Transcripts For DW Covid-19 Special 20240707

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a young woman tries to build a new life after losing her father, with the help of a piano and a cat in the garden of paradise, chile and all her christian. our con has written a novel on a possible future after the pandemic. ah, but 1st to germany, many people wanted to take to the air again, but airport chaos is keeping them grounded. summer break has begun for school from the german capital, and passengers crown the chicken counters of easy jet lufthansa and ryan air head berlin's airport. patience is needed at the security checkpoint. before flying off on vacation, you have to do a lot of waiting finish because they're low on staff from what i hear. and they seem unprepared to what i did enough if after 2 years of not flying, a lot of people have been laid off or are looking for another job than something like this is bound to happen as well. so i'm here in a berlin, it's only 3 hours, but i am silly. i would be concerned if he was 5 hours the waiting times at berlin brandenburg airport are not the worst. at other german airports such as duesseldorf, it's not uncommon to have waiting times of up to 5 or 6 hours before the security check. and it's been like that for weeks eulley, a full mon gamba of the german aviation association, says that the chaos that many german airports is regrettable, but could hardly have been prevented. the call went up on, in the pandemic supposed major economic challenges to the industry as well. so unfortunately, staff had to be caught up because of, and after 2 years of the pandemic, the demand for air travel has risen dramatically, or decor, and then governments lifted restrictions at very short notice of us. so there was no real planning when it came to the race stop law mr. game. well, a vh, an expert who's i taught him, sees things quite differently. the verde trade union secretary looks after employees of the private service companies that carry out security checks at dusseldorf. airport, he says that in the past 2 years of the pandemic, the companies have simply fired many employees. and now they're too few workers. the star, the state which is responsible for this task is passed it on to private security companies and they want to make money. they're not social welfare organizations. i've been, they save money by keeping staffing levels low on the puzzle. now that we have a major staff shortage, especially in passenger control, the fruit guys can pull it up. there were security checks which all passengers have to pass through manhattan resign, but they failed to hire staff. and this is what happens and also to him the german government now wants to bring and thousands of workers from abroad, who would fill in wherever there's a staff shortage. the problem is that anyone who works on the apron where aircraft are handled or at the security, checkpoints must be screened. the official mandatory background check can take up to 10 weeks and that's not all spin bag alene, of the verde trade union warned months ago of chaos at the airports. even filling staff shortages with foreign workers won't be able to stop it in time. if you decide foreign workers are not a solution for the security checks themselves as workers need very extensive training to be deployed there, the employees from 3rd countries won't be helping in those areas. by then summer vacation will be over. so for the time being airports are not likely to see any relief and a german airport security employee tells us that the constant stress for the staff is having dramatic consequences. he wishes to remain anonymous munsey t guns. you see all the crowds here in the halls, at some point you need to break them, but we don't get any opposed, neither from the federal police nor from our employer. i knocked austin of a debug. the passengers are simply being pushed through and there's no real guarantee of aviation security. any moore's office kinda lost the shied me of your last it. germany's biggest airline lufthansa has cancelled about 3000 flights this summer due to poor ground handling. british airways has had to cancel $10000.00 the repercussions of the failed airport personnel policy during the pandemic are now being felt across europe. japan was one of the last countries to lift entry restrictions for taurus back in june, 2022. for more than 2 years, the japanese have had their country to themselves. coven 19 infection numbers. there are surprisingly low. why is that? phoebe m are also reports from tokyo. sh. at 1st glance, japan would seem to be a country that's quite vulnerable to cove at 9 tain. it has one of the world's oldest populations in it says he's a densely populated. yet the countries kofi debt tal remains astonishingly live. japan didn't implement any strict locked downs. legally the government couldn't do that. instead, and all it asked citizens to voluntarily change their behavior was and the majority complied. that was one of japan's great strengths in its pandemic, responsible. even prior to this pandemic, many people in japan were medical math in public places, off to coffee, broke out most japanese adhered to the recommended hi, enrolls avoided large gatherings and socially distance. and they willingly got coven vaccines to day over 80 percent of japan's population is fully vaccinated. yet, despite fairly low case numbers, coven 19 stretch to pants health care system to its limits. even though japan has the highest number of hospital beds per capita, or among o e c d countries, there are few intensive care beds. the health care sector is largely privatized. many small hospitals lack the staff and resources to deal with coping 19 patients. and just turn them away. state run hospitals couldn't entirely compensate for this deficit. so many patients died a lauren at harm. even before the pandemic, japan's hospitals were short staffed. despite the relatively low number of carbon patients work has suffered from stress and burn out. that he's been there, that the height of the pandemic nurses working in the hospitals caught covered or became close contacts. also, they weren't able to work with, you know, you must just lead to staff shortages and hospitals. so the remaining staff had to do more overtime and on your night schiffer. so they got a young guy sid. if net kenji chablis says the government's response to the pandemic was also hampered by outdated legislation to japanese infectious disease all which was set 120 years ago. one not this was not necessary updated properly. so the eas disruption between public health and medical house medical care, in terms of employment, a testing and tracking the patient. so the medical care system, lack of integration information technologies, dis, ah, what became obvious the government that's amounts plans to create a japanese agency, similar to the us centers for disease control and prevention. with an aim to streamlining its bureaucracy. it also plans to revise legislation to ensure greater provision of hospital beds and more universal access to medical care keeping lifestyle. diseases like her bay city and diabetes in check remains a priority. of course to access to testing back scenes, drugs ha ha is important. but eventually it is about the people of equity and a fundamental ah, how services got, who'd be most important to be resilient, august and expanding. here in japan, pandemic fatigue had set in mobility. data shows a steady rising people, ignoring government appeals to avoid large crowds in future, relying on a compliant public might not be enough. do you have any questions about coven 19? are science correspondent derek williams has the answers. based on the latest research and analysis, send an email to covey producer at d, w dot com. this week for your mohammed. nazi at our cram, wanted to know, did other pandemic and through human intervention, or does each have to run its own course? every pandemic is different, while the measures that we employ to combat them have a wide range of impacts depending among other factors on how a pathogen is transmitted and, and how infectious a particular disease is, or how infectious that calms. so comparing one pandemic to another is kind of apple, an oranges to illustrate what i mean. let's look at a couple of band amex and how their course was affected by human intervention, starting with what's viewed as the most severe one in recent history. the 1918 flu pandemic. back then, there were no vaccines to prevent infection with the disease and no medicines to treat it. so only mitigation measures like quarantines, and masking and social distancing. really played a role in prevention. researchers think that they helped psalm, but they weren't applied universally, and the pandemic was a devastating one. it only subsided after about 3 years, and it killed at least 50000000 people. let's compare that to h. i. v. aids, a modern pandemic that's now been going on for decades. it's a very different disease from influenza, not only because of how it transmits of course, but also because the pathogen that causes it persists in the body. so h, i v can't be cured. it can only be managed, it took decades to develop and distribute medications for that and, and even to day, not everyone who needs treatment has access there's, there's still no vaccine against h i v. so prevention efforts focus on education and, and diagnosis. those interventions have helped drive down the number of deaths and new infections and the last decade. but according to the w. h o, a round one and a half 1000000 new infections with h i v still occur every year and it still kills an estimated 680000 people annually to compare. again, that's around the total number of deaths in brazil, directly attributed to sars. coby, to sense the start of the coven 19 pandemic. but here human intervention said played a much bigger role than they did, for instance, during the 1918 flu pandemic. it's really impossible to say exactly how many lives have been saved by measures like like lock downs or, or masking. but there's no question that it's a huge number. on the other hand, researchers have taken a stab at estimating how many lives have been saved by vaccine. so far. no one recent study calculated, they prevented at least 15000000 deaths and 2021, which translates into many more over the course of the entire pandemic. so, so human interventions really do alter the course of pandemic in big fundamental ways, even if they can't shut them down completely gone cove, it 19 has claimed and especially large number of lives in peru, camila suarez as family was also affected during the pandemic, she took care of her family members, but now she needs help herself. in february 2021, camilla suarez is entire family came down with cove at 1910 people was sick and isolating in the same apartment. camilla had just turned 18 and had to attend to the mall, especially the most vulnerable in the family. fortunately, no one suffered complications except her father. and then on, on my son that he was a strong man, but it just wasn't very careful in those 1st days though, mom will chair on a go or ther, 5th day. here he came down, but with a bad cough and be a saw at the set of mass 10 days into his illness. pablo suarez could no longer speak or get out of bed. a doctor gave them advice and camilla attended to him, but his lungs were failing and he badly needed intensive medical care. and along with table and a gum. eventually he ended up on a cove at isolation ward weekend. i'm gone oxygen. yes. as soon as i mean, but he didn't get the same kind of treatment and he would have received an intensive care been there by an a stella, by under about him, a horrible in the 2nd corona virus waived, peruse, house cast system was overburdened camilla says that were only 11 intensive cab ads for cove at patients, but the family couldn't afford upwards of $50000.00 for a hospital stay, but it's 3 days later her father died in a regular hospital bed. yeah, i mean he was at least able to give him pain medication, had applied a lot a and i told him he don't worry. i'll stay here and won't leave you alone. you're not the way i had saw. you just look me in the eyes yet and was practically cheering out alice. uh huh. because he'd already resigned himself. if thou gl model, i think now what happened to pablo suarez is not unusual in peru, the country with the highest cove it infection pay. tell us he right in the world. doctor says i monica of peruse. national center for epidemiology says that is not only due to deficits in the health care system, such as a shortage of intensive cap ads and oxygen ist upon them merrily at the, instead of one pandemic, we've actually had several here because we've had outbreaks of several different diseases, not just cove it within the context of the enormous social inequality here on victoria murphy wonderful daniel purine had its 1st registered cove. it case in march 2020 soon. hospitals like the via el salvador were overflowing. that's changed also due to peruse vaccination program, but cove. it exposed the weaknesses in the countries health care system and cannot be done. the hospital has definitely improved what. oh, they don't anymore, but we still don't have enough. i see you doctors. but he another name was it, and we still don't have enough staff to attend the needs of our population are gonna be like he had the a couple nephew on camilla suarez wishes. that parade had begun vaccinating sooner than her father might still be here. she's traumatized. by her loss has panic attacks and how to interrupt her studies. mm hm. okay. if the narrow neck together, what i need is a psychiatrist, i psychologist who can help me cope with my depression and anxiety. and yet i feel like a lost little girl. now that my father's gone any but a good me, but by an hour, camilla suarez, his life has been forever changed by the pandemic. but she's trying to find a way to put the pieces back together. the pandemic effects at all and with every new wave of infections or hope that one day it could be over is shuttered again. d w reporter hung assure and li talks to psychologist lia dome, about how to build physical and mental resilience in uncertain times. if her domains, dom, thanks for joining us. thank. thanks for having me. we'll have still, we keep hoping that the pandemic is finally over that then the next wave hits and we're worried about the new variable lion very. and then there's also the war in ukraine that will come in and the climate crisis there yet is a certain point it gets to in march. so under how do we keep it all together? just him out. is there yet just had resilience as a really popular topic right now. there's a lot of interest in it. what the hell, and that's likely to do with the fact that so many people of stress and a feeling all these various crises, somehow goof run. whether it's a subtle anees, or worry, or anxiety of missouri in their own, and van making that better isn't easy with michigan's either than absolutely. in psychology, we differentiate between individual and collective resilience. we do ela, look again through revised, revised individual is looking at what's helped you through difficult situations in the past. deploy from glad ward like exercise, or seeing friends and family more often. mm hm. you get off from her order there, gliding. thus, those, the methods of individual resilience with 11 of the and while collective resilience is when we become more resilient as a society, as the set of readers, for example, by having certain structures to live with them that make us feel comfortable and secure. who will be on such a room and can you train resilience and new concepts? that is a fun from a psychological standpoint to help us when you know that there's something you can do with kind of tune as or like, wearing a mass to protect yourself or do it new muscles, google long to gush. something that makes sense to you that seems like a good idea what as i, as the doors or it can be about making decisions for yourself or with your family. i know for me about your surroundings and how you behave regarding things like protective measures. um, mid century must now on to the writer their name and all that in the pandemic. we've been observing others much more critically. why aren't they wearing their masks? probably? why aren't they where one at all, even though it's mandatory? why aren't they social dickinson options? but what is a healthy thought process? she gets her pandemic without living under constant stress at the hours tests are staying as of your ham, her from $130.00. this is an uncertain situation and columbia. it's unclear how things will continue for the next few months. what things will be like by fall and often on, and people react to this kind of uncertainty and very different ways. as with the, i'm the again, from rush, be some people immersed themselves and information and want to read everything about earlier than most, not the writer and, and, and then there's the other option, which we're seeing more often after 2 years of pandemic. it's rather before that people get so tired of all the information that they don't really want to be well informed. any more than here that's denying that they'd rather just brush the topic aside. who won't of late off tomorrow, but by later she'll to one when clean it's similar with climate change can that him and that can be conflict when people encounter each other. he deal with a crisis in such different way as environment treatment and what could help i think that might be to look at how to communicate effectively despite that is to shown be taught similar to commonly cuts your nucleus. the market does fav. i'm suffering from this stress that we've been talking about. i can and i realize that i can't cope with that alone. what do i do there to can, can aunt fast manage done as a negative? practiced by there are basically 2 factors dark. the 1st is how strong are the symptoms, how stressed out, do you feel accomplished by speech, by other strong feelings of anxiety that you can't really come down from any select if you don't want a whole current, but it's further order and how long have they been there and for i think they've continued for sound weeks or perhaps even months and your usual coping mechanisms aren't working. or you're under a high level of psychological stress, like one of i recommend at least getting counseling with men with my buttons lesson on black. and i'd like to add that we can't solve everything with individual resilience methods ethnic. i live from an individual in one of the, again, 500. and as you probably problems were facing us so great that something also needs to change politically under these mental house needs to be taken much more seriously and 2nd longer to come finish. thank egg. a pleasure. thank you. oh, and now we travel to argentina where we visit she lee and reiter christiane allah con in his god. and it's his personal paradise. and the perfect place to write a 1st novel. when colvin came to argentina, in march 2020 christiana cohen had just finish work on his weekend cottage. an hour's drive from buenos aires, eager to escape the locked down in the city. he made this his home. oh, i needed a place where i didn't feel so confined to that, that there were 2000 square meters of land here. plenty of space for growing fruits and vegetables, which i'd never done before guessing my yeah, local news happened that the garden enabled me to experiment and in the process, discover how nature's clockworks really settle your mind and body adapt to the circadian rhythms which are connected to the natural day and night cycle beginning at sunrise and ending with sunset. goal like i, you adapt to have a deep breathing little dea. with some help from antonio, a paraguayan gardener. the writer and journalist set about creating his own garden of eden. he also began writing his 1st work of fiction on the 3rd paradise. the book ended up winning this year as alpha, gotta novel price. one of the leading awards in the spanish language literary world . but they miss him at dylan, lenovo, national, put in the, the pandemic just naturally flowed into the novel a communes. ha, it wasn't a subject idea. tended to write about the novel begins with the idea of creating a garden. you a paradise of fenced in and projected terror joins while m delving into the memory of my own family plan. in southern chile, me a c it up a sent in mino is so while the pandemic is present in my novel with, it's not as much a theme in itself as a way of imagining the future more a leprosy really that there been some interval duda alarcon presented his new book at an event marking the 10th anniversary of anthea an online magazine he himself founded argentine actor clocking for e l. when excerpts from the 3rd paradise. to imagine a garden is to submit yourself to a new consciousness of by the steps i will take will be determined by the land air light that water and time the event turned into one big party. even though argentina was going through a 4th covered wave at the time, though cases have now started to fall. still, the pandemic has left its mark, not only on daily life by some people psyche to lab damien. as the pandemic brings us closer to the idea of mortality and makes us more existential money it confronts us with the message, you can die to morrow might be your last day. so our actions are no longer so innocent. suddenly we become aware that we're only passing through this world multi path, and then we're sometimes more careful, sometimes more intense, obviously muscle denzel's on weekdays, alarcon leaves his little paradise on earth and drives to the university and nearby la plata. here he teaches students how to write a novel using his own book as an example. if you, we have a scenes set in 1970. so given that concept, what's the opening? cnn, phoebe, and up on the me, the pan demik taught us the transient nature of relationships. but we're also willing to make new connections which nurture us. that has an impact on society and how we live cabo. got mis. ah, boy, and that's all for this week. next time we'll find out more about booster shots and how to avoid catching coven 19 in the future. see you then with with ah. 3 climate events. what could the future bring in 15 minutes to the point and strong opinions, clear positions, international perspectives. after claiming the capture of ukraine, johan region, russian troops, no one to take full control of neighboring, don't you? so what's next to vladimir putin and does he have an appetite for more? find out on to the point. to the point. 9 minutes on d. w. a i will interest the global economy, our portfolio, d w business. beyond. here the closer look at the project. our mission. to analyze the fight for market dominance is to this is wes, get it head with the w business beyond? good mike, how can this passionate hatred of a people be plain view? oh cool tom. oh, a history of anti semitism is a history of stigmatization and exclusion of religious and political power. struggles in the christian christianity wants to come from it. that is why christianity use the figure of the gym as a deterrent. it's a history of slander of hatred and violence. a 3rd of our people were exterminated $6000000.00 jews, like microbes to be annihilated even 77 years after the holocaust hatred towards jews is still pervasive. history of anti semitism this week on d, w. y o is d w news life from berlin? italy's president rejects prime minister mario drank his alpha to resign audio drug . he said he would sit down after losing the support of the populace. fivestar movement, rocky says the trust that sustained his coalition government is gone. protest this entry duncan.

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