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tv   Kulturzeit  Deutsche Welle  June 10, 2021 12:30am-1:01am CEST

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2016 as like a bunch of the queen customer wants to see if germany was for me. the last few years have been quite right fully in touch with averted on the home when it comes to genovius. and of course, always look in the eyes birches, but perhaps the biggest on the new hobby, a $100.00 are approved to be in the news. every person ever comes. when you're feeling old together, you'll realize it's culture the way of living. are you ready to meet the german then join me, rachel threw it on the w. me ah, ah, vaccines at turning the tide in the pans amick in europe and the us attention is turned from adults. 2 children. some say they should get the job to it. shouldn't that limited supply of vaccines go to people in poor countries? after all kids, gravity develops, or the cases are covered. some parents have voice safety concerns, family,
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say the shots, say for mine it's it's time to vaccinate the young, the. i'm bent as all and welcome. before we tackle that question without 2 guests today, let's take a closer look at the numbers to get a better grasp of just how dangerous cove it is for kids. there are 14000000 miners living here in germany since march last year of a one and a half 1000 children and adolescents were hospitalized due to the corona virus. about $350.00 of those developed and inflammatory secondary disease of the infection called pin syndrome for children died from cove it. and let's just compare those numbers with influenza in the 280900 flu season. about 7 and a half 1000 kids under the age of 14 will hospitalized 9 died. to
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explain those numbers. i still to julian tongue, he's a console there. ologist, an honorary associate professor at the university of lester young. dutch is the president of the german society for child and adolescent medicine. thanks to both of you for joining us today. let's start with you. you and the standing committee on back the nation in germany have concerns about vaccinating children against koby to what are those concerns? well, it's not so much a matter of concerns with regards to the explanation that it's rather of putting things into context and of comparing potential side effects and the effects of the pen make on children such. and as you've pointed out initially already, we only have very minor 2nd of the content make on children with regards to health . and still we don't know what are the long term consequences of that explanation. and therefore, we educate that church when interest should be expedited,
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and that the children who are living with adults who are at risk of being executed as well as long as the cannot be vaccinated themselves. and finally, in all the other children and young lessons, there shouldn't be an individual decision making process with their g p. what they are pediatrician to find out whether they are actually willing to accept the vaccination and whether they are aware of potential side effects and how they think about you. so you're worried about the long term effects of this pandemic on the you know, the effects of the virus or the vaccine. but what happens if it takes so much longer to vaccinate all our adults, our main concern within the population? because you vaccinating children at the same time or, or we haven't vaccinated all the adults. doesn't that mean we're going to be in
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lockdown a lot longer and have even longer term effects for kids? well, i don't actually think so. first of all, the alternatives to explanation and children. we have that. well, the template testing facility in germany these days, plus we have, we know a lot about hygiene roles and we know about about making cool faith. so explanation. the solution to children. in particular, if you consider that only a minot, minority of children can be vaccinated, we're only talking about those between 12 and 15 at the very moment. so at the end of the day, you can also considering that adults much more prone to in detecting somebody else and to transferring the virus to another person. it may be wise to, to vaccinate adults, especially adults who are in the field,
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a few cation to make sure they don't transmit the virus to a church and you in your less concerned. why is that? can you explain that to us? yes i didn't disagree with was just been so i think that's a very reasonable approach. my concern is that the vaccines generally for children is fewer suspects of rule compared to idols, the more efficacious. and we also a lot of otherwise healthy children getting longer with symptoms about 5 percent of them in the u. k. now, so it may be the experience of the buyers in different countries is slightly different, especially since jeremy is controlled the virus so well compared to the u. k. where is basically uncontrolled. so the actual case of the higher that that's been higher and the risk of complications has been higher because you can see very poor control virus in the community anyway. so i think the context is different and the k has
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been rolling out the probably school. when's vaccination program many years now? less the where i where i am at the moment because the one of the pallets centers to that and also seen in austria in the us. now i've also instituted as primary school vaccination program at the time. it took the children from severe disease, but also the adults have contact with as well. so that kinda overlaps a bit with what the previous speaker has been saying that the u. k. approach from the u. s. approaches more. why do you want to vaccinate the healthy children as well with healthy idols to those children getting along to the complications that we are seeing? in fact, i'm sort of children. how dangerous is the way for kids? while adults, why not forget the jap 1st? i mean those are still poverty. so i think we don't disagree of the i think the adults are still the policy because we see more complications in them. and they do seem to transmit more frequently. but shouldn't do transmit to the inside
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criminal us should highball is just as long as adults don't detect the transmission because often more is infected. the sauce may be a lack of case as attainment rather than a true patient matic. not infectious type of infection. if we know for, for the respiratory viruses, including ones or children of really major effects as rosa was of these are spiritual arses and helping to decades, you know, with powerfully, honestly, i've never seen the revised as one of the ones or so the current of us is run the viruses from the can code are really no different in that respect. we know from, you know, young children and parents experience that to, in the 1st year of life, use a lot of kids in about to all the time with creek, from the lighters because of this kind of non immune infection with these seasonal special viruses. what about the u. s. strategy the julian way,
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where children are already getting back to native, possibly crossing a line at the expense of adults? yeah, so this wasn't really political about this sometimes earlier. and there is a interesting ethical dilemma here, whether you vaccinate children, to protect the idols, more than the children themselves. this is a good way to go around around. but when you have long have it in, children was turning part debilitating, but in several case reports in the case only with children can't remember what they're doing, can't get out bad, can't walk on the, they used to start to be quite debilitating the child themselves, but then also the spread to political adults and get located more more than children. 10 percent of them can get long traded with collecting life, changing illness. that's also a reason to vaccinate. i think children in a more rapid manner. the last thing that i feel you do is i'm just saying that fact
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to be the rational, so why they're doing it, what you can make the following suit. you can i ask you another question? the 5 by and take faxing was tested on just over a 1000 children and adolescents and some scientists to saying, as far as your participants to detect re side effects. that's right. i mean that's actually the solution we made with. well, explanation problem. for instance, the seneca shop a they didn't fail so to speak, their initial studies. but we, we only heard about the long term consequences and at the side effects such as term bosis in front of the arteries being, veins better after after a while after so many patients have been connected. so at the end of the day
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it will be safe for many families to the site upon vaccination or not having a vaccination after they've seen the that the courses on, on a large scale. certainly that's, that's that, that might be a reassuring point for many people. okay, great to get your take on that. your dutch president of the german society for child and adolescent medicine and consult they're all just from the university of list. the julian tang, thanks to both of you. thank you very much. that's part of the show where you get to ask the question, is our science corresponded derek williams. paul, if you have 19 without knowing it and get it back, seen, could be as ver, side effects. oh, the short answer to this is pretty clearly known, but the question has a couple of layers that need peeling back health care authority. recommendations
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focus mostly on whether or not people who have the disease and for covered whether they can be safely vaccinated afterwards. and the answer to that if they can and they should be but authority recommendations are a lot more fuzzy when it comes to people who might have an active present a matic or a symptomatic infection at the moment that they get a shot. however, i did track down opinions from a number of experts on the topic and pretty much all of them thought it shouldn't make a difference in terms of symptoms so. so they believed it wouldn't cause adverse effects. however, some also thought it might possibly have an impact on either positive or negative on the speed and the strength of your immune response to the vaccine. if you've been exposed,
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don't get vaccinated and tell your quarantine if you have been infected and are a symptomatic or pre symptomatic. even if the vaccine doesn't pose a threat to you there's, there's still a problem which is that you still pose a potential threat for the health workers who would vaccinate you. so to protect them. wait for a couple of weeks to make sure that you're in the clear me a fancy organ. ah. oh. the do you like it? do you want it? okay, then buckle up, put the pedal to the metal and lets ride
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on dw. do you feel worried about me too? i'm neil post okay. on the grievance protocols and to me it remains solutions or out. this join me for a deep into the green transformation to me to use for the people in trucks injured was trying to see the city center more and more refugees are being turned away. the families plane for the correct traitors. people seeing cleans,
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getting 200 people around the world. more than 300000000 people are speaking with huge. why? because no one should have to flee. make up your own mind. w. made for mines the time now for arts and culture and coming up, no mission is impossible for claim nation sensation as last will take a look behind these high speed scenes at the filmmakers, paris studio and the wonders of nature. german filmmaker young huffed homes in on his home country in breathtaking time, less oh,
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welcome to arts and culture focusing this time on film and photography. and we'll start with photos taken somewhere that's generally the opposite of glamorous teenagers bedrooms. but beyond the piles of smelly socks and the slamming doors, kids rooms are so much more. they can also be a safe haven or more recently a quarantine. so german photographers fairly and people went on a mission to capture these important spaces and their inhabitants. oh, a young person's most intimate space is their bedroom. it's a kind of transition zone between childhood and the adult world. everything happens here and not only in pandemic times. and it's a place that's off limits to most people, especially someone with a camera, but photographers, feely and pepito were granted access to take portraits of kids in their rooms in
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different countries. the result is the project in my room. the things i told me get started in 2019 with 2 or 3 kids in cologne. we asked them about their situations at home, their family and their room, whole time year in terms of i have a and then in late 2019, we were in asia. and the situation with kofi 19 was starting to escalate and we saw that it was spreading on yes. and then we took photos of children in singapore, in their bed. our daughter cannot and thing up for the golf yet in the month me in large format, prince like pop star posters, feely and peter present the young people in their rooms. these forgotten heroes of the pandemic. ah, ah, when i was, for instance, the fashion photography do, portrays fanny from cologne as a princess in the bedroom, she has all to herself. even the time
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a lot of kids have to share their rooms with their siblings, but i'm an only child, so i had a space just for me over this past year. and i had it's a place of your own that you can withdraw to where you spend most of your time. and of course i can see that. but where you have a lot of experiences for the very 1st time on. and when i think about that and reflect on everything that's happened there, and i think it is a pretty cool place to be reminded a bit of your own use. of course. how was it back then? are things very different now? i don't think much has changed. i recognized myself in these room, although they were busy heidi or someone will buy the best or little votes and todd . and unlike in the past, these rooms are connected to the outside world via the internet. still, even children with the most privileged backgrounds are at risk of getting lost in
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the long lockdown. some of the slacks read all these headlines, lamenting what children and teenagers are dealing with stuck at home all the time. but it could have been possible to better support children from poor families. you know, everyone has the same opportunity and isn't behind on her mission to live with their carefully stage portraits, feely and peter want to give kids a platform, a new challenge and time. and they want to show that the pandemic crisis has made this generation strong to live with. a girl named julia told us that she very consciously spent new year's eve alone. she left candles and danced on her own hands and said it was a wonderful experience. and i think it's great that kids have created new ways of dealing with life and these panoramic ty, inside in my room, documents a generation of young people who've perhaps learned not so much at school during this time. but a great deal for life and about themselves. animator, victor,
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or age allow also spends a lot of time in a small space. the stop motion, films, and loops he create in his studio, have gone all over the world. you might know him from his instagram profile paragraph where his followers, number, in the hundreds of thousands. this is american actor leonardo dicaprio in a way, you've never seen him before in stop motion animation action. this is the work of french director victor as well that who makes animation films and ads in his paris studio. i really like stop motion animation because it's something very tangible you can, you can touch it. you really feel what you are doing. i mean, with your hand, i think there's been creating stop motion animation for 13 years. he taught himself
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how to do it after studying film in the capital product, you put defects in the position. you make movements, you take a picture, you make it as a movement, you take a picture and so on to try to redo the original move you have in mind this 5 2nd clip took 2 hours to make his animations cover a wide range of themes, including this film featuring a 3 d super hero, ah, the other clips are simple loops made for fun, for instagram. ah, this animation highlights actor tom cruises stance from his moving mission impossible. ah, the artist earned his money with animated ads for big international companies. ah,
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victor tries to find a sense of humour in his everyday surroundings. this is where he gathers ideas. the challenge lies in bringing the ideas back to the studio and turning them into many works of art. the finished product isn't always what he expects. sometimes i didn't notice i did so move as i move. and after this time i kept surprising myself. and victor continues to surprise his fans as well with his unique and unusual classic form of animated photography. the. we're heading outdoors now into the german countryside, which for documentary filmmaker, yon huffed, is a world in and of itself. every pedal, every when you beat fascinates him now with a new book and a new film half is hoping to share his fascination,
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especially with their germans, who often travel outside their own country to experience nature, killer nature images from germany. the me, depending me finding something positive in the pen. demik is almost cynical job, but of course the fact that we all had to stay home means we now value the nature that surrounds our homes or villages and our towns even more. because we've spent more time here than usual. for instance, many germans have come to appreciate germany's north sea coast over the past year. thanks to title activity. it's one of the most bio diverse habitat in the world with about 10000 species of animals and plants. nature, filmmaker, young half has filmed the migratory birds that visit the mud flaps by the millions . says nature in germany has great diversity and a wide variety of habitats. his cinematic journey took him all over the country,
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which he bribes in his book. it's titled hi mutton, a tour using a german term, meaning home or homeland. a word not everyone feels comfortable with because it's been misused by far right nationalists. we finish off for most of us the word hi, my triggers, a pleasure and cozy feeling that we shouldn't just give it up to the wrong groups who appropriate it for themselves. when i use the word high and i want to draw in those who simply want to experience a positive feeling with their homeland and put them on leave live in northern germany, the epitome of homeland nature is the he's a natural paradise that's actually man made here everything is interconnected. the smallest animals benefit from the dozens of the big ones. the insect developed in their droppings, flexible,
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had it done beatle. ah, this flower has a sophisticated strategy due to a lack of nutrients. it doesn't produce nectar. instead, learning pollinators with just color and shape, the bumblebee falls for the deception. it doesn't find food, but helps the flour by taking a pollen with it. young, half as passionate about making nature felt. his protagonists are animals and plants that are native to germany. and he highlights just how special they are, by using time lapse and extreme slow motion techniques, he makes both slow and fast processes visible to the human eye. oh, it comes to, i'm still driven by a curiosity about nature and a child like joy. i don't need to go looking for rarities or peculiarities. i'm fascinated by the connections between the species. and you can observe that anywhere, even in the smallest package of nature, you can almost do it on a balcony with some of them by for his films, young husk sometimes sits in
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a chemist, hunters blind for days, but his grades are rare and beautiful images of those who knows that we have earth forms in our country, they grow over half a meter long and listens bruce forest floors in the black forest, eating spruce needles and big who's the biggest earth worm in europe. the allies who knows that we have square earth worms live under water on the bottom of streams and rivers and lakes from z. my, my favorite earthworm, as of course the green earth one we encountered is a clinic, a lake and film day. i need to talk but native nature which also feeds us is threatened. resources are limited, and the habitat for animals and plants is in danger. young huffed sees it as his task to draw attention to that. this is not even overshot the mark and we're only slowly realizing that because when we leave our houses, it's green smells good,
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flushed and beautiful. and you can hear birds singing because it showed them. and it's not so easy to see that there are significantly fewer birds. and the bird songs are more monotonous, because individuals from the orchestra, individual soloists from the bird world, are now missing from the middle of the field. that's the case with almost all species and it's something we need to be aware of. and we need to sort out our social order and get to a point where hopefully we live more sustainably in this country. rubia healthy. now we go here long. oh yon her work is a plea to not always go far afield to see nature quite spectacular. things happen in germany to even on a small scale. oh and we are expecting more spectacular things of the 70th berlin international film festival. kicking off
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this week. more on that and the next arts and culture for now, here's a little appetizer, some red carpet highlights from the last 70 years season. me ah, ah, the ah, in fear it's a turkey. they are increasingly subjected to sexual assault, domestic families. the countries withdraw from the stumble convention meant to protect women, sends a dangerous message. but now women fighting back the
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w into the conflict with tim sebastian. sort of yours was blazing human rights and democracy in the earth and it makes unpleasant we decided to question the leading official who's trying to protect me after which is commissioner for human rights as opposed to what is this suspect? conflict? 90 minutes on d. w. how does a virus spread? why do repellant? and when will all this 3 of the topics that we've covered in a weekly radio. if you would like any more information on the krona virus or any other and find topics,
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you should really check out our podcast. you can get it wherever you get your podcast. you can also find those w dot com slash science. are you ready to get all the places in europe are smashing all the records into a venture? just don't lose your grip. the treasure map for modern gold trotter cover some of your records breaking into and now also in book form that our goal the goal explaining skill, innovation and dedication is one game. we can't afford to lose the world. food program fights and go worldwide,
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helping people help themselves. my goal is 0 under the news . this is deed of the news life from berlin us president joe biden lands in the u. k. on an 8 day mission to rebuild trans atlantic ties off the trump era is 1st foreign trips and taking office will include a g 7 summit and me thing with the washing presidents also in the program. a russian course labels, alexa vaughn, these attic corrupt.

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