs are not being met and we get to know could passionately what these individuals are needing. aside from overseeing the psychedelic trips, these guides provide
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a range of other activities like yoga and sound healing. but it's magic mushrooms that have the biggest impact. there's still a stipend, there's this transcendental experience, like there's anything from expensive, blissful joy. and there's the flip side. there is replay of some of the most traumatizing experiences that might have been encountered in your life. and my personal belief is the medicine doesn't always give you what you want. it gives you what you need, such. so i can logistically lockman for these 4 guys. comes with a 3 and a half $1000.00 bill. but that's cheap. some one wake retreat since you might get charged up to $16000.00, but this and custom is like customers are on the to buy the price. so one would what do you want? acceptance, i think all of our trauma is comes down to self love,
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self recognition, which is very lacking in myself, especially. and i'm hoping to see the lights, you know, the bigger light in life. the close gives me time to reflect. i only still welcoming phone tours as the retreats jamaicans are they, benefiting from my friends, come to the capital kingston to find out at the university of the west. the black cartridge, dr. winston della heights is researching the effects of mushroom therapy. previously jamaica's chief medical officer now heard the car being selected, del x association is 2021. the slab on campus is tested this far to west the property of local magic mushrooms to ensure the safe to sell. and so in
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essence, you're testing for pure product. this lavar tree is what allows it to have that objective sheet of paper to the objective evidence of what's in this product that you're buying. i don't take chances that my health, so i would prefer her getting my products from somewhere like that as ease clinic downtown. this patient is one of 120 jamaicans, treated with doses of suicide and by dr. winston. he says, suffers of severe trauma, obsessive compulsive disorder, alcoholism and depression that will benefit from his non wake treatment program. so here's a product that can be prescribed for persons and on a single usage, depending on the dosage that do well and stay with. i know and no other product like that and all of psychiatric, hey, kirk, a doctor, what happens here is very different ways of trace. on the dr. winston, patients receive increment to doses of suicide been every 3 days. the 3 weeks
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followed by a 7 day break, just providing psychedelic, for a patient, isn't sufficient. we recommend the combination of psychotherapy, along with the 5. the 5 in dr. winston says he's training is a loss for assessing. suitable candidates, do i offer to all patients? know if you've had a history with me or not come in. ready this thing, appointments and heavy kind of as it was, i'm not here die for that. a patient with a history of scripts of for you now or for us agree relative. what's good, so for now, clearly, not nurses. also, i supervise the treatments. i'm very clear. it shouldn't take more than one gun on the side assignment and not be supervised by someone. certainly have 3 exams are going to have cognitive distortions or not in control off and at 6 grams even more so. dfcs are those dependent. in the past 4 years, dr. winston, his tracy to
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a number of people who were rushed to hospital off to they can see mushrooms in more traits or are patients can get psychotic with either of these outside of alex and it's done before the system to make it is a signatory to you. and tracy, which limits its ability to import export, magic mushrooms, but there's no other restrictions. dr. winston says, jamaica is mushroom industry. lex regulations, safe gods, and qualified stock. but that would contain your con, continue, should not continue. there are many retreats across jamaica like what concerns do you have about them. busy one that the safety that's required isn't in place and the more efficiently into then the more you're going to have of persons with out onto artifact. that's the disadvantage of these retreats where you may not have full histories go dependent on persons. so for 14, so all of the is it for you, it's sure to have access to a psychiatrist of a concert,
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you must. and is that happening here on the other to my knowledge know, are these retreats giving solid 5 in treatment of 59? i think ultimately that's, that's the end result. 1 not going to retrieve the kids to getting ready to take the her role dose of to assign a secluded out to location is chosen for the treatment. this time, it's a botanical god. i taught help instinct. what would happen if someone suffers a psychotic episode? rise blood pressure for an elevated hot right? these high dice. nothing is without risk. right? it would transport that person to a doctor or the hospital. some people we've spoken to and they've said they should be a try and psychologist on side and every for training. do you agree?
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i mean the therapist depending on who they were, i found that to be more stringent, more stand offish, then arthritis where their hands on why would move regulations hamper the experience will affect the work you do? i think that that there's just not enough knowledge to start making rules. yeah. and i just think regulations just bog things down, keep people out of the market. and you know that add on necessary costs or obligations to something. it really doesn't need to be that you know, that rationalizes just before they take the doors, we stopped filming awesome perspective for that. previously. a few days later, i may help with testing to see how the magic mushrooms therapy affected for me and had a delayed response. but i had requested to go back to the villa early because i was
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not having fun. i was out of my elements. i was hotspot there, there was too many bugs, but as soon as i was back in doors in the villa and that's when it hit you know, people say they see kaleidoscope. i didn't have any of that. the nausea was pretty strong. but i was very calm, very logical. so what did you learn about yourself? i learned that i need to trust myself more. not be in such a rush to get to the results. would you type mushrooms again? yes, i think mushrooms and they searching with a therapist could be very helpful because they would be leaving you with questions to say, okay, well, now that you've figured that out, how do you feel about that? and i think that's where their purpose combination with mushrooms could really be used to mentor is showing us the possibilities and challenges for the magic
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mushrooms therapy, mental health professionals, and patients a lot the suicide. and as a new way of improving as like a logical will be that for now, the lack of regulation, the best use of profit to took to reputation, like a deal like power dies at risk. the latest news, as it breaks, people are scared from the facts that are also a target is happening is 20. 24 with detailed coverage is really forces continue their intense bombing around lost their hospital in pon unit from the hall to the story doesn't include being arrested, interrogate is found, put into, of course interactive information on family members. the barrels of light scorched fine for you. real quick accounts rising from beneath the rubble of
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desperate stories salvaged on the high seas, brought to the ground breaking films from award winning film. the watch. listen witness. on al jazeera, the most direct way for power. what to get into the brain is by and hailing back in my day to get tucked up all the time. so you're bringing the nozzle up to your mouth. yeah, and i would go through how many times do you think you'd be interested in? oh my 100 and so why you were spring? did it ever occurred to that? what you were spring might hurt you, hers i have plans for people. so who do you hold responsible for?
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what's happened to the us launches strikes and syria and a rock and response withdrawing a tank that kills 3 american soldiers in jordan. yourselves come sit down, was up to the bodies of the 3 service members where every entry, yes. and so the you with the on the cried, this is out. is there a line from job how also coming up profit, he's a pressure cold on.

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