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Aug 2, 2024
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university or johns hopkins medicine. so i got into this work was called to a delivery when i was a first-year ob/gyn resident doctor in training in pennsylvania. everything about the ring was as usual. there were ivey poles, fetal heart rate monitors and a mother about to push the baby into the world. but one thing was different. the mom to be with shackled to the bed. nothing in my training had prepared me for this moment. and since that night 20 years ago i contacted dozens of research studies that have revealed systematic decision deficiencies in care for incarcerate, pregnant and postpartum women. as i begin to provide ob/gyn care any county jail i tried to find out how many pregnant women aren't frustrated and how many give birth while they're in custody. what i found was shocking. there were no such statistics. this was in 2015, less than ten years ago. so my team at johns hopkins conducted the pregnancy and present statistics, or pits study, from 2016-2017, 22 state prison systems, the federal period of prisons an
university or johns hopkins medicine. so i got into this work was called to a delivery when i was a first-year ob/gyn resident doctor in training in pennsylvania. everything about the ring was as usual. there were ivey poles, fetal heart rate monitors and a mother about to push the baby into the world. but one thing was different. the mom to be with shackled to the bed. nothing in my training had prepared me for this moment. and since that night 20 years ago i contacted dozens of research...
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Aug 5, 2024
08/24
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CSPAN3
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at the johns hopkins university here about three years ago, i announced that the united states would take part in the great work of developing southeast asia, including the mekong valley, for all the of that region. are the determination to help build a better land a better land for men on sides. the present conflict has not diminished in the least. indeed the ravages of war, i think, have made it more urgent ever. so i repeat on behalf the united states again tonight what i said at johns hopkins that, north vietnam, could take its place in this common effort just as soon as peace comes over time. a wider framework of peace and security in southeast asia become possible. the new cooperations of nations the area could be a foundation stone. certainly friendship with the nations of search of southeast asia is what the united seeks. and that is all that the united states seeks. one day, my fellow citizen. there will be peace in southeast asia. it will come because. the people of southeast asia want it. those whose armies are at war tonight. those who don't threaten, have thus far been s
at the johns hopkins university here about three years ago, i announced that the united states would take part in the great work of developing southeast asia, including the mekong valley, for all the of that region. are the determination to help build a better land a better land for men on sides. the present conflict has not diminished in the least. indeed the ravages of war, i think, have made it more urgent ever. so i repeat on behalf the united states again tonight what i said at johns...
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Aug 3, 2024
08/24
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or johns hopkins d medicine. got into this work when i was called to a delivery when i was a first-year ob/gyn resident doctor in training in pennsylvania. everything about the room was as usual there were iv poles, fetal heart rate monitors, and a mother about to push a baby into thehe world. bucks, one thing was different. the mom to be was shackled to the bed. nothing in my training had prepared me for this moment. since that night 20 years ago i have conducted dozens of research studies that have revealed systematic deficiencies and care for incarcerated pregnant and postpartum women as i began to provide ob/gyn care to i county jail i try to find t how many pregnant women are incarcerated? howra many give up earth while they are in custody question are quite found it shocking there were no such statistics. this was in 2015 less than 10 years ago. so, my team at john hopkins pregnancy and prison statistics from 2016 until 201,722 state prison systems, federal bureau of prisons and the five largest jails repor
or johns hopkins d medicine. got into this work when i was called to a delivery when i was a first-year ob/gyn resident doctor in training in pennsylvania. everything about the room was as usual there were iv poles, fetal heart rate monitors, and a mother about to push a baby into thehe world. bucks, one thing was different. the mom to be was shackled to the bed. nothing in my training had prepared me for this moment. since that night 20 years ago i have conducted dozens of research studies...
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Aug 15, 2024
08/24
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he got into johns hopkins -- i did not know this until four years ago -- he got into hopkins in his earlybut because of the war and working in a shipyard he did not get to go. he was a very well read guy. he said your job is about a lot more than a paycheck. it is about your dignity. i am not joking. it is about your dignity. it is about being able to look your kid in the eye and say "everything will be ok" and mean it. the national press are good people, they are not crazy about me but i like them. [laughter] they will tell you, they will write about how i am wrong but they will tell you how things have changed. there are no editors anymore. you want to get your name in the news, you want to get a click, it is not always best to get it by doing something positive. i am being facetious. these are right, smart, decent people but it has all changed. . i hope you have all thought about the consequence of your undertaking, what it means. i am sounding like a preacher, but the obligations you have to do it on the level. do it on the level. for example, when i do this thing tomorrow, it really
he got into johns hopkins -- i did not know this until four years ago -- he got into hopkins in his earlybut because of the war and working in a shipyard he did not get to go. he was a very well read guy. he said your job is about a lot more than a paycheck. it is about your dignity. i am not joking. it is about your dignity. it is about being able to look your kid in the eye and say "everything will be ok" and mean it. the national press are good people, they are not crazy about me...
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best selling author and a senior fellow at the phillips merrill center for strategic studies at johns hopkins school for advanced international studies. welcome to you, hostage rescues at by israel relatively ray. what do you make of the slightest release? the rare indeed is only the 4th hostage rescue in 10 months, where the israelis and multi nationals have been held and hum us, look, he humanizes the hostage issue. it's hard to keep those faces to believe that they're real. they're not just posters, they're real people. um, and this was a father of 11 who came out squinting because he hadn't seen sunlight for months of 40 pounds dinner. i would say the 2nd notable thing is he's, he's a muslim, he's an arab, he spoke. you know hebrew though, because he's a citizen of israel and the commanding officer of the is really a military officer who welcomed him, greeted him in arabic, which kind of pushes back on the narrative that israel is an apartheid country. but more, more realistically, a kind of multinational multi ethnic community, the 12 drew's children who were killed by the hezbollah rock
best selling author and a senior fellow at the phillips merrill center for strategic studies at johns hopkins school for advanced international studies. welcome to you, hostage rescues at by israel relatively ray. what do you make of the slightest release? the rare indeed is only the 4th hostage rescue in 10 months, where the israelis and multi nationals have been held and hum us, look, he humanizes the hostage issue. it's hard to keep those faces to believe that they're real. they're not just...
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than 2 decades. professor hole from hong is an american sociologist and political sciences at johns hopkins university. he joins me from baltimore professor, thanks for coming onto the show. we know the pretty much every pen the in captivity around the world is on loan from china. has been called pens of diplomacy and it's not necessarily new but help us understand what does china gain from this practice? the extra data in a very 20 sunset and during the cold war china the gift penders to frantic countries. but uh since and i didnt equities and trying to had a program to the grocery with different countries and different through too long defender and then the shows the to pay a have to some of the pretender to, to do the chinese authorities and research institutions do have concerns, tests that you have it off of pender, so it actually, it is more like the rental agreement and stuff. it has been a long time that these tend to attract to is to the sue. and she will also the can gain from the, from, from admissions of those 2 ways. and at the same time, china, definitely god can spread the im
than 2 decades. professor hole from hong is an american sociologist and political sciences at johns hopkins university. he joins me from baltimore professor, thanks for coming onto the show. we know the pretty much every pen the in captivity around the world is on loan from china. has been called pens of diplomacy and it's not necessarily new but help us understand what does china gain from this practice? the extra data in a very 20 sunset and during the cold war china the gift penders to...
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Aug 4, 2024
08/24
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and vali nasr, professor at johns hopkins school of advanced international studies vali, let me begin with you and ask you, what does this look like to iran? because this has been a pretty aggressive set of moves by israel you're exactly right. i mean, this was seen by them as a deliberate provocation to precipitate. and a conflict that would ultimately probably bring in the united states into a direct confrontation with iran. so they saw that in once israel, by killing haniah, killed off the ceasefire deal, which means that the gaza war we'll go on. and it also decided to carry out the assassination in tehran. and during the inauguration of an iranian president, the new iranian president which meant that it deliberately wanted to humiliate iran and also the iranian side essentially as an attack on that inauguration itself. it's put iran in a very difficult position of needing to both retaliate, but also to establish deterrence against israel. and at the same time also not react in a way that would play exactly into what they think israel wants, which is a larger conflict robin does i
and vali nasr, professor at johns hopkins school of advanced international studies vali, let me begin with you and ask you, what does this look like to iran? because this has been a pretty aggressive set of moves by israel you're exactly right. i mean, this was seen by them as a deliberate provocation to precipitate. and a conflict that would ultimately probably bring in the united states into a direct confrontation with iran. so they saw that in once israel, by killing haniah, killed off the...
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Aug 4, 2024
08/24
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. >> i lost the new yorker's robin wright and vali nasr of johns hopkins also the biggest prisoner swap since the cold war seven countries were involved in 24 prisoners were delivered across borders including three americans. >> i'll talk to putin critic bill browder about who got the better end of the deal then venezuelan president nicolas maduro has claimed victory in last week's elections but the us says, his opponent is the actual winner will soar through the situation with opposition politician, little older lopez but first here's my take the conventional wisdom about donald trump is that he has no coherent policy agenda. he's transactional impulsive, and narcissistic the 140 of his former staffers who worked on the heritage foundation's project 2025 discovered this recently when trump abruptly disavowed the project because it became controversial. but trump does have an ideological core and it's one that dates back a long way. in 1987 when donald trump was merely a new york developer, he spent almost $100,000 to take out a full-page ad in the new york times it was an open letter t
. >> i lost the new yorker's robin wright and vali nasr of johns hopkins also the biggest prisoner swap since the cold war seven countries were involved in 24 prisoners were delivered across borders including three americans. >> i'll talk to putin critic bill browder about who got the better end of the deal then venezuelan president nicolas maduro has claimed victory in last week's elections but the us says, his opponent is the actual winner will soar through the situation with...
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Aug 30, 2024
08/24
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FBC
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so, this is coming from johns hopkins by the way.d it's clear that that's the way the bureaucrats think about american voters, so they do apparently think they are easily manipulated. >> well we know there's roughly 2 million federal employees that are not members of the united states military but this executive order by president biden goes beyond just federal bureaucrats. it's leveraging federal agencies to get out the vote. again, elections are going to be partisan. it's fine if a partisan institution goes and tries to drive up the vote to their advantage. what we're saying is your taxpayer dollars should not be used in a partisan manner during the election. partisan activity and elections is reasonable. our federal government and all government needs to remain neutral during the process of administering our elections. david: that's what the hatch act is all about. congressman thank you very much appreciate it. thank you for coming in. coming up, flip flop flip flopping so harris claims she never wanted a fracking ban and doesn't
so, this is coming from johns hopkins by the way.d it's clear that that's the way the bureaucrats think about american voters, so they do apparently think they are easily manipulated. >> well we know there's roughly 2 million federal employees that are not members of the united states military but this executive order by president biden goes beyond just federal bureaucrats. it's leveraging federal agencies to get out the vote. again, elections are going to be partisan. it's fine if a...
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she's a best selling author and middle east analyst and johns hopkins university. laura, welcome back to the day you served in the us state department as senior policy advisor for the peace process in the middle east. what would be your advice for anthony blinking today as he's in the region, trying to brokers these fire deal as well? i would say there on the cease fires, 3 cheese for success. number one, timing, number 2, trust and number 3, pos and the ability to get tough. um, 1st of all, with the timing, i mean i was, i happened to be in secretary carrie's office in 2014 during, during a gaza or when the is really tags just rolled over the border into gaza. and his 1st instinct secretary carrie was let's go for a cease fire. the truth was then and perhaps now is that neither side was ready for that. and as much as we pushed and tried. not only was israel not quite ready to lay down their arms, but egypt as well that was helping broker in 2014, you know, felt like that there needed to be a little bit more of fighting before we could reach that cease fire. so num
she's a best selling author and middle east analyst and johns hopkins university. laura, welcome back to the day you served in the us state department as senior policy advisor for the peace process in the middle east. what would be your advice for anthony blinking today as he's in the region, trying to brokers these fire deal as well? i would say there on the cease fires, 3 cheese for success. number one, timing, number 2, trust and number 3, pos and the ability to get tough. um, 1st of all,...
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Aug 25, 2024
08/24
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peter pomerantz of he's a senior fellow at johns hopkins university. he has written two books about, russian disinformation and propaganda. nothing is true and. everything is possible. and this is not propaganda. his newest title, how to win an information war, the propagandist who outwitted hitler is a biography of world two propagandist swift delmer interspersed with pomeranz of own with the invasion of ukraine. the session, moderated by russell and encina, the library's chief community relations officer. enjoy festival and let us welcome them to stage. all. on behalf of my colleagues at the library of congress, thank you for joining us today. it's definitely one of our biggest festivals. thank you, annalee and peter. we have a lot to talk about. we'll dive right into it. so the elephant in the room when it comes to misinformation. is it better, worse from the last presidential election to this one? so we were talking about this beforehand and peter said, do you want the tweet answer or the long answer? well, the answer about twitter. yeah. or the an
peter pomerantz of he's a senior fellow at johns hopkins university. he has written two books about, russian disinformation and propaganda. nothing is true and. everything is possible. and this is not propaganda. his newest title, how to win an information war, the propagandist who outwitted hitler is a biography of world two propagandist swift delmer interspersed with pomeranz of own with the invasion of ukraine. the session, moderated by russell and encina, the library's chief community...
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Aug 25, 2024
08/24
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i've learned that andrew cherlin, a sociologist at, johns hopkins, explains that in early america there were sometimes against living alone, particularly particularly single men weren't supposed to live alone. it was kind of considered something wrong with you were a little suspicious. living alone. you didn't set up shop as a as independent adult. but we know today that that's not the norm. so we looking at a society in which i think we're teetering about half of adults married with children as opposed to certainly when i was a kid, it would have been much more like 70 or 80%. so we're leaving that ideal and i think maybe, maybe of what's going on there. jd vance is tapping into this sort of fear that people have that society won't be structured around good of human life for forming families. tom on the flip side of that, of childless coming back to the women that you interviewed, especially women in this country who have more than two children, what did angela mean when? you interviewed her and she said children are the scapegoat of this culture. we put all of our anxiety and, evil on
i've learned that andrew cherlin, a sociologist at, johns hopkins, explains that in early america there were sometimes against living alone, particularly particularly single men weren't supposed to live alone. it was kind of considered something wrong with you were a little suspicious. living alone. you didn't set up shop as a as independent adult. but we know today that that's not the norm. so we looking at a society in which i think we're teetering about half of adults married with children...
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Aug 24, 2024
08/24
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i've learned that andrew cherlin, a sociologist at, johns hopkins, explains that in early america there were sometimes against living alone, particularly particularly single men weren't supposed to live alone. it was kind of considered something wrong with you were a little suspicious. living alone. you didn't set up shop as a as independent adult. but we know today that that's not the norm. so we looking at a society in which i think we're teetering about half of adults married with children as opposed to certainly when i was a kid, it would have been much more like 70 or 80%. so we're leaving that ideal and i think maybe, maybe of what's going on there. jd vance is tapping into this sort of fear that people have that society won't be structured around good of human life for forming families. tom on the flip side of that, of childless coming back to the women that you interviewed, especially women in this country who have more than two children, what did angela mean when? you interviewed her and she said children are the scapegoat of this culture. we put all of our anxiety and, evil on
i've learned that andrew cherlin, a sociologist at, johns hopkins, explains that in early america there were sometimes against living alone, particularly particularly single men weren't supposed to live alone. it was kind of considered something wrong with you were a little suspicious. living alone. you didn't set up shop as a as independent adult. but we know today that that's not the norm. so we looking at a society in which i think we're teetering about half of adults married with children...
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Aug 22, 2024
08/24
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i might miss pronounce from johns hopkins. >> i would say quite the opposite.need to be deepening the alliance we have and building out additional partnerships. when you look at asia you have quiet conversations with people, many leaders in other countries admit the u.s. is still there greatest foreign investment but has been displaced by china as their biggest trading partner. the fact we did not move it ford with the high standards was a huge strategic mistake. we will end should regret for a long time. that aside almost with a couple of exceptions it is very clear the u.s. is our preferred security partner. we went the relationship you have become a hot a national navigate to not anger china promote and we want more. what a deeper relationship. that is the message across most of that region we should be taking advantage of the fact the countries are very nervous about china's behavior. they want our help and interest aligned on this. >> there is an example of belt and wrote initiative being pushed back in some areas. which errors are seen that happen? >> in
i might miss pronounce from johns hopkins. >> i would say quite the opposite.need to be deepening the alliance we have and building out additional partnerships. when you look at asia you have quiet conversations with people, many leaders in other countries admit the u.s. is still there greatest foreign investment but has been displaced by china as their biggest trading partner. the fact we did not move it ford with the high standards was a huge strategic mistake. we will end should regret...
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Aug 14, 2024
08/24
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marty makary, professor of medicine at johns hopkins university now. if we give the federal government the power of our health care, what will that look like? >> i think there is an appeal to cutting the middleman away from the system. the problem is every country that has moved to government-run health care has had to make draconian cuts, five or ten years down the road across the belt cuts and that's what's happening with their own government. medicare is currently running on fumes and doctors are getting paid less and less every year, adjusted for inflation with no change or increase in payments and medicare is getting fleeced. there is a lot of waste in the system and a recent analysis that came out this week by paragon found that the cost of medicare for all is $44 trillion over the next four years. >> harris: i saw that, and none of what you are saying particularly will change from other medical experts i'm talking to you. i mean, putting it in the hands of the same government that has run things less than ideally if you want to see it that way.
marty makary, professor of medicine at johns hopkins university now. if we give the federal government the power of our health care, what will that look like? >> i think there is an appeal to cutting the middleman away from the system. the problem is every country that has moved to government-run health care has had to make draconian cuts, five or ten years down the road across the belt cuts and that's what's happening with their own government. medicare is currently running on fumes and...
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Aug 31, 2024
08/24
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let's bring in senior scholar at the johns hopkins center for health security.ou so much for joining us today. let's talk about this mosquito borne illness it's short for eastern equine encephalitis. apparently it's pretty rare the cdc says is only three -- 15 cases a year. the resident of new hampshire that died, he was only 41 years old. apparently had no underlying health conditions. that's pretty scary. what more can you tell us? >> eee is unique. if you become ill with you are very likely to have a severe case. this is very different from other infections including westmount for example. you do not want to get it progresses to brain infection in the very high number of cases who are infected and develop symptoms. if you do survive you're left with a disability per there is no vaccine for it. anytime there's eee activity in mosquitoes, and horses i take a pretty aggressive health actions with mosquito spra sprain, advis to the general public. they are trying to avoid these cases they are no laughing matter. these are not minor infections. anita: it sounds li
let's bring in senior scholar at the johns hopkins center for health security.ou so much for joining us today. let's talk about this mosquito borne illness it's short for eastern equine encephalitis. apparently it's pretty rare the cdc says is only three -- 15 cases a year. the resident of new hampshire that died, he was only 41 years old. apparently had no underlying health conditions. that's pretty scary. what more can you tell us? >> eee is unique. if you become ill with you are very...
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Aug 12, 2024
08/24
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member of the house appropriations committee and gop doctor's caucus, previously a physician at johns hopkinsur physician's hat for a moment. many states, if somebody walks into an er, even if they don't have the ability to pay, they get the treatment. that includes migrants. >> that's absolutely right. let's say you're a pregnant migrant and you're going to go for delivery. if you come to the emergency room in labor, they have to take you and that's thousands and thousands of dollars in costs that a texas taxpayers would have to eat because bottom line is, you have to take care of -- it's a federal law, you have to take care of emergency patients. cheryl: one of my best friends went to her hospital to deliver her daughter and was turned away because the maternity ward was full of migrants. that was in phoenix. that happens a everywhere. vice president harris flip-flopping on the issue of the border, she was in arizona, speaking of arizona. she called for strong border security. she's a former attorney general of a border state, talking about california. in 2017 she put out an statement decla
member of the house appropriations committee and gop doctor's caucus, previously a physician at johns hopkinsur physician's hat for a moment. many states, if somebody walks into an er, even if they don't have the ability to pay, they get the treatment. that includes migrants. >> that's absolutely right. let's say you're a pregnant migrant and you're going to go for delivery. if you come to the emergency room in labor, they have to take you and that's thousands and thousands of dollars in...
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Aug 11, 2024
08/24
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NTV
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tonometers are massively lying. claim scientists from the american johns hopkins university.ng to their data, blood pressure is often measured with a large error, and the reason for this is the incorrectly selected cuff size. the standard one is not suitable for everyone. thus, in thin people, on whom the device can dangle, the readings were underestimated, on average by almost 4 mm hg, and in overweight people, if pulled too tightly, they were overestimated, sometimes by as much as 20 mm. the cuff should... match the person's constitution, otherwise there may be errors in diagnosis and drug dosage. surely you have seen girls and women with bright polyester fibers woven into their hair in the south upon returning from it. this is called kanicalon. it is inexpensive, sold in large quantities and is offered for home use, among other things. it is beautiful, but what underwater stones? pink, green, purple, curls, ringlets, braids, there is such a variety in the beauty salon that dinara batyrshina's eyes just run wide, her soul requires experiments, but work in the press service
tonometers are massively lying. claim scientists from the american johns hopkins university.ng to their data, blood pressure is often measured with a large error, and the reason for this is the incorrectly selected cuff size. the standard one is not suitable for everyone. thus, in thin people, on whom the device can dangle, the readings were underestimated, on average by almost 4 mm hg, and in overweight people, if pulled too tightly, they were overestimated, sometimes by as much as 20 mm. the...
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Aug 7, 2024
08/24
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. >> sarah is the dean of the johns hopkins school of nursing and leads the philanthropy-funded programllaboration with the university of maryland, morgan state, and compton state's school of nursing, she says by next year, they plan to bring primary health care to more than 5000 baltimore residents regardless of their insurance coverage. >> the vision is that we will go door to door, be in the laundromats, libraries, schools, sort of blanket it so everyone has access to nurses and the health-care system. >> the approach was inspired by a program developed with a 1000 miles away in costa rica, where health-care workers aim to visit every resident nationwide in their home at least once a year. >> they might come back to visit them if they have high needs. they might connect them with other parts of the public health or nutrition system, and all the time, they connect them with the acute and chronic care that person might need. >> harvard's school of public health has studied the impact of costa rica's model. >> costa rica has significantly improved the health of its population across bot
. >> sarah is the dean of the johns hopkins school of nursing and leads the philanthropy-funded programllaboration with the university of maryland, morgan state, and compton state's school of nursing, she says by next year, they plan to bring primary health care to more than 5000 baltimore residents regardless of their insurance coverage. >> the vision is that we will go door to door, be in the laundromats, libraries, schools, sort of blanket it so everyone has access to nurses and...
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Aug 20, 2024
08/24
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well, it turns out thomas dixon and woodrow wilson went to school together at johns hopkins university in baltimore. so ugly birds, a feather stick together. another columbia university historian would say william, hemoted the view that black people were incapable of reconstruction would have been a colossal error, reversing reconstruction was reversion to natural order, thee fact of racial inequality that slavery once encoded the natural order, is people to be enslaved. that's from this vantage point. it's kind of hard to get in touch with the okay, so let's go the next group, just the housekeeper, you know, and then, you know, tear her down or anything but but they also they didn't want to give her a whole lot of credit for anything. judge charles landis, a noted jurist in lancaster county back in the 19th century, wrote a defense of stephens and smith, a very detailed defense. in fact, he says at the beginning of it, i've researched this, so don't you dare question anything i say. and here he did make a couple of mistakes. but anyway, he wanted to defend against the scurrilous attac
well, it turns out thomas dixon and woodrow wilson went to school together at johns hopkins university in baltimore. so ugly birds, a feather stick together. another columbia university historian would say william, hemoted the view that black people were incapable of reconstruction would have been a colossal error, reversing reconstruction was reversion to natural order, thee fact of racial inequality that slavery once encoded the natural order, is people to be enslaved. that's from this...
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Aug 26, 2024
08/24
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sean carroll is professor of natural philosophy at johns hopkins university and
sean carroll is professor of natural philosophy at johns hopkins university and
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Aug 16, 2024
08/24
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with that we bring a doctor marty makary johns hopkins school of medicine professor and author of blinddicine gets it wrong and what it means for a health. doctor it's always good to have you with us today. let's put this up. this is a call for the ketamine shots on the day that matthew perry died. his assistant's plea agreement first shot 8:30 am, second shot around 12:45 pm, third shot a big 1 at around 1:25 pm. where your thoughts on happened here and who's to blame? >> it's a real tragedy. there's a couple things look ketamine everybody needs to know this is a drug that's increasingly becoming abused. 1 study suggest that 1% of seniors in high school have tried it and because it has an expanding indication for some mood disorders not as first-line antidepressant but certain cases of ptsd cats are increasingly being used some more people are getting access to it. with that seeing more abuse. it's an anaesthetic. we use it everyday here at the hospital for general anaesthesia. it has hallucinogenic and psychedelic properties sometimes. and the doses used for these mood disorders and p
with that we bring a doctor marty makary johns hopkins school of medicine professor and author of blinddicine gets it wrong and what it means for a health. doctor it's always good to have you with us today. let's put this up. this is a call for the ketamine shots on the day that matthew perry died. his assistant's plea agreement first shot 8:30 am, second shot around 12:45 pm, third shot a big 1 at around 1:25 pm. where your thoughts on happened here and who's to blame? >> it's a real...
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Aug 1, 2024
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and then martha jones is a professor at johns hopkins, has a very nice chapter on how african-american kids were able to actually, in spite of the dred scott decision, in which said basically blacks had no rights citizens, they had no standing, were able use the courts and in baltimore successful to advance their causes. so and then we do we do have a number of other topics i think in. recruiting troops in maryland for the union and. the chapter on reconstruction and then the final chapters on is on memory which is something we can maybe talk about as well. but i would say that there are a number of diverse opinions in there. but i don't think you're going to find a chapter that says that, you know, maryland. maryland, you know, was a confederate state along and only what if, what if, what if marilyn wouldn't remain the union. so i hope that's a as your question. thank you. yes, sir. did you have question? yeah. you mentioned being a lawyer was, the union. in what way would you say it was strongly loyal. the union. so, you know, you had the mason-dixon line and the confederates felt th
and then martha jones is a professor at johns hopkins, has a very nice chapter on how african-american kids were able to actually, in spite of the dred scott decision, in which said basically blacks had no rights citizens, they had no standing, were able use the courts and in baltimore successful to advance their causes. so and then we do we do have a number of other topics i think in. recruiting troops in maryland for the union and. the chapter on reconstruction and then the final chapters on...
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Aug 31, 2024
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amishi dollar shaw, who is a senior scholar at johns hopkins university center for health security doctorthanks so much for being being with me when people hear that figure 30% of the people infected with tripoli dying, that that is certainly enough to make people panic how concerned you think you the general public needs to be? >> it all depends upon where they live. so if you live in an area where there has been cases of eastern equine encephalitis in humans and horses, or mosquito pools have tested positive. you need to be aware of that and you need to take precautions because this is not an infection. you want to get because of that 30% number. and those who do survive often have disabilities. i think if you live in massachusetts, if you live in new england, some of the gulf states also where you see this, this infection or other states like new jersey or wisconsin have had cases. you need to be aware of that, but i think for the general public that the risk is low and you mentioned precaution. >> what what is the best way to prevent these mosquito bites? from these insects that are c
amishi dollar shaw, who is a senior scholar at johns hopkins university center for health security doctorthanks so much for being being with me when people hear that figure 30% of the people infected with tripoli dying, that that is certainly enough to make people panic how concerned you think you the general public needs to be? >> it all depends upon where they live. so if you live in an area where there has been cases of eastern equine encephalitis in humans and horses, or mosquito...
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Aug 2, 2024
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so let's discuss with cnn contributor and associate professor of history at johns hopkins university, leah wright rigueur. leah, thank you so much for being with us how did you feel seeing the first black woman and the first woman of south asian descent to win enough delegates to lead major party ticket i think we are watching history unfold. >> and there are no two ways around it in the same way that when we saw all of these motions with barak obama back in 2008, i think we're having another moment, but we're also having a moment that many people expected to have in 2016 with him hungary clinton. so when you put those two things together, i think you have just an enormous amount of historical importance, but also a sense of real significance that moves beyond the symbolic. this is something that has teeth, this is something that has meet, this is something that has weight and it's certainly something that over half the country has waited for very, long time, to be honest, i never thought that i would see a black or indian woman as president of the united states. and now it's well wit
so let's discuss with cnn contributor and associate professor of history at johns hopkins university, leah wright rigueur. leah, thank you so much for being with us how did you feel seeing the first black woman and the first woman of south asian descent to win enough delegates to lead major party ticket i think we are watching history unfold. >> and there are no two ways around it in the same way that when we saw all of these motions with barak obama back in 2008, i think we're having...
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Aug 13, 2024
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she, the former president of the american maryland psychiatric society and is on a faculty at john hopkins school of medicine. please me welcoming to politics and prose damon tweedy and dinah miller. so did lilly. introduce us? yeah. yeah. so. so, first of all, i just want to say, you know, thanks to politics and prose for hosting this, thanks for c-span, for filming and thanks for you guys are are in you know it's friday night in d.c. obviously a lot of things you can do. so really thank you for coming out today. we appreciate it. and thank you. so to dr. miller, actually, someone she's a fellow writer, dr. sakai trice, and really kind of helped inspire some of my writing as well, particularly on the topic of psychiatry. so thank you as well. thank you for having me. i'm excited to be here and so damon, i've read both of your books and i want to say that i read some of facing unseen while it was in progress and i wanted to congratulate you because i know you asked for my opinion at times and i'm not always the easiest critic. and so when the book came and i started reading it, i was like,
she, the former president of the american maryland psychiatric society and is on a faculty at john hopkins school of medicine. please me welcoming to politics and prose damon tweedy and dinah miller. so did lilly. introduce us? yeah. yeah. so. so, first of all, i just want to say, you know, thanks to politics and prose for hosting this, thanks for c-span, for filming and thanks for you guys are are in you know it's friday night in d.c. obviously a lot of things you can do. so really thank you...
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Aug 2, 2024
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i teach classes at johns hopkins university in climate policies. thank you for the panelists for the great conversation. so you all about me i'm going to ask a question for pedro and one for gina. pedro, this is a think about climate migrants. there are plenty of studies that show the heat waves in the middle east in the 2000s with the culprit of the political instability and the massive migration to europe. here in america, too, we have a heat wave in the central america that is pushing migrants to the united states. those migrants are sparking what you call a national reason, kind of polarization that you mention. so my question for you is, what is undp doing specifically to address this issue of climate migrants? because i'm -- why are you doing for people are forced to displace because of climate? for gina, we are agree haves conversation of afternoon about the chevron case. we know the supreme court dismissed the chevron case. i want to pick your brain about if you have a magic wand, would you -- would you do something and were to be sure we h
i teach classes at johns hopkins university in climate policies. thank you for the panelists for the great conversation. so you all about me i'm going to ask a question for pedro and one for gina. pedro, this is a think about climate migrants. there are plenty of studies that show the heat waves in the middle east in the 2000s with the culprit of the political instability and the massive migration to europe. here in america, too, we have a heat wave in the central america that is pushing...
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Aug 25, 2024
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sean carroll is professor of natural philosophy at johns hopkins university and fractal at the santa fe institute. he is host of the mind scape podcast, author of from eternity to here the particle at the end of the universe the big picture and something deeply hidden, he has been awarded prizes and fellowships by the national foundation nasa. the american of physics, the royal society, london and many others. he lives in baltimore with his wife, of course. once again, the book we are here for this evening is titled quanta and fields, which is the second book and is internationally acclaimed. the biggest ideas in the universe. in the book, carroll cuts the bare mathematical essence of most profound theories, explaining every step in a uniquely way. this book a journey to a once unimaginable truth about what our universe is. we're so honored to welcome sean back to harrisburg for, i think the third time now. so without further, please join me in giving him a warm harrisburg welcome. okay. thank you, alex. it's always great to be here at the midtown scholar college bookstore. one of, i
sean carroll is professor of natural philosophy at johns hopkins university and fractal at the santa fe institute. he is host of the mind scape podcast, author of from eternity to here the particle at the end of the universe the big picture and something deeply hidden, he has been awarded prizes and fellowships by the national foundation nasa. the american of physics, the royal society, london and many others. he lives in baltimore with his wife, of course. once again, the book we are here for...
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Aug 26, 2024
08/24
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sean carroll is professor of natural philosophy at johns hopkins university and fractal at the santa fe institute. he is host of the mind scape podcast, author of from eternity to here the particle at the end of the universe the big picture and something deeply hidden, he has been awarded prizes and fellowships by the national foundation nasa. the american of physics, the royal society, london and many others. he lives in baltimore with his wife, of course. once again, the book we are here for this evening is titled quanta and fields, which is the second book and is internationally acclaimed. the biggest ideas in the universe. in the book, carroll cuts the bare mathematical essence of most profound theories, explaining every step in a uniquely way. this book a journey to a once unimaginable truth about what our universe is. we're so honored to welcome sean back to harrisburg for, i think the third time now. so without further, please join me in giving him a warm harrisburg welcome. okay. thank you, alex. it's always great to be here at the midtown scholar college bookstore. one of, i
sean carroll is professor of natural philosophy at johns hopkins university and fractal at the santa fe institute. he is host of the mind scape podcast, author of from eternity to here the particle at the end of the universe the big picture and something deeply hidden, he has been awarded prizes and fellowships by the national foundation nasa. the american of physics, the royal society, london and many others. he lives in baltimore with his wife, of course. once again, the book we are here for...
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Aug 6, 2024
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i can tell you many things john hopkins school of advanced international studies third the kissinger center of advanced international studies goes back and forth burrito's multiple language you can tell from the footnotes and theok book. it's an external piece of work. it is a thrill and honor and having him here today. please join me in welcoming him. [applause] >> thank you up it is a great privilege to be here. i am so grateful to stanford university or to the hoover institution for hosting the here and organizing this. ten years of writing. is not an insubstantial piece of work. i had to cut a substantial amount before the publisher agreed to entertai' the prospect of publishing it. >> it does not bilk you cut a lot. [laughter] i almost hurt my back. >> yes, this was a challenge. why is it that i could not stop writing? the reason for this is a remarkable change in the archival situation in russia over the last 10 years or so. russian materials are not the only materials that are used in the book there are almost entirely close since xi jinping has come to power this a crackdown
i can tell you many things john hopkins school of advanced international studies third the kissinger center of advanced international studies goes back and forth burrito's multiple language you can tell from the footnotes and theok book. it's an external piece of work. it is a thrill and honor and having him here today. please join me in welcoming him. [applause] >> thank you up it is a great privilege to be here. i am so grateful to stanford university or to the hoover institution for...
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researchers from johns hopkins university programmed their machine, which they have been working on forat she performed one of the most difficult surgical manipulations: suturing intestinal sections on a living organism, where the tissues are moving, and laparoscopically through minimal incisions. the operation was performed. on four pigs, and the robot never made a mistake, even a person does not always succeed in suturing so tightly. according to the creators, in the future, independently operating robots may be equipped with yes... ambulances, one morning on ntv, i am sergey mayorov, hello, one day marina mishcheryakova brought me back to life, the world-famous diva performed the part of chi uchiusan in giacoma butterfly in such a way that i fell in love with this genre with all my heart. many of you, judging by our broadcasts, have long guessed this, i try not to... but i cannot pass by this significant date, i have no professional right. marina misherikova, the talent and voice that was admired by luch at the turn of placida domingo, jose carreros, elena obraztsova and dmitry hvaro
researchers from johns hopkins university programmed their machine, which they have been working on forat she performed one of the most difficult surgical manipulations: suturing intestinal sections on a living organism, where the tissues are moving, and laparoscopically through minimal incisions. the operation was performed. on four pigs, and the robot never made a mistake, even a person does not always succeed in suturing so tightly. according to the creators, in the future, independently...