Skip to main content

tv   Kulturzeit  Deutsche Welle  May 28, 2021 8:30pm-9:01pm CEST

8:30 pm
from don, us, don't just read fish. want to life plans from nature. here are turned into organic fertilizers and culture into a sustainable ecosystem. eco africa in 60 minutes on dw ah ah. even as many parts of the world start to open up again, frontline work as a struggling to cope with the silent, told of the covert, 19 pandemic bone out. and now all our recent studies on top workers and other for, for suggest that for now is increasing diety is increasing. and so we expect that the rates are gonna kind of stay high for, for public service. for a while, i see that there are some intensive care unit staff saying they've reached a breaking point left a little bit from academic research centers to scientific journals, health workers,
8:31 pm
and scientists. fighting the pandemic say they are hitting a wall. me know some health care workers have thrown in italy and taken up a completely different job. main thing, stay sane. doctors and nurses who can soldier on is still a lot of work. maybe like the end of the tunnel, but the crisis isn't over. a taste of normality can be felt all over madrid. the cities vibrant nights have recently been approaching what they were before. the pandemic bars and restaurants are busy. since spain lifted the state of alarm bars and restaurants have steadily extended the hours curfews have largely been canceled . non essential travel between the regions is allowed again. the lifting of these restrictions was met with wild celebrations in the streets of spain. that outraged many spaniards infection rates across spain are dropping,
8:32 pm
but he and madrid that's still higher than elsewhere. and hospital especially feeling the pinch intensive cast off, say that they're bad occupied after more than that breaking point. some even quitting that job at the coven ward. this is why people we speak to are cautious. they want to enjoy their new freedoms, but also do so responsibly. one that we were to discuss the hasn't seen his family in 9 months because of spain travel bands. he is planning along over to visit yada. now that they're opening up the really want to see each other, but we're also scared as part of the. okay. especially because my father died last june from cove it, although his mother is already vaccinated. what is garcia will still take every precaution to make sure his visit home will be safe. hello, this is what it is. the virus is there. even if restrictions are ease. but it's true that the easing of measures takes
8:33 pm
a weight up your shoulders. it gives the freedom to a certain degree bar owners like simone. i photo optimistic that such freedoms are here to stay on the monastery. our business is in our sector that live from one day to the other, cannot afford to close. but i am confident that by the end of the some of the situation will have improved, whether it's social and night life or everything else and myself. so i don't know those bodies until then. pain will try and enjoy this fragile life, hoping that 1000000 small people will get the vaccine. and that corona virus variance can be kept at bay. europe and parts of north america starting to reopen. but that has many employees. worried. one survey shows that nearly half of the workers could leave their jobs in the coming months. with 66 percent of respondents saying they feared that workplace safety measures were being listed too soon. and
8:34 pm
surprisingly, health care workers and researches are some of the most effective by code stress, one in 5 saying they were considering leaving the field when the crisis is over. and there's a, there's a re, dickerson is a clinical psychologist and the academic, mental health and well being specialist joins us from our country in spain. just what sort of a burden 1st of all of these medical workers in particular carrying quite particular a huge fin, right? so that though the weight of, of, of, of, of i guess the world of looking at the moon how, how are they able to help our grandfather in hospital in this moment, holding people's hands when they can have family to support them? how do they deal with just the increased good, and i've heard stories of people who of medical professionals who have signed the certificates in a day than they had in their work life to that point. this is incredibly impactful
8:35 pm
on those at the co face right now. so how should those doctors and nurses be dealing with this sort of situation and it's huge bud apply. it's very easy for me to say from the comfort of my, my office, my enclosed office without having to wear a mask or anything like that. but it's, i suppose it would be my to seems, would be to take it back to sort of the smallest possible changes that you can make in the moment. right? that pause and breathe that, that poor just to refit yourself, receipt, even your post to recognize that those physical sensations that you're experiencing, feed into the level of stress level of what you're experiencing at any point in time. so just restricting your brain through, through that die for medic breathing, if you like, receding just your posture and finding that point of tension in your body can be useful in those moments and just keep it, keep it in the, in the moment. if you, if you can, right, just rather than zooming out and looking at all that you are dealing with over time . but just the person in front of you and how you can,
8:36 pm
how you can help your work concentrates mainly on academia. how much of a problem is, is burned out in academia and how has covert made? it was quite well i guess if you consider the sorts of things that dr. burn out, it's not really surprising. they've been out the huge problem. academia right. increased work was really high workloads, relentless pressure to publish really, really in the work life balance, i think drivers. but then if you consider the scientist even those working around the clock to provide us with everything that we know about the current or virus, all of those predictions in those models in a driving governmental policy. the science that allows for this rapid development of these life saving vaccines. many of these incredibly talented individuals, around short term contracts with no idea whether they live, what they like to look like. what will be living in the next 2 years time? that's a huge degree of job uncertainty and that's incredibly stressful. right? covert has been increase their workload at times 3 times the working low because of
8:37 pm
the teaching load is shifted significantly to move them on line. it's reduced any of the ability to collaborate and meet work with our colleagues and to, to build and to share on those scientific ideas. and opinions of them are doing it at home with kids asking for snacks, every 2 minutes. that's hugely increase that right now. and i can in the community official. so do you have any advice for them in preventing that burn out in the 1st place? i guess 1st and foremost, it's really richard. and i think that that, that burn as a problem not of the individual, but of a system by the system. it needs to change. but that seed, obviously they're asking the individuals can do, and that's where they spend a lot of my work is. there's things that we can do to protect ourselves against it or to manage it when we're experiencing. it fits with academics just it's just don't internalize it. this isn't the sign that you're not cut out for academia that you're not good enough. those thought stop us from putting a hand up and asking for help. it would be focusing on the things that you can
8:38 pm
control. why you might not be able to change that lack of job security right now, but you can work on managing your worries. your fee is how much they keep you up at night and how much they stop you from concentrating. and again, just making the smallest possible changes, those micro changes that could fit you on a healthy path to day, right? it might be towards sleeping bit, it might be towards moving a little more, might be just permission to breathe and do nothing disconnect for 5 minutes. briefly with you and i was just going to ask, what about a big change? what about something like? because i was reading a lot of employees, would like to move towards a hybrid model of work to reduce that stress. what. what do you make of that? i suppose in some ways it's been, it's been really beneficial, right? a few don't need to be in the lab as a scientist or whatever than being able to work from home has provided great objects, ability that many are enjoying, but to be honest, actually makes at least and many of us, right. i'm not very good at delineating between work and life and finding that line
8:39 pm
in between and the few about doing that from home. that's even harder still. so how do you find that line? how do you close that laptop and not just chicky nails in the evening. work is intruding on our lives and especially in cove at times when you don't have life, all of that, like outside your friends, your family coming in claiming some of that work time. then you're just working more, right. you're just able to phillip space and it's, it's hurting us, putting a lot. does it take us in there for us, a clinical psychologist and a bit of advice there if you're suffering from out. great, talking t. my pleasure. take here is another interesting question for our science correspondent derek williams. if you've got one yourself, send it to our youtube channel. oh, i took an antibody doctor destination negative. shouldn't have come at positive no, not necessarily. the food and drug administration in the u. s. actually issued
8:40 pm
a communique on exactly this topic just a few days ago. it says that although cove at $900.00 vaccination might cause a positive result in some antibody tests, it doesn't necessarily do so for all or, or even for most of them. that sounds a little counter intuitive, i know, but, but it isn't really for some simple reasons. one in particular, which is that most antibody tests weren't designed to detect immunity after vaccination. they were designed to detect a past infection with ours copy to. and although both vaccination and infection lead to the same result, which is immunity for at least a while against the virus, it turns out that at the immune system level things are a little more complicated to surprise, surprise,
8:41 pm
to explain what's going on. let's look at the structure of, sorry, covey 2 for a 2nd. from the outside. it looks like a ball studded with weird, feathery structures. the ball is what's called the cap, that which in cases the virus is genetic material together they form what's called the nucleus caps and the feather like structures that don the surface are called spikes. now when you contract cobra 19, your body reacts with a range of antibodies that attached to a range of different targets. lots of them on the nuclear caps it. and those are the anti bodies that many tests are developed to detect. most vaccines, however, work by getting your immune system to produce only antibodies that target spikes and plenty of tests weren't made to detect those. so if you've only been vaccinated but not infected, and you take one of those tasks,
8:42 pm
then it will come up negative because the test was made to detect nucleus caps of antibodies and not the spike antibodies that your vaccinated system is producing. but they protect you effectively to me. thanks so much and stay safe and see you again, sir. of the, the room as managers to go today. nothing will ever change. you know, the banks pay news fines and so watch the language of a bank is money. speaking the truth, global news that matters. d. w, made for mines every day for us and for our planet. little divide,
8:43 pm
yours is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make cities greener? how can we protect animals and their habitats? what to do with all our ways? we can make a difference by trusting reforestation over deforestation recycling over disposable martin solutions overseas said in our ways is truly unique. and we know that, that uniqueness is what allows us to live and survive. my d, the environmental 3000 on dw, and me to species an expedition look into disease or the secret language of whales, the exciting part of underwater listening. if you're giving you
8:44 pm
a window into their, their life that you would never, you will never see a company research team to the pacific to the language of wales, june 4th on dw, the reading from berlin, and welcome to arts and culture. and heading into the weekend a new video from ballets bad boys said a game for learning fees. the ukrainian born start dancing to reevaluate bolero bids to raise awareness for multiple sclerosis and british, nigerian designer you can come in. laurie celebrates his dual heritage with color, bringing of buying for the 1st positivity to object and urban faces. but 1st to
8:45 pm
london, where the victoria and albert museum is pulling out all the stops for a blockbuster returned to culture. the exhibition epic, iran, which opens on saturday, showcases 5 millennial of persian culture ranging from the ancient pri islamic times right through to contemporary artists of today illuminating an artistic richness that the curator's hope will add some new own to how iran is seen in the west the with artifact spending 5000 years epic iran hopes to show the continuity of the country's culture and identity as seen in its art and design. the co curator tim stanley was tasked with showcasing the country's millennia long narrative. although it's existed for this very long time, people generally don't have this idea that iran is one of the great civilizations
8:46 pm
of asia, which is existed for a very long period. and that's one of the essential messages of exhibition. and of course, telling that long story with only, you know, to say the 300 objects is it's, it's quite a challenge. ah, the exhibitions 10 sections cover the many facets of iran's rich artistic and cultural heritage. from historic costumes to persian rugs illustrated manuscripts, vases and even weaponry and armor. the whole the exhibition offers of dazzling recreation of the walls of percept willis, the ceremonial capital of the 1st persian empire. using modern technology, epic, iran re imagines historic object.
8:47 pm
ah, one of the interesting things about this exhibition is that recent research about perception, this is shane, not the relief originally covered. i mean, hands, they found traces trying to microscopic traces of the pigments they use and say, we've been able to recreate the colorful aspect of the relief using projected color. one of the most important object in the exhibition is cyrus cylinder. memorializing the conquest of babylon by persian king cyrus the great in 539, b. c. it also appears to document king cyrus as support for religious and cultural diversity policies that were unique in the ancient world. some scholars referred to it as the 1st bill of human rights. your runs long history has also included turbulent relations with the west. going as far back as the persian invasion of
8:48 pm
greece in the 5th century. and continuing to today. the exhibitions organizers hope to offer a different narrative. they include in us or counties and man. his family owns many of the object on show. the exhibition also highlights modern day iran, with a selection feature in contemporary iranian art. many of the works here are bold and colorful like this. i catching self portrait by closer hi sunday, which explores how the world views iranian men by presenting contemporary art from iran. today we really able to challenge prejudices and this name is about what being iranian is today. this room gives an explosion of different artistic voices from artist living in iran, sitting in exile and who struggle between the 2. and when you look at it,
8:49 pm
you have photography, film, animations, sculpture and what else do you have painting? of course, oil painting, which explore art across media at the very highest level. i think iran shedding light on the richness and diversity of one of the world's great civilizations. well, he's been called the great dancer of his generation and long been known as the bad boy of ballet, sergey poland, in an all or nothing kind of artist as extreme in his political views as in his approach to life and his career, which has been a rollercoaster ever since he became the youngest ever principal dancer for britain's royal ballet back in 2010. but now the ukranian born film is focusing some of his explosive energy on a good cause. it was this video by photographer david lasha power that made sergei pulling in
8:50 pm
a viral internet sensation and shocked the ballet world. in 2015 polonium bared his tattoos and his soul as he vowed to quit classical dance. ah balloon never did quite quit. his latest project together with the farm, a giant mack asks what's it like to have multiple sclerosis, a disease that causes loss of sensation and control over one's own body mass mutual acre can someone who finds out that he has a mass and experience is something that other people can't understand why show how one's simple finger and hand movement suddenly become difficult, or even touching your own nose. i show the struggle of no longer being able to control your own body to the numerous sprites of sin until people like the dash to junk of i know 1st hand what that's like. she's one of 2000000 patients living with multiple sclerosis worldwide for symptom started when she was 18 at 1st,
8:51 pm
she had problem seeing then she found it difficult to walk up the blue. we need to get busty and you could, there were days when i felt like a vegetable, i just lay there. only able to move my eyelids love, i didn't. then i pulled myself together. i got up and kept going crazy. today and shares her experiences with other patients as a self help group in moscow. the focus here is on learning to live with the challenges a dizzy of presents and on setting goals, even if they don't seem attainable at 1st, what would you do it? yeah, i could dance, i prefer it because dancing means passion. not still. and when this passion takes hold of me, i have to do it. that's. it's the same with m. s. you can control your body again. if you want to was not. i think you would have the polonium,
8:52 pm
the youth centered around controlling his body. every muscle, every sinew, had one team. he was the youngest principal dancer in the history of britain's royal ballet documentary dancer charts. his rise from a boy in ukraine to a star in london, and his public unraveling amid drug use and psychological struggles. and he continued to so controversy with this had to vladimir putin and with a homophobic grant that caused the paris opera ballet to cancel his guest appearance in 2019 still, the farmer company merrick saw him as the man to help raise awareness of multiple sclerosis. fernandez to chunk of our opponents piece hits close to home if you didn't, you mean when he was moving so i could see that his muscles were tense doing that
8:53 pm
usually helps ease muscle spasms when people with m. s jump around a little, you hardly see their leg sake. you can because on the healing, i wanted to show that people can be strong and can triumph when they gather their strength. and perhaps a new turn for his reputation pony and is honoring the strength of m. s. patients fighting a disease that still has no cure. and that with a view to world m. s day that's coming up on sunday. well, from another generation, italy's leading prima ballerina cadillac for she has died at $84.00, considered one of the celebrated ballerina of the 20th century. she dazzled audiences around the world, dancing with the top male stars of her day, and was best known for her interpretation of the great romantic ballad. most notably, ah,
8:54 pm
for anyone still suffering from about the pandemic, blues, or blonde, the vibrant world of income, louis is a welcome way to kick start. your sense of the british, nigerian designer, can spit up just about anything from a friend skater park to store windows at selfridge is in london, and he even has a signature line of home and kitchenware that reflects the joyful spin that he brings to many public spaces. this colorful installation is called in plants. we trust the worth of british, nigerian designer laurie can be found in london, mayfair districts. it's a veritable urban away since the turn crystal mistakes based principal reflection, meditation, use appliance and green greenery. so come here, sit down from a commonplace and reflect, read whatever you want to do, but just being around, you know, a green space. the 34 year old londoner loves working with bright,
8:55 pm
vibrant colors. not too long ago, you can redesigned a gloomy london underpass. happy street as his work is titled it is a sight to behold. he wants to bring more positivity to urban spaces. when i create an installation in a studio, it gets my work. when it goes into space. i don't belong spinning what belongs to the people. also it kind of gives people a sense if you know belonging and respectful proud of their environment. you know, he produced countless installations for art galleries and events like the playground for adults at the 2900 can film festival has always bursting with new ideas. the inca launched his design career 10 years ago when he reimagined 2nd hand chairs, giving them a multicolored make over. much of his work is inspired by stories from his
8:56 pm
childhood, as well as west african fabrics. returning his kind of space around to who i am living as a kid have always felt i was living or to license you coaches in a position where it's here and and i love both got both with coaches, but how do i celebrate? and i think the best way with me was to do it for furniture. so take those narratives to i was kind of, you know, told what i was young and on. i love choice, you know, retail them in my own way. the drums up these crockery designs during the 1st corona virus lockdown. my obsession with colors is definitely some has been inherited to my mom and dad. i was wondering when my mom, but if you get her insurance from california, it was obviously from her mom because that's been passed into so my, my friend presents me hello just yes sir. it's something that's just, yeah, it makes me for positive and good because lively creations bring some much needed
8:57 pm
color and positivity to urban environments. illuminating the darkness well, positivity is good. that's all for this time and this week and it's been a blast. so until we meet again, go, well, stay safe and all the best for me on the feet of the the, me the
8:58 pm
i, how can we make fish farming effective? and ecological to entrepreneurs from don us don't read fish. want to play plans from nature. here are turned into organic fertilizers and culture into a sustainable ecosystem. eco africa. in 30 minutes on d. w. ah . i was secret lighting, discover new adventures in 360 degree and explore the fascinating world heritage sites. p w a world heritage 360. now the
8:59 pm
little guys, this is the 77 percent, the platform for african issues and share ideas. you know, i know we are not afraid to, catherine, delicate african population is willene and young people clearly have the solutions. the future belongs to the 77 percent. now, every weekend on the w, the ah,
9:00 pm
the news? this is b w, you do live from by then. germany admit for the 1st time that had committed genocide during its colonial rule of no, maybe up to 80000 railroad nama people were murdered by german imperial forces. over a 100 years ago, the government is ready to apologize and started building euro development to fund . but not everyone's happy. also in the program, france and germany pledge more than 500000000 euros to help african nations ramp up vaccination in the fight against the corona by.

16 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on