tv [untitled] BELARUSTV December 12, 2022 1:05pm-1:51pm MSK
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the violators staged riots and began to chant anti-russian slogans, while law enforcement officers did not even try to prevent immoral actions, provocateurs in ukraine imposed sanctions against the family of priests in the canonical orthodox church. the accumulation of freight transport remains on all routes from belarus to the european union, according to the state border committee of the border committee, the queue of freight transport to leave in the morning was almost 5,000 vehicles. services. poland, lithuania and latvia have the largest concentration of freight transport. we are entering lithuania through kamenny log employees of the lithuanian control services. over the weekend
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, only 25% of trucks were issued. generally since friday. lithuania allowed 42% of freight transport to enter its territory. poland 29. latvia 56%. cars. at the moment follows from the side of the european union without clothes. the first trial in absentia of fugitive oppositionists has begun in belarus. the minsk city court is considering a criminal case of 45 volumes, there are no defendants in the courtroom, there are lawyers, public prosecutors, a people's assessor and journalists, so the case is being held by sazanovich on vosha bogdanovich vysotskaya because of the memomorskoe. despite the fact that each was properly notified to the court, the defendants did not come, as the investigative committee previously reported, they are charged with inciting social hatred and discord as an illegal action regarding privacy information and personal data. new information from my colleagues at 15:00 on our air. all the best.
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looking at them you can tear off never fit charge emotions stumbled upon. i don't consider myself a creative person at all. eh, more so hard-nosed. well, such a stubborn person. here, this is my art. i think so, there are moments when people just, well, they were refused, yes, that is, one door closed, the second, they don’t try further. here. well, i'm going, that's until they open it, the belarusians are a project of updated people. we are all births, we are from childhood yes, and i don’t remember at what point the project was born, it was born for some time, and it was a series of some of my street choices, as we are, you and i are thermoses sandwiches and discussing the most important matters in the center of the lake not yet. yes, we will discuss, but we will not come to a common concept. we don't leave the lake. this is how we like to have fun and work on our tv channel. they
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can play not only with muscles, but also with their heads in which sport did lewis lewis ham succeed when shooting from which position the target diameter is smaller sasha in biathlon is smaller when shooting prone in the champions league champions league, of course, from his unusual shape for the correct answers, the participants will get points, and for the wrong to lose them which of these players has more arsenal player of the month awards? arshavin absolutely not. so what are we playing? which of these athletes, watch the intellectually entertaining show
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week is no exception to mass polls, the decision and the result, on which often depends completely specifically from a doctor or health official. i am talking about health and human life as well. here in this studio there were many doctors and virologists and narcologists and transplantologists neurosurgeon for the first time if neurosurgeons are jewelers from medicine, then what is belarusian neurosurgery neurosurgeons, of course, yes, first of all, jewelers, because sometimes these movements perform delicate work. similar to the work of a jeweler, but jewelers make beauty. and we save lives. so i would add and compare neurosurgeons, probably, there are situations with sappers when a neurosurgeon cannot make a mistake, either makes a mistake only once, and this mistake sometimes
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costs a lifetime. e man, as the people say, measure seven times cut once, well, without this, we can’t do it without this, and we have to. uh, millimeters sometimes calculate the accuracy of their movements gold in medicine. i might have said this. uh, a generalized concept is value, value for the state is that the belarusian people have such a specialty, and it is represented, uh, by the affordable neurosurgical care that we can to provide and this is uh 150 neurosurgeons in all of belarus uh this figure. what should e tell us about if we compare it with the countries of the near abroad, this is quite a lot and the availability of neurosurgical care, that is, we have a high level, e out of 150 neurosurgeons. we have three
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doctors of sciences, about 20 candidates of sciences, about 100, uh, specialists. these are doctors, either with the first or with the highest category. ok then. i will clarify. look at the transplants. we are known. yes, the whole world and the names are known and come from all over the world for in order to perform in belarus, uh, an organ transplant operation. yes, but surgeons, how much is the industry? in your opinion, it is quoted in the world, if we are belarusian gold, yes, well, someone thinks in the same way this is a gold mine, the highest paid job in america is a neurosurgeon. and if a person meets someone there, and he says that here is a neurosurgeon, he means something of the richest person. e, that is, in the region of one million 1.5 million dollars, he earns a year. uh neurosurgeon in america well
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good number. yes, it's good to fix people's heads. yes , to restore clarity of thinking to help literally get on your feet. yes, i don't understand this correctly. yes everything is correct. this is neurosurgery. this is help for patients with problems of the brain and spinal cord, as well as the peripheral nervous system. that is, this is the main category of patients. these are patients annually e order. there, 15,000 patients uh go through uh, the hands of neurosurgeons. uh, about 11.012.000 operations are performed annually in the republic of neurosurgical operations. this is what brain tumors are uh, vascular pathology, uh, brain. and these are problems. uh, with the spine, most often it's herniated discs. that's why pretty uh, big. ah, the big layer. ah, pathology. here , uh, it goes, that is, not a rhetorical pathology. well
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, in general, the question lies on the surface. if so the price is a profession. e, as far as we export to attractive e centers come to us from e, neighboring countries over the past year, our center has earned about 800,000 rubles to help foreign citizens. well it 320,000 dollars this year, 360 thousand have already been earned in 9 months. uh dollars. uh, patients, why are patients traveling? well, this is a brand brand of belarus - this is quality, that is, the patient comes. he knows that he will receive high-quality medical care and neurosurgical care. i know that an american building came to you, then, it, who paid 500,000 dollars there and they did not help him, in fact. yes, the operation has been completed. well, let's just say it's not quite qualitatively, you can't say that. no, well, uh, he had the operation here normally. yes
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are coming. well, most often these are patients from russia . that's because their medicine is built in such a way that high-tech care. uh, that is, quotas have been distributed and for someone these were not enough for someone. that's even for the citizens of russia, even for the citizens of russia uh-huh, there is such a problem. e no. we have access to any patient and the indicated assistance of neurosurgeons. e, if it cannot be done in the regional neurosurgery the patient is admitted to the rspc for assistance, that is, if there is no opportunity there in terms of time in a given case, yes, plus, uh, there are some types of operations, for example, that are not performed in the baltic states. that's it, there are expensive operations or there is a need. uh, it's been a long time to wait for this operation. well, now a lot of patients have gone there to poland in the baltic states and they are struck by the fact that this is a trite disc herniation, in order to get a planned operation, you have to wait 5-6
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months there. here it is, 5-6 months later. this operation may no longer be necessary, because the function of the foot or leg may be lost. and we have an operation available, these operations are performed in in regional hospitals in the rpc, there is practically no waiting list, that is, for 2-3 weeks, for the patient to collect the necessary tests in order to exclude contraindications for the patient to be ready for a planned operation, there is a state of emergency. ah, neurosurgery. these are, uh, giant tumors, or uh, ruptured aneurysms, vascular pathologies, when there is no way to wait, uh, a patient can get to our center almost within 2-3 hours from anywhere in belarus, or in this way there is a sanitary system - aviation republican sanitary aviation, over which flows all the necessary information from regional specialists and about the need to transport this or that
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patient, any institution, not only our center, but in any, that is, well. if a doctor, roughly speaking, there in a district or regional hospital decides that an urgent evacuation to minsk is necessary, and e, the patient's condition is assessed. sometimes it's easier to call specialists to the regional hospital than to transport the roc, the specialist comes and er, if the necessary equipment. uh, he does the operation there for a month, in addition to another. eh, we have that now, e . telemedicine is actively developing. e telemedicine. this consultation is an online consultation, that is, within a few minutes, information is collected, analyzes , images, everything that needs to be set for making a diagnosis, and almost online consultation is going on, specialists, regional specialists, leading specialists, uh, rpc, for, uh, making a diagnosis. . eh, problem solving. here are the treatment strategies. who decides that a helicopter is needed, it will now be from
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who it depends on the decision. see in her surgery you can not do the operation with a margin. yes, that is, every extra millimeter or even a fraction of a millimeter there. can make it impossible to hear and see. well, bring others. well, to put it mildly, problems. yes, yes, the brain - this is the organ in which there is nothing superfluous, nothing superfluous, and depending on that pa. which affects one or another part of the brain, uh, depends on the tactics of the surgeon. that is, we call it professional functionally significant areas, when a tumor is removed in fractions of a millimeter, or a hematoma there, can lead to disability, the person stopped, either to hear or see, or, uh, his hand stopped working. that's why every time you determine the volume of the operation, you compare, uh, in your brain, the approach so as not to
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harm not to harm the patient so that he is no worse. well, you understood that you would face this millimeter to the right, millimeter to the left, well, shooting, but how did you choose this profession? here's to why is this? that's responsibility, cool a responsibility. uh, any professor this responsible traumatologist answers and uh, the urologist answers any and uh, psychiatrists answer, that is, sometimes a word. it happens here that we are already jealous here , here you see immediately, we see the result immediately, that is, we do some operations, for example, we do in the mind of the patient. uh, at the crucial moment, thanks to our anesthesiologists. he is awakening. we are in contact with him. he can tell his biography. maybe uh sing uh, count the elements depending on what function we want to keep. here we are, we are trying to contact the patient during the operation, we can play the guitar there, figuratively speaking, belarusian neurosurgery is
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more than 70 years old. as far as i understand, great doctors were the first to develop vascular diagnostics and the name of academician smenovich. it has become a cult. at the same time , we know very little about this branch of medicine. look, hollywood times. we have already touched on this topic, hollywood makes films about how they successfully perform operations, our doctors are embarrassed to speak about it publicly. maybe i myself ask what then about the most striking episodes. look at open brain surgery what you started to say, right? the patient quotes balmont there or bach plays there. for belarus, this is not a movie. well , for us it is first of all, everyday work. here, yes, we are adopting the latest technology. we introduce these technologies in order to be no worse than
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neighboring countries or leading countries. well, in practice. look here. uh, just recently there was information that the patient is undergoing surgery on the brain, yes, and it’s already there, nothing supernatural told a biography told a poem they thought you forced them. yes poem he is in full contact. trepanation was openly performed here. the open brain does its job. here sits dr. neurophysiologist. here is an anesthesiologist who, as you and i, are talking to a patient. but if, let's say, uh, uh, that uh part of the brain that is responsible for speech is also affected for me, as a specialist, there is a problem. radically remove swelling or leave a piece. but we know that if a person is removed another 5 mm here , the traction of the brain itself will no longer speak, that is, removal of the brain. uh, this
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volumetric formation will be there vascular, such and such a formation, or a tumor. and the patient we see that the contact is broken. he slows down. here, then we are already more or more scrupulous, or we will leave a patch of this formation, which can later be treated with radio radiosurgery, or, uh, chemotherapy, but the patient, as i said, does not harm, so that he is no worse than before the operation, so that his quality of life does not suffer. that is , this is the expression. uh, literally poking around in my brain. yes, while i was doing something there, but there is a place to be good. and when we started to do such operations, how many have already been done in your memory? well, in my memory about 20, probably such operations. so, uh, for the last five years, we've streamlined these operations. that is, we can freely e there is nothing supernatural in this. well, look at this, and he is the brain in
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everything advertises its know-how. how monkeys can print with the power of thought thanks to a computer animated by the brain and is already announcing the approbation of this in humans. is it true that in our belarusian center in your center? yes, brain electrodes have been introduced for a long time. yes, parkinson's disease is being treated . yes, it's not only parkinson's disease, uh, there are four or four types of, uh, implantable stimulants, here, which we also actively perform about 200-260 operations per year of functional operations. here using here these are the working day. yes, these are, of course, foreign implants most often. uh, it's dbs stimulants for parkinson's again, we have a group of specialists who determine the indications and when it's all used up. conservative methods of treatment do not help
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injections pills then resort to use. for these stimulators, the technology itself is simple, that is, anatomically we see the nuclei that are responsible for a particular function and under the control of neuronavigation. here's the head uh, fixed still and in control neuronavigation is implanted. this electrode, which sends certain impulses, irritates the part of the brain that is responsible for this or that function, and the battery is also implanted in russia, yes, and it changes at an interval . then there are, uh, batteries, which are designed for 5 years of service. that is, after 5 years, if everything is fine, the patient, uh, you feel uh, the battery life is ending comfortably, he is already starting to feel it is coming. we change the battery in a cut, a cut in the skin and fantasy works, but have already gone further there are rechargeable ones.
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stimulators, relatively speaking, a recharge is placed on the place where this stimulator is implanted, and it, like a phone, charges the service life without contact, the service life of this stimulator is extended there up to ten years. i mean, wait for me. i am now recharging with it even yes, here is a plus uh, this is a stimulant for parkinson's disease, we also actively began to install anti- volitional stimulants stimulants for epilepsy in all simulators. for each pathology, 20-30. e in the year of the baltics, e, these operations are not performed. central asia only in kazakhstan, they began to do it, too. here , a patient from latvia came to us this year, why is the available help the stimulator itself costs about twenty thousand. e dollars our surgery for e implantation, that is, a stimulator of 2.500 dollars
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for a foreigner. yes for foreigners. i think we've been cheap. it is clear that their own patients are free of charge, but for foreigners, patients are now very actively counting money. so they can go to russia or there to germany although in germany this operation costs 30.000. the operation itself plus the stimulant. yes , the patients, uh, are looking for some kind of economic. uh, ways that are beneficial to them. well, the balts have learned about this technology, that it is being implemented in our country and they are ready to come, but now we are faced with sanctions. here are those patients who were implanted. these are stimulants. they are roughly dependent on these stimulants. now the western medical companies that supply these stimulants do not want to work the same epilepsy themselves. uh, about twenty stimulants a year uh is set to half for adults and half for children when conservative is exhausted. here are the treatment
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reserves. so the patient is not given anything. that's just the hope for the implantation of this stimulator, but it's good. russia does not produce from the plan. no, that is, these are exclusively western technologies. this is western technology and recent . uh, china well, like everything advanced, they are trying to adopt all the leading ones. here are expensive technologies, including implantable uh, stimulants in neurosurgery, well, brain tumors. well, like zhanna friske or anastasia zavorotnyuk well, the regular accusation against oko, if there is a relationship between these things, well, i think that this is an unfounded accusation. yes, uh, a lot of operations are performed in belarus for uh, tumors, like benign and malignant ones, but uh, this is first of all, after all. uh, heredity heredity. uh, predisposition to dark
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diseases and horses, both are not related to uh development. uh, these malignant brain tumors. uh, at least i didn't see this patient having ivf and then, well, that is, there is no such pronounced relationship , no dependence, good. is it true that our indicator of belarusian medicine in terms of squeezing out from traumatic brain injury, they are among the best in the world, yes, providing assistance to patients with brain injury. we have a high level and this is due to the construction of a system for providing patients, that is, there is a district link. there is a regional link. uh, city hospitals. plus rnpc. about 200 beds have been deployed. e throughout the republic for patient care traumatic brain injury. uh, availability increases every year. e, diagnostics, that is,
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computed tomography can be performed and assistance is provided on a territorial basis, that is, it depends on the location of the computer tomograph and the leading trauma surgical departments and regional surgical departments specialists. uh, annually, uh, training. e, as we have in the center, and e in white popo. this is an advanced training academy plus more our specialists travel with training cycles mini-conferences of interdistrict e are held on such a scale to refresh in memory, in principle, the care of patients with traumatic brain injury, somewhere it reaches 10%, that is, 10 people per 100,000 of the population. e. we have , uh, mortality is very brain injury. well, in russia it's 30, probably, that is, we have times better times better, right? every week we are laying new
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routes in interesting corners of belarus today i will debunk myths and discover for you, zhidvichi and the surrounding area. captain let's get acquainted with interesting people, and in many ways they succeeded really often called our palace, and the belarusian universal for our belarusian scales. this is indeed a very significant palace. one of the largest and one of the most magnificent palaces, showing local traditions and iconic sights, the territory of the modern national park was inhabited thousands of years ago. all this is a modern interpretation of the language, but once there were many such places, see the program. marut built on belarus tv channel 24 propaganda can be different, but this will
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tv channel belarus 24 well, here it is again if we are talking about sanctions, yes, since we have already started talking about how much they have affected neurosurgery today. and in other ways, let's say. and what does import substitution look like, well, in your field in the first place. these are expensive consumables, yes. eh, we have more. uh, the necessary stock stock there is half a year for some for some generic one and a half year stock for some positions, but u work and know that sooner or later it will break down and
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patients may end up without help. that is , there is some kind of pre-think about it , pre-think, yes, maybe look for some other suppliers. again, the same china is either still developing its own is being developed or has been developed, then what you can say, i was a direct participant. and to the developers of belarusian domestic implants, that is, it was an innovative project. prior to this, in belarus , implants for the replacement of skull defects were presented by foreign analogues that cost a lot of money, that is, five or six times, that is , roughly speaking, these are sections of the skull, a section of the skull, uh, a fracture injured somewhere, a comminuted fracture , and either the operation was performed and patients were decompressed to save their lives. after the patient has survived, his quality of life suffers, because knowing that he has nothing between the skin and the brain
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. and it can be traumatized at any moment. that is, it must have been a blow given the question. e about the replacement of these defects and we looked, uh, with my supervisor. why are we worse than foreign developers, why can't we do the same, we have a company. e belarusian developer, who specializes in the manufacture of not only implants in neurosurgery plus traumatology. yes, it's a long journey. this is an innovative project. this is the creation of medical and technical requirements. these are technical tests. it is these working needs of me specifically. you are doing it now development started in 2008 successfully completed. e in 2010 year. so, uh, all these implants are actively used in neurosurgery in regional centers. eh, now roughly speaking section. uh, we make skulls ourselves. well, for example, uh, our plate
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costs about $100 there, maybe even less , that is, imported 600. professor. uh, the manufacturer of similar implants, and they start talking. that's how great they started to make a 3d skull model with fabrication. those, uh, implants. i am like the presenter, at least about the plastic one, was attached to this group. i listened carefully to these guys, and in the end. i asked three questions, cost availability and how much did they install? it was probably, uh, 15 or 16, when they came to us in the russian orthodox church, the cost reached from two to thirty- two thousand euros for implants, that is, it is an individual, made according to a 3d model of the skull.
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this is the situation when the surgeon himself cannot make a cosmetic one, that is, when there is a very large defect and model this plate, almost impossible, then a model of the skull is made. uh, according to the model of the skull, an individual implant is made, and then the surgeon will only have to put it in. uh-huh our colleagues in slovakia performed 17 such operations at that time, in turn, at that stage. i said that we have already installed about 80 such plates. the professor who manufactures the plates must be present at this operation to talk about how it is twisted individually very individually. here, and we have already developed this technology and flows, in fact. the cost of such an individual plate, it costs 500 or 600 dollars, well, about 60 times cheaper, so in this example, this example is for titanium implants for extreme plastic surgery. we went on to train the fabrication of titanium implants. e for operations on the spine
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in the same way. there orthopedic traumatologists can manufacture and are actively already being manufactured and installed intensified. uh, the motherland is an implant, so we need to actively promote import substitution, which is what we can do. uh, yourself this is the economy. this is the currency of savings in the first place, but there is such a nuance. uh, i'm like, uh, a practicing surgeon. e yes, i see what we are working on, but i do not know the possibilities of e manufacturers that they can make another question to teachers and doctors. at a meeting on monday, the president once again emphasized the special attitude of the state towards these two professions. yes , the most important professions for the country were affected. subject, salaries and transition are completely 100% targeted training. well, now we are talking about sixty
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percent of approximately the opposition. very much love now there are horror stories that doctors in the country stayed for 3 days. all have left. here's how true it is for you. in our country , medical care, just like education, is a socially guaranteed necessity, which, well, is for our citizens. first of all, accessibility, free healthcare and free education. i think it's in the same vein, we must continue. it's about the doctors leaving. yes, we collided. eh, but most of the time they leave. uh, young doctors who want everything and right away, for the youth. now it is generally relevant question received a diploma and wants to get. uh wants to get paid by an american professor. let's just say it did nothing for medicine in order to become a neurosurgeon. it is necessary to go through a thorny path, but
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in this thermist path there is also training , continuing training and in order to perform a certain type of operation. it's uh, you have to go there for 10 years. grandfather some operations 5 years some 10 my general position in life is such that where i was born, it came in handy there. this is first of all. uh, responsibility to parents to the family, which everyone sees e savior yes, they taught you , they see themselves that person who, in old age or in some kind of trouble, will have. e help is the same and friends think about it, sometimes the last thing when colleagues leave is not necessarily neurosurgery. six months later, andrey alotom, well, then mom and dad got sick. can you help us say this. and why is there poland or germany there, you cannot help him? take away there and there help, again, this is a responsibility. before
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when you leave, and you still have some roots here. well, yes, this is a problem, by the way, not only in medicine there is now a problem, perhaps an uncomfortable question. as doctor house said, everyone lies. and also lies - this is a very creative process. the truth is much more primitive and prosaic. here we are faced with this in the twentieth year, and we and the doctors became one of the main target groups, which was directed to the emotional impact of information. moreover, the telegram channels are wearing white coats, and he became one of the mouthpieces. andrey vasilievich how much then it affected your colleagues. i mean exactly in the center, and you know , uh, i wonder if you knew then that these technologies that were used by the unification of power in russia and the withdrawal of white coats and just people in white clothes on workers, they had already been tested en masse in nineteenth year in hong kong, that's how it was compared about that period. i can say with certainty that
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the campaign coincided with the spread of the covid infection, and we did not fully know, uh, something for an infection. uh, there was fear, like patients have fear. uh, the medical workers themselves have an unknown disease, a deadly fatal disease, which is unpredictable, and it is around the end of february, probably the beginning of march, then gradually began to gradually develop emotional burnout among workers who had several hours per shift. these spacesuits , spacesuits, arriving home, they want to, uh, calm down, rest, but close people. uh, the wife's elderly parents and children are wary of probation and an infected person, who, although he is a close relative, but can cause a deadly
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disease, the doctors suffered, both at work and at home, and then here it is, uh, emotional uh . uh, the labile state of doctors still had a psychological impact. specifically, can i explain, uh, it's the crowd effect. the effect of the crowd, when a person, uh, cannot control his emotions, when he hits, if you conditionally put 20 people on the railway tracks and seven people go, the rest will think about everything and also go and conditionally three or five will remain, which either gape. here, and then will look where to go. send the second in the background. here is some kind of permissiveness and anonymity of this crowd, probably, that if i go, i won’t get anything for it. plus, we in white
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coats provided assistance from march to july and in the eyes of the majority. we seemed to be, uh, reorientated heroes. this is probably the last question. still, in a slightly different tone. yeah i'll ask di camera he's such a time. well, when even an adult voluntarily or involuntarily begins to wait for miracles and not sit with an alarming suitcase. yes, and good stories are important today more than ever. here on monday, the president told the story of saving a woman in a school district. yes, and you have a story, a favorite story. here is such an ordinary medical miracle of your history. this is probably the longest operation. uh, in my career, 12, hour surgery was performed at the intersection of related specialties. this is a young guy. they talked about him, uh, out of youthful stupidity, uh,
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opened the electrical transformer shield and got electric shock. and he e was struck by half of the skull, that is, burned out. i don't know how many thousand volts there are, and our colleagues in brest , uh, saved the life of this boy. here they performed 17 skin grafting operations, the skull burned out and the brain was also somewhat burned. it was a coal. the first operations were, uh, so that he would not catch an infection, so that meningitis or encephalitis was there, so that the infection would not settle his defenseless brain, and er our conbustiologists are combusiologists. they did a great job, but in the future the patient's skin was represented by a thin, that is, translucent
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film, through which the brain shone. and when i saw this patient, and before that i had already done about 150 operations for the reconstruction of skull defects, i was amazed how to protect this brain, because the disease continued to develop anyway, and together with the professor e under paradise vladimir nikolaevich, as if such a council. well what are we going to do? how to help? and there was nowhere to go. let's dare to try this do, and he has about 80 percent. the skin has already been replaced, that is, continuously fenced during these 17 operations. here, uh, for maybe four or five hours. i isolated this thin film, separated the brain by a millimeter, so as not to hurt any important centers, then joined the help. uh, colleagues, they singled out, that is, vladimir nikolaevich, his employees
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singled out this one here, uh, skin plus a muscle section with vessels, uh with arteries and veins, and this here muscle section after i installed this one individual plate, there is about 250 cm². plate, we installed the muscle. the muscle must be nourished with something podshiliks. e from a colleague podshil. carotid artery. here, the venous blood must also go somewhere to the veins, they sewed it up and then covered it all up. eh, skin. yes, the patients recovered for a long time, but it was felt. it was the eighteenth year. here is the defense of my dissertation and literally. a month later. you could say it's a thesis. yes, this is such a coincidence that a patient is caught. he was treated for a long time, long dressings. something took root something was not experienced. then he was transplanted again
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, he was discharged and after 2 years last year. there was one of the yandas, where, after all, the pipes cut through were supplemented. well, the guy. uh, the name is ivan . that's after these operations. here is my bride. i still want to get married. hands and feet, they work for him. this is probably such a, uh, happy story. well, in every e patient. i think that we see some sort of at least the patient must believe in luck believe in himself believe in a surgeon who makes it easier for us when there is a patient faith in something good and faith in a miracle, then it is easier for us to work. well, if i'd like to finish, you know what. here's the truth. eh, not even such an appeal, but just one remark addressed to, probably, all your colleagues, not only neurosurgeons. very often the doctor - this is the last hope of the patient very often and i want you to
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be your colleagues. this has always been remembered, because we always think and count on you. it's true. thank you for your work. thank you for your friend. thank you. do you think that they were more reasonable for us the architecture of the whole ukraine hates us, and we can understand the abc of giants with it, but you are a belarusian on the channel. at mogilev, at the pinnacle of the development of the romantic
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architecture of the russian empire, the absolute modern , straight in gestacore proportions, is symbolic of the stratification of the hugeness of the monumental giant, which in terms of quality had a system, biospaki and organization of administration, and there were no open spaces, nor a water financial installation of the great world. and what kind of pits i hava at their inventive walls of this mossy commemorative of the streaming architecture of architecture belarus massive bank bottles, this was due to the fact that vityo of the banking system of the russian empire was one on the
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level of high-gray old fell to the bottom of europe under gina to the shatyrs of stogodi, jumper, to the right, which dozed off at the thoroughly capitalistic anosin, the street is better than the central mogilev street so that the hajjas were already satisfied with the mansions of the court of wounds for the everyday life of new financial institutions. behind the blue, great beams were allotted with an inter-connection of worlds with an area for the viability of bank bottles, you were drawn to the carcass sales and by the amount of damage, which made it possible to more freely arrange elements. mogilev was part of the system in this banking or russian empire in the 1880s, their task. these are nano credits
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