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tv   The 360 View  RT  December 20, 2022 7:30am-8:01am EST

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aids and decades and sentence, or sorry, as a result of pressure to just an announcement that says, we sorry, we must see some being somewhat similar to what you're seeing. germany do, in particular to watch troops, comprehensive respirations, as part of the package. that's and 2nd, demonstrates true moss and repentance. right. scottie nell hughes is back on her screens. next would another episode of our new show $365.00. and then rory's, here at the top with all the big developments affecting your world today due to an am, ah
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ah, ah, i'm fail you on today that 360 you. we're going to look at the various effect math have had on our youngest generation and is america the only country lowering its academic failure? as pandemic? let's get started. ah, america is now pushing or to lower academic standards in schools. we're seeing claims methods, racist high schools in virginia are getting rid of advanced diplomas, saying they are discriminatory. the entire a p and i, b placement programs are all under scrutiny. meanwhile, american school systems are already away behind schools in europe. china and india
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are actually raising their academic standards in schools. plus the centers for disease control quietly lowered developmental milestones for children aged $2.00 and $3.00. now this all comes after proven studies show children have developmental issues due to masking. 20th now is a doctor. marian mass founder, practicing physicians of america and a pediatrician who has practice in suburban of philadelphia for 21 years. thanks for joining us, dr. now this was the 1st major event and present day, which touched every aspect of life. all in regards to our children. what did we actually get right about how we handled the pandemic? i love that question so much because i like to be a positive person and, and i feel like everyone has talked about what we got wrong on. something that i saw happening early on in the pandemic. was people started to do more every day,
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real hands on things with their children. i read about people baking sour dough bread, cooking with their children, gardening, with their children, reading to with their children and let these are things that you know, i have always supported as, as a pediatrician and mom, in, in my community that i've helped put gardens in the schools and i've, i've helped talk to the schools about the importance of, of gardening and cooking with your kids nutrition. and the fact that doing these things is really giving kids their actual hands on experience of doing things. we don't think about it, but when children are so tied up on line on screens and they're not doing things physically, i don't think they feel the same sense of accomplishment that we might when we do something virtual. and children are concrete at many ages and need to, they need to see the effects of, of their labor. so i think this was something that was really wonderful. i also saw
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parents well at this one was out of necessity. you know, of course, there were no activities sent me over. right. and everyone talks about the modern parenting model that money in modern model of our children being so over scheduled . and i think for kids this gave them a little bit of a breath of fresh air. of course, there was probably a little too much of that, but i, i think it really did help bring families together and give children some building blocks of doing actual hands on activities. i thought that was wonderful. what lessons did we learn, which will actually help us if ever presented a situation like this? again, i hope that we learn the lesson that, that we need to take a deep breath and not turn circular firing squads on one or another. you know, i'm still feeling after effects of the anger that came out of co bid. i feel like it's receiving a little bit, but i feel like people were so angry at one another. it everyone had
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a different loss because of coded, right? you know, if, if you, if you lost a parent, if you lost a, a caregiver, if you lost a brother, a sister, that was a huge loss, of course, within that were people that last chunks of their lives. children lost chunks of their childhood. and i think it was very easy for people to go to a point of anger, but not, not tried to respect one another's losses. and i hope we have learned the lesson that you know, the anger and the blaming and the shaming it doesn't help. it drives wedges between, between humans, and that's a terrible place for us to be. i, i've known about families that were just ripped apart from this. it's so sad. now, there was a lot of confusion of actually very ramping during the pandemic. all this regarding the do's and don'ts for parents. did you as a physician, ever question what was being put out?
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and did doctors actually have the freedom to differ an opinion for their patients? i felt as though. ringback if i questioned though, the right or the option of someone to choose to have friends over to choose to socialize, i, i felt shame to myself, you know, it sometimes from members of my own profession. 8, it grew to a point where i didn't want even tell people what i was doing myself. you know, very early on, you remember potting became like a very popular thing to do a couple months into the pandemic. i just, i didn't have a name for it, but i told my children to pause right from the get go must have been like a week or 2 weeks in that you, you are not going to thrive and prosper and grow and be mentally healthy person as you're cut off from every, you know, i told him who we need social distancing from his, everyone underneath your we might like not be so happy with one another. you know,
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it's not a healthy environment. i remember i did an interview with philadelphia newspaper, maybe about may of 2020. i got a lot of angry commentary on it. it was as though, you know, i'm not allowed to discuss this. that was it. that was just so unwarranted. you know, professional others are professionals that were coming back and land best in me. you know, we made our own decisions about in a vaccinations and we made them frequently and we made them after reviewing the literature. and i felt as if you questioned it. if you question know, must get vaccine, one must get vaccine too, and you must get them 3 weeks apart from each other or else or some kind of crazy anti oxer. i mean that's just excused my vernacular. that's nuts. and what that did, in addition to have, like thought and discussion, tamp,
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stay on people who are watching. i think they stopped trusting because if, if people are going to insist on a narrative, instead of a discussion when we're in a novel medical situation, people who are watching and doubting themselves are going to stop trusting the people who are attempting to lead the discussion. i kind of called them sometimes i felt as though there were these m a self appointed media, social media anointed gurus. and i don't even know what a cooper expert is really, i guess, you know, the people that are an infectious id. physicians that are virology tests, i want to hear what they have to say about what's different with this virus and what's not. but people who run around and say that they're masked experts on cove, it and, and various others forms of experts in a situation. it's new and novel when there's so much information that we really
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don't know the people i trust or the people. busy were willing to have conversations and to state. i don't know, i'm not sure those are people that i tend to really trust. now, what changes have you observed in your own patients which are different than pre pandemic times? so if you don't understand that, you know, every day i go into b will not every day the days that i do work and work part time clinically in an urgent care setting situation. so i'm meeting patients all the time and it's a rapid fire kind of setting. so a parents like to talk about this and as i'm logging onto my computer, there's always a few minutes to talk. i, i think one of the things that certainly held throughout the pandemic was the increasing amount of, of anxiety, especially anxiety and depression that was felt by children throughout pandemic. and the worst of all forms or, you know,
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was the increase that i knew about of suicide attempts. so we live in a very small suburban area and there's a small hospital and i used to work in our hospital and you spend a good amount of time in the e. r a teenage suicide attempt with something that happened a couple times a year. and staff was always shaken. i was told that that particular hospital has 5 attempts in one weekend. think about that. i mean, i feel as though i pull up expert opinions and, you know, they'll say we've looked at the numbers in there, haven't been as many suicides as was thought during the pandemic. but i can't ignore something that's right in front of my face. something that, that a friend is telling me about. they've experienced it. and i, i don't even know what i say. what i look at numbers, they have to read a very carefully to know that they're actually accurate patients. so many patients,
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the anxiety level and it was just hard to watch. i felt as though some were anxious because they had, they had lost a loved one. they had an actual physical laws. they had lost a grandparent. and all of what was put on us is blaming and shaming. if anyone was going out, i kind of wondered if there's many children who felt guilty that could they have brought a germ home. you know, that can certainly add to anyone anxiety. and i saw enzymes that happened because children wondering if their life was ever going to be normal again. and i thought behavior escalations among vulnerable populations. i'll never forget one little girl. i met that keenan was a grandmother and the the, the reserve. it was a substance use disorder, a problem in the family, in that and so the grandmother was caring for her grandchild. but this, this little girl wanted to spend so much time with me and we did spend
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a lot of time together. but later, the grandmother said to me, she's just starving for attention and we're locked up in, it's the 2 of us, and i can't give her what she needs. and you know, she had some attentional problems in behavioral problems ahead of time. and they're all getting worse on it. so like the best case scenario is everyone was suffering cases where there were already issues and problems, those problems escalated. so you know, now we've covered mental health with cupboards and behavioral health issues and physical health. you know, for a while in the pandemic, we were all congratulating one another. you know, my kids are never sick and this is grade and no one's thrown up in a year. and how wonderful. and then we all started getting back to some semblance of real life. and i don't know the ill ever come out with a study on this. but it seemed to me that when kids came back and got sick, they were sicker than i've ever seen him before. in the summer of 2021,
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we had ramp an r s b ramping rsv. and you know, it was like the hospitalization level of our sd was really remarkable. in fact, in my, um, in myer area, children's hospital philadelphia. and i work for them, but i don't speak for them, but children's hospital philadelphia put on an article in the philadelphia inquirer and they announced that they were full. but they weren't full of coded what they were full of was mental health problems and packed with other respiratory illnesses . so i can't say for sure how would you ever measure it? but i sort of wondered if these children had like some immunity debt. you know, if you think about it, when you're a pregnant mom, you pass your antibodies on to your child, you're going to have more antibodies for the things that you're exposed to. so if no one saw ours me and reino virus and flu and add no virus and all the other viruses, there's hundreds of them. and then they have a baby. the baby's not going to have as many and bodies and board that they do gets
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exposed. and wham in ho doesn't look so pretty. i saw children with respiratory illnesses that were acting like 6 month olds that got r s, v, but they were 2 and 3. and i thought to myself, you know, is it possible that the normal course is you get some exposure to these things when you're younger, and if you don't get it, then you're going to pay later, you know, i guess that's one way and put it. and i certainly understand the need for shut down at the very beginning and for, you know, everyone said 2 weeks to flatten the curve and that really changed and worth it to eat. but i eat to take it out into months. i kind of wonder what it did to people's immune systems physically on a very interesting to i. i knew people when i met them, they told me that they didn't even let their kid out of the house and on the back porch. and what's my so good? look at the sun wave mindy. it know this is, this is not
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a good scenario. i'm in tuesday, told our our youngest he came to us early on and said, no, i thought well in this we let him out with 3 friends. as long as the parents agree, no one was sick and they all ran. they were cross country runners to tell you the truth and had an extra fringe benefit. they became the front for him across country team with it. they made it to the one top runner made it states that year, and then the next year they all made states as team and a, you know, several of them are running in college, it's it in it for them because they had that opportunity. it to actually do something it, it turned into a huge plus and know every one of those parents said to me, out of all of my children, this child that got out is the most mentally healthy and they're physically healthier as well. and then lastly, of course, like the education, you know, if parents will mention this to you in passing, but no kids with a d, h. d lost, lost some love what they had learned. you know, children, i mean, it's really,
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really sad. we don't think about how much autistic children suffer, right? you know, and, but, but they do, and they need that, you know, almost huff practice to be able to thrive and, and do well. and to overcome the obstacles they were getting that, you know, and, and lastly, i'll throw in the flood for the older kids, you know, the teenagers have you ever like, had someone break down a near tears and ask you if they're going to be able to go in deep a 16 year old. i mean, if it like what i heard from people, you know, young young men and women asking, are we ever going to be able to have a normal college experience and watching what you brought up, you know, like the graduations we just had to this year. and we were very lucky with those like our, our son graduated 2017 high school and her daughter 2019. and then we didn't
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have another graduation until this past year and it was an amazing event. and i'm our oldest then graduated from college. so we missed all the graduation stuff, but our 2019 graduate coven shut down her freshman year. and you know, i feel like for those kids and then the kids all applying to colleges, it became an issue to. there were so many losses, so many obstacles and it's easy to think, well that's nothing you know it compared to the loss of the life. busy but i guess in that you can't compare and i would never take away someone's know her if a loss of life with a loved one. but were children going to school in all cases or having a choice to go to school? would that have accelerated loss of life among those children themselves? i don't think so. thank you, dr. math for joining us. now we have this heard from a medical perspective,
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the effects mascot had on health after the break. we will find out how this is actually affecting them in the past with huh, ah, ah, yes. now what you need? yeah. if it's deploy box near to melting, no them comes in a book that probably the leslie should see, radiates your showcase in under another note. that sounds good to the boy. why is it w boy? ah,
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[000:00:00;00] with a quote i'm in my chair. this is, laura doesn't want that much extra mom, but i know it's up under that hole.
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ah the welcome back here on 360 view. we want to give it the audience, the full view of the subject. since the name. now we have just heard from her pediatrician, who believes the effects of the colored policies on children could last for many years. joining me now is dr. steven taylor, a professor and clinical psychologist in the department of psychiatry at the university of british columbia. in vancouver, canada, a doctor's tennis, work focuses unexciting disorders and related clinical conditions. now mr. collum g . appendix, thanks for joining me, dr. taylor. all right, thank you. now knowing everything we know about the corner virus today, were decisions made regarding policy and rules with any consideration to the impact it would have on development and mental health. a given what was know at the time, i think the policies were fine with regard to mosque wearing and in particular. but
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of course for, for a lot of these things kind of 19 there are a lot of uncertainties. it's difficult to extrapolate what happened during the spanish, really, for example, ever a century ago to, to kind of 19 so clearly a lot of research was needed to be done, including research, to determine the, the safety efficacy and tolerability of face masks and young kids do you feel like the younger generations filling security in the future has been lost. i mean their entire lives basically came to a halt and were changed almost overnight. what kind of impact can this have? yes, on the one hand, we know that the human beings, i and kids in particular highly resilient, that people are highly resilient to stresses and people do tend to bounce back. but with kind of 19, it's not clear what will happen in terms of the long term impact on children. there's. there's no evidence of a long term impact so far, but covert 19 is just one of
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a number of stresses that kids have experienced. of course have been all kinds of other things happening to them, including climate change and all kinds of other things. so only time will tell but, but at the moment it looks like it's not clear that covert will have any lasting negatively impact on kids. now, do you believe when looking at your research around patients? that there is a correlation which can be drawn between the coven policies, which were put in place and the rise and teen suicide, and even drug use, right? it's hard to tie these things down to any one particular thing. i mean, of course, rising drug use can, is going to teen suicide. and, and often in these cases, it's really difficult to determine what was actually the cause or even indeed, whether it was suicide or an accidental overdose. now, any your research were there countries that you saw who handle the pandemic better all in regards the overall health of the young?
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that's a really good question for some countries that seem to do really well, like you zealand, for example. it's way easier to manage a pandemic in a country that's the size of a mid sized american city that has a boundary by the sea. so for some, some countries, it was inherently easier to manage the pandemic then other countries. so. so again, that's a really difficult question to ask. now, i'm not sure there any clear answers as to whether one country has done better for young people than, than other countries. again, it's an issue. the only time will tell my guess is that most countries will come out roughly the same in terms of the packed on co cobra, on young people. and we are seeing the obvious development changes of falling mass cover. just concerns about whether this, either there's been effective in largely not identified yet, which can also lead to issues down the road. i think a big concern the masks with school closure and kids having to get their education
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via zoom. i think that's likely to have a bigger impact asks because as you say, it interrupts with not only their education but their socialization and social social emotional development. fortunately, that was for a brief period of time. it's hard to say whether that has had any impact on kids. again, like to reiterate kids a highly resilient and do tend to bounce back from adversities and so far there's no clear evidence of any negatively impacted by the mosque or school closures on kids. but again, it's really too early to tell. even going back to the issue of teen suicide is again too early to tell the world why the research on suicide has been all over the place. during coven, some studies have found an increase of a decrease. i'm not change. if color is anything like say saws all the spanish flu, we won't know about the impact on suicide until some years afterwards. so looking
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into the future, you believe that mental health will play more of a role in decision making. if we are to have another global health crisis in the future, nobody remembers the hysteria back in the 1980s where there were major mental health problems and all kinds of confusion and misconceptions around h i v. and now we come to cova 19 and the mental health situation is no better. my, my worry is that after cobra has gone or off, the cobra is become endemic and no longer of great concern. people will go return to focus on other things like climate change or other sorts of things will leave mental health behind. so that's my concerns the, the, the things that we've done for mental health during cove and should be preserved and perpetuated in the future. things like a health or internet based resear resources are very important now and for the future. so how does one psychologically prepare for a pandemic both as an adult and as a child? well, if there were so many uncertainties is actually
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a very good document for the w h o, just published. i was involved in some mine away on predicting future pandering sir, all kinds of uncertainties. i think the big thing for preparation for pandemic send for other sorts of a serious world visit is to improve your tolerance for uncertainty because that's one of the big issues is so many uncertainties. there are cognitive behavioral methods for people to improve their tolerance for uncertainty. answer improve this stress resilience not just for a future pandemic, but for all the other sorts of challenges ahead such as those associated with climate change. thank you for joining us, dr. ah. ah, children look to their parents to make decisions for them. some we get right in the case of handling the pandemic time is revealing the adults in the room got it wrong . physical, mental and emotional as well. social development was greatly reduced by the blanket protocols put in place on the name of public health. those who were questioning the science behind putting
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a piece of cloth over half the face were sadly demonized. even the most for parents themselves. who could see the real time damage being done to their children. damage for a virus which affected at less than one percent of their population at the time a number which is just a small fraction of youth who decided to take their own life. sadly, during the pandemic, 2 weeks to stop the spread, turn into 2 years for many and sadly, it could turn into 20 years before we know the full consequences. never before have we seen a time or the long term effects on children became the least of all concerns. yet the restrictions and rules which placed seniors in isolation, mixed infected patients in high risk. places like nursing homes, delayed care and testing, denied cobit treatments, which worked and put many on ventilators, only amplified the problems. so where these restrictions are really about
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protecting public health or protecting certain people's wealth. well unfortunately, it is the next generation who will be left to pay the bill. i'm sky now hughes and this is been your 360 view of the news affecting you. thanks for watching. ah huh. oh ah, ah, ah ah
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ah . i've actually found safety in the braces naziism as a joke. all of a sudden you're placed in a position where i can offend myself now. i don't know to be afraid and you walk on one hand, i'm terrified that they're going to find out. i'm jewish, but on the other, i think it's so far away. i distinctly remember my mom sitting me down one night and her st. john, they're going to hurt one guy hunch me. hi my ear or somebody shell now, and the rest. in the punches, who started flying? in? somebody shouted out, died, you boy died. and at that point i knew i remember had an indian
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doctor. they came in and looked and said, there's no medical reason why you should be alive. you to find something to believe . john story is a story of how the story of victory and whatever i can do to help him. i went to a dallas top headlines right now, one ot international in rushers, belgrade region. electricity is we're still off. ukrainian. shelling left half the city without power and wounded, at least one civilian, lots of golden co, local authorities, france following similar accusations from the u. s. accuses for one, the supporting intelligence and the d oxy. ultimately setting the stage for a deterioration off relations. it's something we're one though has been denying companies in poland and germany apply to secure deliveries of russian oil for next

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