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tv   Tomorrow Today  Deutsche Welle  March 2, 2024 8:30am-9:00am CET

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the top costs for everyone who wants to know more about this topic. second son of about this story is beyond the headline world in progress. c, w talked about the babies born prematurely that spend weeks on the needle. words are exposed to a lot of hospitals, stimuli during a time when they should ideally have been protected in the blue dress factors linked to being born too soon can have serious consequences. one research team is looking at whether music can help mitigate the risk fact topic and much more this week on dw science. you welcome to tomorrow. today
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a fed today should have been born 3 weeks from today. the but his mother is shot a new job done, gave birth to him over 2 months ago. had told her his brain didn't have sufficient time to mature. he missed out on vidal weeks in the womb. that's the reason many premature babies end up with developmental disorders. some of them cause lifelong issues. pediatrician and research are paid to hook b is trying to do something about it. with music. coincides the middle of the day of holding. we came up with the idea because premature babies have a daily rhythm that's determined by machines. meaningful and the name indeed can that be spring? we thought we had to give them something that they could hold onto based that the facial, hey, that's something that comes regularly to try something with
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a personal connection to them. so we, that's when we had the idea that we could do that with music or make music mazda actually metric us out the plot. and then some time for us to raise wake up music. he has a different piece to fall asleep too, as well as one for his waking hours. in a study, the team led by the research are looked at what happens in the brain when premature babies and neo natal logy wards associated music with events like waking up or falling asleep. they have an h. d all worked well. well. well, mostly babies who live listen to music regularly, show a clear maturation of these blue and orange networks. believe these are the networks that are otherwise less or under developed in premature babies that in sea cliff team. so some neural connections and the brains of these premies grew more sophisticated due to the music and the daily structure they associated with it. and
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the music was created by end to this folder. and by the while composing as much as possible, he tried to put himself in the shoes of a premature in front of the stairs to tc tc. and it's in to the 1st goal was to relax. the children boat was to dissolve the blockade. they had built up through this process of being told into the world and on clone for suicide, trying to develop a sound from overtime, from human voices 27. i extract of the sounds that were the most a theory all should be on is that go on for a long time. disco, david, only sound that develops constantly to that. like a cloud based. i'm thinking in 3 click this, i mean of a loser of these concealing the month, it is full of i just need the missing discussions with on to the as far the invite . always took a very long time because we spoke different languages. i kept trying to bring
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everything down to a scientific evaluation thing a on dad had phone that. he didn't think that what happens in the brain was all that important. jimmy got tubs of his. she thought that the main thing was that the babies ended up feeling better, do space sit on the hot, but i told him that i actually wanted to know what happens boss, and how it affects wellbeing. v as small as you lemma. and then you just don't go on that day and then it became about stimulating the children after relax. ations gave in other words, to give themselves the wake them up. will you do that arouse their curiosity to wonder? what is that some where does it come from? something like a bell ringing, for example, let's see shared with you, but i'm thinking the surprise on when he listens from other good cities coaching out, let me play at a level well, what do you say is when i was in geneva for the 1st time and this was the
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instrument, they reacted to most economic hits a snake charmers fluid from india. it's hard to play and so you have to practice long and hard to make nice sounds, but i'll give it a shot. for the babies, relaxing music and science. the study became something of a global sensation, a photographer from national geographic showed up in geneva. the results fascinated everyone. i don't see it. so for me being able to prove this scientifically with this project was a fantastic experience. pretty big. is it these from thoughts digikey for me? now to the is one of the children who were exposed regularly to until he is full invite as music. whether the experience also strengthens neural networks and
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infants at the later development stages is currently under investigation. the parents of the children are thankful for the musical experiment. so lisa, i told him, was that the best phone to do? yep, there was a way for me to give her an activity. when you have your baby at home, you can play with all their limits to what you can do at the neo natal logy station . but i had the feeling that nancy la got something from the music and that's through it. i was doing my job as a mother. so some of us you, hey it's, i've been, i'll put you on the phantom club. i the memo. it's due to the long conversations between the scientist and the musician paid off in the end. let's see what happens in our brains when we listen to music. that's the kind of question
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being explored in the field of neuroscience. another is how to develop human machine interfaces and devices that can be controlled by thought. in that area, a researcher at one of europe's largest university hospitals is trying to break new ground. he collects fountain pens from all over the world in a small way. the hobby acts as a kind of analog counter way to his research, which is a lot less tangible the so you suca da spends most of his time studying the around 86000000000 neurons that make up an incredibly complex organ. the human brain. and he's been doing so since his university days back in the 19 ninety's decided economy scale and that was the decade of the brain. and there was a lot of hype about all the imaging techniques at the time and what could be
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explored. i found it incredibly fascinating that we could practically watch the brain think who owns. i'm going to cook and couldn't today. the researcher does just that. with technology. gee, that's grown much more advanced at the chevy tay university hospital and research clinic and berlin. he develops high tech for the brain. for people with paralysis, for example, like you to show it's using electrodes. the doctor 1st establishes a connection between the patients brain and the computer. the electro and stuff la graphic illustrates how active the different connected areas of the patient's brain are today. it's important data for developing machine supported therapies. so use, so could cause the process calibration justin page that has also benefited from his research which has led to
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a better understanding of processes in the brain. and that's helped her get her life back on track. she's suffered from depression for almost 30 years, mostly just flushed in. um you have to imagine that you feel home inside nowadays might have you have no strength at all. when you can concentrate on the of this as soon as you, it's not like you always have a jumble. looks on some more like there's nothing. wow. wow. and every little task feels almost insurmountable. just getting dress store, cleaning yourself up, sometimes takes the whole day. just the show much montague has become for years houston boesch that took antidepressants that cause severe side effects. she tried many different treatments and repeatedly suffered severe relapses. then she heard
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about a technique, so you a circuit or has explored it's called repetitive, trans cranial magnetic stimulation. this, in the symmetric group, i mean, we know for example that and people with depression, people who have depressive symptoms. the left frontal brain is not activated as strongly as it is under normal circumstances. and with this method, we can specifically module 8 the activity in the left frontal brain. that kind of re orients this area, creating a situation where new connections can also occur, or changes in brain dynamics. in the whom do not make code developed by the research or the therapy was approved in 2018 treatment is painless and has just one side effect. a noticeable improvements in the patients state of mind. the device is used in the mask that are constantly being refined and the institutes own workshop. the aim is to taylor them even better to specific new ronel
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dysfunction in individual patients in the future. so good are wants to use magnetic stimulation to plum even deeper limbeck regions beyond the frontal brain takito showed so the special ed, so skeleton for his hand was produced as part of his treatment, a godsend for the patient. after brain tumors, surgery, he was no longer able to move his left arm on my back, then nothing happened. i'd wait for it, but not even a twitch will fight not missed it. so, a just 30 or 40 years ago with the expert consensus was that dead nerve cells were irretrievably lost. we now know that other neurons can take over their functions. the brain is incredibly flexible. so it says it's surprising how many everyday tasks require to hands and how much not being able to use
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a lamb can restrict autonomy. but with a little more than the power of his thoughts, the electrodes attached to his body and a machine that converts those thoughts into commands. for the x of skeleton shorts, it has now regained some of his motor skills, toys through that exercise. and then with this exoskeleton, i certainly thought i want to close that ended close to a few weeks. so i was flooded with happiness hormones and thought, hey, there's still time i can get my life back on with that. so it would come and see if there's we can develop as much technology as we want. yeah. but ultimately it has to help individuals and their everyday lives. so you know, so good our works towards that goal every day. probing the depths and possibilities of the human brain. we imagine about science and technology. that's why dw signs is now on take time. what do
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fun? why do gravitational ways that that is when did people begin getting high and laughing gas out? the drums boogie to the beads and what's the perfect kid football find? find the on says, gets most dw science own new tick tock channel. to calculate results are also being achieved in cancer research with one method called car to so therapy. the patient's own immune cells are genetically modified to recognize and destroy their cancer. some success stories on on colleges hoping for a revolution. hands banner, it is a living example of how powerful a new form of cancer therapy with so called car t cells can be 2 years ago he was diagnosed with
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a malignant lymphoma. the conventional treatments for it had little to no effect on the device. on ben, it's pretty much certain and you have half a year to a year, and that's it. yeah, this was hard as a last resort, the medical team, it's kind of about university hospital suggested car t cell therapy, a method that's only been available for a few years. the idea behind it is to get the t cells to recognize pathogens and cancer cells. the defensive cells have binding sites called adage and receptors, which allow them to recognise and dot com to harmful cells. these can then be destroyed by the immune system. in car t cell therapy patients t cells are genetically modified in the laboratory that causes a new receptor to form on its surface. these car t cells are then multiplied. they're super power, a new receptor which allows them to recognize the cells. so these also play
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a role in the immune system. the cells can develop into malignant cancer cells. the car t cells have been specialized or recognized them and render them harmless. cartridge self era. these are being researched at germany's national center for tumor diseases and hide about. even experts have been impressed by the success rates the idol twice and often gets the most impressive data has been in the treatment of childhood leukemia. square car t cell approaches can actually cure 80 percent of children who would otherwise have no other treatment options at all. that's a huge high income success rates and adults are somewhat lower. but even in them with some tumor types around half of all patients have had long lasting effect. still, the treatment can be tough to take. the infusion with altered cells can cause a serious immune reaction. hands bound that was hospitalized for 3 weeks after
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getting at. the new therapy may also have side effects that aren't yet know, so it's currently only given to patients who have no other option. still, the approach appears quite promising the contents and i'm glad i think car 2000 i showed in a new era and on college. and when you talk about self therapies with genetically manipulated cells, it always sounds a little negative. but in this case, i find it extremely positive. say i'm good. such therapies have been shown to be brutally effective at extremely specific savings fits the 1st time. come. what special is the treatment happens with living cells which remain permanently effective in the blood? however, in germany, car t cell therapy is currently only available for specific types of blood cancer or tumors of the lymph nodes and bone marrow specific domains. and 9, at the moment it only impacts a small area of oncology. it is a narrow spectrum of diseases that can be treated quite effectively. but in the
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majority of cancers, the future of car 2 cell therapies are still are relatively open questions and that people from the end, the therapy is also highly individualized, which means it's expensive. it costs up to $380000.00 euro is per infusion test clean, how tradition off it. good. that sounds like a lot of money, of course. and it is a lot of money. on the other hand, if a therapies with a certain probability, and you can lead to permanent disease control after a single dose, and then such sums are justifiable. this is also always isms. and they couldn't even turn out to be possibly cheaper than conventional long term drugs therapy. you might be to maybe come into there's a talk for hundreds bound to the treatment appears to have paid off 6 months after receiving his car to sell therapy and fusion. there's still no signs of recurrence
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. he's helpful that is malignant lymphoma won't come back. let us read why. if you have a special science question, send it to us as a video, text or voice mail. if we answer it on the show, we'll send you a little present as well. thank you. come on, just as and this week's viewer question comes from who l. e? a in egypt. why does our hair turn great? actually gray hairs are not really grey at all. they're white, but layered with surrounding hair of different colors of white hairs can make the hair as a whole appear great. the pigment, melanin is responsible for hair color things humans. that's also the pigment that determines eye and skin color. the melanin in the hair forms in its roots, in particular cells, the melana sides. they produce 2 different chemical types,
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the pigment, black, brown, you, melanin, and c o melanin, which is reddish yellow. the amounts and mixture of these 2 compounds determines your hair color. the older you get though, the less melanin symbol leno sites produce instead colorless bubbles of oxygen to accumulate in the hair, making it look white exactly when the 1st white here's appear varies from person to person. most people start to find that between the ages of 30 and 50, but it comes down to your genes. if parents go grey when steel so young, the trait can be passed on to their children. but your hair a can't turn gray over night. as some legends claim, the french queen marie antoinette is said to have gone great the night before. she was be headed in 1793. but green is by its
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nature, a gradual process. once a here grows past the scale, it no longer changes color. and since even white hair only grows between $1.00 and $1.00 and a half centimeters a month, there's at least a little time to get used to the new lot. in denmark, many smaller clinic, 6, it was through doors in the last few years. as the countries health care services are being gathered into 16 giant facilities, the idea to centralize expertise and activities to improve quality and efficiency. let's take a look behind the scenes at a danish super hospital around 150 kilometers from copenhagen. com who is university hospital is a huge complex that houses more than 40 medical departments and employees nearly 5
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and a half 1000 doctors in nursing staff over a 1000000 patients are treated here annually. it's a hospital of support, as stated on the 54 year old yesterday to remove a tumor, a difficult procedure together to, to look at the medical findings and discuss how the surgery went. the brain scans indicate that all is well after the doctor was able to successfully remove the tumor. the patient is scheduled to leave the clinic today. less than 24 hours after the tricky operation. short hospital stays are part of the concept. and of course it's a smooth, i'm guessing only is it fast to have brain surgery and be sent home the next day. yes, maybe you should, but it's safe because the patient is very well prepared. just the entire staff is kept up to date on the patient's condition via the central platform called the blackboard. it contains all patient information. for example,
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the exact doses of medication for each case are registered here and can be viewed by everyone involved in treatment. but occupancy and staffing levels are also listed to a certainty of and in the information we exchange at the meeting involves capacity on the one hand, but it's also clinical data if it does. in other words, just is there a certain patient info that's important for the operation in for me we also use it to assign surgical nurses to operating room and off the or what kind of stressed out in an item will piece. this is the heart of the clinic and internal tracking and tracing system. more than $3000.00 transponders are installed in the corridors and patient rooms. the box track, the exact location of beds and medical devices. 45000 transmitters are attached to every important piece of hospital equipment. the tracking tool is
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a huge help for nurses like cash. right. right now she wants to know where to find the next available, ultra sound machine. but the system can also help her quickly track down a free bed for an urgently needed head doctor. there are mobile very sions on handheld devices for staff who are on the move. the system is unique in a hospital setting. it's a $4500000.00 euro investments that is paid off, helping the clinic save money on stuff without making concessions in care. the ultrasound device, nurse ashley is looking for is located a floor below, or one of the masterminds behind the new danish super hospitals. as judge muller kid is on a professor of health economics at the university of southern denmark and o'denza, his goal was to achieve shorter treatment times while improving the quality of
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medical treatment in general. if we look at the situation before and after, i think it's fair to say that after we get better services, higher quality, better educated, the doctors, etc. so essentially from a patient perspective, it is a considerable improvement. the only improvement that there's not included in that is that the distance to the hospital has increased later that morning, head physician, go on front hunting and has surgery scheduled. and he's surrounded by the best doctors in the country. because people with the most medically demanding health care issues are now treated at the super clinics from brain surgery to heart transplants. specialists from a wide range of fields come together. and of course, there's a team of experts involved in every case that has big benefits for doctors and training, but above all, for danish patients. got
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wrap things up this time around for tomorrow today to sign show on dw, thanks for joining us. and see you again next week the, [000:00:00;00] the, the,
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the lifelong relationship that nobody chooses for themselves. siblings, they help see and challenge us. what role do they play in our development siblings, love, rivalry. in 15 minutes on the w.
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then ducking in the shutters, waiting until the parasites can be maddening. when do they become dangerous? and how do you protect yourself? in good shape in 90 minutes and d w, the get ready for an exciting. i've been trying to look surprised. hi, irish of and i am ready to dive into the hands of the gentleman who to us with you on you have you have a window to talk to me before you go to the spot on the on
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expected side to side. enjoy sliding away. when it's 40 degrees celsius in the shade, can be deadly during times of climate change. how do rising temperatures change our reports? of the internal heat? march 15th on dw,
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the business dw, and use lie from berlin. the us announces plans to air job emergency aid into gaza joining efforts from jordan and other countries to supply palestinians as a last resort. the move comes and mid calls to investigate the death of scores of guidance rushing and aid con boy. also in the program. germany investigates possible russian espionage officials and berlin are concerned by a russian media report citing to german officers discussing how ukraine could hit

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