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tv   Founders Valley Africa  Deutsche Welle  February 21, 2023 4:30am-5:01am CET

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was settled for time to find out a willing conflict in ukraine. a european war and 10 voices. russia's war in ukraine. one year since the invasion began. we take a look back and into the future. in slow rain. in february on d, w the with me, every time i come back a waiver, emotion and also with disbelief because
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it's still shocking to know that people can decide to kill and kill so many people in a short time. mm huh. i these are my these are people that my parents thought died and you still feel it. and i'm just the next generation. imagining what their life was, michael, who they could have become me. i
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the bank, my boy genocide is continuous there. how prices there were those who still have why to me, pain. and then there's also the mental health aspect of things. oh, we still have some way to go to terms of healing, mind and kinds of terms of healing our our spirits. ah, my name's amanda calissa, i'm currently the president of an end geo. it's called who maker, which means breeze. i am rewan d's and i've lived in different countries. i'm
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hoping to learn a lot more about the health care system within my country to engage with people who come up with innovative ideas and see what people are, are up to for me, health means life. and this is interesting because in india run by health and life, i actually did the same way, which is always in my life. i mean everything between birth and death, you know, being able to fulfill your dreams. being able to fall in love, being able to see your children grow when it comes to health. the goal of everything that we do should be to make you easy to access every time for every one on time for every one. further, we go in the future, the more people are getting either richer or poor,
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and those who have the finances are what their mindset. probably they only take care about technology as a source of how to make more money or they carrying a bio, how to create ways for human beings that healthy in the film for the minimum of your engine cleaning in cleaning more when you could have them on a cleaning of us can go home on your window when you want to go for the new model. number one, not
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a problem. a why don't you when you think i found a new new i'm just returning your angle and j fully ah. model clean unit from day one on a fully function. when give me a porno put out will be for a a a
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a a can you give when you need a similar gram. i'm when you mind me single, a single one and we have to, you will yet to see t u t. i will know some will not come up with a thing. i'm gonna get out what their muscle, how you are for show us not to money. the query for critical point, even with
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a couple of needing get unique names and with i'm sure me shannon good to meet you. good to meet you. so how did zip line start to what was the idea behind them? behind the glen is how can you change logistics for the future to make sure that area logistics is an integrated component? how can you deliver anything to anyone anywhere starting right. talk products like them in the core products and then shortly integrate to more and more and more. so now this is flight operations, right? that's were the flight is launched from. that's where it's recovered from
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so basically once the package is prepared, you scan the queue or could you tell it where to go? and you associate the package to a john. now the drug test on that route. and then from the moment you launch to the moment it comes back, everything is what's on us. so you don't have to do anything with that to be one hospital of a few months, one to $5.00, a few months on and on. now we are doing $410.00 hospitals across the country with loveland. oh, you feel help and i love it. the
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minister of health of the 1st client or so was involved in the process to figure out what the best application that this john can help with. and blood distribution was the 1st that actually comes to mind why blood is one of those products that have a very short shelf life require special storage conditions and is actually it's not expensive. it's actually one of those rare products because to get blood a person has to donate blood this is low, you are one. and the 80 kilometer videos, you can see facilities are around to where we actually go. that's more thorough. so from here to there, 45 minutes. so whenever we really believe this, it becomes
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a lot of fun. there are areas where we can fly depending on what's happening, but the rest of the areas is really like see to fly by the hospital. tiro takes 45 minutes for us to get there from here long by car. that's 6 hours, 3 hours to get the products 3 hours to come back. so it's really revolutionary where we are quite far from the city in many still developing countries it's, it's quite complicated to get such, you know, surface medical survey, especially the emergency with . mm
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hm. 0 one. so i don't know who interval of to knock wasn't a long day one to hm. so copied, you know, from the 111, did i go i didn't get them again. so i think one should to actual options. they're not no, no. yeah. well, i'm a vehicle, i'm a pay a model, so 20 year buckling in the year before. when i do with madison who both of them are not active. i just wanna go back. i will tell you those in which are a made enough for you not to go so mr. to come over with change, get on in some work on a new new account. whichever client id is then again,
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children should really given up on life. but being that the medical system was there to save her to protect her, she was able to now come back to her 2 children. the way health insurance works in rwanda, as we have a system called, he chose to santee. so it's a universal health care system in which the poorest are entitled to free health care and the wealth you have to pay the highest premium of $8.00 per year. another thing that they have put into place is to decentralize health care. so for making sure that communities vulnerable communities that aren't able to have access to the hospitals or other forms of clinics, are able to have a services brought to that. ah, they also designed a sort of bio clinic in which
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a clinic has all the basic medication. it can go into the communities, making it much easier for people to be able to be vaccinated and to also be able to see the care that they need when, when you get a mentioned how, although there are sort of these advanced tools that are there to support, they still need more doctors this is why these forms of innovation are coming up just so that they could fill those gaps in those spaces. but what would be even better is to sleep more people have those careers take those jobs and go into those communities. a need to do to money is that i'll call you quota coyer. hans, the network might be hung by a hands interview. plenty. never gonna let us up with
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a lot of the quotation, the longest to close quiz they it on to claw behind a by behind that it was, i want to push, i'll go elected on 9. jenny 0 monetary, i didn't, you didn't believe it. and i was in the living room with jobs. what up on the job i don't live when i show out of why i would say comedies jobs, and demand that im yet galvan roku, manuel minute. hold on one will work with a thunder. can i need a old info to ship to a treadmill? london, a sons it, you know, what could i have in the side of the club? autism will not work. novel got a whole lot more for it. what would to so when you know from what gone gone agenda colanda to dr. mcgill question, which one? yeah. the other tell me to i tell you the for sure. was it with that which i'm with
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joy at us. somebody that i'm going to charge a for a patient in the area who makes less than $2.00 a day actually on day one they usually have to travel. and then on bay to that's when they are, for example, go to the hospital, they read they, they get that nosed and then they have to wait until the next day to go back home. there's a lot of cases for you to put will decide to not to get credit just because they can't afford it. in the u. s. we have about 100 radiologists by maybe on. but in rhonda we have about to wander ideologies, brand new young, and you can see the same in the health professionals in general that there is sky, city and inequity in terms of the expertise and resources that we have
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ah, and on our side run then and tell her a diligent company we allow hospitals who dont have radiologist access and regular g re monthly ah ah, okay. are you that you are looking at inside is regular just then we call it in the inside diagnostics platform. and this is a platform that we use both to correct them, indicate images, but also to diagnose patients. it means that hospital, we vowed radiology can actually let us give access to the hospital.
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and right the other day, we can fair more than just the hospital. he'd been but he can also amount of hours . so i mentioned that our invention eventually is to perhaps take radiologists, i don't, and have been in environment that are more high speed internet. we have more to acknowledge that allow them to make decisions. because what we want to do is to maximize the usage of the very 1st thing with them. in this case, there is a 5th out of there. and yet when i so my grand, my getting freak and diet and i was a little kid. we didn't even know what she had been added to be different than that actually reality. how much do i have a good health ah,
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ah, a das grove and rolanda. and i went to mit, which is one of the best, you know, technology schools in the u. s is all over the world. he was able to learn from incredible professors. he found his way into the tech world and something that was of fascination to him. this is my 1st venture that i've found dead then also that we've been challenged as we've been across the them being very and very new a lot of places we go, we had the 1st people to go there so that that can be challenging. but i like that where i can at least look back and actually be able to say, you know, and i, i did that and i build the technology i helped people absolutely should be proud of the fact that you are creating something entirely new and something that can be, you know, can save lives. so you so much for sharing and teaching me about this. and i
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hope to, you know, see more of what you do in the future. thank you so much and definitely very nice to me. very nice to meet you. i'm bye, thanks bye. oh i i know it felt like a weight just like the water he just underneath there and its weight over you feel physically exhausted. he feel scared. and that to me describes a mental health issues such as depression, anxiety. you feel like you're in the deep end and you always wondering, will i ever get out labor able to meet again?
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i did a lot of research on it, trying to understand. so transformational trauma in shorts is basically trauma that's been passed down through generation. you know it's trauma that has not been healed yet, and it can manifest itself in the fact that your parent has adapted to a unhealthy coping mechanism. now you learn how to deal with your suppression through that unhealthy coping mechanism. because you know, children learn from the parents. my father was a soldier during the genocide trying to liberate the country. my mom was helping in calling for help and, and helping with children as well. oh, furniture. so and after that they didn't have a healing process because they were coping it couldn't have an intimate relationship where they could have a relationship or not an intimate one because they didn't even know how to have relationship for themselves. a really
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good with me. so my name is amanda calissa and i am the president of who make our organization after i graduated from high school. right. i started to struggle with my mental health is i to decline over time? and it went to a place where i would suffer getting out of bed. i would suffer, going to brush my teeth. ah. and i didn't have a reason why i couldn't explain it because if people would ask me to ask me why, why are you depressed? you go to school and he was, why are you depressed? your parents can afford food on the table? are you depressed? right? like they're asking what and even me ask myself, why am i depressed lake? i have everything. but for some reason, i still cannot get out of bed,
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and i'm still struggling with whatever like the sounds and noises in your head. right to go to a point where it felt cloudy. like, you know, you feeling a cloud of your head and it's tough and you just can't go to that point. but i'm lucky because i had the space to seek help. but there's so many people who don't have that right there. so it was suffering and they don't even they don't have the space, they don't have the money. they don't have the time. the parents are not listening . right? and so that's what well, because about, so we are going to start with the 1st activity. look at yourself in that mirror and remember a time when you were young, when you were in high school and how that felt like, ah ah, so he said, okay, want to create a space where public school students can be able to access mental health care for free. we also notice that a lot of therapists didn't have interpersonal skills. we are going to give universe
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to students the ability to come in and have internship, you know, has interpersonal skills. and it can vary from whether they want to learn about coping mechanisms, whether they want to learn about individual therapy, whether they want to go into the community itself. so that's the ecosystem we're trying to create. the me me, there's a lot of people who are ready to step in and take a risk and build new ideas and find new solution. me. they also remind this, you know, there, remind us where we came from there. remind us how we need to attach any form of
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patient culture and active port that going down the line because we do want to maintain an identity still ah, me, wendy, you're creating ideas, making homegrown ideas. and it's by us for us. mm. ah, the jacoby genocide, their moral standards for remembrance. so it reminds us to basically keep building a better community, a healthier community. we went from
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a space where there were dead bodies on the streets. there was no infrastructure for health. there was no system built on how to handle or organize that to now having innovative ideas. ah, in terms of access, we're not where we need to be. but in terms of innovation, i can see that yes is huge, innovative ideas that's coming about ah, every generation has a mission, right? i price generation was to give us the safe home. and now our mission within our generation is now to heal those. whoops. we already went through the worst if we can come through that, we can tackle the rest bmw
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. ah, ah, with
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who? leaving islamic state leonor as life back in germany. she seemed to be a normal teenager. but at 15, leonora disappeared to join the islamic state in syria. for 6 years, her father fought for his daughter's life until she finally came home,
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a story about guilt and 2nd chance. in 15 minutes on d. w. e co. india asks, how do we reduce the ecological footprint a footway? when i bad things, which are christina, then i feel good myself. so yeah, that's, that's a win win for me. rising awareness is driving fluid sustainable production. this is it actually from the dial guided diode, and then you the ends up in the landfill. ah 90 minutes on d. w. o . a getting ahead. using tech,
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as our documentary series of founders, valley foliage africa. to meet the founders, empowering their continent through digital innovation. transformer work and health, and living conditions in their country, and inspiring the world with their ideas. founders valley africa. watch now, w documentary in war being fought him real time on social media. and david sent his instrument toward the people shaping public opinion. the key word here is the word fate. where are the right to the battle lines being drawn, the propaganda war for ukraine? russia's warning crane one year since the invasion began
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to take a look back and into the future in the slow rain in february on d w. ah, ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin and now the powerful earthquake hits south and turkey. the trim a heating the region already devastated by massive quakes 2 weeks ago. also coming up us president joe biden makes a surprise and historic visit to keith. keith stay.

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