from around the world were on my flight, coming along with me, bringing medical supplies and medicine, anything that could help treat and help the ukrainians, which was really beautiful. you know, sandra, we are the most capable country, so we should be most supportive of peace and promoting peace and reducing suffering and saving lives and when we have that ability, it would be a sin to not take that opportunity to help others. john: doc, and this probably parallels your experience with covid as well, you are there to provide emergent care, but there is going to be a long-term effect of this war, particularly on children and the same way this has been with covid. what are you expecting in the weeks, months and years ahead? yeah, that s a great question, john. one of the most common things i m seeing here is the anxiety, the trauma, on children, children are coming in crying, these beautiful young ukrainian children, refugees, even their parents, it s not just the children, but can
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the hazard pay for the respiratory professionals and the nurses and the cadres that we don t have a supply, and i say this as a military doc that we play the folks who go into deployed settings extra that they feel a greater satisfaction, and greater incentive to stay in these dangerous roles and we need the similar paradigm here for those who are not being paid enough, particularly for nurses and respiratory professionals. you are health care professionals, but human, and how long can the health care systems can you operate like this? fundamentally, and we have this conversation like this, the and when i was down at oregon health and sciences university, and rationing of the care is already happening, and the difficult conversations are already happen, so we have to broaden this, who should and
and other people helped us out. what was that like to see your kids and wife ride up in the boat? i was happy they were safe and nobody is hurt. all of this stuff is going to be replaced eventually, but we worked so hard. and everything is gone. but we have each other, so i don t know what else to say. reporter: what will you do now? where are you going to live? we are in a hotel at the moment, and people are helping us, and i don t know, we have no plans. reporter: have you file for insurance yet? i am in the process, and i am talking with them, but i don t know, i have never been through this before, so everything is new to me. reporter: i am so hard, vincent, because you put so much love and care into your house. and i wanted to show you this, because this is vincent s garden here, and the entire foundation, and look at this, the entire foundation of this home is crumbling, and this house could very well buckle, and vincent
issue is being examined. and what that means for the 7 million-plus women of child-bearing age in texas right now is that they have essentially lost their right to access abortion care in this state. it cuts across all lines. however, i do want to stress this. that while it may be the case that your niece finds out that she is pregnant and isn t going to be able to get an abortion, you may have the ability to put her on a plane and send her to colorado or to new mexico or new york or elsewhere to receive that care. so as has always been the case, this law is going to have a disproportionate and devastating impact on the lower impact women, and women of color who don t have the same opportunities to access care outside of the state as some others might. and it is also my
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