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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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>> so kawasaki disease was first named in 1967.entified in japan and seems tube genetic predisposition for the disease in the janz community. there's cases every year and every pediatrician has heard of kawasaki disease. this outbreak around covid seems to be a bit stronger but a viral disease thought to cause kawasaki disease and covid is accentuating that process. the different between covid related kawasaki disease and others at least from cases we've heard about is that there's much bigger shock associated with it. low blood pressure. needing to have heart medication administered to maintain blood pressure. that's what we're seeing in our patients and seen in other places around the world. that's the reason for the alert and for the intense interest from everybody involved. >> and this gets to how is knowing this, this anecdotal evidence, how is this changing how you're caring or assessing children who come inspected with covid. >> kawasaki disease as an entity associated with the development of coronary aneurysms. that's been
>> so kawasaki disease was first named in 1967.entified in japan and seems tube genetic predisposition for the disease in the janz community. there's cases every year and every pediatrician has heard of kawasaki disease. this outbreak around covid seems to be a bit stronger but a viral disease thought to cause kawasaki disease and covid is accentuating that process. the different between covid related kawasaki disease and others at least from cases we've heard about is that there's much...
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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reporter: reports show a growing number of cases of multi-system inflammatory disease, similar to kawasakich is a disease most common in children, characterized by fever, swollen lymph nodes, and inflammation in the eyes, mouth and skin. dr. jane newburger is with boston children's hospital. >> if they get treated promptly, they'll do well. but a small proportion will go on and develop enlargement in the coronary arteries, or even aneurysms of the coronary arteries. >> reporter: here in new york, at least three children have been hospitalized with a rare inflammation of the heart related to covid-19. >> it's a tiny minority of a kind of a shock syndrome, and sometimes with some signs and symptoms that look a little bit like what we can see in kawasaki disease. >> reporter: coronavirus is proving to be much more than a traditional respiratory illness, with unusual symptoms being reported almost daily-- for example, loss of taste and smell, and frostbite toes-- purplish patches seen on the feet of children and young adults, possibly caused by increased inflammation and clotting. doctors are
reporter: reports show a growing number of cases of multi-system inflammatory disease, similar to kawasakich is a disease most common in children, characterized by fever, swollen lymph nodes, and inflammation in the eyes, mouth and skin. dr. jane newburger is with boston children's hospital. >> if they get treated promptly, they'll do well. but a small proportion will go on and develop enlargement in the coronary arteries, or even aneurysms of the coronary arteries. >> reporter:...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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BLOOMBERG
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his name is guy kawasaki, kind of turned into a famous person. i said, you know, i'm 19 years old. i just put all my life savings into your computer to write software, and it doesn't work, so why don't you explain to me why that is? this was in may of 1984. he was like, why don't you come to work here this summer and help us fix it, because we are having some problems? [laughter] i was like, what was that? he's like, we will hire you as an intern into apple. i'm like, ok, where are you? well, he is in cupertino, a 15 minute drive, actually right next to my father's store. david: did you meet steve jobs and have any relationship with him? marc: i did.
his name is guy kawasaki, kind of turned into a famous person. i said, you know, i'm 19 years old. i just put all my life savings into your computer to write software, and it doesn't work, so why don't you explain to me why that is? this was in may of 1984. he was like, why don't you come to work here this summer and help us fix it, because we are having some problems? [laughter] i was like, what was that? he's like, we will hire you as an intern into apple. i'm like, ok, where are you? well,...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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with severe coronavirus are also having very serious complications including what they say is the kawasaki syndrome. what is that and how threatening could this be? >> this is a very interesting story. a rare event happening in the uk but describing kids coming in who have difficulty breathing, low blood pressure, appear to be in shock, septic shock, and they have a unique rash, which resembles somewhat this condition known as kawasaki's disease, which has been an issue for decades. we think it has infectious e deemology but elusive in identifying the virus. when you go back to the ckawasai literature, it goes to coronavirus, binding to the same ace 2 receptor so maybe we're going to make some progress on uncovering the cause of kawasaki's but it's another very worrisome trend we see young kids getting sick as well. bottom line, this is not a virus to take lightly. this is a serious illness and we have to be able to do that contact tracing and testing on a scale that's larger than what we're doing currently, if we're going to safely open up the country. >> not to oversimplify, having had i
with severe coronavirus are also having very serious complications including what they say is the kawasaki syndrome. what is that and how threatening could this be? >> this is a very interesting story. a rare event happening in the uk but describing kids coming in who have difficulty breathing, low blood pressure, appear to be in shock, septic shock, and they have a unique rash, which resembles somewhat this condition known as kawasaki's disease, which has been an issue for decades. we...
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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KDTV
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el sÍndrome de kawasaki es una enfermedad, vieja que la de que todo el doctor kawasaki en japÓn, tienen tenemos un tÉrmino para esto en la medicina se llama idiopÁtico. no tenemos idea porque pasa pero pasano debemos llevar al extremo estos sÍntomas raro. karla: otra cosa es que estÁn viendo sus hijos demasiado tiempo en las tabletas y aparatos electrÓnicos, quizÁs por miedo de que no es que la que no saben si cuando es suficiente de la lÍnea. >> lo mejor es tener una en el mercado el niÑo no quiere sacarse la piyama, es levantarse, lavarse lo siguiente, desvestirse, tener un orden, no el mismo que tenÍamos antes de las pandemia en la casa, porque el niÑo necesita tiene siete aÑos y necesita lÍmites salir estudio ahora hace cuatro dÍas y mostrÓ un estudio que vieron 2200 niÑos que antes del aÑo de vida, y esto me estoy refiriendo a la parte de los electrÓnicos, usaban las tabletas costaban frente a la pantalla en un tiempo prudencial mostraron sÍntomas algunos por ejemplo chicos que no sabe, hablar prestan atenciÓn al no, and distraÍdo y se vio estaba relacionado al uso de la pantalla o
el sÍndrome de kawasaki es una enfermedad, vieja que la de que todo el doctor kawasaki en japÓn, tienen tenemos un tÉrmino para esto en la medicina se llama idiopÁtico. no tenemos idea porque pasa pero pasano debemos llevar al extremo estos sÍntomas raro. karla: otra cosa es que estÁn viendo sus hijos demasiado tiempo en las tabletas y aparatos electrÓnicos, quizÁs por miedo de que no es que la que no saben si cuando es suficiente de la lÍnea. >> lo mejor es tener una en el...
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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CNNW
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kawasaki has been around for a while. it always has been mysterious, we always thought it was triggered, the syndrome became evident after what may have been coronavirus routine infection. it is out there. we know how to diagnose it. it has good treatment. it has curative treatment. so i think awareness as ever is the first, second and third issue here. people should, if their kid has a rash, if a kid has fever, they need to call their pediatrician, probably through telemedicine visit so the rash can be examined and the treatments are pretty straightforward. so it is a real deal. i think it is the real deal. but i am confident we can handle it. >> okay. >> so many surprises with this. i know doctors like you, you're learning something new every day, dr. sepkowitz, thank you for walking us through it all. >>> tonight, anderson cooper and dr. sanjay gupta will have the very latest on the virus, they have a new live cnn global town hall, joined by dr. anthony fauci and bill gates, "coronavirus: facts and fears" tonight at 8:
kawasaki has been around for a while. it always has been mysterious, we always thought it was triggered, the syndrome became evident after what may have been coronavirus routine infection. it is out there. we know how to diagnose it. it has good treatment. it has curative treatment. so i think awareness as ever is the first, second and third issue here. people should, if their kid has a rash, if a kid has fever, they need to call their pediatrician, probably through telemedicine visit so the...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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—like disease, so kawasaki disease isa very —like disease, so kawasaki disease is a very rare inflammatoryime in downing street and the coverage continues on the news channel. george is coming up on bbc one with the bbc news app 6pm. stay with us for that. in the meantime, thomas ruffenach with the weather. hello. well, it's been so dry for so very long that it's high time we got some rain, and rain is on the way, a fair amount, for southern parts of the uk — and i'm sure our gardens will love it as well as our parks. and, let's face it, most of us are stuck at home. the rain clouds are visible on the satellite picture coming in from the south. that's tomorrow's rain and this band of cloud, that's the weather front that will come our way on wednesday. you can see how over the next few days one weather system moves across southern parts of the country and this next big area of low pressure swings in front in our direction as well. the forecast for the coming hours, then. through the night, we expect the clouds to thicken across the south. it will start raining almost anywhere from cornwall
—like disease, so kawasaki disease isa very —like disease, so kawasaki disease is a very rare inflammatoryime in downing street and the coverage continues on the news channel. george is coming up on bbc one with the bbc news app 6pm. stay with us for that. in the meantime, thomas ruffenach with the weather. hello. well, it's been so dry for so very long that it's high time we got some rain, and rain is on the way, a fair amount, for southern parts of the uk — and i'm sure our gardens will...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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BLOOMBERG
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his name is guy kawasaki, kind of turned into a famous person. i said, you know, i'm 19 years old.put all my life savings into your computer to write software, and it doesn't work, so why don't you explain to me why that is? this was in may of 1984. he was like, why don't you come to work here this summer and help us fix it, because we are having some problems? [laughter] i was like, what was that? he's like, we will hire you as an intern into apple. i'm like, ok, where are you? well, he is in cupertino, a 15 minute drive, actually right next to my father's store. david: did you meet steve jobs and have any relationship with him? marc: i did. i met steve jobs, and steve jobs ended up having a huge impact on my life, especially when i started salesforce. it was a very, very meaningful and powerful relationship. and i would not be the person i am and salesforce would not be the company it is without steve jobs. david: now, when salesforce was started, you started a system of having people develop applications, apps, and you had the name of the app store. can you tell us how that evol
his name is guy kawasaki, kind of turned into a famous person. i said, you know, i'm 19 years old.put all my life savings into your computer to write software, and it doesn't work, so why don't you explain to me why that is? this was in may of 1984. he was like, why don't you come to work here this summer and help us fix it, because we are having some problems? [laughter] i was like, what was that? he's like, we will hire you as an intern into apple. i'm like, ok, where are you? well, he is in...
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Apr 22, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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inside the st marianna university hospital in kawasaki, dr shigeki fujitani shows me the new covid uniteeks. this is their new control room. this is the airlock through the window, here? this is the green area. this is green zone, this is the airlock, and that goes into the red zone in there? from here, dr fujitani and his staff can monitor the patients from a safe distance and preserve their dwindling stocks of protective equipment. this hospital has 1,000 beds. but the covid unit has just 15, and already 11 of them are filled with very sick people. dr fujitani says, if the outbreak in tokyo isn't controlled soon, these beds will not be enough. because tokyo is a pandemic, with sick patients. and the number of icu beds are limited, compared with other countries. so we are reaching the limit, especially in tokyo. on the monitors, we see nurses attending to an extremely ill patient. all of the patients here are men. all are under 60. dr fujitani says too many people in japan still think this virus will not get them. people think the younger generations, if they suffer from this covid, th
inside the st marianna university hospital in kawasaki, dr shigeki fujitani shows me the new covid uniteeks. this is their new control room. this is the airlock through the window, here? this is the green area. this is green zone, this is the airlock, and that goes into the red zone in there? from here, dr fujitani and his staff can monitor the patients from a safe distance and preserve their dwindling stocks of protective equipment. this hospital has 1,000 beds. but the covid unit has just 15,...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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inside the st marianna university hospital in kawasaki, dr shigeki fujitani shows me the new covid unit in the last two weeks. this is their new control room. this is the airlock through the window, here? this is the green area. this is green zone, this is the airlock, and that goes into the red zone in there? yes, yes, yes. from here, dr fujitani and his staff can monitor the patients from a safe distance and preserve their dwindling stocks of protective equipment. this hospital has 1,000 beds. but the covid unit has just 15, and already 11 of them are filled with very sick people. dr fujitani says if the outbreak in tokyo isn't controlled soon, these beds will not be enough. because tokyo is a pandemic, with sick patients. and the number of icu beds are kind of limited, compared with other countries. so we are reaching the limit, especially in tokyo. on the monitors, we see nurses attending to an extremely ill patient. all of the patients here are men — all are under 60. dr fujitani says too many people in japan still think this virus will not get them. people think that the younger g
inside the st marianna university hospital in kawasaki, dr shigeki fujitani shows me the new covid unit in the last two weeks. this is their new control room. this is the airlock through the window, here? this is the green area. this is green zone, this is the airlock, and that goes into the red zone in there? yes, yes, yes. from here, dr fujitani and his staff can monitor the patients from a safe distance and preserve their dwindling stocks of protective equipment. this hospital has 1,000...
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65
Apr 22, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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inside the st marianna university hospital in kawasaki, dr shigeki fujitani shows me the new covid unite airlock through the window, here? this is the green area. this is green zone, this is the airlock, and that goes into the red zone in there? from here, dr fujitani and his staff can monitor the patients from a safe distance and preserve their dwindling stocks of protective equipment. this hospital has 1,000 beds. but the covid unit has just 15, and already 11 of them are filled with very sick people. dr fujitani says, if the outbreak in tokyo isn't controlled soon, these beds will not be enough. because tokyo is a pandemic, with sick patients. and the number of icu beds are limited, compared with other countries. so we are reaching the limit, especially in tokyo. 0n the monitors, we see nurses attending to an extremely ill patient. all of the patients here are men. all are under 60. dr fujitani says too many people in japan still think this virus will not get them. people think the younger generations, if they suffer from this covid, the symptoms is not so bad. but that's not true at
inside the st marianna university hospital in kawasaki, dr shigeki fujitani shows me the new covid unite airlock through the window, here? this is the green area. this is green zone, this is the airlock, and that goes into the red zone in there? from here, dr fujitani and his staff can monitor the patients from a safe distance and preserve their dwindling stocks of protective equipment. this hospital has 1,000 beds. but the covid unit has just 15, and already 11 of them are filled with very...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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KDTV
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aylin: enfermedad de kawasaki se reconociÓ en principio en japÓn, por eso tan este nombre extraÑo, esntestando sus preguntas. esta pregunta nos la envÍa luis: veo que siempre dicen que no hay suficientes ventiladores para tanta gente que estÁ enferma con el coronavirus y eso preocupa, pero por otro lado he oÍdo que los mÉdicos estÁn evitando poner a los pacientes en ventiladores. no pueden aclarar esto? tocamos el tema un poco ayer. >> no es necesario poner a los pacientes en ventiladores porque no hemos tenido incidencia de tantos casos graves como una vez se pronosticÓ. la ciencia tambiÉn dice que ventilar a los pacientes muy rÁpido puede causar más daÑo, que tenemos que rebajar un poco nuestras reglas y normas. le queda dar la oportunidad al doctor ramÍrez. yo pienso que debe ser mÁs conservador, quizÁs no ser invasivo, utilizar ventilaciÓn, pero aquÍ tenemos al neumÓlogo. >> estamos aprendiendo todos mucho acerca de esta enfermedad. al principio pensÁbamos que era, bÁsicamente, una neumonÍa viral muy severa, un proceso inflamatorio muy severo que era lo que creaba la falla respira
aylin: enfermedad de kawasaki se reconociÓ en principio en japÓn, por eso tan este nombre extraÑo, esntestando sus preguntas. esta pregunta nos la envÍa luis: veo que siempre dicen que no hay suficientes ventiladores para tanta gente que estÁ enferma con el coronavirus y eso preocupa, pero por otro lado he oÍdo que los mÉdicos estÁn evitando poner a los pacientes en ventiladores. no pueden aclarar esto? tocamos el tema un poco ayer. >> no es necesario poner a los pacientes en...
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Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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KDTV
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pacientes mÁs pequeÑos de el coronavirus, entre ellos, unos parecidos al de sÍndrome de la enfermedad kawasakioria. suena paradÓjico. muchos trabajadores agrÍcolas no reciben el reconocimiento que merecen, a pesar de figurar en la lista de empleados esenciales. buena parte de ellos son inmigrantes indocumentados. desde que la tienen ayudar gobierno frente a la pandemia. socorro desde los Ángeles nos cuenta cÓmo algunos toman la iniciativa para darles alguna sorpresa. socorro: asÍ fueron sorprendidos con una serenata al remo de mariachi los campesinos de la zona. >> hemos escuchado en las noticias, hemos escuchado los comentarios de bomberos, enfermeros, doctores, policÍas, son hÉroes, pero creo que tambiÉn se les ha olvidado uno de los mÁs importantes que es la gente que trabaja en el campo. >> queremos dejar saber a la gente que ellos son la parte esencial de nuestra economÍa. entonces, si no los protegemos, si no los cuidamos a ellos, entonces, cÓmo vamos a comer? socorro: estos hÉroes escondidos entre naranjas y legumbres desde que comenzÓ la pandemia no han dejado de trabajar. se calcula q
pacientes mÁs pequeÑos de el coronavirus, entre ellos, unos parecidos al de sÍndrome de la enfermedad kawasakioria. suena paradÓjico. muchos trabajadores agrÍcolas no reciben el reconocimiento que merecen, a pesar de figurar en la lista de empleados esenciales. buena parte de ellos son inmigrantes indocumentados. desde que la tienen ayudar gobierno frente a la pandemia. socorro desde los Ángeles nos cuenta cÓmo algunos toman la iniciativa para darles alguna sorpresa. socorro: asÍ fueron...
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Apr 28, 2020
04/20
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BBCNEWS
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kawasaki disease, one of the ones they think it is like, and toxic shock syndrome are both when the immunee an overreaction of the immune system from perhaps coronavirus, but we are still so unsure. i think what we are still so unsure. i think what we have been telling parents who have called in and said they are really worried, is first of all my no child under 14 has died at all from coronavirus. it is extremely mild in most children. but if their child to go to very high temperature for more than a few days, they get tummy pain, they get bowel problems and they start to look unwell, particularly if they get skin problems with a rash or skin peeling on the palms of their hands, clearly they should phone 111 and hopefully they should phone 111 and hopefully they would do. but the main message here is, what, don't worry too much? yes, it is such a small numbers. obviously devastating for the parents who have got the children who have got this but we are talking about incredibly small numbers compared to the main masses who, through to us with the coronavirus, and it is incredibly in childr
kawasaki disease, one of the ones they think it is like, and toxic shock syndrome are both when the immunee an overreaction of the immune system from perhaps coronavirus, but we are still so unsure. i think what we are still so unsure. i think what we have been telling parents who have called in and said they are really worried, is first of all my no child under 14 has died at all from coronavirus. it is extremely mild in most children. but if their child to go to very high temperature for more...