tv Documentary RT April 29, 2020 12:30pm-1:31pm EDT
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all sensible. times. when you have been listening battle is over the many. believe that our housing profit of. it is taken initiated. at last we're getting a jump ball flight live. in those particular one i'll be your wife pounding on. this is i think represents the 100 housing blowing deal 9. 100 pound bomb. just built robot is one way to.
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about cause and effect is priorities if nobody's making money on it i eat it's not a commodity then it has no value and it shouldn't it isn't a priority of the federal government so housing that was just from about people that was not a commodity that was just a bad living up to the responsibilities of the federal government to ensure people have a clean d.c. from place to live that's not important anymore that's not i value. your term for walker bush william jefferson clinton who saw the water bush dishonest live ragusa and obama do solemnly swear i told john truong do you solemnly swear. the world would make sense with the work of the general wages of living standards of working class and poor people the city constant or declined since the late seventy's. the numbers of people who need housing and grow because
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of their growth in the population the supply is not known to the to nearly the same extent so somebody is going to get squeezed out and some of the most people the momentum people will go the country have been squeezed. so now there's a new public housing so the shelter system is like a public housing so because housing is not treated as even the writer of the title meant which it should be the country is both is this one. and order for us to get. and be right back to society i
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think it's incumbent upon office to try to resolve this issue that's gone on far too long it's a fundamental right by having food and finish your i.q. for anybody care to. take a look at the universal declaration of human rights. as the peoples of the united nations have in the charter reaffirmed their faith in fundamental human rights in the dignity and worth of the human person and in equal rights. to see education that just and. so it seems to. me and it's one. it's considered.
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just general right actually the u.s. doesn't accept the universal declaration of its own success because it rejects most. of that there are 3 parts of this civic and political right. there's a social and economic. and there's cultural. and they're all are. the u.s. doesn't just dismiss is the cultural community in the rejects you know. ringback politicians have concluded that there is no answer because the answer requires resources i don't believe that's true i think that housing is the answer to homelessness that you have to have supportive housing yet we're not willing to prioritize that as siding and the crazy thing is that we're paying for it anyway when in jail a homeless person is after cisco acosta. $40.00
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a night that's what it costs and some. fairly nice hotels outside of the city yet we insist on believing that criminalization of all this this is the answer that if we quote nice people who are being homeless and being mentally ill that they're going to cure themselves and be off the streets when in fact it just becomes a cycle. 30 down here it. seems. like every major issue of the subway. is the best. you can get.
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you know. i have a place to stay stay with me sober great. or i'm sure it. doesn't stand next door moans and cheer makes home. just so. he can go to the city and the county and get a map. shows all of us all over the you know county. and there's over 400 miles below the law they go all the way down the freeway and they that there's that if nothing goes on tropicana somewhere. sure they can. you know this is this is someone who. is very warm very rude you're sure
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you know the music going to be known this was using the issue. on the tunnels in las vegas in tears. because. she. say. my name is guy and we were. around 10 years ago and strays and she was in the same situation and she didn't know what to do and that's and then. i disaster she would. say when's a best place. to stay in home hotel in brighton and he left me to me go across the street and it's and we came back he was gone so i was strange he was bought by cosmo. just you behind the scenes to read.
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now is take years ago. you know i haven't drank in over 30 years. that we've had 5 months we've had you know. i make for $6.00 to $7.00 almost so security and. just not enough to say. we do better in the summertime because it gets too hot and get you all. the good side me everything a really good bad when going to charge top dollars. they fly aside just a few dollars and. they gives me you know. he had all of us just a girl. she had a big girl you know. just had a. press you know. and i say
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your city so what i. feel closest. just let me see if i can see. i was on the floor some things in my basket and you know trying praying. i. mean once. it's time for us to die worms i was having chilling fever i didn't have any sense of say so smell from the most you know from my world would you. recently she goes on the old days used to say. that one time when he was on the rounds of the reasons. i have heard and. push myself how close are they for me in the 5 days i'm going to. go.
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but i found myself in a home state and you know my home this is is not just the building i'm home is within my body because i don't know am i making the right choices and i don't know right i don't know it's always the enemies is asking us and they swear i need to be still and be alright with claim i'm a slave. no i'm not out there doing things it's going to cost me a model that you know and my dogs they're all calling you one of john and my axe murderer whatever. i want you have a chance if. you want to 1st i was actually attacked by a guy from behind and then he hit me in the face and inching choked me around my neck or survivorman. everything then december 13th i was hit in the head with a rock for me hind leg i actually caught that guy couple would later to we i actually in the film into a suit or do that in my book. i was going to his father was
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a little bit come back and shut off on me because i was laying out here by the hour . it's not everybody know it in in the year and it's it's more dangerous for women the world is more dangerous for women in that. they get lost in the in their. overall tapestry of armistice i mean everybody's heart breaks for their children 1st of all and rightly so then there is the veteran then there is the mentally ill. you were there is a specific population only women that are having there is specific needs that are we going to do enough so you know we made it a priority and by that we pushed through in it any beds available to them or to listen to a year ago there were hardly any beds available for them and it's an unsafe
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place for women to. tell all our daughters to not walk in the streets or at night in a dark neighborhood that's the sort of imagine that you have no work to go. or know what i had when something. or were. were. in the us is being told in the quantity of a good way to figure out which song to beat your on is with your company planes on h.b.o. to. me shit like bush workers calling for a much higher minimum wage workers at mcdonald's wendy's domino's pizza and more will want not the job. you really think the federal minimum wage is one created $938.00 under the fair labor standards act ok which was in response to
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a 1000000 people wandering our nation looking for jobs it was the same and after the depression congress got together and started to say well we should set a standard that ensures that if somebody puts in their 40 hours in a week they can afford the basics so. it makes sense and makes sense to me it makes sense to you so we take that in a brace that good the problem is they never index to do anything so they just keep picking this number out of the year and those has of congress fight over debate over it and go do that and that and it and it back and forth and so. you know maybe get raised a dollar maybe it's $0.75 whatever so we sort of started this problem backwards you know we now have $3500000.00 people experiencing homelessness in this nation and what we could tell that house the homeless. there's tremendous efforts to try and deal with the fallout you know. some more successful than others some different
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approaches like housing 1st get off the streets and then start dealing with them you know it's one we believes in that's an organization says 1989 so you know that's approach we are. and i used to look at this population as. who they are the breakdown the better and. recently released people out of the penal system single women single women with children substance abusers alcoholics. really really all the different factions but now we stood back and looked at the folly of that approach and realize that in order to really deal with it in this society which is couples we view them as. this whole this group that falls 'd into 2 factions those who can work and those who
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can't work so we walk away with this way it's $77.00 in the quarter and 'd but i i live in america and anybody who's lived in america has traveled anybody who's traveled is travel to someplace what's more expensive than where they came from and they travel someplace with less expensive right now the government uses the concept of one size fits all. so they keep doing it's like 70 court for everybody so whether you lose in washington d.c. or whether you live in a harley engine texas they're going to set it 7 decor right now there's talk of raising it to $10.00 an hour well the day that adds pass to $10.00 an hour that's the president is promoting for. something to get one minimum wage homeless worker off the streets of washington d.c. at the same time that $10.00 an hour wage is going to hurt small business and will america and make no mistake most of america is rule they're trying to push
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you will lose your money. so here the road home we have a family show for women shelter in them and shelter so one of the big fears that our families have when they come down from the shelter is that all of us are. child and family services is going to be involved in their getting their kids away i mean work very closely with. the c.p.s. . we work very hard to reassure families that that that's not how it works their families are also subject to the whims of whether it's economic instability or family instability or health problems. family is run out of resources and they're not able to stay in their apartment anymore or stay with family or stay with friends or stay the hotel i mean. a lot of times by the time the families that walk through those doors they've exhausted all of those resources. how are you
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getting so wet child. yes so we have this huge playground there is. you know as a ramp for. all of the kids the stuff like that and still are still. they have this grassy area over here we try to keep the kids away from the gate just because of the semen on because this is the men's side of the shelter we are slide in the playground for the kids and stuff like that. i've been on and off homelessness since having for the 1st 6 months of his life were stable and then i lost my job which intel lost my burman. but for you know for after that 6 months we did pretty well you know we stayed with friends here and there we stayed with family but it sank i kind of started to feel like i was a burden these people you know because then they have to deal with my kid having his little fits in this that. you know i got another job and i
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was paying for hotel rooms you know 2 weeks out of each page i can i just got really expensive really pricey so you can hear just like all right well i'm going to keep doing it i'm going to do it i got to get up i got to work. with having a kid a child with special abilities you kind of. you don't really get much. expression when you're a single parent you don't at all you're constantly on the go on doing this doing that picking up this picking up that it's. so you resort to of course a drug that makes you stay weak. there isn't that surprisingly i got off it by myself i didn't go to rehab or anything i just kind of kicked it i've been clean for 3 months. and we've been hearing. there are about 150 beds in this large storm area. for families who have small children it will be like if it's a single mom in
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a small one or 2 year old will share one of these small little bunks. and each family is allowed one of these totes per person so this has to be able to fit basically all of your earthly belongings in it. and that's not a lot of space as you can tell. it's tough for families. and one of the great frustrations here in salt lake is that there's a substantial lack of affordable housing and so that's one of the barriers that clients have is finding a place that they can continue to afford after our assistance ends clients a lot of times face other barriers to getting housing whether it's on their criminal background or they have evictions from prior apartments and so it can
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sometimes be really difficult for clients to find a place to live that will accept them with their background or with the funding from the road home. to help them get out of the rut that they're him. use to do most of this sort of imagery push the sneakers have succumbed to mean who keep a bird. migration. shit out to the extent just like it was going to do it it was frightening. you're definitely walking into a word don't you know we no longer know what we're walking into. march you know what she needs to break she admitted.
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that he is a nerd. who shakes but also whole sense of self. financial while i don't buy a i prize on a teacher's. face was almost friday as of last night my ex from the future trucker watched kaiser. time after time called parisian to repeat the same mantra sustainability it's very important to accelerate transitions to sustainable transport sustainability stay number man not the more equitable and sustainable well. they claim their production is completely harmless hollow dissolute. because the models and got it into something companies want us to feel good about buying their products while the damage is being done far away and this is something all this must be done even and i mean
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look. this is the move and you mustn't be doing to me when i'm stung seemed to be best understood to going in. welcome our viewers from around the world live from central london this is our to u.k. . the british government finally includes home deaths in its coronavirus death toll which is no reason to over $26.00. u.k. cabinet office minister hints that lockdown measures could be eased on online and such as those off the west coast of scotland ahead of the rest of the u.k. despite the government refusing to publish an official exit strategy. pandemic
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could result in almost $18000.00 extra deaths from cancer in england due to delays in douglas's and treatment that's a former adviser and cancer specialist professor carol support tells us that the virus has simply overwhelmed the system. it's like. the water flows up the floor of the valley and gushes down we can't cope with all those patients we're going to have to work related to the evening and if we can surround the place to do it. and also the antibody tests have been seen as the puff out of the knockdown but scientists warn that the government must understand how they work a more limitations on it from a professor of. roan of our recent death toll has passed $26000.00 to taking care of fatalities into
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consideration but claims it is not a spike in the number of deaths says one cabinet minister says the lockdown could be eased on the nation's islands ahead of the rest of the u.k. despite the foreign secretary saying they would wait for scientific advice before publishing an exit strategy or take a shot it was dusty is here in the studio with all the latest so shut it tell us about the increase in the number of coronavirus deaths well there's no doubt about it that until now there has been. plenty of mismatches and discrepancies when it comes to the official death toll and that's because the government's figures until now as i say were only based on deaths inside of hospitals and therefore missing from their official statistics care home deaths that's because the government was using a different methodology of collating the statistics but now the government is saying it will include the care home deaths as well and when you add the number of caring deaths to the government's hospital deaths we're looking at well over 26000 now that is a huge increase from the government's figures just yesterday but dominic rob the
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man standing in for boris johnson who himself is not in action because his fiance has just given birth dominic rob standing in his place is denying that this number is a massive search from today we're moving to improve daily reporting systems the deaths so that deaths in all settings are included wherever the individual has tested positive for coated 19 rather than just those in hospitals and those figures show that up to yesterday on the new measure which we have recorded an additional $3811.00 deaths in total and i think it's just important to say that those additional deaths were spread over the period from the 2nd of march the 28th of april so they don't represent a sudden surge in the number of deaths. so as you can see on your screen in the last 24 hour period there's been a jump in the united kingdom of the daily death figure which came to $765.00 now
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that is indeed an increase from yesterday and showed it what about easing those look at the measures well today in prime minister's questions they believe the circus starmer was grilling the government over the lock down exit strategy rob rob remained quite tight lipped in or of this not really wanting to give too much away saying he is waiting the government is waiting for the advice from sage now that is the advisory board that's a group of various different scientists leading in their fields all looking at the statistics and the modeling of the lockdown strategy while they're really looking at is about how and what could be done to reduce the reproduction rate that's all about the transmission of the disease keeping that stable is the main aim and we know that the government's policy has always been that by the medical and science professionals that warned that if you relax the measures too much too soon you could see a resurgence in the virus so dominic rob really rich writing today that the lockdown measures will stay in place another cabinet minister was slightly more
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frank when it came to explaining things when it comes to the lockdown measures and a committee meeting earlier today michael gove talked about potentially lifting up down measures further afield in the island across the united kingdom even though the government would prefer to do it as one nation collectively. it is often the case that. because of where our politics takes place and because of the where our media are that we sometimes have london centric policy thinking one area where we may be able to explore. having the law and ease more would be it only when communities and bob see the m.p. if they are white who suggest that we made a trial context tracing on the isle of wight before it's rolled out nationwide while michael kay i thought was also grilled on how the government could have been better prepared to deal with
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a pandemic such as this one which forced him to admit that he only just read a government report called oppression sickness just last week now that report was published way back in 26 stephen that looks at how the government could cope with a pandemic such as this one the purpose of exercise cygnus was to model a scenario for of the pandemic and it was conducted in 2016 with a different prime minister that promised an authorised as i mentioned national security council to look at the work that was required and it was because of that we were able to introduce the coronavirus legislation because of that we had a hand demick stuck because of that and some other steps were taken by the h.s. when did you read it. i read it last week was it not given to you perhaps it's earlier on in your role might sort of open to receive it perhaps in in january some of the product that flowed from that report i have
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a dread beforehand yes. so the government really facing dynamics in all direction on the one hand all eyes are on them to see that they could have been better prepared to deal with the pandemic on the other hand there are calls to relax these lockdown meshes but all the while at the heart of our government's policy is not to see a 2nd wave of this virus shadier thanks very much indeed for the us well the president of public health section of the rules society of medicine doctor gave scully told me that governments must be more transparent on the advice it receives. every time a difficult question is asked of a government minister they say they're following with scientific advice and yet we're not allowed to know who those advisors are or bought out of by says it and it keeps going round in circles all the time i think what we do know is that the advice they're getting is not public health advice and it appears from the list of
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expertise that the secretary of state provided to the commons science committee or us or patrick vallance provided to the commons science committee give a long list of expertise but not public health and this is if it is anything is a public health crisis right ok but despite that if all this is done in the open can impact on the quality of the advice given that it can't be given. openly and transparently that some of this really has to be done behind closed doors i think there is sometimes when discussions have to take place between the advisors but if there are competing issues that they need to sort out they should certainly be able to do that but as we know this committee is not a met behind closed doors it's got 2 of the dining straight political operatives have been attending and it has a wide range of people from other government dejan says on the death toll we are
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going to shift from hospitals towards care homes where the situation of course can only get worse and how do you see this now unfolding oh it's a terrible tragedy and so many lives are being lost and i think back to. many of the things that are being said look at the last. 8 to 10 weeks about the importance of shielding your members shielding the elderly and vulnerable and in cocooning was mentioned that none of that appears to have happened and we are not of the got this torrent of deaths in care homes and nursing homes and and. real concerns about the health of the workers as well and i think there must also be concern about care workers in the community who are going from house to house provides help to elderly and vulnerable people. the coronavirus pandemic could cause a launching crease in deaths from cancer as patients avoid tests and hospitals
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delayed treatments research by university college london earned the health data research up for cancer so that almost 18000 extra deaths from cancer could occur in england within a year due to the pandemic could also lead to at least 20 percent more deaths in nearly dark those patients over the next 12 months and also 5 to 76 percent fall in urgent cancer referrals from g.p.'s and a 60 percent decrease in chemotherapy attendances compared to preach virus levels on that's as cancer expert and former doubly h.-o. advisor professor carol sykora says that britain should start lifting the lockdown from this coming monday he says schools pubs and bars should be opened by the end of may if there is no spike in the number of cases the government has not yet published an exit plan despite demands from the opposition but that was joined by the man himself former director of the w.h.o. cancer program and professor of medicine at the university buckingham carol sykora and he told me that we do need to lift the lockdown to concentrate on other
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diseases. it's like a dam you up in the dam the water flows out and floods the valley and it gushes down and we can't cope with all those patients we're going to have to work related to the evening and weekends around the place to do it involve the private sector there are all sorts of ways of of getting round it but it's got to be done quickly the calculation of university college this morning it's about right that's contingent on maybe just a 6 week delay if it was a 6 month delay let's say there's a the virus just doesn't go away for a long period of time we have to keep hospitals working just on cue bid we're going to get stuck again on a 6 month delay could cause $50000.00 deaths from cancer so we have to try and get moving and can you reassure people that it is safe because the government says that treatments can start up again there are indeed adverts calling on people to see their doctor if they suspect anything is wrong. absolutely it is safe and now we've
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got the testing ramped up you know it's going to be difficult for our health ministry who promise 100000 tests by tomorrow the end of april if it doesn't reach that number that's not that the absolute number doesn't matter it's sustainable testing to identify those that are coded positive and should have put in isolation before they go for treatment those who are negative go into a cancer treatment for surgery and the other cancer treatments we have available people shouldn't be put off from going to hospital now you have one legions of fans on twitter for presenting the coronavirus data in a more positive play but of course the daily death rate is still high and was certainly not out of the woods why are you giving that level of optimism the death rate is artificially you know it's not really as quite as bad as it seems 1st of all every day sadly in britain 1700 people die so it's the difference through
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those that would have died anyway and those that died with because of corona that really makes the difference and if you take the pure people that have died actually of corona and that's how the german figures are presented it's actually forming quite markedly and now to actual the government decided only yesterday at the care home figures to the total death were they thought they were so the curve is not dropping very pacific just because you've added more deaths from the care homes is just how the figures a hand or i think within the next 2 weeks will be coming out of it and that would just be great and you people and you indeed are advocating that the relaxation of the knock down but of course and then we hear about the possibility of a 2nd wave a 2nd peak later in the year. well you know a lot of gloomy people around i was they get a game a ologist a terribly gloomy it's true that's certainly a possibility but we look at other countries we look at china it was south korea that all went up to that now we look at austria czech republic they came out of it
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we austria came out on the 14th 2 weeks ago today so it's fantastic and they haven't seen a 2nd surge of infection we're going to monitor it that's the key chast and monitor and look at the number of new infections i suspect we're going to get away with it in all these countries now and i really hope so for the benefit of cancer patients that it's all part of the same thing if we can't get rid of corona we're not going to be able to start effectively on cancer cardiac disease and other owner says. the world health organization as want to get issuing immunity passports saying there's no solid proof that recovery from the disease would prevent a 2nd infection but the plan is being widely discussed particularly in europe with croatia's tourism minister claiming many agree on the need for a common travel protocol of what he calls a covert 19 possible of these people out of a takes a closer look. the brandenburg gate is one of germany's most visited tourist
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attractions but if you're dreaming of seeing it or anything else in the e.u. any time soon you may well need a special type of passport that says you're immune to the coronavirus the tourism sector has experienced an immense and unexpected decline in demand due to the outbreak of the corona virus pandemic our mission is to be as members of the european union and as part of the most successful tourist region in the world leader in the recovery of tourism these m unity passports is just one of a number of ideas being discussed by the new tourism ministers as they try to find ways to mitigate the impact of covert 90 on the holiday industry one particular idea is based on the whole proviso that if you've had 19 you can't be prefect it's some nations like greece which relies massively on holiday makers spending money there are very much on side with the plan but there is one quite significant hit
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show experts at the world health organization say immunity passports wouldn't be worth the paper they're printed on at this point there is not enough evidence about the effectiveness of antibody mediated immunity to guarantee the accuracy of an immunity passport or risk free certificate people who assume that they are immune to a 2nd infection made more public health advice the use of such that if it gets made there for increase the risks of continued transmission in some barolo just so warning that immunity for sports would just be impractical but they could do the help to spread the virus further the sad reality for europe's tourism industry is that without say working vaccine the future looks far from bright before all of us r.t. . let's take a look at the latest figures from around the world and according to johns hopkins university which connects well by days are over $3100000.00 are infected while 2 of
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see us. i was on the floor some days in my bathroom you know trying praying. it was just. like water still. was slime westmead out words i was having children fever i didn't have any sense of say source now i'm in the most you can. would you. recently she was on the low just you. and i was simon is on the grounds of the research. i have didn't. push myself over they fill me in the 5 a got to. go. the
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1st wave of the u.k.'s coronavirus pandemic could be over by late august that's according to data modeling research from the singapore university of technology and design their predictions claim that in the u.k. 90 percent of the total expected cases of covert $1000.00 could be realized by the 17th of may the 1st wave could feasibly and by august the 22nd now using the same model university also estimates the u.s. could hit the 97 percent mark by may the 15th but the 1st wave wouldn't be over until september russia looks set for an earlier finish 97 percent of cases could be realized by may the 23rd the 1st wave could be over by august the 7th in a similar vein india could see the end of its 1st wave as early as the 2nd of august on a global scale the current phase of the crisis could be over by the 1st of december
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where we must caution of course that these are only predictions but earlier are joined by an associate professor at the university that carried out the research jaish e low and he elaborated on some of the methodology is used. we only recently started to do the production because because of the day that available so we actually use the data i had to trim the model recently regress into q parameters in the model and then we use the trend model that was a very very high model date of feeds into a guesstimate of the total and lifecycle and also with that cycle we can we can map it together with that actually creates this to estimate where we are in our you know that you know life cycle of the pandemic and also estimated are they key dates with translations supposedly we are expecting a 2nd wave are we but will it be a lot worse or would it be not as bad. so the current model is a one stage while it's natural of modeling am predicting multiple waves together
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it's a suitable word and the conditions for example there's 3 or scenarios like government parties the locker room and behaviors don't change and remain a say an innocent trajectory than the predictions will be valid to predict the trajectory of a century jarryd if one of us conditions or the conditions dramatically have changed and will be likely to see the 2nd wave worse in a survey of not if we have to use the data for individual waves to feed them up so we have to the early sites quite what we're doing actually is a predictive monitoring we continue to monitor the actual pieces together was a prediction is because we know that it will worsen the research engine we cannot just make one sharp prediction and wait to see whether this reliance or much not that that's not what we're doing we're actually monitoring and the predictions that predictions are supposed to change if there are a real war changes you know in the government policy human behaviors. and supported tests have been seen as the golden ticket to easing the lockdown but the still
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a way to go in order to prove they'll be effective in halting the spread of the virus and bodies are made in the body and can be effective in providing immunity against future infection or. medical journal the lancet centers of caution that governments must have a deep understanding of antibodies and while they were in relation to the virus the experts say there is no certainty that bodies will give protection against the disease or how long they might last and as joined by one of the authors of the lancet article and professor of immunology at imperial college downey and he told me that different types in amounts of immunity cells and antibodies need to be studied we desperately need antibody casting in general so you know scientists talk about 0 prevalence that's measuring antibodies in the population as widely as possible to understand who's seen as far as you have them and better we all think
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all over the world is desperately important and we're all scrambling for data because if we haven't got that data you know we haven't got a clue how widely the viruses spread how wide herd immunity is so that's that's one point that's not quite the same as whether there is there are you in the future in some kind of an antibody passport to say only the individual level who safe to go to work and who isn't which is a whole other ballgame and much more worrying why is there a question over this because obviously the virus has been around for a little while now and of course most antibodies do work for most diseases that right to say so why is a question over this particular virus. i mean it's not special to this forces so the reason that people like me are in employment. viruses and bacteria and fungus i are very complex and very different and the immune system has many thousands of cells in it and different types of antibodies and devil really is in the detail and for every infection that we look out there are different so-called
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correlates of protection and the kind of point that we make and it's a point we were making in a paper we published yesterday launce it which we called what policymakers need to know about covert 19 particular munity and get a clue as it is a little is that you can't guess these things you need to study them need to know them and so you need to be able to say for this infection what's you know what how much immunity or what kiper what flavor do you need to be safe if you don't know that you know you don't know if you're safe. for now from the pandemic could last for 2 years and subsequent waves of the virus adding to the current economic damage that's according to a report by the institute of economic affairs which says government must be prepared to invest to get through the crisis it claims depend on mic is moderate when compared to historical plagues but it doesn't mean the impact is any less serious it expects world economies to experience a severe drop in g.d.p.
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this summer but the turmoil could see an acceleration of changes in how we work already seen in innovations such as online shopping or remote working however governments will also be faced with a large bill with a global debt crisis likely and a period of high inflation to follow it also states the crisis will see governments move away from further economic integration with the global economy. the report identified intensive farming as a source for the transmission of a new disease triggering a future pandemic and it added that the development of vaccines in tests could be accelerated by relaxing existing regulations the i.a.e.a. also called for more robust health care systems and changes to adult social care provision well member of the institute of economic affairs dr richard winnings join me and he said that many of the changes brought about as a result of the crisis on now here's a stay i don't think so it's research and there are several states it's not
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a big deal but she seems to want to regulate in the economy or spreads in which the well it needs to recover is understandable and then interesting in there because many people might think that better economic integration and global corporation is the answer after all diseases don't recognize borders so why should our preparations. where we are in a promissory station so certain sites are you close one station in the sense there has been. serious spread or you know this and that meets early clues very subtle searches just in arm's distance and it's very long and often there are bits of hundreds of. sensors all every day eat currency so they're very obviously very short sweet instant benefits we don't need to stop it actually but downsides and just last and governesses if bush in italy so far in the sense of subsidizing these long supply chains and richard the lockdown has enforced
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a mass trial of sorts as an in your approaches to employment such as remote working what long term impact could that have is this sort of new approach to working here to stay. i think some really see immediately it would be just. as in the understand precisely people is not to learn some of you don't like certain streets so you. certainly understood. the trans spectrum so if people didn't say much they did it only to travel down the beach instead but just the state so to speak objects like they just. also spoke to economics expert professor keith pilbeam who thinks that country to the i.a.e.a. report more government interference might be on the way you know like you got more regular i should alconbury if i had a lot less and where the freight market is the solution it is a real problem because what we're saying is the government intervening rescuing you know if your comments about biden serve their lives if you provide
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a parallel program but if you look at the parallel so far back you know capitalism isn't working about that but to buy out the government's policies these bailouts keep that working and would talk about businesses fun of workers helping the self employed this will surely help. create a better bounce back when this is over for the economy would it not it's a cushion the blow in some ways oh it may be pushing the blown good guy but the question is what for the future because if i'm going to buy progress in gold at the moment i guess you think you know my mate or of the money but ultimately i'm going to play that back and say we got root problem. but for sure personally compactor go out like us and that's it from us today altie america will take over the news at the top of the hour from the team here in westminster by.
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economic system known as capitalism has generated more wealth than any other system in history in many ways it is defined maternity itself hundreds of millions have been lifted out of poverty however capitalism has also witnessed growing income inequality thus the appeal of socialism currently on the rise can complement. one else seemed wrong but all roles just don't. mean you get to stamp out disdain become attitude and engagement equal to trail. when something find themselves worlds apart. just to look for common ground.
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