tv [untitled] December 22, 2021 6:30am-7:00am AST
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sign a light on various stages of their migrant journey known as no nation fashion. to label started as a semi in collective providing reusable face. during the panoramic several people are missing off a torrential rain cause major flooding in bolivia, central east rescue teams are searching flooded areas for survivors. some residents have been brought to safety. dozens of homes have been destroyed and several roads have been cut off. ah, i have a quick check of the headlines here on al jazeera u. s. president joe biden has announced measures to limit a surge of omicron cases, bank who had expanded tests, support the hospitals and more vaccinations, but he stopped short of calling for another lockdown. all these people who have not been back, you have an obligation to yourself, to your family, who quite frankly, i know would be criticized this to your country,
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yet faxes it now it's free. it's convenience. i promise you would save lives. an honest to god, believe it, you preach reality duty. israel is set to offer a 4th dose of the coven. 19 vaccines are people aged? over 60? the prime minister natalie bennett, says it will help overcome the spread of the arm across variant. the decision comes after israel reported its 1st death from on the chron on tuesday. the u. k. government has announced a $1300000000.00 support package for businesses affected by the arm across outbreak . prime minister boys johnson says tighter corona virus measures will be considered after christmas. flooding in malaysia has killed at least 27 people on display 70000. the military has been called in to help rescue people still trapped in their homes. sedans, prime minister reported a close to stepping down abdullah honda was removed in a military takeover in october, but he was reinstated last month after signing
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a deal with the authorities. liberals presidential elections likely to be postponed after a dispute about rules and regulations, as no official announcement that fried his vote will be delayed but had to be mentioned. as this old electoral committee's vote was called, as part of un, led to his presence of official supporters in georgia, demanding the release of jailed, former president mc sock has filled out. the doctor said he was tortured in custody . thousands rallied in front of the parliament in the capital, tbilisi threatening a mass hunger strike. marcus billy was arrested in october after returning from exile in ukraine. he was convicted, abuse of power, a charge he says is politically motivated. all right, so those were the headlines. the news continues here on our to 0, after witnessed state you. thanks for watching bye for now. the political debate, so that's housing the way you think. have agencies fail, hayden,
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this he's and he's more than one before the isn't a sound bites and digging into the issue is a military advancement. going to stop a family ticket? i is on that company to divide some people out of die. how will find that migration differ for those who have in those who don't have lot of countries see we, we paid poor countries to keep refugees there up front with me. markham, on hill, on out there. ah ah, for f a i am the commentary and care physician. i was
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born and raised in new york city in a lifeline abbe yankee, an i'm currently on the long stretch of work in the i to you or i week street in and happen coincided with the emergence of krona virus here in boston. and it's something that i think raises a lot of uncertainty and fear amongst people who are practicing because we just there are so many. i know we don't know how bad it's going to be. i it's march 20th, went in fairly california and it was another home day to day. our patients volumes
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have been very low and the philos. joe's great. we are running a little bit low on teaching yourself and i was unable to find an adult mask that i've got this pretty switch chips nass, to where they're not the best at birth. i get the job done. i am, i am an e r physician and i work at a couple community hospital just outside boston myself full time student. right now i'm getting my m b a from mit. and so what that really means is that i'm in classes monday to thursday, essentially during the week and i work on the weekends. and so things have been
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pretty crazy the last few weeks and unfortunate that i have these breaks in between my shift might accept as tomorrow. and so it's really hard to know what to expect in the container. looks like a small lunch box. a has my name, my name on it. this is my and 95 that i'm going to be using in the entire at least the entire week. maybe longer. i was doing a lot of research today trying to find out if there were a specific guidelines and of course, because it's a pretty new virus. there aren't a whole lot of published guidelines available. so it's, if you do what you think is best and hopefully i did what's best for my
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patients. interestingly enough, i didn't as a single person today for go even though about half a patients i saw definitely had it. and that's because are low on tasks and none of them required admissions or mit or met the criteria that we look for it's march 30th about midnight and i just had my 1st death, likely from coded super sad story was a 65 year old male who was walking and talking earlier tonight but had been complaining of some short of breath recently with new visitor policies in the hospital. it's really, really difficult. you have to go to family and say at your level and has just died, but you cannot visit them right now. i think that as things ramp up, it's going to have a much different, much crazier eventful change. and it's going to feel much different than the
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emergency room new right, in all think we sort of like compartment allies and shut off terribleness of it and connect just enough to have empathy one when talking to the families. and i think, you know, if you really took every case and every death to heart, it'd be impossible to do the job that we do. so i think that's like a coping mechanism. and i think there's an appropriate balance of being in touch with your emotions. but not too much that you're crying over every patient to
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me, but everyone's on. there's like patient, i'll touch you and you don't know why maybe you like the family. maybe the patients hands reminded your dad or take whatever it is. it does like often connect to your core and you feel this sort of emotion and this lump in your throat and water in your eyes. and you're like, i've turn this off me here, new york might be getting a little bit what they're saying. my mom all the time, she lives in new york city and i go down once a month to see or and i haven't been able to see her. it's always hard air dear and get sick. my car wrote down on sunday and i called triple a and to play have you been in contact with somebody who you know has chrome i was like
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no because i knew i say yes. come help in my car. so it's saturday, april 4th, just finished a shift and volumes are still very low in the emergency room across the multiple sites that i work at in the bay area. so another interesting development i am going to try to go to new york city to see if i can get a local job. i think that this time is emergency medicines, spotlight and a be kind of ashamed to not see what what is going on in new york city. ah .
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like i said earlier, i am feeling very fortunate that i have not full time anymore. i can see my colleagues just really drained and everyone's very aggravated with the whole shift changes because we are not working as much. and so, and i can pain and a patients. yes there. so the whole thing is just really crazy. nurses are really unhappy with the short staff providers because sick patients are waiting for a really long time, even though we have enough people theory at theoretically, just more setting doctors home early in. the whole thing is just crazy, but they're trying to cut back on her hours because i guess we're expensive and they're not. you know, hosp was not making any money off of the elective surgeries, but i felt like today was busy regardless. so i'm glad to be done. anyways, i got an hour ish drive ahead of me. thankfully there is no traffic,
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i guess that's why the most positive things i can think of in this entire situation . mm hm. how are you? yes, it is finished. the chef. i take it off. i have all of the hard for all those live aids, the lovely. ah, it was a coffee right now. ah, ah ah, ah. so i just finished a night shift. ah, it was a long one, julie long. i on see. i think that should end with a terrible death, so it's always like every patient is blah blah, blah,
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year old blah blah. sheer with respiratory failure from chrome verse. it just can be a little bit not today. we had a patient come in, who was included in the emergency room. and down i was putting in a central line internet real artery line and her wrist. and while i was doing it, the nurse was going through her belongings and came across a sandwich in her bed. their bag of belong in like this woman locked into the emergency room. thought i might have to wait awhile. so i should get a st. lynch. and fail it now is on my support without family around her because we're not allowing families in elson like i
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look at her and like saw her as a person instead of just a patient grown a virus monday, april 13th, 0930 at night. and i just got home 2 weeks ago i was and i found out that my patients had gotten better and that is the long haul to recovery in a book back last night. those patients, i think i find out 10 people have gotten better. some are so live, but london have gotten better. this is why i don't like scary the
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me alright, so i'm going to give a little bit longer of an update of where i am, how i got here and what's been going on. so i am currently working in a coated unit. it's in the washington heights neighborhood of manhattan. this unit was set up about 2 weeks ago. it's set up in not in the main hospital. we're currently in the lobby of the hospital. i'm not sure if the hospitals in california were doing quite as openly but we were trusting family members off with with the a 95 and p b and allowing them to come and visit which which
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is incredibly necessary. ah ours we all we have, i pads next to all the bad so patients can face time if they don't have their own phones. ah me. i definitely feel a little bit nervous that contract and cove it but who knows? i might have been positive at some point in the past. i might have been through it . i don't know. i'm generally much more careful now. i've been very good at putting on a mask and not touching it while it's on. and i think i yes, definitely. when somebody touches their face, i think i touched my face earlier in this video, but it's definitely, i notice that i really wanted to see more and understand covert. it's
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a fascinating, fascinating illness. and i've only been in the past few days getting to understand a little bit on understanding how is changing our practice of medicine. i won't well with that one given her with those errors. he is my esteemed colleague, author of him. there is an i have very, very exciting news to share. today, april 19th. i estimated who he is. ah, which is awesome, is awesome. i have been working like
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a dog on service for weeks and weeks and weeks and had not activated a single page. as i expected to today, which was really and i call 1st ring tele member picks up everything. okay. and already updated them. so they weren't expecting another phone call. and i said, we just activated your dad and he's doing great. and the genuine joy on the other end of the line and the like i this is the best news i heard in weeks . thank you. think you, you know, that we can the yeah nothing unbelievable is just oh really good to deliver that newness on and your patience for their lives and were fighting for them. but these family members are home fighting and
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praying and do everything they can to will their loved ones. and you could just hear the relief on the other end of the phone. ah natal, great. did i it's april 30th of 2020 and i have my next shift tomorrow on friday and but i just found out that it's my last shift at this hospital, which is also that i've been working in for 4 years. just found out that they're cutting oliver's just because they're not in
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a volume dealer and amec and they can't give me any more shifts for an indefinite amount of time. i'm in a bit of a disbelief. i'm really upset about it. i'm to stay for that. i have another hospital that i work at, although sherman i hear from them a minute, but they're cancelling my chefs as well. next week. i just can't believe at a time when we have a we're in the middle of the b as health crisis for generation. and me as an e. r doctor has suddenly left in a position where i don't have a job and i'm worried about my rent. i mean, i'm a some more fortunate than one of the people in terms of my training in terms of what i do right now. i don't feel that way. they have to move to a smaller place, so i can't afford it. i don't know when i'm in again,
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marcia for this hospital again. me regular for another job. he did love this place. i can't believe that to mars and when i say it's heartbreaking. but yes, as soft as her bay. i had a couple of death. he has off 2 days that are kill my patients, died. i'm one was pretty young. she's and her 50 is mom and i rather and called the son to come to be with her. so the mom was on the maximum doses is high flaw oxygen and her son was waiting outside the room,
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pairing to the window. ah, again like the last moments of his mom and dad. she wanted to be with him. so she asked if she could take the oxygen off and we explained that he off t oxygen off. ah, yeah. she'll die. he'll die. but also might feel uncomfortable in teachers to take it off and her son went in. she passed away pretty immediately and i guess it's been too long. so in the past few
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days, i've got to walk around the hospital and visit some things. and i visited the operating rooms which have turned into intensive care units. and this is one of the craziest things that i've seen. each operating room contains 3 to 4 ventilated patients. so an operating room generally is not meant for any more than one patient and to see $3.00 to $4.00 patients in each. one of them is pretty wild also in my 2 weeks here . we have only treated one caucasian patient. i think more than half of our population has spanish speaking. i think that goes to speak how much of this disease burden multigenerational households and the poor population was in red atoms and where we are. and 3rd of the people that cannot
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socially distance burdens the people that are unable to work from home. i thanks for tuning in, it's may 8th, 2020 or to start off with our say that i had the file for unemployment. yesterday, i did that and it was just crazy. i've never even considered that as being a possibility in my career as an emergency. room physician, that's the one thing we joke about. we say job security when somebody does anything stupid because theoretically that's true, this is really interesting because i've devoted so much of my time to helping to educate patients into understanding when they need to come to the emergency room when they don't. and i pride myself on that i focus so i am, i'm proud that i have retained a lot of that from my training in canada and been one week that has been
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turned upside down. and now i'm realizing that i get paid by those people. i get paid by the people who don't need to be in the emergency room. i get paid by the people who have a sore throat for a month. people who are coming because i want a pregnancy test. those people pay me. thank you guys. hi. today is thursday, may 14th, i had like are really few days and i feel like i probably should have been recording during it, but it's still ongoing. so whole, our own feel and really, really burned out. ah, really tired today is monday, may 18 work was insane. on friday, and he was absolutely not. ah,
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1234. today is thursday, june a letter to go probably put an 80 hours a week for the past 2 weeks. i am no longer able to sleep until like night am. i'm super grateful that i love my job and emergency medicine and that i'm able to come out and help out where i'm able to have a hands ah, grateful to see. my family is healthy and she said it, it is a late engage a patient who got really, really sick one. it felt like she was gonna die. she did fax machine is on the news today are being built and hold talking about her experiences. talk about that dr.
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lee told her that she was going to be cut into a coma and put her daughter on a 2nd speech, but not really good to see somebody in the window leave so many like non rennes. we've had so many debts to me. awful. data there is easier. remember those people and kind of feel awake. gary went through this battle, this war, but like her survivors are so did in our losses. are so great. then you see a woman like this on the on the ears and she looks great shears or something. you're like okay with ah
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ah move in hebron boys breathe and fly pigeons. but in this occupied palestinian city boys are also closely watched by really forces at times shaw thought and often arrested. a delicately told tale fumed over 5 years of a coming of age in a place where even a child's imagination is heavily restricted. the skies above hebron, a witness documentary on on jesse era. in just under a year's time catalyst al bait stadium will house the opening match of the 2022
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world cup. the official opening of the stadium came on day one of the arab cup, but many fans were already counting down to the big kick off next november. see you back. $2020.00 as this tournament unfolds over the coming days. it will play a key role. the organizes getting ready to house the middle east's biggest ever school thing event next year. and for the castle. national seems like it used to playing in front of expected home crowds lobby, hoping to convince both the fans and themselves that they really are ready to take on the world. they traveled thousands of co misses from time to pick berries. but do tie work as written, exploitation in the forest and swayed in one or when aisd investing aids. one out there in we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world said no matter what lucy,
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al jazeera will bring you the news and current affairs that matter to you, al jazeera ah, if you're not fully vaccinated, you have good reason to be concerned president biden dodge as americans to get the cobit 19 job was the unveils bonds to fight the rapidly spreading, omicron barrett, ah, hello, i'm down, jordan, this is al jazeera life and go are also coming up hundreds of killed and.
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