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tv   Hotel- Legenden  Deutsche Welle  December 22, 2021 3:15pm-4:00pm CET

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again, plants off and here is where the logistics challenge and the supply chain problem hits actually home. how with those hits bikes? for example, there's just about a dozen here. normally, this shop hess, many, many, many boxes of those. his wife's ready for consumers to grab for christmas or any other time. now that's all they have. it's not just customers affect the temper for business is big and especially small across the country. it's a disaster for the panoramic, you would just go to a brand website and you would buy everything on a b to b, which is, which is the back end where retailers go to buy things and you would just order. i will now we take deposits for us, sometimes over a year out for a bicycle latest deeds find a majority of americans regard the so called supply chain crisis. as a big concern, there seems to be no easy fix. the underlying reason for the supply chain disruption and shortage is a multi dimensional and complex example. the trucking business,
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the american trucking industry says it is 80000 truckers, ford. not enough people want to become professional truck drivers anymore. entertainer st. tina started this trucking, driving academy just 3 years ago or mission training, a new generation of truckers and bringing real change to the industry. so when you talk to companies, especially larger companies who are trying to recruit a large volumes of drivers, they are recognizing that they recognizing that they were not with the flow of a people's demands. and so they're recognizing that work life balance is, are important and benefits are important. besides those new reform efforts, gina thinks the entire logistics industry must change. more fundamentally, sentiment echoed by many experts to what we became were used to or last 30 years is taking manufacturing across the globe and pinning everything under one node,
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one country, one continent. and we created this long string supply chain and we've really lost the true supply chain resiliency, which is to diversify your network and not put all your eggs in one basket. back to the los angeles and language ports processing around $20000000.00 containers a year now. and with more to come will be a major challenge. it will take the rethinking and reforming of every aspect of the global supply chain. when the abernathy hope family lost their son billing in a motorcycle accident 3 years ago, they decided to start a project to ease their pain and keep his memory alive. they created a new local currency billy trips to help homeless people. the bill chips can be used by the homeless to purchase food and hot drinks in the u. k. homelessness is on the rise, where charities estimating up to 8000 people don't have
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a roof over their heads. did abuse brigitte mos reports from the south western english city of bristol not simply to walk on by but to help others. that's one thing meghan abernathy hope learned from her brother billy. right. is there anything that i can get you? she often stops in bristol city center to talk to homeless people like laura. i think you need a bit of courage and a bit of humanity because it's just like having a chat with anybody else. and i think that fair and worry of approaching people is what stops that love and that transaction in the apartment for megan and her father, john, it's the way of channeling their love for billy to all those who needed. he was only 20 when he was killed in a motorcycle accident, but he was already concerned about those with no word to call home. billy said, why don't they just invent a token that you could buy and then exchange for food and drink. and
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i think he saw that that would reduce the barriers because people would know it was a safe, secure thing to do. and then people would also, you know, communicate more with homeless people. after billy died, john and megan decided to go ahead with a project creating tokens which can be exchanged and cafes for food and drink for the homeless. the church when you are code on a window sticker is while dozens of outlets in and around bristol, have joined the scheme using the tokens known as billy chips. they cost $2.00 pounds each enough for a hot drink with an awful. how changing the mesa, and i think it though something about the reassurance of how it will respond, which is good as well. the right of the over charity say the number of homeless people in england has doubled in recent years. many of them in bristol have come across megan and john and the billy chips. yeah,
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they're really good. what do you like about them getting free coffee? is absolutely vital to have a warm drink through the cold night. if you're on a visa. mm hm. phenom void, you know, even though the economy, those people will still give money. but john and megan hope the billy chips will reassure homeless people that they to are part of the community. we poured our love that was our grief. we could no longer pour into billions and we put it into the billy chip. we created a legacy. we've in a way immortalized a key values that billy had as a human being. his father and sister know that if billy was still alive, he would be proud of the scheme named after him.
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making a difference. so what will be the red pill or the blue pill? that was the choice facing keanu reeves more than 20 years ago and the ground breaking science fiction epic, the matrix while the film and it's 2 sequels, depicted a dystopian future in which humans are trapped by machines inside a sim related reality. well, now matrix for has hit cinema's, grease and a premier delayed several times by the pandemic. but does it measure up to the original thomas? fast forward 2 decades in the matrix revolutions homeward, harper, thomas anderson, aka neo, is living an ordinary life in san francisco. when events take your turn for the weird my, chris, we don't use our dinner and he finds himself mixed up again in a war between humanity and robots. the matrix resurrection sees keanu
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reeves and carrie, anne moss, reprise their roles assumed rebel lovers neo and trinity. i think it's everything that you can hope for in a matrix film and, and then some are, i think hopefully you can be inspiring, you know, help us always sort of a matrix films as a tool your income and that help to see the world direct to learn with chowsky is back at the helm of for the 4th outing of the science fiction action thriller. filming began in february 2020. but it was interrupted by the pandemic. that's that the release date back 7 months. but the wait was worth it. anticipation has reached fever pitch and the matrix resurrection is expected to be one of the most successful cinema leases of the year. after all these
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years, to be going back to where it all started. back to the matrix ah and weren't very lucky man, our very old master of the movies got roxborough. sh. got to see the matrix. so let's find out what his verdict is. scott, while we envy you on tell us, should we think that wrap pill and dive back into the matrix? yeah, i think that depends a bit on what your opinion is. of the 1st matrix films are particularly the, the very 1st film for 1999 because this new movie is a real callback to that film. and there's a huge number of easter eggs and serve nostalgic reminders of that movie. and this, this new film is actually always a repelling of that story. again, it's about this character neil play by keanu reeves, who's
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a programmer who is sort of in a dead end job and, and doesn't really know if he's living in the real world or if he's in a computer simulation and what the director, lina, what chowsky ad so to this is another meta level where she sort of criticizes the original matrix films and particularly the fans response to those regional film. so there's are several levels going on at once, which is kind of typical for a matrix, a movie. and that's all quite fun, i'm but then this film as well, like his predecessors, is a big action block buster. and that's where i feel the movie sort of falls down. because if you're with a member, the original matrix film, it was really groundbreaking. so visually groundbreaking, if your menu, remember those a bullet time sequences, i mean justice made cinema history and the action here a really doesn't take it any further. um i feel like lin, which house he is almost playing as her own cover band here. she just giving the fans her greatest hits and there's nothing really
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a new there on. i think it is great to see canneries and carry on loss back as neo and trinity. that's a lot of fun. but for me, this resurrections feels less like a 2nd coming of the matrix and more like a re animation of a film franchise that maybe we should have let die with dignity. oh, harsh, you're tough crowd to please sky tough crowd. the release was already delayed because of the pandemic several times. i understand well now cases again of course, as we've been reporting our searching again across the world ab, i mean will keanu reeves, i mean, he's able to fight off killer robots, but, you know, can this movie survive this new surge? that's a big question. i mean, we saw with the recent spider man film, which had huge box office that there our audience is willing to come out to theaters. if there's a film they really want to see, i'm but you're right on the chrome is surging. um, we've seen countries like the netherlands, like denmark shut down all their cinemas, more could follow in europe and maybe even the united states. so it could be the
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case that this matrix film arrives just as cinema's are starting to shut down again . but for the real matrix fan, there is hope because warner brothers is releasing this film simultaneously on it's a streaming service, hbo macs. so if you have access to each b o max, where you are, then you can pop that red pill from the comfort and safety of your own sofa at home . says very calm and canneries is always a good idea as got rats var. thank you so much. great. having you back on now with the pandemic restricting travel this christmas organizers in moscow, i have come up with an idea to bring an international flare to festivities. designers, musicians, and even ballet dancers have been commissioned to adorn christmas trees, with themes representing cities from around the world. the tree gallery is part of a christmas festival that is spread across $27.00 sites throughout the city, each representing seasonal traditions of different countries. the festival includes
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$21.00, mary, go rounds and 18 free ice skating. rink. gorgeous. you're wanting get every news coming up next in the w news, asia calling for help suicide prevention help lines and india. our busiest cove, it takes a toll on people's mental health and we'll see why endangered green turtles are back in droves to lee eggs on a beach in pakistan. those stories and a whole lot more coming up in just a moment. and you w news, asia for now. thank you so much for spending this part of your day with us. i'll catch up with you at the top of the ah, with
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ah ah, to own or not to own. what about a sharing economy instead?
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a change in thinking is changing the economy to create something new with the economics magazine, maybe in germany, in 60 minutes on d, w. b for listen carefully. don't know how with to the goal. ah, feel the magic discover the world around you. subscribe to d w documentary on youtube or hello guys. this is the 77 percent the platform for africa. you to be beat issues
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and share ideas. ah, you know, or this channel. we are not a great to have to delicate the topic because population is growing. and young people clearly have the solution that future belongs to you. 7 percent now, every weekend on d. w a did other news asia coming up to date, different them x impact on mental health headlines in india, i have seen a rise of distress callers seeking a way out. we look at how and los grief and financial hardship are taking an emotional toll and life on the beach. wide green sea turtles are returning in
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huge numbers to nest in pakistan. ah, i'm british manager, welcome to the other news asia. glad you could join us. india us. gov, it's been demick hides another silent pandemic suicide. recently released figure show a 10 percent increase in suicide last year. up experts assume that the economic impersonal stress is brought on by the pandemic, affected all sections of society, including business persons and women. but as we see in this report, a suicide doesn't have to be the answer. there is help available. 25 years ago, i do my new truck or founded a center for a problem really addressed in indian society. a crisis intervention center to make,
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to operate a health line for the depressed and society over the years. the center has helped countless people by providing them emotional support at the time when we felt we had no option left, but to take their lives to date. well, who dr taking calls in the center alone? do people talk to us and we listen to them in a non government and we don't agree or disagree the going to in their life. we have their feelings, we don't yet gruesome, but who share their feelings. hello to us as the co, 19 pandemic has had a huge impact on people's mental health. and that the number of distress cause they receive has almost doubled since the beginning of the crisis. in his experience, emotional and financial troubles are the 2 biggest reasons behind suicidal thoughts of the corners. according to the n, c i b, or the national crime records bureau data, there has been a sharp rise in the number of debts by suicide in the country in the year 2020.
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while daily wage laborers made up the largest share of the total number of suicide, there has been a significant jump in the debt by suicide among the business people as well. last years loved down to club, the spread of forward lead to any konami and humanitarian prices. small businessmen and vendors had to shock shore, and many workers lost their employment. triggering a mass exodus of migrant laborers back to their towns and villages. economists santos marrow tra said the su sites have increased mostly among those who are the poorest, who lost their jobs and savings during the pandemic. that is entirely due to economic distress, which has caused mental stress, family dentures. and my suspicion is that you're going to see a repeat of this data in 2021 marrow tra, says unemployment has only increased, which will lead to a worsening of poverty. with no end to the pandemic in site, my thoughts are also believes that it will take time for the situation to improve.
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people have gone to a lot of things like that. loss of job, loss of the dis and doug goody faker. liam gone through it is going to meet him back, did on jeremiah for a slightly longer day, because we're not coming and daily out of it. but no matter how emotionally drained the feel, my hotel believes everybody deep down has the desire to live grandview. that's why they reach out to the crisis center. and he and his fellow warranty ers are here to help you want to take some time. i can hold on and join me now for morris public health policy researcher and mentor of the mental health in a non profit sunroof, on and on a month how readily is help available for people in india who have suicidal thoughts or are undergoing depression. thank you for having me. so you know, as you're in a mental health is huge,
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be under so daily and not just in india, but many other parts of the world as well. and the reason for that is that it is usually not recognized but absent the same as physical health. so there are a lot of people, but absolutely inside the depression of a serious mental this orders were not diagnosed early enough, not to be early enough. and that becomes an issue because it's very important in mental health, and especially for those who might be having suicidal thoughts for them to be able to be identified for them to get can't early and then you've got to get to a specialist if the plan. so that becomes an issue and you don't have adequately trained resources. right now we have a shortage of psychologists like at us that is clearly not enough mental professional sort of country of india size and making sure that we have no way to model such as setting where you train franklin heads workers so that they can provide plus level care and paper those patients will need for the specialist care
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to psychiatric psych on just and that is a mechanism which is still in the book. there's been some progress, but a lot of needing to be done. you think the impact that the corporate ben demick has taken on people's mental health in india, especially that is going to give a phillip to this process to try and train the people that need to be trained. so that frontline, mental health care can be provided to people who need it. your run hopes that they've been a clear understanding based on the experience of the last, almost 2 years of dealing with the band to make that many hope needs to be center stage in our responses and in our health system. and that will mean that we need more resources, we need more funding, we need more trained professionals, and we need more recognition of mental as being an important component for larger health despite we also recognize that mental locally made stigmatized. you know, people are not as comfortable for example, of talking about their own struggles with mental health as they might if they were
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diabetic on high but in, on with any other chronic disease. so i think we also need to be stigmatized the field so that more and more people feel comfortable reaching out for help. early enough, i did want to talk to you about the stigma and i'm glad to know where that you've brought this up. i mean, in india, particularly in the society that we have in india, do you think people even realize what signs to watch out for? do people even realize that they are depressed or is it just dismissed as a temporary problem that they need to deal with? yeah, i don't think there is enough recognition of signs and symptoms of someone dealing with a mental issue. it is usually an apps dismissed as he was actually saying. this is also because most franklin health professionals also not aware of what to look out for in the night in defining someone who's come to them as perhaps having a mental element on needing help. so if we make sure that more people recognize
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that both on the provider side as well as there is a larger acceptance of mental health as being an important component of ones will be and people should feel free and comfortable and reaching out early enough. so i think that require us to work make, make sure that we the stigmatize mental health and also ensure that more and more providers can identify individuals early enough screen for depression, anxiety provide support, and then therefore those will need for the support to higher level of professions and you've been looking at the issue of mental health in india during the panoramic and we were talking about it in the summer as well during the height of india. second wave. would you say that the pandemic has left mental health scholars? i think perhaps never healed for some families, but i certainly cause a lot of trauma. i mean there's a lot of belief that is perhaps a lot of things id even now because you know, they're concerned about the future. we have new radians, et cetera. so that is an ongoing you know,
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set up stressors which can take mental health issues. certain people, of course, and families support a lot, especially during the 2nd we have, they have a lot of losses, perhaps not closer. so those will have, you know, reminders and normally don't professions, but hopefully that will not be permanent. you know, i think it's important any better for us to reach out to these families and provide care to them and hopefully that can provide them support as is most needed at this point of time. and i will leave it there for the timing, but thank you so much for joining us today. and if you're suffering from say, this emotional strain or so we sidle thoughts, you should not hesitate to seek professional help. no matter where you lead, you can find information at the friend as worldwide at the web address on your screen right now. and in addition to the mental health impact of the vendor makes a new barrier and has brought with it fresh challenges. yeah, we take
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a quick look at the latest reactions in asia to the spread of the omicron very and when they say, i think we have temporarily suspended ticket sales for their travel lane scheme under the program. both countries allowed florentine free entry for fully vaccinated travelers in another blow to it's better tourism industry. thailand has re imposed a mandatory quarantine for visitors and japan has found its 1st suspected case of community transmitted, omicron, ah, the government in pandemic continues into its secondary, many of us are facing new restrictions. it's hard to feel positive about any of that. but there are some positives to be found at this time. like on the beaches of karachi in southern park is done locked down. the movement restrictions brought on by the pandemic have given the endangered green turtle the beast and com. if needed, to lay its eggs in the breeding season. a pregnancy turtle
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returning to her birth place. and it didn't take her long to find a perfect spot to lay eggs. as the pandemic stroke, thousands of green turtles like her have been able to reclaim to one's polluted beaches. in karachi, what has been human beings nightmare turns out to be a blessing for wild life. just now the coven lockdown has ended. the turtle still got an ample lea opportunity during this period. we've had a large number of turtles coming here on the gothic bank of it. most turtles come on land at night to lay their eggs before dragons themselves back to the ocean. conservationists will then quickly dig out the eggs some times more than a 100 at once to keep them away from predators. was that busy? and then i take the eggs out of the ditch and bury them in the hatchery. or at that
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time, a prayer goes out of my heart. o allah, let all these eggs hatch in, 40 to 45 days, all of them. so i can release them in the water valley than me. some edge of vinegar, liver, but a man finally, mitchell. and some of the baby turtles are ready. the n g o is giving them so much care as years of human activities such as pollution and bi, catch, have destroyed to reptiles, habitats. coven 19 has given the endangered species a little relief. the conservationists are glad to see them thrive again. whenever, from an agency that in their eagerness to reach the vast ocean out there, these tiny little feet are moving forward, impatient to touch the vast waters ahead of them. just look at the tiny footsteps and their happiness at seeing the see. here you can see how life moves on that of
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life revealed for setting up a life patching out in unison. baby turtles find their way to the ocean by the reflections of light on the water. and once they succeed, though, hide and grow for years until the day comes where some of them return as mothers to be and that's it for today. there's more from the region on our website, d, w dot com, forward slash asia. and as ever, you can also follow us on twitter and facebook. read to you at the same time for to morrow, over the fight against the corona virus pandemic. how has the rate of infection been developing? what does the latest research say? information and context? the corona virus off day, because 19 special next on
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d w. are you ready to get all these places in europe are smashing. all the records have been too bold adventure. just don't lose your grip. use the treasure map for modern globetrotters. discover some of your groups wykard, breaking sites on google maps to and now also in book form ah ah, the pandemic has been hard on all of us in different ways. but some experts say it's children who've suffered most an important phase in their lives and they've learned how to interact socially has been interrupted. and parts of the world,
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kids have spent months doing lessons in front of a computer and developing countries. many children have missed months of school altogether. how will the generation of children who grew up in the pandemic hope at the future? will it teach them resilience or weak in their development? welcome to your coven 19 special. i'm chelsea delaney in berlin, and many countries. children are now able to receive coven 19 vaccinations. health experts said that's a crucial step to protecting children and their families, as well as keeping schools open. here in germany, children ages 5 to 11 have been eligible for jobs for just over a week. we had a look at how things are going here in berlin. i was with you. yeah, i was lucky. the 9 year old go was one of the 1st children under 12 to get a cove at 19 job here at a vaccination center in building
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a union knows why she's come my allot, i in fact loud. well, because it chases away corona and i think it's just good the eula line. please. julia was a premature baby born 3 months early and very, very often here were in the hospital with pneumonia. oh, she had to be on a ventilator. and we don't want to experience that again. we have no meta, which virus in north nissan. i'm a liam, a guy mcveigh can be or just like julia all children from the age of 5 and are able to get vaccinated in germany and vaccination lines set up, especially for children. they receive a lower dose than the regular one of the many parents have been waiting for this stamp given the high cove at 19 cases, among 5 to 11 year olds across germany. we
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hadn't, we have the highest rate in this age group and berlin. it's between 70800 and other german states. it's much higher and that is a great risk of infection taken and the cause of the disease among children is not always mild. hello for life and especially occasions i've been found to make getting the jap more attractive for kids. here in berlin's nature museum, children get a free ticket to see the dinosaurs after being vaccinated by including younger kids, politicians hope to finally get out of the pandemic. he, maggie, in the more vaccinated people we have in germany, the better we will be able to fight the cove at 19 pandemic that applies to all generations and vaccinated children also offer protection for their family at home . it done so how's a beaten julia and her parents chose the jam because it makes them feel safer. the government hopes that many other families will now follow suit.
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now for more, unless i'm joined by york, dutch from the german society of pediatrics and adolescent medicine. so york, after being in this pandemic for almost 2 years, how are our kids coping well actually, at the very moment, they are doing a little better because the school has been, has been, has not been on and off as it used to be at the beginning of the year, but there was a certain degree of persistence of interrupted possibility to meet other children and to his teachings. perience. so we actually know from the enquiries doing better than they did the beginning of the year. so there is some stability now. but how has the pandemic hit different age groups differently throughout these past 2 years? well, there are certain things that have to be put into consideration of 1st of all,
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lessons. they are very keen on getting in touch with adolescence in the age group. where is younger kids? they have more contact to their family environment certainly. and they can more easily be stabilized by, by the emily's but by the parents. so it's actually in particular the lessons that we are concerned about. and another, the big concern is those family that hadn't got all the means of supporting their church. that for instance, don't have access to, to, to, to why fi, they don't have access to, to laptops and everything you need for well, for getting in touch apart from, from meeting each other. so. so it's not only met of age, but it's also
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a matter of access to technique. you mentioned that there, but there has obviously been a lot of concern about the impact mrs. having on children's mental health. what should parents or adults be looking out for in their kids? while there are certain things that we have learned so far to depend on the one hand, they should have been keeping on the eating be off their church and they are getting more obese. not eating too much and they moving to little or is the opposite. then on the other side, they have to take care of their children, not getting depressed, not not being said throughout the day or not losing their degree of activity. and finally, they have status and need to,
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to take care that children really still are in touch with the environment that they ask questions that they well stimulate. they approve that they even criticize their parents as long as they do this. this is time when they, when they stop talking and when they stop getting in touch with the environment, one has to worry about that. so we're at a point now where children are eligible for vaccines in some countries. do you see that as a game changer? eyes possibly not a game changer, but it's extremely good news, especially for the goal that we saw in the in the movie that you just head you who have risk factors for a more sci fi cost of covert $19.00 infections. and for those children, it's extreme. the good news, as well as for children that have that have relatives,
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that families, that previous potent for, for most of your cost bases, then again and other children. parents may be quite convinced that the nation is the right thing to do. and we, we absolutely stimulate those parents to have children next united. but at the same time, we don't argue with parents. i'm not sure about the actual state of that explanation whether they should vaccine it or not. i had to make it or not because they are not yet sure about the side effects. and we don't want to. we don't want to stigmatize these parents either. so it's up to the parents. the parents should try to keep as well informed as possible by what they can read, but also talk to the pediatrician, to their family doctors, to get more information and to draw a decision. and at the end of the day,
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it's most important not to stick with parents that don't don't mix and 8 and need the terms that the fight for the information. that is you're in touch from the german society of pediatrics and adolescent medicine. thank you so much. thank you very much for the interview, sir. here's a viewer question for our science correspondent derek williams. oh, can you tell us more about the effects of lung cove? it in kids? 0, $1.00 of the few upsides, if you will, sorry, covey to is that at least during the active infection, children are largely spared serious outcomes, like hospitalization and death. but that doesn't mean that some of them won't eventually pay a price, estimates for what percentage of children suffer symptoms associated with long
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covered in the weeks and the months following an infection. they're kind of all over the place, but most researchers in the field seem to agree now that it's significant, although recent data indicates, thankfully, it might not be as common as we once thought. some early research postulated that post cove and sentence might have fact up to half of all the kids who got that estimate has dropped considerably with a larger recent study. roughly finding more like one and 7 kids are still reporting symptoms. and over 3 months after a covert infection, just like an adults, those long coded symptoms have also been very wide ranging. and kids of the most serious reported a fact is called multi system inflammatory syndrome in children or m,
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i. s c o which can lead to oregon failure. it's fortunately, pretty rare. there have only been around 5 and a half 1000 cases of it reported in the us so far. for instance, more common effects are some times but not always similar to those reported by adults like fatigue or labored breathing or head aids or changes to the sense of smell and taste. neurological symptoms like brain, fog, or, or difficulties concentrating are also widely reported. some studies show that vaccines appear to help cut the risk in an adult of developing long covered if they experience a break infection, maybe by as much as half, but there isn't enough data yet on whether they also reduce the risk of it. in
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younger kids, we just haven't been vaccinating them long enough to know and finally, pakistan's locked down may have been tough on humans, but it's been a great opportunity for sea turtles to breed. they used to lock down to return to their birth places and huge numbers reclaiming the once polluted. but now serene karachi beaches to lay their eggs, their numbers jump from around 8002019215000 last year. thanks for watching new ah, with
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203 or not to own. what about a sharing economy instead? a change in thinking is changing the economy to create something new
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the economics magazine, labor in germany in 30 minutes on d. w. ah. she's up to date. don't miss our highlights. the d w program online, d w dot com highlights with
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we're all good, the good to go beyond the obvious well, as we take on the world 8 hours, i do all this weird all about the stories that matter to you. whatever it takes, 5 policeman a deal we are, your is actually on fire made for mines sometimes a seed is all you need to allowed big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning packs like global ideas. we will show you how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world
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