tv Documentary RT July 7, 2020 9:30am-10:31am EDT
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and. so when. these researchers will cover almost 3000 kilometers in trans polar aircraft and they'll stay here until the antarctic summer returns. snow in the very heart of antarctica has one amazing property. when the temperature drops below minus $55.00 it becomes a drive frozen sand if a plane lands on it friction instantly cheats its skis which then refreeze solidly
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onto the runway. that's why planes can only fly between mid december and early february just 2 months in every year for the rest of the time the people are completely cut off from the outside while. stocks water supply is drawn from the snow. the station sits more than 3500 meters above sea level that that altitude even the fittest of people time have very quickly due to the low oxygen levels home.
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issues to the purity there sort of person who wants to drill for us to blow spirit merely because you were a little sort of. dork who put up with the system and what is a bruce hopes that opus will do. but. the conditions here are truly and human the average temperature in december and january falls below minus 30 and in winter minus 80 is par for the course. at most very pressure is 40 percent lower than on the mainland and there's less oxygen in the. joint pain and nose bleeds all symptoms of a climate as a nation it can take a whole months for a body to adapt. it to work here through do you know of those who are bullies and it was approved if. you remember to be a lurker 2 years ago the other cities you moved. to the soviet union at that time
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went to watch the station because it was no further the farthest place from the coast from anywhere in the guy it was the most challenging place i mean the way the soviet union wanted to show how good they where hunting very extreme conditions so the felt was more important the gore won the scientific one now is different this iteration is very much driven by science. all of antarctica risk covered by an ice sheet that can be up to 4 kilometers think that's enough to cover the entire planet in a 50 meter thick layer of ice. the word for girl would you push it go again she's going to go but if i want to. go with the nation i'm going there with a weapon that you've known to do with a boy that occur to you because of the flu conclusion that animal will be going to think i'm a little bit wealthy and good. but all that they were that. then there were the
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other. one of the biggest geographical discoveries in the 2nd half of the 20th century scientists had long suspected that there was a lake the size of europe subglacial lake vostok contains water that is millions of years old. but to reach it you have to drill through the so-called atmospheric ice formed by the snow that has fallen in antarctica for millennia. one theory is that the lake formed because the ice sheet above it melted under the pressure of its own weight another is that the lake had always existed even before
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antarctica froze over and that the ice sheets simply sealed it in. a new field that is the state is at the certain end of the can to do with a bit of the south of the of the group or the furthest british it's on earth but the impulse to be in the as a short the burden of the social abilities to other. the late 20th century saw the 1st attempts to reach the lake by drilling through the kilometers of ice that concealed this unique body of water. and has done so stoke that it will certainly go concerts and there will be near that this should keep it so that it's to us in. the borehole was dubbed 5 g. one and drilling began in 1809 serviette french and american members of the joint
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expedition at the vast uk station all took part. in my work as truly truest studies of the past try met in the antarctic their ice cores being drilled they're about 10 centimeters in diameter and up to 3 kilometers known. researches from various countries drill through the antarctic more using their unique mess. but only at the russian station have drillers managed to reach the ice boundary. and then make water where they stopped. apparently there's no way to take water samples from the lake without introducing contaminating microorganisms. so far we have no way of knowing whether there is life in the most ancient water on
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earth but paleoclimatologists have found material that is just as valuable for their research. is the only archive where you can have similar tain as least stored that temperature history of the earth and similar tain is lead to the same times also the composition of the atmosphere of these times so we can directly go into the ice and find ot the contents of this atmosphere is specially sealed to. and from this c o 2 measurements we know form from the last 800000 years. with the only. person that that isn't what do. or.
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you want to do with. studies of this engine dice have yielded serious scientific results we can extract data about the earth's climate hundreds of thousands or even millions of years ago now from tiny bubbles trapped in the ice for millions of years this new group of people by their them sort him and been put there so the shop folks need to get a chair through look them up on what we've got with the amount of the proof we have with it is. well the snowboarder got that image too because they took a rebirth wish they were at any of those. but it was sort of political 1st there's a push for them at the web. browser for their new. from these studies researches now know that greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and methane have a change in lead builds up in the atmosphere leading to a warmer climate then hundreds of thousands of years later levels decrease again resulting in ice ages. is to get access to
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a major change which took place about 1000000 years ago and it's a kind of an enigma we don't really know what happened we expect that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is responsible for this change and this is what we want to check how much carbon dioxide was a get a fair a 1000000 year before. so perhaps the global warming we see today is just a period in the planet's climatic history and people have nothing to do with it for are we excess arista climatic calamity after all these are the questions paleo ontology trying to answer here in antarctica. your pocket. book. the pool of quotes apparently you were thought. to believe.
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that he didn't go through the who is to talk to. you to do the. research is from every country represented in antarctica purely scientific objectives politicians have another goal it's what the cool presents. the quality of presence on the polar continent is a symbol of a nation's capability and strength. the extent to which a country can influence antarctica's future depends on it. the usa australia france germany china japan india chile and other countries have stations in antarctica. more than 50 countries have a presence and they're signatories to the antarctic treaty.
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so i would do this for him. to have. a moment of truth is coming soon the 959 treaty expires in less than 30 years. where that is the beauty of the absolute beauty that these tensions do not matter in the scientific community in trouble maybe because of a medical emergency or because the weather just closes opportunities for science in one area then the cooperation is there to look how can we best help each other attentions do not come into it at all on the grassroots level of doing antarctic research and it is a wonderful example how the international community can come together and how we can overcome other issues and work together. like now polar explorers abide by the rules agreed 60 years ago the only legal
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activity in respect of antarctica and its inhabitants his research. both girls. who are for. we're going to settle through for the wolf if people feel. intrusive and native inhabitants aren't always happy about the attention. small seemed wrong all roles just all. the old beliefs yet to shape out just to become educated and engaged because of the trail. when so many find themselves worlds apart. just to look for common ground.
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the arrest and charging of glenn maxwell free and sovereign states means turn what about the timing and the specific indictments what kind of defense can be expected is a deal in the cards and will justice be served. is your media a reflection of reality. in a world transformed. what will make you feel safe. high salacious community. are you going the right way or are you being led so. direct. what is truth what is faith.
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bubble with us the good as you look to be lean we don't with the bottle to monitors the miley kill bill is for. you wouldn't you cook with a clue sports. scores i'm talking about with the pistol you. studied so you political person with an. i.q. of should might want to. pick that song as that of my pet and i say see what that opinion on the others would be if you will spit with all your looking at the affair even use me a little p.x. . to be useless be able to get them a coke or ammonia which is up on the coke for the pew study of. along with deal when you. should write by special that. i mean yeah.
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your show of shows just shows it's about money by michael yeah by the house and i have a copy and you still talks about the myth of statistics book yeah but clearly state themselves who should this is most wealthy people cut because. in the real us seems to be as obese up. people who you have only thought was suicidal and the country doing the killing is the solution and could honestly persuade you of. you know i will. give him a little party pure all. wrapped bunch of sway marcum in the me i grew it still here with us i'm a. warship no more the ocean bush the with a little ways to go we're going through there have been given this road because the movies that have been made the. book
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a woman here will sort of she always will with us but the issue which should flow. but no way to go with this thought. but with. what you should try to wish to believe you believe that one time t. do with the above video to the world. i mean it is it is an amazing amazing place and i think you should be prepared to go and go there and feel your place may invest the suddenly feel very small. how do you cope with such an enormous overload politicians come to the rescue.
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and i still feel. when we go into the wish to mount a. little grains a little. silver balls one of these. mid winter probably brings the biggest holiday to antarctica. everyone celebrates no matter which country they're from. the mid winter celebrations mean that half of the season has passed and every day takes you closer to going out.
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the americans have a reputation for coming up with fun ideas and they've decided that everyone must celebrate mid winter to get up the muslim area. in target take when tour film festival or. the antarctic film festival is drawing near. for the 1st weekend of august at the american mcmurdo station mcmurdo is the largest station in antarctica it's a small town with a population of almost $1500.00. the festival consists of 2 parts 1st the open category entrance upload damage to films of any genre about any topic the only restriction is on duration it can be no longer than 5 minutes 6 why just 5 because a common antarctic problem has
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a low speed connection. we have back in the 2nd category is for films made in just 48 hours a day on friday festival organizers announced the rules and on monday all participants upload their entries which are shown to the entire population of mcmurdo. and the jury delivers its verdict the winners are announced in several nominations just like all good movie festivals best film best actor best writer best camerawork and there's an audience award.
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all of antarctica's inhabitants abide by laws some of the feathered and aquatic varieties abide by the antarctic laws of nature others by the provisions of the antarctic treaty. under the antarctic treaty. by mental pressure. adopted in the early 1900 and part of that well the whole of the protocol is about how we under the treaty are going to manage the environment better so things about mineral exploitation.
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the rules governing antarctic life specifically states that any country exploring the continent must leave only pristine land behind them that's what explorers do. every year when and large ship arrives and they prepare for a shift change they burn water can be burned and all glass and scrap metal is collected to be shipped out to the mainland. if. the voices of your. it was.
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do to try to tell you that you don't need to do what you did. for now the harsh climate hinders colonization in antarctica but in the future if it warms this southernmost continent really could be settled. you cannot turn to political interests to have stations and then i think there's economic interest to have tourism and. i think there is it's important to set some limits. but it turns out that signing the antarctic treaty doesn't mean that the countries that ratified it have withdrawn their territorial claims over the continent to nearby areas. some of the claims are enormous. the beauty of the antarctic treaty is the oil nations who have made those territorial claims put them aside completely and as you know some of the
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territorial claims are overlapping but all of that is put aside entirely because the continent is dedicated to scientific research. it will be a real shame if the antarctic values imbedded in that treaty of a perfect community of free citizens in gauged solian research and scientific progress should ever sink into oblivion this should be a place for true freedom equality and human brotherhood on this fragile world of ours.
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won't blow off the america's head and that they get to keep all the free money this day and they do that every single day and then eventually like in 2008 they blow off america's high end and it will happen again soon and they'll say well you know we were acting in the greater good. time of the time called parisian to repeat the same mantra sustainability it's very important to accelerate the transition to sustainable transport sustainability space where man a more equitable and sustainable world. they claim their production is complete be hamas. use nuclear. kakadu to cause the models and not to do this on the books on companies want us to feel good about buying their products while the damage is being done far away this is something else this must be going to mean and i need money skipping the sun moon and music to do nieminen i'm stunned seemed to be based on that understood look to see when.
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54 jets and more than 1300 military personnel are headed to air force base in alaska where is that to say come on i'll show you what's the reason for any type of enhanced u.s. military presence in this area russia. what is it suddenly about the south china sea that makes it so that it 11000000000 barrels of oil. take a look at this map who really owns what kind of says no it belongs to us india says no we claim that that belongs to us both of these countries have nuclear weapons capabilities there is reason for concern so that's why we're going to drill down on this story for you today right here on the news with rick sanchez where you know as
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there month or was he just came down for whatever they think i didn't hear that oh . i'm talking about is a very international community. meeting yesterday the trick is only to play. with just a few things this study says they need to eat. president bush at the will to use the newkirk in brazil so their nuclear cooperation is everything because he was the loser with the forms of t.v. with the above 30. 5 they have and would affect all day but i decided not to take this life. with my get can tell you that. this is a promo for renegade inc a new kind of talk show for the so called post truth there with the team behind the
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documentary 4 horsemen a box with a weekly show about life well politics culture and business will ask the questions of the show's often miss and i'll be exploring the issues with people who think differently together will be calling out the elephant in the room except this one there's not much rain on the front technically it's not doing so join me. you kind of talk show only here on alt. is your media a reflection of reality. in a world transformed. what will make you feel safe. isolation full community. are you going the right way or are you being led. direct. what is truth what is faith.
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in the world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the depths. aura maybe in the shallowness. of. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm show business i'll see you then. shape our other central bankers warren buffett are effectively playing financial
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russian roulette right so they have gone and in there is one bullet of risk they spin the chamber they point at america's head and they pull the trigger hoping that they won't blow off the america's head and that they get to keep all the free money this day and they do that every single day and then eventually like in 2008 they blow off america's head and it will happen again and they'll say well you know we were acting in the greater good. so we was as soon as you see. them on those you just came up with it because you're here that. i'm talking about
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is a very international community. media used to. just go to cuba is those folks that i need to eat. those who pushed them but the one who used to cook in brazil through their nuclear cooperation the hotels you go is everything reduced to do we live in front of t.v. with. 5 they have with us next to go thank god we decided not to take people's life . with my gave you that. on running getting the racket of the american military industrial complex we also kind of go on the us edge ago despite its warlike qualities does not want to go to war with iraq it is a consistent pattern of national security state has continued to float over the sea
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isolation for community. are you going the right way or are you being led so. direct. what is true wants his fate. in the world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the depths. for a mate in the shallowness. join me every thursday on the alec simon show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm showbusiness i'll see you then.
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so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy going from day shouldn't let it be an arms race is on often spearing dramatic development only personally i'm going to resist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical time time to sit down and talk. the world is driven by shaped by one person. snow day or thinks. we dare to ask.
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is your media a reflection of reality. in a world transformed. what will make you feel safe from. tyson nation little community. are you going the right way or are you being led so. direct. what is true watch is. in a world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the depths. of the shallowness.
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one apologies for a few technical difficulties that so is starting the news a little bit late but welcoming of us from around the world live from central london this is r.t. u.k. . the u.k. government is forced to defend the prime minister after he said care homes didn't follow procedures during the corona virus outbreak as experts claim 10 percent of infections have occurred among the health and social care workers i'll be joined by an n.h.s. commentator and an epidemic expert. the u.k. government is accused of avoiding scrutiny of its coronavirus test and trace program following the decision to report the number of daily tests processed rather than the number of people. and the u.k. marks the 15th anniversary of the 77 terror attack on sri lanka in underground trains and a bus which killed 52 people and injured over 700. thick
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a government house defended prime minister boris johnson after he was slammed for saying too many care homes didn't really follow the procedures during the coronavirus pandemic can own bosses have called his remarks cowardly and clumsy and some accuse him of trying to shift the responsibility away from the government for the high death toll in care well on. joins me with more on this their research so a lot of people are taking issue with the prime minister's words all day. yeah absolutely prime minister boris johnson really finding himself coming out of cya for his comments made yesterday whilst in yorkshire saying that care homes and care home chiefs were not really following the procedures laid out by the government in order to combat code at 19 and that was possibly one of the reasons for the spread
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of coded 90 in the social care setting where up to 30000 people are still to died after testing positive for coated 19 in the prime minister making those comments really again and bringing up the issue of care homes to quite a position of contention and one of the things that the the crisis has shown is that we need to think about how we organize our social care package betto if you remember and how we make sure we look after people better who are in a social care i think has been there was it we discovered a too many care homes didn't really follow the procedures in the way that they they could have but we're learning lessons the whole time one of the most about things is to is to fund them probably hoping other 600000000 into covert compliant care homes but will also be looking at ways to make sure that the care sector long term
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is properly organized and supported so that that absolutely crucial part of people's lives is is is is properly cared for. now there have been calls for boris johnson to apologize and retract his comments particularly from the chair of the national carousel sation and. now i don't see spokespersons come forward to say the government and the prime minister will not be apologising but the government have come into criticism already for their approach to issues ranging from p.p.a. with cameroon buses saying that stuff i've been forced to source around 90 percent of the p.p.a. themselves privately also they've already been criticisms of the government saying that the government threatened care homes with a drop in funding and a reduction in funding if they didn't take patients who had been tested or that tested positive for coke at 90 at directly from hospital and that's one of the
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reasons that many of attributed for the spread of covert 900 from the hospitals to the care homes now this was raised in parliament where the shot of health secretary john ashworth took that hancock's opposite number its task. thousands of families have lost their loved ones in care homes this disease care workers themselves have died on the front line kind of understand why people are so insulted by the prime minister's remarks when he said too many care homes didn't really follow the procedures county appreciate the her that has been led to care home provider sedate for example describing the comment as clumsy and cowardly and county tellers there for which care homes didn't follow procedures and what these procedures were that apparently were not followed throughout this crisis care homes have done amazing work and the prime minister was explaining that because asymptomatic that
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transmission was not known about the correct procedures were there for not known and we've been constantly learning about this virus from the start and improving procedures all the way through. the government are already coming for criticism from n.h.s. chiefs for the handling of cope with and now it seems can't hold buses to not impressed and is ready thank you very much indeed what has got the prime minister's comments about care homes and i don't buy from n.h.s. cast kevin roy in a row i thank you very much indeed for waiting i what do you think of britain's latest comments about cabs many health care buses as we heard of called them insensitive well look i think the whole care home situation has clearly been a mess clearly the government were slow to react there is a question mark over the number of trial and vulnerable people who are discharged from hospital into care homes it's important to get some context around that certainly 3000 people were moved out of hospital just under 3 percent of them were
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from elderly that when you to care homes and less than 20 percent of them actually eventually tested positive we have folk over it so what what johnson has has said was that some of the care homes didn't manage the situation very well now i'm number 10 of trying to put that in a new context by saying i didn't manage it very well in the context of the new guidance for covariate which was late coming people didn't understand it they couldn't do it they didn't have enough he ate all of that so he's kind of rode back of the impact of what he's trying to cite but it is a fact and this is the the thing that i think is hinting at it is a fact that 53 percent of care homes had people with one all more patient testing positive for kogut so just on a hot didn't have any kind of it in their in their residence all their stuff so we're left asking the question well if half can do it why couldn't the other hole
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so i think there is a question over the extent to which they can have been evident manage infection control these a care home. not nursing homes and some of them of done it better than others so i think it is a reasonable question now at the weekend the chief executive of the n.h.s. simon stevens was on news t.v. here he's calling for a restructuring of social care in this country in the next year. now the government had tried missed 2 years ago to provide a concert consultation document on the future of funding social care several governments who previously promised to do that and they've never done it it is a complex thing it does involve a huge amount of money and probably some increases in taxation to pay for it so this simple statement has been sort of teased out and used i think out of context
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and it we would do much better to actually focus on white was some can succeed in others did not right could i just pick up on that point of a little future of so i mean the death toll is high in kansas when i could the government be trying to shift the blame away from their policies there were those comments well look governments always try to shift the blame so who knows and you know every day older the attention to now is what happens with the inquiry what sort of inquiry is going to be will it be a royal commission a public inquiry will it just be a parliamentary inquiry we don't know i mean clearly there will be a quarry an inquiry and there will be things to find out i mean we do know that the that the whole of the health care system including care homes was short of p.p.a. there again so it was the whole of russia and so it was the whole of europe because most of it comes from china and the chinese factories were closed down because they have their workers were suffering from concrete or trying to avoid it so there was a problem with that there was
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a problem with testing because we've never been prepared for testing on the scale let's recall it now i mean thousands of testing tests a day throughout the whole of the health care sector and that's really only just starting to come to it now so. certainly they've been delays certainly those rigs that could have done better and certainly there are lessons to learn but you can't ignore the fact it's some can. hardly care homes have no code at all and we have to ask why have some done better than not really thank you very much indeed thank you for joining us. one report claims a lack of personal protective equipment is likely to have contributed to the high number of covert 1000 infections among the health and social care workers in england a group called the data evaluation and learning for viral epidemics group claims around 10 percent of covert 19 infections in england occurred among workers in the health and social care sector meanwhile patients in hospitals made up around one percent of coronavirus infections but the report also suggests that care have
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residents made up around 6 percent of infections it's also been revealed that 90 n.h.s. workers in london have died from the disease what to discuss this report and are joined by the chair of the dell of data analytics group that's dr nigel field dr phil thank you for joining us tell us about your report has the lack of p.p. been key to the spread of infections. so this is a report undertaken by the toe group which was convened by the royal society in response to code it and the focus of the report has been on infection is transmitted in hospitals and the timing of the report is important because it's been timed to inform the opening up of hospitals and care settings and also in preparing the n.h.s. for winter and for the possibility of future good future waves and so it's very forward looking in to learn from what's happened and plan for the future we want and as i've said we serve as a senator to fair to me why do you think the coverage 19 infection rate was so high in health care and social workers. yes so as you said we we estimate that of the
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entire epidemic in the 6 weeks leading up to june the 7th around 10 percent of cases were in health care workers and social care workers and i think there are lots of reasons for that and at the moment we don't have enough data to really understand what the reasons were you know a lot of reports about. insufficient m.p.p. and also about testing capacity but also i think we have learning a lot about this infection as we go and it takes time to make good policy informed by the science is relatively recently that we've realized the extent to which asymptomatic infections of contributes its transmission so interventions like ensuring physical distancing between health care workers both next to patients and away from the patient's bedside it can be really important in preventing transmission within within the healthcare setting where the government as you said we're dealing with an unprecedented situation and we have to understand and therefore how difficult it was to procure p.p.a. globally wasn't it. yeah i think you're absolutely right it's an unprecedented
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situation we're dealing with a virus that none of us had heard of less than a year ago we've learnt a lot in the last 6 months we now understand that masks provide good protectionists source control preventing dropped a transmission we understand as i've said about the importance of asymptomatic transmission and this report really focuses on the role that hospitals may have played in potentially amplifying amplifying the epidemic in population and what we've joined together is recommendations about how to learn from those experiences and how to ensure that and in the future if there is a 2nd wave we are really well behaved really well prepared and that the n.h.s. and its patients and its star are well protected and in turn that will protect the communities and the populations at their site when we're picking up on that point out field i mean what systems can the government put in place to help prevent the spread of the virus. you know so in the report we set out the importance of really
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simple but come comprehensive surveillance systems and ones which are linked to an outbreak response so there's. no point in counting the dates or unless you actually do something about it and so we recommend a coordinated surveillance system which is monitored ideally by an independent monitoring committee linked to locally empowered response so that any cases any transmission change which occur in hospitals or health care settings can be jumped on really quickly what we said is that in the 2000 there was an enormous response to the threat of m.r.s.a. which is a different infection a blood borne infection and has different causes but the response was one of the systematic and carefully organized framework that really prevented that infection from being a problem in our doors and we suggest that the same kind of comprehensive strong leadership response is required for covert going forward so that we can keep the n.h.s. safe in the event of a 2nd wave and over the coming winter and on that point finally don't have at least
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the government that is prepared to deal with the 2nd wave we hope so we hope that the government will find the findings from this report in the same considerations that we've set out useful in preparing for a 2nd wave if it comes at a dr nigel phil thank you very much indeed for talking to us ok thank you. now the u.k. government has denied accusations that its avoiding scrutiny over its testing trace program it comes as daily data on its testing program will now reflect the number of tests processed rather than the amount of people tested the opposition labor party that has criticized the decision it accuses the government of wanting to hide the fact that it never reached the target set in may of 100000 tests a day but the government has defended the move saying that under the old system repeated tests for health care workers were only counted once it added that the number of tests counted would still be included in weekly data. the department of health and social care will no longer publish the number of
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people tested daily anymore and will instead publish the number of daily tests processed this is because the daily people tested statistic only counts new people being tested for example someone who is tested in february and then tested again this month will only be counted once test and trace statistics published weekly will still include the number of people who have been tested well meanwhile the government's own figures suggest around 2 and a half 1000000 tests made available have gone to waste data published by the department of health said over 10500000 tests have been made available since the crisis started though the data also revealed that just over 8000000 tests have been processed by laboratories that suggest around a 5th of the tests were either not used or labs lacked the capabilities to process them number 10 said some home test kits are never returned but the exact proportion remains unknown barren estado harding who oversees the n.h.s.
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test a trace program told the lords science committee that testing was only being confined to those displaying symptoms this is prone guidance from board the c.m.o. the chief medical officer. the concern is that if we test contacts particularly in the early days of isolation and they test negative it will reinforce the view that they don't need to continue in isolation but because the period in which that you could start to show symptoms or test positive absent fission barra's in the back of your throat to register on a test can be as long as 14 day is a test on day 2 or 3 of isolation only tells you that you haven't got the virus on day 2 or 3 you could easily start so become infectious on day 4567 etc. and in the next hour to discuss this i'll be joined by an expert in diseases.
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at least 3 pubs in england have had to shut the doors again off to customers tested positive for corona virus just days after reopening the pubs in the countess of west yorkshire hampshire in somerset have been forced to close their doors until further notice they were among hundreds of venues that welcome customers off to 3 months as long time measures were eased on super saturday staff being tested for the virus while health experts are warning that the u.k. will be hit with big outbreaks of crowded scenes like those witnessed at the weekend inside a home in central london reoccur the world health organizations covered $900.00 special envoy for europe to stress that young people should be wary while they
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this is boom bust the one business show you can't afford to miss friendship or in washington coming up with a group of scientists are now pushing the w.h.o. to take more seriously the idea of hope in 1000 airports spread we break down the calls and how markets are faring amid the ongoing economic turmoil plus chinese tensions with the west are on the rise as the united kingdom is turning while ways equipment in the nation's development of 5 g. straight ahead we welcome a payable to an ally of the situation we have a packed show today so let's dive right in. and we lead the program with the scientific communities concerns over the world health organization's messaging regarding the crow virus pandemic more than 200 scientists from over 30 nations worldwide are calling on the un backed group and other health agencies to update guidance regarding the viruses spread by.
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