tv Auf den Punkt Deutsche Welle January 8, 2021 1:00pm-1:46pm CET
1:00 pm
subscribe to the documentary. this is d. w. news line from berlin the e.u. doubles its vaccine order the european commission reaches a deal with biotech and pfizer for an additional 300000000 doses securing nearly half of the 2 firms global i'll put forward this year also coming up. because those who are engaged in the acts of violence and destruction you do not represent your
1:01 pm
country under fire for inciting the storming of the capitol building u.s. president donald trump has now condemned the rioters but it's too little too late for democrats they want the president out now before inauguration day. and the migrants stuck at the e.u. border in inhumane conditions we need to people sending for themselves after their camp in bosnia of burned to the ground and we ask the e.u. commissioner for home affairs what brussels is going to do about it. i'm sumi so much going to thank you for joining us the european commission has reached a deal with drug makers pfizer and beyond tax to double its order of their covert vaccine the move secures the e.u. nearly half the 2 firms global output of the job this year the commission has come under fire recently for europe's slow vaccination rollout tourist commission
1:02 pm
president wasn't funded line explaining what the deal means for the block. with the new agreement we could purchase a total of up to an additional $300000000.00 doses of the biotech pfizer vaccine in other words this will allow us to double the amount of this of biotech. let's go right to brussels to teri schultz is standing by for us there welcome terry what does this deal actually include yes sue me as european commission vonder law and just said this will double the number of pfizer biotech vaccines that the european commission has purchased and this is not a small issue because the commission is under fire for having purchased at the beginning to few and too slowly the number of doses that the population of almost half a 1000000000 needs so every additional purchase that they're allowed to make of course the commission will hope that this lessens the criticism of them and till this week
1:03 pm
this biotech pfizer vaccine was the only one approved in the european union of course earlier this week madonna was also approved adding 160000000 doses and as we listen to these numbers it seems awfully high so i mean but we have to remember that since every person needs 2 doses you're only being going to be able to vaccinate half the number of people that you hear the purchase of the vaccine so when she says that we're going to have 600000000 of the biotech pfizer vaccine that's going to be of course just 300000000 people right that's important to keep in mind so what do you think this agreement will mean for the e.u. wide rollout. of course it's encouraging to know that there will be more vaccinations available but the problem really hasn't been buying them the problem is producing them and the facilities are you know in a dead neck run producing the of the drug as fast as possible but there have been delays both in produce production and in transport especially with this biotech
1:04 pm
pfizer vaccine because it needs these ultra cold conditions that not all countries were able to to create at the beginning so some of the shipments had to be delayed some of the shipments actually had to be thrown out because they weren't stored properly the medinah vaccine can be stored in normal freezer temperatures so that also will help but there simply isn't enough capacity to produce the high numbers of vaccines that the public is demanding now also this week we heard that a new facility to be built there in marburg germany is going to be up and running for the biotech pfizer vaccine so that's going to be very encouraging but as underlay and said this morning we are only talking about the 2nd quarter of this year for for the new pfizer biotech jobs to come into production and only by the end of this year will the full shipment be able to be fulfilled so people need to keep in mind that the rollout is not immediate you can buy them but it doesn't mean you're going to have them in your arm anytime soon and you have the e.u. actually courtenay to this mammoth task in the member states doing the rollout so
1:05 pm
how is that going. that's right and i think sometimes it's appropriate to defend the european commission because they buy them they purchased them but it's up to member states to deliver them and implement a vaccination program and governments are each taking their own their own path we've of course seen germany and france criticized for having a slow roll out but now this week there's some additional criticism sumi and that is that it's been learned that well germany was president of the european council the 2nd half of last year and test was shepherding all $27.00 governments into making their purchases together to have extra leverage to meet to make these big procurements it also on the side negotiated its own deal with vaccine makers and that's something that a lot of countries are are not happy about germany of course the wealthiest e.u. countries a very powerful country and at the time the european council president so this is something that the european the european commission and the german government are
1:06 pm
being asked about how was it really ethical for germany to purchase additional doses on the side of underlying says that it did not break the european commission agreement that countries are allowed to purchase additional doses and that germany's extra vaccines will come only after the commission shipment is fulfilled . reporting from brussels good to talk to you. let's take a look at some other developments in the pandemic now germany has broken its record for covert related deaths in a 24 hour period the 1188 fatalities were also accompanied by a spike in new cases which surpassed 31000 the u.s. has reported more than 4000 new coven 1000 deaths in the past 24 hours that is a global record nearly 3 times greater than number 2 brazil china has sealed off 2 cities south of beijing to stem the country's biggest outbreak in months people are
1:07 pm
banned from leaving and shing thai with combined populations of nearly 20000000 and iran's supreme leader has banned vaccines from the u.s. and britain in a televised speech ayatollah ali khamenei said anti covert 1000 shots developed in either country are forbidden well the pentagon make is also hitting african nations hard especially south africa where case numbers have been surging since the start of this year it is the worst affected of all africa states with more than a 1000000 cases reported. has more. this isn't a waiting room it's the treatment room for code which patients at the hospital in khayelitsha one patients calls out to us to tell us she'd been sitting and waiting for 3 days waiting for beds to become free next door you've been reduced to only 2 we didn't want it understood you just. did.
1:08 pm
dr susan mccomb caller has been working here for 9 years and this pandemic is pushing him to his limits the 3rd of his colleagues here have already had the virus how do you feel to see your facility sometimes you know where this was going to be enough for st sometimes we don't do enough oxygen and we need to inform our youth and you know the one point when did you feel you did something you drew. do you 1st do it looks just i mean should we just stop but sometimes you just it's. on average one person with coverts dies in the hospital every day there's a small room next door with somewhat better beds for acute patients waiting for an intensive care bed at another hospital. the local health minister at mit's that not everyone can get an i.c.u. bed most are already full it doesn't but i know that i sleep that
1:09 pm
instead of them but i did it in my own home i.c.u. and that is what it is but it was on fire so this is actually the waiting all the waiting area off the hospitals where people would normally wait for their treatment but you can see it people will come here with non-coverage related issues emergencies for now being treated here because they need the space on the other side of the building for potential coverage cases. south africa meanwhile has reintroduced tough are locked. measures there's a stricter mosque requirement alcohol sales are banned and beaches have been closed but police are overwhelmed with enforcing the rules. only patients over the age of 45 are now being tested at the state clinics the demand is overwhelming. here enviro just both gone crisis laboratory every 2nd test is positive the peak of the 2nd wave is expected in south
1:10 pm
africa in mid january but even after that experts anticipate further waves i fear. experiencing. some time. through 2020. 2 make a big difference the government announced it is already in talks with the manufacturers but there are no details yet. there is hope initial studies show that during the 1st wave up to 40 percent of residents will already infected and possibly even immune social distancing remains impossible for many here. dr cole and his team they are forced to bracing for a tough few weeks ahead of them. in the u.s.
1:11 pm
president trump has acknowledged he will be handing over power to joe biden that's after an attempted insurrection and 2 months on from the presidential election in a video published on twitter he also condemned the rioters calling the storming a heinous attack a police officer has died of his injuries following clashes with the pro truck. couple of days too late fresh fortifications around the u.s. capitol building after an angry mob invaded the altar of american democracy. those who attacked journalists. as police and now being attacked by their leader who himself is under intense fire the demonstrators who infiltrated the capital have defiled the seat of american democracy to those who engage in the acts of violence and destruction you do not
1:12 pm
represent our country and to those who broke the law you will pay we have just been through an intense election and emotions are high but now tempers must be cooled and calm we store truck stop short of actually conceding defeat his statement contrast it with those prior to the storming where he urged attendees to fight to overturn the election results doing we will never give up we will never concede it doesn't happen. shortly afterwards hundreds of people were marching through the halls of the capitol for protesters died in the chaos one of them of gunshot wounds and a police officer died from injuries inflicted in the. america's next president joe biden lays the ugly insurrection squarely at trump's feet you know unleashed. and all out assault on our institutions of our democracy from the outset
1:13 pm
and yesterday was about the culmination of that unrelenting attack while some normalcy has returned to washington d.c. the city is clearly shaken even trump supporters in the capital was shocked by the violence what happened yesterday is just. i mean. what they did. was definitely. we don't support that we don't support that and that is you know they they. overcame police and they overcame barricades that not a lot order and for some members of trump's cabinet wednesday's events also went too far several have since resigned including the transportation secretary and most recently education secretary betsy device. from the us elections team is with us hi peter we're now seeing several members of
1:14 pm
the trumpet ministration stepping down at this well we've seen at least a dozen members of strays now resigning right so we have reports of several others also who want to resign but fears that doing that would essentially render the. government unable to function so wednesday night we saw former chief of staff and current special in more than what ireland. mick mulvaney resigning thursday we saw 1st of 1st lady maloney a trance chief of staff resigning then we saw the transportation secretary elaine chao resign and then education secretary but sort of awesome she wrote in her resignation letter that the events that we songlines were simply unconscionable for our country see late the blame squarely don't trump feet and say there is no mistaking the impact that his rhetoric hat on the situation and called it an inflection point for her she then went on to say that you know impressionable children are watching all of this in there that they're learning from this and that
1:15 pm
they have a moral obligation to essentially model the behavior that we would like these children to emulate you know for a lot of people i think these words ring fairly hollow considering that this is not the 1st time that we have seen trump really challenge the norms and even the constitution throughout his 4 year tenure we have seen you know him. better the boss remain in office when. the trouble ministration locked up kits and cages when trump refused it doesn't gel from right wing extremists when he caught old authoritarians frankly and so a lot of people are seeing this kind of a last ditch opportunist attempt to essentially abandoned from sinking ship and try to save face as they're out looking for new jobs well pressure really is mounting. also in washington to remove the president from office even in these remaining day how realistic is that we're looking at 2 scenarios right so one is impeachment
1:16 pm
which if congress were to go ahead and impeach donald trump remove him from office that would be the 1st time in history that a sitting president has been impeached twice but it is very unlikely that's going to happen clock is really running out on the term presidency we're only have 12 days left and congress is not even session so they would have to get back to washington they would have to go through several commissions then go to full vote in the house which would then have to pass it on to the senate where it would have to be up for trial and face and be signed off by 2 thirds majority in the senate all of that is very very unlikely that that's ever going to happen the other option is the 25th the amendment which by president combined with half of the terms cap and it would then have to submit to congress that they find him unfit for office again the president could challenge that would then would have to go to 2 thirds majority in congress so really the obstacles are enormous and then within this short amount of time it's very unlikely that any of that is going to happen right
1:17 pm
peter from the u.s. elections team thank you very much for that analysis thank you. let's take a look now at some other stories making headlines around the world boeing will pay to going to have a $1000000000.00 to settle a u.s. justice department probe into conspiracy charges related to to crash a separate $737.00 max plane the accidents in indonesia and ethiopia killed $346.00 people and led to the aircraft being grounded the settlement includes compensation to airlines money for victims' families and a fine. the suspected mastermind of the 2002 bali bombings that killed more than 200 people has been released from an indonesian prison authorities say cleric abu bakar bashir will now enter a de radicalization program he was imprisoned in 2011 for his links to a militant a training camp in a province. roads have turned into rivers in central malaysia as deep floodwaters hit the area local media say at least 4 people have died in the flooding tens of
1:18 pm
thousands are displaced the emergency is being further complicated by malaysia's soaring coronavirus caseload. the european union says it will help fund accommodations for thousands of migrants currently living without shelter in bosnia herzegovina foreign affairs chief joseph what has said 3500000 euros will be granted to alleviate what he calls completely unacceptable conditions now bosnia is not an e.u. member but it does border croatia which is a member of the union human rights groups say migrants have frequently reported rough encounters with croatian police including bt said being forcefully sent back into bosnia that is a charge that croatian authorities deny now at the moment only $9000.00 migrants are estimated to be in bosnia many of them are from afghanistan pakistan or syria and the un's migration agency says more than a 3rd of those migrants right now are living without shelter many were left
1:19 pm
homeless when the captain leap out was evacuated on december 23rd after boston authorities sailed to prepare the camp for winter that empty camp was later set on fire the bosnian army has set up new tents but n.g.o.s say more permanent shelter is sorely needed. reports. asked for comments is angry and he's not the only one of feels that way going on a year in tempe is a yes they are guys that same problem they are suffering here assman tells us he was forced to leave his home in pakistani controlled kashmir 2 years ago due to conflict in the region now he's one of several 1000 migrants and refugees here in bosnia-herzegovina right at the doorstep of the european union most of them have only one goal answering the e.u. after mitt has tried several times to reach crazy but says he was always violently pushed back by border guards we had a human being we want to live we have
1:20 pm
a fairly the old guy's got a not given a not dead at least we don't have a gun we had a very police asked for us medicine all stuck here in camp lipa which made headlines just before christmas when it was 1st cleared and then burned down these damaged bank beds are a minder of what happens since then people here have mostly had to fend for themselves some are collecting rain water to drink. we're not allowed to enter at this camp police told us they're just following new instructions from the government but they could not explain to us why journalists are not being permitted inside boston authorities have faced harsh criticism because of the appalling conditions the mayor of the nearby town of beotch suited fashion it says the national government and the e.u. share the blame piano on his parents so much money in my crises but the hatch has not received any any euro we have been dealing the law on media or money
1:21 pm
with our own resources european union on. should treat migrant crises is a european problem as a global problem the e.u. says it is helping for example by sending a former ref. shelter in b. hutch but after repeated protests it was closed down in september and replaced by complete some residents of the harsh are still gathering here every day because they fear that a migrant could move back in. they said to us that we are lost we are not to assist 3 years we suffering and helping the people they don't want to stay in bosnia they just want to go to the border in europe and their europe open the border. this is what many and can be far hoping for a swell but for know they have to cope with the little they have. for more on this
1:22 pm
story we can speak now to unify johansson he is the e.u. commissioner for home affairs in brussels commissioner johansson thank you very much for joining us we heard a woman there say in that report that the migrants do not want to stay in bosnia-herzegovina she said dear europe open the border and take them will you take them while everybody has a right to apply for asylum and those that have reasons to get asylum will get asylum and i welcome and you have been union but those that are not eligible for asylum they cannot come and they have to return to their country of origin that's an important part of our migration policy but why is that not happening if we look at the conditions there and i can't they're essentially stuck they'd like to apply for asylum and get to the european union. well i think it would be seeing right now in in the area off the closing of the camp just before christmas we are having
1:23 pm
a humanitarian emergency situation and this one now we need to solve them that's why i spent actually part on my christmas holiday with a lot of phone calls to their forty's and the politicians on both national and regional level in boston has to go and also together with a high representative braley so now we have today temporary solution where the red cross reopens the leave camp with winterized tents that could help for the emergency situation right now but commissioner johansson i want to come back to you and not the humanitarian situation which we understand is dire but what the actual avenue is for people there to apply for asylum and come to europe how can that be addressed where people are not not everybody can come to duty in union those that are eligible for aside them can come to the opinion union are
1:24 pm
welcome to come but not everybody that wants to come to you to be in union can come and constant in the european union and boston has to go and has to manage their migration situation as well you say that they have to manage their migration situation we heard from the mayor of be harsh in that report saying he hasn't seen any euros from the european union how can that be. well we have spent a lot of money i think it's almost 85000000 euros to help us you know house to go managed migration and we will continue support them doing this but unfortunately we can also see that it that that there is a dysfunctioning governance in this country that means that there are some areas of the country some candles that are having taken much morison responsibilities for migrants than other areas for example and this is something that bussing has to govern a need to address in my view and i think also that i mean the european union we
1:25 pm
have been investing in the be wrecked have that it's winterized and it's ready to open with the place and bed for 1500 migrants and just down the road from the leave camp and i think that will be a good solution to reopen the b. rock and to give people shelter there for for the winter and commissioner johansson you told me of in september that you were confident that your pact on migration that's currently in talks right now that this would address some of the issues that we're seeing when it comes to these camps on the e.u. borders still this package does not solve the problem that there are countries in the european union that are not willing to take in migrants so how are you going to solve this issue. well 1st on the pact that i have presented it's now being negotiated by member states and also by the european parliament and that should say in a constructive way and the situation that we are facing right now and that's also
1:26 pm
the case with the migrants and bustin has to go over and i should guess that is a majority of those of a life to ended european union and not refute g.'s they are not eligible for international protection and it's important that we make the distinction between is that those that are eligible for international protection they can well come and they could stay and others could also come on legal possible ways to work in european union to study had to be part of society but if you're a drivers that are not eligible to stay they have to return and that's also an important part of my policy that we should have the pro says this already at the border is to have a quicker and more efficient return system for those not eligible to stay ok we'll have to leave it there. johansson the e.u.
1:27 pm
commissioner for home affairs in brussels thank you very much for joining us. now let's get a quick reminder of our top story the european commission has reached a deal with drug makers pfizer and beyond tech to double the torture of their colon vaccine adding 300000000 more doses that's a currency union half of the 2 friends global output of the shot this year. coming up next our health and wellness show in a good shape thank you for that. good
1:28 pm
1:29 pm
good shape. nestor. the story of prejudice and propaganda. they were called the rhineland bastards norn after the 1st world war. the monkey was an illegitimate child there were many of the new from. their mothers or germans living in the occupied rhineland their fathers soldiers from the french colonies. off the boats and these afro german children had a hard time and because they were a reminder of the german defeat. they grew up in a climate of wounded national pride and racism the 1st of the european population
1:30 pm
felt that it was important to be white and to stay right by sublight. exclusion and contempt culminated in forced sterilization under the nazis. this documentary examines the few traces that remain of their existence we call them the children. storage january 11th on d. w. . welcome to the health show on g.w. here's your host dr costume they called out hello and welcome to a good ship you'll never guess where i am in the cold war. why many people will know how it works. maybe wondering how i got here.
1:31 pm
it's a model and it stands in berlin in the backstabber center for molecule or bad is said and in today's show you will learn everything you will need for healthy digestion i'm going back into the colon and i'm a little bit afraid that it will be boring so i invited a competent support. this time i'm in good shape we need doctor and gillick appearance click a straw enter our just hates the internal medicine department i feel is a bit cremated in berlin she'll tell us all we need to know about healthy intestine this is just a model but really about this constantly in motion. and this is called peristalsis. up to 30 tons of food pass through the colon in a person's lifetime this is as much as a truckload. which of this enters the body and
1:32 pm
what is extreme it again is determined by the colon it has many millions of nerve cells. our so-called thumb in the brain not only organizes our destiny it also has a big influence on our psyche. if our colon were smooth on the inside its surface would only one square meter big the approximately $10000000.00 thing aside villa increase the surface area. our digestion is probably done by the intestinal flora which is composed of billions of funny intestinal bacteria together they wake up to 2 kilograms the intestine the bacteria are also there to build up the defensibility of new immune cells that the intestines produce every day over 70 percent of the immune systems defense cells are located in the intestine and that's
1:33 pm
a great thing. because many toxins and pathogens enter the body through food and we need to get rid of the. i meeting doctor and gillick of beer here in the bowl this is a very special place to meet not for you because you're just on trial it is so this is your daily life isn't it here it was quite if you sit here right so what can you see here if you doing a colonoscopy you can see all those things we can see you have the models so we'll get our 1st thing right next to me every year paying cash and trust them accounts are. good plots a commission that's quite hopefully comes out ok so this is not. rich obviously this is not now that's not that far left worse because let's just carry on and that's a pretty true ssion from just my cousin a through a mother week after the hour and it's just been and most of the patients who have
1:34 pm
to particular they don't have never sometimes ok so this has been i we don't have to worry about this now so it's about what about this year it seems limited they are both rather scary there's a strong inflammation close to the divot you can love. inside the david that's caused cured why this round of bacteria affects now you have to treat them and to be attics ok so this is infections so what you can see here this is a lot of the fiction this is something coming off the wall here that some of our lives that perforation of the macos are they are small and usually they have been equal. the bigger they are the risk is increasing to cancer ok so even though it is still behind it can grow to a cancer yeah ok so what about this year this is apollo because we're. many many
1:35 pm
many are poli close together. they have a disease called police posers there's always a genetic background and they're suffering from hundreds to thousands whole lives that's quite right so those polyps come in different shapes and colors so this is more looking like it is a mushroom more of it here in silicone. for start you know why they can't grow flat on the cows are like a plaster. rely. because you can cut it out very easy just to cut it with her release those or you just look at a loss because you're just kind of here and all those things which worry you about them so this is what you see here yeah it's already cut but you would cane so if you don't cut it you're very brave to grow into it for cancer like this here.
1:36 pm
and the customer it's a collective carcinoma. well it's quite often in germany say 6 per cent off they became a common cancer in germany during the lifetime you could really tell the difference that of course no one looks differently to all those nice normal colima cosell and you won't have any symptoms like legends if you're from nice macos or if you called treats are nice and you have to teach are called in nice as well. no matter how we eat whether we relish each mouthful. well wolf things down greedily. whether we're concerned about the taste of our food i'm focused on what we're eating. or just shoveling it in without a 2nd thought. our intestine us to
1:37 pm
process it all high time to consider what might make it happen here so 1st of all we should perhaps avoid what i got really doesn't like being fed practically nonstop for example we may breakfast then have a piece of fruit an hour later followed by a class on in the late morning. and then some candy in between times if we do that the gut never gets it's much needed breaks. so the number one tip for a healthy intestine is a balanced daily routine if you eat breakfast at 8 am and it's best to wait until around 1 pm to have lunch in the gut likes to have an afternoon nap before dinner at 6 pm as well as meals at regular intervals the gut also appreciates routine in
1:38 pm
terms of getting regular exercise periods of relaxation unsufficient sleep our gut loves dependability and doesn't like surprises. tip number 2 our intestine likes to be warm it likes to be woken gently in the morning for example with a glass of warm water or herbal tea or any milder alternative to coffee which is a stern taskmaster and really crack the whip. if you want to give your gut a break just very simple hot meals for a day plain rice for example is easily. i'm relieved the gut. equally you could choose to eat boiled potatoes. porridge. or steamed vegetables. tip number
1:39 pm
3 a little tender loving care. if your gut gives you grief be patient maybe your body can no longer digest certain types of food that for years were no problem experiment leave out any food you think might be causing the problem just for a while then try it again and see if your hunch was correct. so be kind to your gut after all you're a team. so we heard a lot of what you can do good for your colon so is there anything interesting doesn't like yefim when you shop for. meat to. beef or. exercise less than 3 hours per week. something that they're. also. smoke. or eat. a lot of my patients complain about stomach rumbling bloating and flexeril
1:40 pm
so to what degree. while they have some cure some time now probably. if this 1st. year quite often only uses the quality of life of the patients there are some terms should the patient should contact their pay their doctors many of my patients say that they're intolerant against math a certain kind of food so is this a problem for them and what did i say that's not a problem if you. don't hurry for eggs. mots you can live without eating that's. just stupid right so what kind of symptoms are you and i should definitely see your doctor but you have to go to the uk to if you have signs of pleading if you have been on this in the studio you have to get to the doctor immediately you
1:41 pm
can't. just have you have to look after it even if you know that you've got him yeah definitely yeah we have a reason for. saying you should go to the doctor if you have. pain. change in your difficult haitian habits for example i used to have constipation now your theory are you should contact your doctor because there could be some truth behind this like a calling you know on the fly to leave you thrust in many cases is just irritable bowel syndrome which is behind those kind of complaints but this can take the joy way of life. pain and cramping bloating gas and constipation words opposite diarrhea the symptoms of your writable bowel syndrome or i.b.s. often start out slowly and increase in frequency and since other diseases can cause similar symptoms diagnosis can be difficult many people with i.b.s.
1:42 pm
have undergone numerous medical examinations including blood tests stomach and ask a p. and common are skippy and alter a sound exams to rule out other conditions when no other cars can be found i.b.s. is the likely diagnosis but even then the search for causes and treatment is usually just beginning happy month for me i'll have someone in my office who has symptoms and is looking for help if the diagnosis ends up being i.b.s. then we can begin looking for a treatment but it can involve quite a bit of detective work. we try to figure out what is causing issues perhaps look for food that aren't being well tolerated. food intolerances often play a role in triggering symptoms figuring that out requires keeping a food diary patients need to write down exactly what they eat how much and when and what food additives were involved they should also record what symptoms occur
1:43 pm
afterwards what. is also with us and if any is often patients can tolerate a small amount of specific foods but then be unable to tolerate larger amounts of it and that's when it can be useful to consult a nutritionist someone with experience who can help you navigate the process and help you figure out how to have as varied a diet as possible. you know could not stand drastically and perhaps unnecessarily limiting your diet isn't a good option since that can lead to nutritional deficiencies one solution is on women having a specific category of food to see if that helps stress and emotional factors can also play a role. first endless when the stress of course when someone with i.b.s. is experiencing stress or pressure or even when they're suffering from an infection or other kind of physical stress they're much more likely to experience symptoms any physical or mental strain can play a role here. to help counteract that i.b.s.
1:44 pm
patients are advised to get enough rest plenty of exercise and fresh air. i walked in the fresh air the only thing you can do when you suffer from i.b.s. you have had a lot in there are perfect because you are exercising the fresh air and. shining and it's quite good. out there martyr post strategies you can follow you can change and you can think about your sleeping. and you can think about things which are good for you so the new symptoms are quote individual but is there some general advice you would like to give to patients for various. patients there. and though we are living in a digital. jeff track that's not shaken and it's not perfectly every
1:45 pm
day said. you cannot have techs have some discomfort or. if the discomfort is too often and then you should contact the drug dealer or if the quality of life is reduced by the symptoms so try to relax or were next to their phone. so let's talk about colon cancer which is kind of a common disease which mainly affects older patients but sometimes even younger patients as well so why is there. how they're sampling how cancer is our cost by that exchanges their families with for example. the high incidence of colorectal cancer so keep an eye on your family. there are colon cancer or breast cancer or very rare cancer or curing and if it's like that.
23 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
