really focused on the mental health needs of ukrainians that are affected by this war. offering something that we call psychological first aid, which is really just not the ideal long term counseling, but for somebody who is on the move, passing through, trying to get to a safer place, or who was stuck unable to move and rejoin their families, it is a way to help them cope using locally hired staff that we trained in these techniques to allow people to be able to get back emotionally on their feet, so that they can take care of themselves and take care of those that they are responsible for, such as children. thank you for your work, thank you for being with us this been wall of doctors without borders. now we move from health concerns, to food insecurities. yesterday, during a visit in warsaw poland, president joe biden met with world renowned chef, jose on the base. at the world central kitchen
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i m asking every single organization, especially the big countries, especially the big and ngos and the big non government agencies, it is okay to look like an expert on a tv show, but the people of ukraine need us here. doctors without borders, they are here. you want to help the people of ukraine, let me invite you to show up to be here, to be next to them, listen to them, learn from them, what they need, and let the people of ukraine defend their own land, they are protecting their children, their elderly. let s make sure that war will not ever again have a space in the 21st century. we cannot let a few, the one, create fear in the many. the people of goodness, we must
kyiv obviously. and we are making sure that cooks like me. that right now, they could be in the safety of another country. but these cooks food, fighters. people that stay behind, open their kitchens, and they are cooking every day under any circumstance and bringing hope through a plate of food, when women and children are in bunkers because they are receiving missiles. this is what gives me hope about humanity, that in the worst moments of humanity, the best of humanity shows up. you ve done this everywhere. not only did we work together in harlem, i remember, i keep mentioning about how the haitians were treated, i want to texas and there were thousands of haitians under that bridge. you had a truck down there feeding them. so you have been consistent.
women especially in their 50s. it s not just a male disease. women are a lota of times dismissed from the hospital mid-heart attacks. we don t have hollywood heart d attacks. we have pain in our necks. we feel nauseous. womenee have to advocate for ourselves, but, please, doctors and the health system have to be able to trust. such an important took. who shouldd read it and why? everybody should read it, but not i just woman. let me tell you, every woman has a story, a medical misogyny story and if they don t they know someone who does. men need to read it as well. often our partners, our witnesses, andrt we can t move forward in this conversation and in this revolution without our male allies. the new book is entitled the pain gap: how sexism and racism in health care kill women.