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Transcripts For DW In Good Shape 20221116

d w's health show. we look into the best diets for babies and small children explode popular myths about taking care of newborns. and of course, we find out what happened to little mia. welcome to in good shape. ah, ah, if all goes well, most pregnancies last 40 weeks. but according to the world health organization, $15000000.00 babies a year are born to early. a premature birth usually begins with pain and contractions, but unfortunately, the signs aren't always obvious. collin arnold was half way through her 1st pregnancy when she started experiencing painful contractions. her instinct told her something was wrong, but doctors ignored her concerns. she didn't know where else to turn in one lighter from kind of victory to ask and no one took the contraction seriously and can. i was told it was just the baby kicking and moving around, but none of the doctors examined me her trying to establish why i was having premature contraction. so what side is sophie levine? hot? fortunately, her baby son is healthy. things could have turned out very differently. colleen anava concerns were finally taken seriously at the mannheim university hospital, and she got to see a senior doctor that was right off and all of our classes to pinewood. oh, i knew i was in good hands with doctor novak on sunday. he talked me through what might happen during the birth. i would, i really took his time with us. both young men stood. haven't you grown for the 1st time mother is deeply grateful to doctor novak quote. he immediately saw how worried she was and it didn't take him long to discover. the problem with the baby was breach positioned, bottom down, which can potentially cause complications during delivery to swamp. in almost honesty, the zip codes where i can see if its something was unusual, was hook news one percent into it through. and that's what my intuition told me. i was looking forgiveness, yvonne, none of the previous examinations revealed anything wrong. but i could tell something more than right has to young vinnish to them. the doctor near cavalier arnold needed immediate attention. this one's unlike one, this is our also does this guy. it was a sunday him on some sort, and i just come off of the night shift how to humor comedies as it would soon for i couldn't stop thinking about it. i kept wondering what the problem could be if miss was armed. suddenly kind of worried, wasn't it all such? so i decided to go back to the hospital room and personally deal with the case right away did as a whole pillar in the jeep snow. dr. nova quickly decided, carolyn arnold should have a c section right away. although the baby's due date was still 2 weeks off of the home. it was a decision that probably saved his life on the umbilical cord was wrapped twice round his neck. draw carolyn arnold, any realised later how life threatening the situation had been with all those fast you can talk. and as i can think, i think about it every day. i keep realizing how lucky i am, then he is alive and healthy and that he was delivered safely. water. i'm. yeah, i've been, i feel grateful to dr. novak i every single thing, the sort phones i that he looked after us and made sure my baby wasn't cameron's, i'm liam katelyn arnold enjoys every 2nd with her baby boy. if there's one thing, the experience taught her, it's that it's worth relying on your instinct. oh, in the western world, mothers often lay their babies down well to play with them, maintain eye contact, and show them love and affection. ah, elsewhere in the world, skin to skin contact is seen as all important. in rural africa and south america, mothers rarely set their babies down. instead carrying their newborns with them almost all the time. when a baby cries, it's mother feeds it straight away. there are regional and cultural differences in what's seen as best for babies. but some things are actually not such a good idea. here are a few common misconceptions. new parents are often told that too many cuddles can spoil that baby and turn it into a demanding monster. it does the baby good to be left to cry now and then that the fairy is i knew the entry teeth. this is sort of idea that make apparently respond intuitively who's pick up their baby to handle it and haul them nail guilty and be best ryan's or a baby that's crying nest to become fits and it's anna. oh, parents need to think about was making it cry. what's wrong and, and react accordingly. wanted to hopefully again one babies have all different ways of communicating. one of the things they can't to right after they're born is smile . they can't talk that they can let you know how they're feeling. and one of the ways they let you know how they're feeling as if they're cry. nancy stone has been a midwife to 21 years. she knows exactly what babies need and often has to clear up misunderstandings about infant health and diet. many parents think that honey on a pacifier will help calm their baby. that's a myth that you should give a baby under one year old honey. whether it's putting it on the pacifier or putting it on your finger might think that you're doing something good for your baby, but it's actually very toxic in one extend atlanta, my albert area in the honey and lading. also that could make a babysitter because it is immune system is less developed of e b an attack had all it can lead to bought. your nelson hurt can and face was loss . as we saw in warren is under a year old. should never be given honey yorkie. oh, the newborn baby has a stomach. no bigger than a cherry needs milk. $8.00 to $12.00 times every 24 hours. but should it also drink water? that's a question. parents often ask, especially in hot weather easiest, you know, kind of buy babies that aren't getting in a solid foods in the 1st few months, shouldn't drink lucel's often even when it's hot milk is enough in order to get the baby could just nurse more often or be given a bustle on the leaves when i and fry starts getting solid food at 5 or 6 my side. it can drink water with its 3rd meal of the day. rougher and get a bit more horsing when it's hot. many hours later, when a baby is eating proper food, parents still need to be careful about foods like fish, peanuts and eggs, which can trigger allergic reactions. some parents wonder if they're best avoided altogether. new or he's those in the mom i herons avoided giving their babies anything in the 1st year that could horse allergies scratch these days that are considered non st easily. it's actually important to give babies fish and not our example in although i know whole nuts obviously at an early stage because it reduces the risk of allergies is anchored by 6 months. most babies a teething, which can be painful, but can cause a fever, which in babies is anything above $38.00 degrees celsius. when a baby gets em gets its things, it's not cutting through bone, it's not really cutting through anything. so we don't have to imagine that it's in any kind of terrible pain. now it could be that a baby gets a slight rise and temperature. but if your baby is really getting a fever, when it's teething, please bring your baby to a doctor and let it get checked. teething does not cause high fevers. it's a common misapprehension that newborns can't see anything. in fact, they can make out light and dark, even in swim when they're born, they can see they just don't have much ability to focus. a newborn baby opens is or her eyes after it's born. and there's this very intuitive distance that parents can just feel that they should hold their baby, and it's right here. and at that distance, a baby can see all of the structures of mom or dad's faith. another popular theory is that listening to classical music makes bailey's more intelligent . the so called mozart, affect you to ed and ha, and not have her parents hope that if they play music to the ongoing babies, they'll benefit from the massage effects that effect. but this has been disproven by listening to music. he does not like babies, small sat as on me so but plenty of love and attention from their parents does make babies smarter and also boost their empathy and social skills in later life. so cuddles, do help make babies happy and intelligent. that's not just a misconception. i am babies often have a runny nose, a cough, a high temperature, eric and diarrhea. they're immune systems are learning how to fight pathogens. usually babies can't easily withstand infections. but if an infant is struggling to breathe and can barely feed, it should be taken to the emergency room straight away. it might be suffering from a virus that can have serious consequences. rsv, respiratory sensational virus. it's bright and early at the pediatric clinic in the city of course of the time pediatrician. mario balfour has hardly any pre beds in his station. rsv cases are main reason for the glory of patience. it's a virus that can cause severe respiratory issues and babies and small children that was posted for respiratory rsv stands for respirator cheats. and so she'll virus, it's a virus with major outbreaks every 2 years and it makes a lot of kids sick and her concerns. mia also has r s. b. she has to use ventilator to help remove the mucus. she's been with her father alex in the clinic for 2 days. and hot miss us im but my wife told me there was something wrong with mia that she was coughing a lot heavier than i told her if it didn't get better during the night to think the hospital would be our last resort. hold off nama when we got here. they told us immediately that she'd have to stay on the humor. when the us cook was annoyed, born as our clinger newborn babies, and small children under the age of 2 are especially high risk. often they often gets infected by older siblings and we bring the virus home with them from kindergarten, kindergarten, small children have a hard time getting rid of mucus, and it builds up in the respiratory tract to drive off the can't just coffee tote. it's also hard for kids with the virus to drink properly, and the lack of fluids would also makes it harder for the mucus to go away. for this cut, in the worst case is the children may require invasive respiratory systems transfer . that means that the children have to come to intensive care stations with their incubated and put on a ventilator into a little bottled. calm damage often has issues so ah, the virus had a drastic impact on the family's daily life. me as mother micah takes care of the babies, brother at home. and i like spent the night at the hospital albums and i turned of the coffin gets even more severe. those, especially after me a uses the ventilator on not me, not even just before the doctors round me as mother micah comes to the hospital, she misses her 4 month old daughter and is very worried about her. the she is ha, dealt with the filter. neither shanaski did you have sweet dreams, city out a slow, so toilets, countries not doing so well and constant things could definitely be better, but she still manages to smile at us again and again. again, there was a period of time here in the hospital when she didn't smile and i was that's when we knew something wasn't right or the last even less as she lay there, like a wet rag arms and legs stretched out, barely moving her head. that's when we knew she really wasn't doing very well. that will smell m, yankee diaz, capital sport with the help of a ventilator and consuming lots of fluids. mia is doing a lot better. still, dr. bellville doesn't take any chances. he only releases the patient when he's certain she's really doing better now as was she up to feel young duncan and drinking. how's that going all yet. so you saw some all her self help was told i say it's a lot better than her 1st day here. than she was any drinking 30 to 40 milliliters as of yet, we're extending her stay one more night because her arterial oxygen saturation levels are too low to go. arterial oxygen saturation refers to blood oxygen levels when too low, they can negatively impact her bodily functions. are the thing that they saw so far would be irresponsible just to see the patient has borderline arterial oxygen saturation levels and can go home? no, just so we can free up a badge for the next our sb patient. instead, we aim to provide good thorough treatment for those who have come to see us here or consequent good bother. with more for we dog, and now the family has to stay for another night. even though free beds are desperately needed. the staff has lots to do, the phone is ringing off the hook and new emergency cases have to be coordinated to that kind of going on for little says in your work or emergency department is completely fool. there's no more space when someone's discharged. and then someone calls it and we can start and take again on the free space gets filled immediately in effect. the next the next day, dr. bellville as good news for me and her parents. oh hi. i um, i have some important documents with me for speech pathologist, a bye, if you can take her home. wonderful, awesome, good. since mervin is not too much, you'll have to worry about. just make sure she gets lots of fresh air and keep her bedroom cool. keep the apartment cool with fresh air. what site on take walks and all those things strengthen the immune system and improve circulation and breathing over when the lighter than next young patient is ready for dr. balance carrying treatment. oh, go for it. that's it. good. our babies need a lot of energy. growing is hard work. they need 90 calories per kilogram of body weight every day. that's $2.00 to $3.00 times more than adults. infant nutrition should be made up a 35 to 50 percent fat and a lot of protein. babies also need a lot of fluids because their kidneys aren't yet fully functioning. their gut flora isn't fully developed and their bodies haven't finished making digestive enzymes. so what's an ideal infant diet with nina is mother of to henry was born 5 months ago. jane's is now 3. she's breastfed both of them with henry her 2nd child. it's all gone smoothly, but it was different with the eldest james bull's kings advocates. it began shortly after his birth on the 1st or 2nd night in the hospital at anna from cunningham. he was frequent and way in what they said that he wasn't gaining enough weight and we needed to keep an eye on that one moment, but i was already feeding him around the clock. thank you. some fuzzy of want him to work a still it. nina had a hard set on breastfeeding her 1st son. she was upset when she was advised to bottle feed him. she agreed to it, but feared her baby wouldn't want to go back to breast feeding. the world health organization recommends exclusive breast feeding for the 1st 6 months of life because it protects the baby and lowest the risk of sudden infant death syndrome di real diseases, mid ear infections, obesity and type 2 diabetes. it also low is the mother's risk of ovarian cancer, breast cancer, endometrial cancer and cardiovascular disease. this new mothers twins arrived 9 weeks early at this children's hospital in munich. one of them is still in intensive care. it is especially vital for the tiny babies to be breast fed. the importance of breastmilk is well known at this milk bank at another munich hospital. mothers of premature babies often struggle to produce enough of their own breast milk in the early phases of their new bulls lives. milk donations are essential, but often in short, supply after air for song olive food. when we give donated milk to only premature babies with a birth weight below 1000 grams and borne around 30 weeks or earlier slave, our big wish would be to give it to all babies under 1500 grams. but unfortunately, it's not currently possible due to a lack of storage and the amount of suitable donor milk we receive light on mission location in some hospitals don't, is a screened and they milk is given to babies, and pasteurized surge retains all it's valuable. nutrients. breastfeeding is often not prioritized in every day hospital life, but this milk bank makes it a focus for all employees, toughness and english crust. each draws is very pressure to look at all the staff here are aware of business to the milk bank. whenever a woman isn't producing milk or is upset because it's not working, so everyone here is immediately very open and very willing to advise to see it as a fault. zia often zia, i'm very, it is in the talk to lawton, when i'm, if he only opens his mouth like this and then does this with his tongue, only latches onto the tip of the num, the nipple is then mount completely inside of his mouth. the consultations have an impact and premature babies who receive donor milk a more frequently nursed by them, others when they're discharged, according to a hospital data. mm. better advice and more social acceptance of breastfeeding mothers are modest demands for such an important isham boys. gloves is today, i think the public is far more aware that breastfeeding is good. most of women are also proud of breast feeding which they should be on so, so we've already achieved a lot from a lot of things have gotten better agreeable, but there's still room for improvement and still progress to be made. i'm not going to you should have fallen mom. nina says like taishan support group helped her battle 3 with breastfeeding her 1st child and after initial difficulties, she really enjoyed it. i mean, it's highly sweet when he's so close to you. such a precious moments isn't boy b i o and above all else, it's healthiest for the child. whatever a new mother eats can affect the taste of breast milk, such as garlic, carrots, and curry. and that affects her babies evolving sense of taste. newborns can already distinguish between sweet, sour and bitter tastes, and they don't much like those last 2. it's the body's way of protecting against toxic substances. by the time their 4 months old babies can also taste salt. an infant food preferences are often a source of frustration and conflict with parents. but babies have different taste perceptions, and more than twice as many taste buds on their tongues than adults. that explains why they have such an extreme reaction to lots of foods ah, vegetable day at the moser eggs, family in frankfort, christiana, and her children. benno valentine and isabel, prepare the food together. today they're serving salad with fresh vegetable soup, carrots, cucumber, and radishes are favor here. broccoli and especially cauliflower, on the other hand, are just yup. that is not fun. going call it kind of flower. it reminds me of eating a brain or something as an enlisted taste bad. the cabbage varieties are unloved, but a healthy diet is very important to christiana moser eggs. sometimes it's hard to find something that everyone likes. she says and eating should also be fun. that one we can do an event, of course i'm happy when they go for the vegetables because i know it's healthy, but i also try to find things that they like and, and i'm not strict about it. i don't force anyone to eat anything. he might sing of us as broccoli and cauliflower are many children's least favorite vegetables. why is that australian researchers have discovered that these bitter cabbage varieties along with saliva, form of fowl. so for as compound in children's mouths, it's harmless, but creates a bad smell that spoils the taste. children have twice as many taste buds as adults, so they taste everything more intensely. nevertheless, eating vegetables is important. the recommended daily allowance for children is 200 grams, but almost 70 percent of children don't eat enough vegetables. according to the german nutrition society. eating only fruit is not enough, says pediatrician baba booth edge. and when it comes to vegetables, there's a lot to choose from because vegetables contain many important vitamins, minerals, secondary plan, compounds and fiber, and expected mothers can do something for their children's vegetable appetite even before they're born. let's get that taken by some of the i indications that the amniotic fluid can be influenced by the mother's phased and by her diet does and busy and that it tastes a bit like what the mother eat lots better than him. and later, the same applies to the mother's mill. we know it exactly of indian. what as if the mother eats well, then she not only sets a good example, it also promotes this positive sense of taste and the child mux and finishes positive english monks and fenders kinda find out who want salad me back at the moser eggs home in frankfort, the salad is already prepared. the vegetable soup is still simmering. instead of broccoli and cauliflower, there are lots of carrots, cucumbers and radishes, something delicious for everyone. i want to find out how to get great glutes and firm up your rear end or really is here to show you. oh, hi and welcome. my exercise for today is duluth bridge. the perfect exercise for a beautiful derriere. lay on the ground. bend your legs, bring your arms to the side. lift your hips as high as you can. and squeeze your buttocks. and then back down. one more time with repeat this exercise. 20 times rest a little bit and doing it for, for brown, with a, with this exercise, your strength, your lower back and your products with destination, your highness, belton road, leaders of the gigantic venture promised new partners, a loss of growth. we visit 3 cities which are already part of the silk road initiative. and where the feeling of dependence is growing. in 30 minutes on d, w. e co, india, 8 garbage photo op. in delhi scouts hums for legally, dispos demolition ways. it contains valuable cereals, but much of it gets dumped in the natural environment with becoming a gigantic environmental problem. rewards and waste scouts are intended to motivate people to recycle eco 90 minutes on d. w. o, a natural spectacle in the return of the spiky 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Transcripts For DW Kick Off 20221115

d. w. health show we look into the best diets for babies and small children explode popular myths about taking care of newborns. and of course, we find out what happened to little mia. welcome to in good shape. ah. if all goes well, most pregnancies last 40 weeks. but according to the world health organization, $15000000.00 babies a year are born to early. a premature birth usually begins with pain and contractions, but unfortunately, besides aren't always obvious. collin arnold was half way through her 1st pregnancy when she started experiencing painful contractions. her instinct told her something was wrong, but doctors ignored her concerns. she didn't know where else to turn it in. one light are from kind of victory to ask and on no one took the contraction seriously. hands can. i was told it was just the baby kicking and moving around a little. none of the doctors examined me her trying to establish why i was having premature contraction with what side. the sophie levine, hot. fortunately, her baby son is healthy. things could have turned out very differently. colleen anava concerns were finally taken seriously at the mannheim university hospital. and she got to see a senior doctor that was right off and all of our classes to pine wood off. i knew i was in good hands with doctor novak on some movie. he talk me through what might happen during the birth. i would, i really took his time with us. both men stood. haven't you grown for the 1st time, mother is deeply grateful to doctor nova, quote, he immediately saw how worried she was and it didn't take him long to discover. the problem with the baby was breach positioned, bottom down, which can potentially cause complications during delivery to swamp and almost honesty, the zip codes where i can see if its something was unusual with like news, one percent interest room, that's what my intuition told me. i was looking start, give miss yvonne. none of the previous examinations revealed anything wrong, but i could tell something wasn't right, has to young venus to them. the doctor knew covered in arnold, needed immediate attention runs on board wonders of our also does this guy. it was a sunday. hm. and i'm sorry, and i just come off of the night. shifted. how to humor, company movie duties as adults yawn for i couldn't stop thinking about it. i kept wondering what the problem could be if mr. was our mainland southern kind of wiggle, osmond massage. so i decided to go back to the hospital room and personally deal with the case right away. did as a whole pillar in the jeep small. dr. nova quickly decided, carolyn arnold should have a c section right away. although the baby's due date was still 2 weeks off the phone. it was a decision that probably saved his life on the umbilical cord was wrapped twice round his neck draw. colleen arnold, any realised later how life threatening the situation had been little twisted. it was fast, you can talk. and as i can think, i think about it every day. i keep realizing how lucky i am that he is alive and healthy and that he was delivered safely. ha warder. m. yeah, i was in, i feel grateful to doctor novak every single thing. this or phones eyeing that. he looked after us and made sure my baby was m cameron's. i'm name kathleen arnold enjoys every 2nd with her baby boy. if there's one thing the experienced towards her, it's that it's worth relying on your instinct. oh, in the western world, mothers often lay their babies down while to play with them, maintain eye contact, and show them love and affection. ah, elsewhere in the world, skin to skin contact is seen as all important. in rural africa and south america, mothers rarely set their babies down. instead carrying their newborns with them almost all the time. when a baby cries, it's mother feeds it straight away. there are regional and cultural differences in what's seen as best for babies. but some things are actually not such a good idea. here are a few common misconceptions. new parents are often told that too many cuddles can spoil that baby and turn it into a demanding monster. it does the baby good to be left to cry now and then, but the fairy is i knew the entry teeth, this is sort of idea that make apparently respond intuitively who's pick up their baby to handle it. and holden, nail guilty, and be best rhyme or a baby that's crying. nest to become fits in anna. oh, parents need to think about was making it cry. what's wrong and, and react accordingly. wanted to hopefully again one babies have all different ways of communicating. one of the things they can't to right after they're born is smile . they can't talk. but they can let you know how they're feeling. and one of the ways they let you know how they're feeling as if they're cry. nancy stone has been a midwife for 21 years. she knows exactly what babies need and often has to clear up misunderstandings about infant health and diet. many parents think that honey on a pacifier will help calm their baby. that's a myth that you to give a baby under one year old honey, whether it's putting it on the pacifier or put it on your finger. might think that you're doing something good for your baby, but it's actually very toxic in one. extend at hand my elbow area in the honey and later so that could make a babysitter because another meal system is less developed a, b, b i n a can cut, it can lead to barter. nelson hurts coming face was lost. as we saw in warren is under a year old, should never be given honey yorkie. oh, the newborn baby has a stomach. no bigger than a cherry. it needs milk. $8.00 to $12.00 times every 24 hours. but should it also drink water? that's a question. parents often ask, especially in hot weather easiest, you know, kind of my babies that aren't getting in a solid foods in the 1st few months, shouldn't drink lucel's. often, even when a hot milk is enough, in order to get the baby could just nurse more often or be given a boston on the leaves when i in for i start getting solid food at 5, i 6 my side. it can drink water with its 3rd meal of the day, rougher and get a bit more horsey when it's hot man miasca. later when a baby is eating proper food, parents still need to be careful about foods like fish, peanuts and eggs, which can trigger allergic reactions. some parents wonder if they're best avoided altogether. la hazel's in the ha, my hands avoided giving their babies anything in the 1st year that could horse allergies scratch these days that are considered nonsense limbs. it's actually important to give babies, fish and not example in although i know whole nuts obviously at an early stage because it reduces the risk of adage which is easy to thanks. by 6 months, most babies achieving which can be painful, but cannot cause a fever, which in babies is anything above $38.00 degrees celsius. when a baby it gets m gets its things. it's not cutting through bone, it's not really cutting through anything. so we don't have to imagine that it's in any kind of terrible pain. now it could be that a baby gets a slight rise and temperature. but if your baby is really getting a fever, when it's teething, please bring your baby to a doctor and let it get checked. teething does not cause high fevers. it's a common misapprehension that newborns can't see anything. in fact, they can make out light and dark, even in swim when they're born, they can see they just don't have much ability to focus. a newborn baby opens his or her eyes after it's born. and there's this very intuitive distance that parents can just feel that they should hold their baby, and it's right here. and at that distance, a baby can see all of the structures of mom or dad's faith. another popular theory is that listening to classical music makes bailey's more intelligent . the so called mozart effect. some parents even play music to that unborn, babies in the womb. you know it and ha, and all of her parents hope that if they play music to the unknown babies, they'll benefit from the massage effects. but this has been disproven. my listening to music does not make babies smart enough as on me slow. but plenty of love and attention from their parents does make babies smarter and also boost their empathy and social skills and late life. so cuddles, do help make babies happy and intelligent. that's not just a misconception. right. in babies often have a runny nose, a cough, a high temperature, eric and diarrhea. they're immune systems are learning how to fight pathogens. usually babies can't easily withstand infections. but if an infant is struggling to breathe and can barely feed, it should be taken to the emergency room straight away. it might be suffering from a virus that can have serious consequences. rsv, respiratory sensational virus. it's bright and early at the pediatric clinic in the city of course of time pediatrician, mario balfour has hardly any pre. benson has station rsv cases are main reason for the glory of patience. it's a virus that can cause severe respiratory issues and babies and small children that was posted for respiratory rsv stands for respirator cheats and says she'll virus. it's a virus with major outbreaks every 2 years and it makes a lot of kids sick hung since mia also has rsv. she has to use a ventilator to help remove the mucus. she's been with her father alex and the clinic for today's hotness us him. but it, my wife told me there was something wrong with mia that she was coughing a lot heavier than i told her if it didn't get better during the night to think the hospital would be our last resort off nama. when we got here, they told us immediately that she'd have to stay on the humans when the others cook was annoyed. vaughn was working on a newborn babies of small children under the age of 2, or especially high risk. often they often gets infected by older siblings. and we bring the virus home with them from kindergarten, kindergarten, small children have a hard time getting rid of mucus. and it builds up in the respiratory tract to the 5 of the can't just coffee tote. it's also hard for kids with the virus to drink properly on. the lack of fluids also makes it harder for the mucus to go away. for this cut, in the worst case is the children may require invasive respiratory assistance will fall. that means that the children have to come to intensive care stations with their incubated and put on a ventilator into middle. bob won't come damage often because he shuts, ah, the virus had a drastic impact on the family's daily life. me as mother micah takes care of the baby's brother at home and i like spend the night at the hospital arms and i turned of the coffin gets even more severe as a dog, especially after me a uses the ventilator wont not me, not even just before the doctor is round me as mother mike comes to the hospital. she misses her 4 month old daughter and is very worried about her. she is ha thought within 15. either she missed it. did you have sweet dreams? city out. a slow, still toilet cuz she is not doing so well. constant things could definitely be better, but she still manages to smile at us again and again. and there was a period of time here in the hospital when she didn't smile. and i was that's when we knew something wasn't right or the last last as she just lay there, like a wet rag arms and legs stretched out, barely moving her head. that's where we knew she really wasn't doing very well. that will smell m, yankee diaz tattle sport with the help of a ventilator and consuming lots of fluids, mia is doing a lot better. still, dr. bellville doesn't take any chances. he only releases the patient when he's certain she's really doing better. now it was shipped to feel young duncan and drinking. how's that going all yet. so some of her self help was hungry, so it's a lot better than her 1st day here than she was any drinking 30 to 40 milliliters as of yet, we're extending her stay one more night because her arterial oxygen saturation levels are too low to go arterial oxygen saturation refers to blood oxygen levels when too low, they can negatively impact her bodily functions with the thing that they saw so far would be irresponsible. just to see the patient has borderline arterial oxygen saturation levels and can go home. no, just so we can free up a bed for the next r s. b patient. instead, we aim to provide good for a treatment for those who have come to see us here or consequent, oh good bother. with more food are good. now the family has to stay for another night, even though free beds are desperately needed. the staff has lots to do. the phone is ringing off the hook and new emergency cases have to be coordinated to under kind of going on for lentils in your work or emergency department is completely fool. there's no more space when someone's discharged. and then someone calls and we can start and take again on the free space gets filled immediately in effect. the next the next day dr. bellville has good news for me and her parents. oh hi. i um, i have some important documents with me for speech pathologist, a bio if you can take her home. wonderful. austin gibson, moving is not too much. you'll have to worry about. just make sure she gets lots of fresh air and keep her bedroom cool. keep the apartment cool with fresh air. what site on take, walk in. all those things. strengthen the immune system and improve circulation and breathing over when the lighter than next young patient is ready for dr. balance carrying treatment. ha, go for it. that's it. good. our babies need a lot of energy. growing is hard work. they need 90 calories per kilogram of body weight every day. that's $2.00 to $3.00 times more than adults. infant nutrition should be made up of 35 to 50 percent fat and a lot of protein. babies also need a lot of fluids because their kidneys aren't yet fully functioning. their gut flora isn't fully developed and their bodies haven't finished making digestive enzymes. so, what's an ideal infant diet? wisdom mina is mother of to henry was born 5 months ago. jane's is now 3. she's breastfed both of them with henry her 2nd child. it's all gone smoothly, but it was different with the eldest james bull's kings advocates. it began shortly after his birth on the 1st or 2nd night in the hospital at anna from cunningham. he was frequently away what they said, that he wasn't gaining enough weight and we needed to keep an eye on that one moment, but i was already feeding him around the clermont. yes, one fuzzy of want him to org, stood nina had a hard sites on breastfeeding her 1st son. she was upset when she was advised to bottle feed him. she agreed to it, but feared her baby wouldn't want to go back to breast feeding. the world health organization recommends exclusive breast feeding for the 1st 6 months of life because it protects the baby and lowest the risk of sudden infant death syndrome. diarrhea, diseases, mid ear infections, obesity and type 2 diabetes. it also low is the mother's risk of ovarian cancer, breast cancer, endometrial cancer and cardiovascular disease. this new mothers twins arrived 9 weeks early at this children's hospital in munich. one of them is still in intensive care. it is especially vital for the tiny babies to be breast fed. the importance of breast milk is well known at this milk bank at another munich hospital. mothers of premature babies often struggle to produce enough of their own breast milk in the early phases of their new bulls lives. milk donations are essential, but often in short supply. after a for song olive food we give donated milk to all premature babies with a birth weight below 1000 grams and borne around 30 weeks earlier. slaves are big wish would be to give it to all babies under 1500 grams. but unfortunately, it's not currently possible due to a lack of storage and the amount of suitable donor milk we receive light on mission location. in some hospitals don't is a screened and they milk is given to babies and pass to rise. surgery tains, all it's valuable. nutrients. breastfeeding is often not prioritized in everyday hospital life, but this milk bank makes it a focus for all employees, toughness and english crust. speech therapy is very pressure to look at all the staff here are aware of business to the milk bank. whenever a woman isn't producing milk or is upset because it's not working. so everyone here is immediately very open and very willing to advise to see it as a fault. zia often zia, i'm very, it is. i'm a talk to lawton monroe if he only opens his mouth like this. and then does this with his tongue. good. only latches onto the tip of the nipple. the nipple is then mount completely inside of his mouth. the consultations have an impact and premature babies who receive donor milk a more frequently nursed by them, others when they're discharged. according to a hospital, data base advice and more social acceptance of breastfeeding mothers. a modest demands for such an important issues with voice gloves is today. i think the public is far more aware that breastfeeding is good news to women are also prouder breastfeeding which they should be on so, so we've already achieved a lot from a lot of things have gotten better ago, but there's still room for improvement and still progress to be made on the go to the to foreign mom. nina says like taishan support group helped her battle 3 with breast feeding her 1st child and after initial difficulties, she really enjoyed it. a nice week when he so close to you such a precious moments isn't boy b, i a and above all else, it's healthiest for the child. whatever a new mother eats can affect the taste of breast milk, such as garlic, carrots, and curry. and that affects her babies evolving sense of taste. newborns can already distinguish between sweet, sour and bitter tastes. and they don't much like those last 2. it's the body's way of protecting against toxic substances. by the time they're 4 months old, babies can also taste salt. an infant food preferences are often a source of frustration and conflict with parents. but babies have different taste perceptions, and more than twice as many taste buds on their tongues than adults. that explains why they have such an extreme reaction to lots of foods ah, vegetable day at the moser eggs, family in frankfort, christiana, and her children. benno valentine and isabel, prepare the food together. today they're serving salad with fresh vegetable soup, carrots, cucumber, and radishes are favor here. broccoli and especially cauliflower, on the other hand, are just young danish mac fun going call it kind of flower. it reminds me of eating a brain or something as an enlisted taste bad. the cabbage varieties are unloved, but a healthy diet is very important to christiana moses eggs. sometimes it's hard to find something that everyone likes. she says and eating should also be fun. that one we have to reach me. of course i'm happy when they go for the vegetables because i know it's healthy, but i also try to find things that they like and, and i'm not strict about it. i don't force anyone to eat anything. he might not sing of us as broccoli and cauliflower are many children's least favorite vegetables. why is that australian researchers have discovered that these bitter cabbage varieties along with saliva, form of fowl. sulfur is compound in children's mouths. it's harmless, but creates a bad smell that spoils the taste. children have twice as many taste buds as adults, so they taste everything more intensely. nevertheless, eating vegetables is important. the recommended daily allowance for children is 200 grams, but almost 70 percent of children don't eat enough vegetables. according to the german nutrition society. eating only fruit is not enough, says pediatrician baba booth edge. and when it comes to vegetables, there is a lot to choose from because vegetables contain many important vitamins, minerals, secondary plan, compounds and fiber. and expected mothers can do something for their children's vegetable appetite even before they're born. skip tuts, akin visor to all the i indications that the amniotic fluid can be influenced by the mother's phased and by her diet. death is ambition and that it tastes a bit like what the money eats salons better than the moon, and later the same applies to the mother's milk. we know it exactly of india. what does it if the mother and it's well given, she not only sets a good example, it also promotes this positive sense of taste in the childish max and finishes positive english max infant is kinda find out who want salad me back at the moser eggs home in frankfort, the salad is already prepared. the vegetable soup is still simmering. instead of broccoli and cauliflower, there are lots of carrots, cucumbers and radishes, something delicious for everyone. i want to find out how to get great glutes and firm up your rear end are real. yes, here to show you. oh, hi and welcome. my exercise for today is duluth, bridge. the perfect exercise for a beautiful derriere. lay on the ground. bend your legs, bring your arms to the side. lift your hips as high as you can. and squeeze your buttocks. and then break down one more time with repeat this exercise. 20 times rest a little bit and do it for for brown with with this exercise, your strength, your lower back and your products. with march 2017 site of crime museum. 3 men climb over, train tracks to the border museum. they enter through an unsecured window and steal the largest gold coins in the world. spectacular crime and only one of many. museum a crime scene. in 15 minutes on d. w. a pulse ah, the beginning of the story in and takes us along for the ride. it's own about the perspective culture information. this is the w news and more d. w. made from mines. oh, i could talk to you sporting terms, controversial, political terms where there for youth with reports and background information. everything about the 2022 world cup 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Transcripts For MSNBCW MTP Daily 20200327

in this case, it's to press general motors to make and confidence in our leaders. ventilators and to do so asap. basically the news of the last >> secretary hagel, very hour reinforces the severity of quickly, would you temporarily lift sanctions against iran the crisis facing this country. right now on humanitarian as we await the day's grounds or not? coronavirus briefing from the >> i would. white house, which is scheduled i think for a lot of reasons. to start roughly in 30 minutes. i think it's a smart thing to do here's where the crisis stands politically. i think it's the right thing to at this moment. the u.s. now has the most do for humanity. coronavirus cases in the world. and i think it pays off in the we're on the brink of 100,000. end. and i don't think when this is we've leapfrogged italy, which quite ominously just had its over -- it will be over. we'll be out of this someday -- worst single day of deaths, more than 900. that people in history want to the number of deaths in this look back on us and how we country continues to go up as well. it's now above 2,300. judged and how we did and performed our responsibilities the situation at the epicenter as the greatest nation on earth. of the u.s. outbreak, of course, i think there has to be a is in new york, and it continues to worsen. mayor de blasio is projecting humanitarian and compassionate dynamic to this. and the poor people of iran, that half of the city will be infected. hospitals have already begun to be overwhelmed by patients. they're separate from their the emergency call volume is the leaders, as the poor people of north korea are too. biggest since the city has ever so i think we've got to be smart seen, and they broke wednesday's about that, wise about that, and let's do the right thing. record on thursday. and now there is new concern about hot spots in the american south and in the midwest. >> instead i think we increased the president's messaging sanctions in the last week. meanwhile has been mixed at former defense secretary chuck best. last night, for instance, he hagel, a former republican made comments suggesting that senator from nebraska, been on the country had plenty of all sides of the aisles these ventilators to handle the crisis. today he's invoking the rarely days. i appreciate it. used presidential power to while we are still waiting insist that general motors make for that white house briefing to get under way, up ahead, the more ventilators asap. but putting aside the battle against the coronavirus president's continued mixed in hard hit florida. i'm going to talk to the mayor messaging throughout this crisis, the public itself of miami about the conditions appears to be tolerating the there and frankly conditions in his own house, as he's somebody profound changes to their who has tested positive for lifestyles as we collectively this. that's next. attempt to slow the virus' spread. according to a new "washington post"/abc news poll, nine in ten memory, focus, americans say they are who has tested positive for this. maintaining distance from others that's next. and see the difference. during this pandemic. nine in ten say they're staying home as much as possible. eight in ten say they're washing their hands more often. and sometimes, you can find yourself and six in ten say they've heading in a new direction. but when you're with fidelity, stocked up on food or supplies a partner who makes sure every step is clear, ostensibly to hunker down. basically the country has been there's nothing to stop you from moving forward. following these guidelines. so the big question right now, what will the next phase of the u.s. response look like? how long could it last? how bad is this going to be, and laso you can enjoy it even ifst you're sensitive. se. , what will the president do to respond as things worsen in yet some say it isn't real milk. other parts of the country? i guess those cows must actually be big dogs. remember, we are now just two days away from the expiration of sit! the president's 15-day social i said sit! distancing guidelines. both dr. fauci, the top infectious disease expert on the white house task force and vice you can't claim that because it's inanimate! president president have, in the people ask me what sort of person past 24 hours, poured some cold should become a celebrity accountant. water on the president's claim and, i tell them, that the country could reopen by "nobody should." hey, buddy. easter. joining me now from the white what's the damage? house where we are standing by i bought it! for the latest from the the waterfall? coronavirus task force is my nope! a new volkswagen. colleague, hans nichols and with a volkswagen?! us from the epicenter of the outbreak in new york is nbc's i think we're having a breakthrough here! ron allen. let me start in new york, ron. welcome to caesar's palace. thank you. i was stunned when our reporting indicated that the 911 calls, at&t has connected us every day for over 100 years. emergency calls, broke the and we're here for you - especially now, record for new york city doing everything possible to keep you connected. emergency calls that was set during 9/11. and i think that happened through the resilience of our network and people... wednesday, and then last night they broke that record again. we can keep learning, this tells you that it looks like these hospitalizations are keep sharing, just going to keep going up. keep watching, >> reporter: we're talking about and most of all, keep together. 6,000 calls. we're talking about 20% or so of it's the job we've always done... the emts in the city who are out it is the job we will always do. sick. they're catching the virus. we're talking about a huge unlike ordinary wmemory supplementsr? percentage, a big percentage or neuriva has clinically proven ingredients growing percentage of police as well. you know, i talked to a doctor that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, here this morning, early this accuracy, learning, morning, and i asked her how is and concentration. it going? try neuriva for 30 days and see the difference. she said it's awful, and we don't know when it's going to stop. i talked to a man who arrived early this morning just after dawn to wait in line for testing. these are people who show up early in the morning, wait here for hour after hour to guess tested, and he said he was just terribly afraid of catching this virus because a neighbor of his did, and he was just -- just terribly afraid. that's why he was here. and i think that's happening in so many places. at this hospital, we know the anecdote that during a 24-hour period, 13 people died. we've heard that they're using three times the capacity that they are in their icu. the whole hospital is at 125% of capacity. and it's not letting up. you know, there's all this debate about whether there's enough protective equipment or not. maybe at this moment there is, the mayor and the governor say. >> right. >> reporter: but when you talk to medical professionals, that doesn't give them any comfort. they are worried about a week or so from now being faced with trying to decide who gets what, whoive hads, who dies, making these life and death decisions. certainly nobody wants to be in that position. it's just an every tightening vice, it feels like, and people just hope that help arrives. welcome back. a citywide curfew in maeiami is >> you know, ron, we know that set to go into effect five fours the javits center is up and running. as you and i were talking, the mayor of new york city was from now. the mayor who has tested holding his own briefing. he just laid out a warning that positive himself announced. said after next sunday, so basically in ten days, that's but despite his efforts and when he starts worrying about despite a surge of coronavirus the equipment issue, the bed cases in south florida, governor issue. so the javits center is supposed ran desantis still has not issued a statewide shelter in to be up and running by monday. when do we expect the usns place order. keep in mind there have been no cases reported in more than a comfort? when do we expect more beds? dozen counties in florida, so that may explain that situation. >> reporter: the navy ship is joining me now from his arriving on saturday ahead of quarantine is the mayor of time. they're rushing it to get here. miami, francis suarez. the javits center has about 2,000 beds. they've got another 1,000 or so mr. mayor, it's good to on a college campus, part of the virtually see you. let me start with how is your state system. health? >> i'm doing very well. they announced plans to create i'm very blessed. i happen to be, i think, in that 80% category of people who are 4,000 more beds. feeling very, very mild symptoms the governor is asking the white house to authorize that using as a result of this virus, which the army corps of engineers, of course is also a category of fema, to create federal people who you worry about hospitals up here. you know, another thing, there's because had i not also a medical reserve corps self-quarantined -- i've been 15 days in quarantine as of today -- then i could have been here, people we have been someone that could have infected talking to. many more people. there have been some 40,000 doctors, nurses, medical professionals who have said, you >> let me talk about the things know, send me in. they've come out of retirement. you're trying to do. you just issued the citywide they've been inactive. they've been doing other things. curfew. and since i grew up down there myself, i'm well aware. so they are standing by and anticipating jumping into the i think there's 31 incorporated fray. but even if you get these 4,000 cities in miami-dade county, beds that they had online, 4,000 with the city of miami being the biggest. the most difficult thing more, they're still many sometimes is you're going to issue an order. are the rest of the thousands short of the projection of what the governor says is needed. >> right. >> reporter: and he every day municipalities going to comes out, and he's basing these participate in it, and if they don't, how much of a challenge is that for you? estimates on hard data. they're looking at numbers. >> well, we're up to 34 now, and they're not acting out of fear. so as you said -- they're not acting out of politics or compulsion. >> thank you. >> i was a former president of it seems to be really hard data what they call the league of cities of all 34 municipalities, driving this. and, you know, hopefully he's and i've been in constant wrong. but, you know, there doesn't seem to be any indication of communication with all those that right now. cities because they obviously >> well, as i said, the mayor follow our lead oftentimes. said basically new york's got already six or seven cities have ten days to prevent -- to get implemented a stay at home order all the preparation they need to in conjunction with a curfew. so we're starting to see that prevent this onslaught. ron allen, thank you. let me jump down to the white trend happen. my preference would be for the county to follow suit. house. all right. hans, walk me through this. they did put in a safer at home order but have not yet how do we go from telling sean implemented a curfew. hannity yesterday, i don't know why we need all these so i think for uniformity's ventilators. it seems to be too much, to this sake, i think the best thing today. would be for the county to do it i want to put up a few full as well and follow our lead so screens. it started with the president that there isn't a future with lambasting general motors. as usual, with this general kendall and north miami, which motors, things just never seem can get confusing for our to work out. they said they were going to residents who maybe don't know have us 40,000 much needed where the boundaries are. ventilators very quickly. >> right. i mean, you know, just look now they are saying it will only at -- literally you can cross be 6,000 in late april, and they the street. want top dollar. you cross u.s. 1 from coconut always a mess with mary b. grove and suddenly you're in invoke p. p of course meant defense coral gables and it's another production act, and suddenly municipality. that's been done. let me ask what is your concern? hans, did he invoke it out of some of the best hospitals in spite, or did he invoke it out the world are in south florida of need? between baptist and jackson and >> reporter: i don't have an answer to that, right? certainly a very sophisticated i want to be clear on that. hospital system. all we know is that he finally but how many beds do you have, and what is the capacity down invoke roed invoked and with specific there? regards to general motors. >> i just texted with the ceo of he called it general electric at jackson before coming on, asking one point but he's talking about him what his capacity load was for beds, for ventilators, and general motors. he hinted he came close to do it for ppes. he just texted me that he is with three other companies but good on beds, ventilators, and pulled back. as to the question of ppes. ventilators, the only way you can square the president's obviously they have, i believe, 2,000 ventilators, which is more tweets from last night and what he's talking about today is to ventilators than half the say the 30,000 to 40,000 had to country of italy. it's the fourth largest public be for new york city or a specific hospital. hospital in the united states. that's the only way because when you look at what the president so we are preparing the best we is talking about, he is clearly talking about thousands of can. we have already overflow ventilators, and yet last night, hospitals, if you will, that 30,000 was too much. we're creating. so the only way i can make those they have an additional facility sentences make sense is if the that has -- they haven't even 30,000 had qualifiers on it that tapped. they haven't even started weren't actually there, and putting patients in. so we're preparing obviously for those qualifiers were for the worst. we're looking at very closely at specific individual hospitals and the president's confused what's happening in new york to about what governor cuomo's see how that's going to affect requests are. and as you and ron are us and the governor has implemented a 14-day quarantine reporting, on indeed what the for any visitors who are coming needs of new york city and new york state are going to be. from new york, which of course so there are really three things is a big concern for us. going on in the white house right now. >> it's funny you s number one, the victory lap. you had dr. fauci talking about i have my own questions about how this is bipartisan, but it why any of the three major didn't look very bipartisan. airports in new york are still you take away the medical moving passengers around experts up there, it was only considering the state of florida has issued this quarantine, and republicans. >> did they not invite i think the national task force democrats, or did democrats not want to come? wants anybody who travels out of >> reporter: what we know from new york city to self-quarantine. pelosi's office is that she did let me ask you this. the miami international airport, not receive an invite. now, usually it's up to the how concerned are you that that white house to send that invite out. is going to continue to be a we haven't heard from schumer's gateway to bring this virus in and out of the city? office at least when i was walking out here just yet. >> i'm extremely concerned. there had been concerns earlier miami international airport has about social distancing. you can't have a huge signing 50 million passengers a year. let me repeat that, 50 million. ceremony. that said, the lawmakers up there seem to be pretty close and it's pretty clear that i together, and i don't think social distancing guidelines probably contracted the virus were necessarily entirely met from the brazil delegation that for that portion of it. came here. they did do it inside, not so they were foreigners who came outside. so at least with pelosi's to miami and were here for a couple of days a couple of weeks concern, she was not invited. ago in a delegation where i think more than 40 members of chuck? >> hans nichols as the white the delegation have already tested positive. house. ron allen on the front line. so it's a huge concern. both of you doing the best you >> that's unbelievable. >> for us. can social distancing but locally we don't have the ability to restrict travel. reporting at the spot where the so certainly would welcome any news is happening. thank you both for doing that. further restrictions that would another hot spot in this country right now is new protect our city. >> who would make that -- who orleans. joining me now is colin arnold, has that power, mr. mayor? who has that power? director of homeland security is that the governor, or is this something that has to come from the federal government? >> i think in terms of the power and emergency preparedness. the governor has been warning to prevent people from coming in all week long, and i think from overseas, we saw that by you've always been warning all presidential decree when he week long that the rate of increase of both cases and prevented certain countries from being able to fly into the deaths is rising at alarming united states. the miami-dade county airport is rates in new orleans. fill in our viewers what's going under the control of miami-dade on. paint the picture for us, sir. county. i'm not sure what kind of power they have in terms of limiting >> i can just say that we're a people and limiting air carriers community of 400,000 people, and from flying people in and out of we just went over 1,000 cases the airport. but certainly unfortunately that is not under the control of the today, 1,170. city of miami. we have one of the highest infection rates per capita in >> right. no, i know it isn't. in some ways it can be very the country, and i will say that's partially due to, you complicated if you don't know how our system works down there. know, we've ramped up a lot of it can be complicated to navigate. testing. and, you know, what we're doing yes, it is. mr. mayor, you sound healthy, now is we have a drive-thru and that is great news. good luck to you down there testing program that's part of fema and hhs. fighting this, and we hope to that's been going well. talk with you soon. >> thank you, chuck. we've done 3,400 at two sites in new orleans and an additional likewise. up ahead, the deal is finally done. the president just signed the $2 trillion rescue bill. 1,750 in jefferson parish. the latest from capitol hill those have helped. plus the drama that happened it's informing us better. moments before. the fact of the matter is we're that's next. in a crisis. we have to have people stay in their homes. there's been a mayor's mandate to stay home. there's been a governor's order to stay home. and we're seeing that people are turn on my tv and boom, doing it. we've got data that says about 73% less traffic through the city. you can see it out there that there's less. it's just people need to continue to do that. i implore not only residents of it's got all my favorite shows. i wish my trading platform worked like that. my community but every community in the country. they have to do this to stop the have you tried thinkorswim? spread and flatten the curve. this is totally customizable. now this is what i'm talking about. >> tell me this. focus on what matters to you with thinkorswim. tell me about your supply ♪ situation, ventilators, masks, and your hospital capacity. >> i feel like we're an absolute missions in iraq as aand afghanistan.89 combat microcosm of new york right now. as a national security advisor, for our community, it's the same i worked to keep our country safe. situation. personal protective equipment, i'm amy mcgrath. now i'm running for senate that ppe, it's vital, and we're in kentucky against mitch mcconnell. running out. i can win, but i need your help. and, you know, the state has assisted us with trying to get with your contribution, we can finally remove more. it seems to be a problem mitch mcconnell from office and start repairing the damage he's done to our country. nationally and, you know, at i approved this message... because this is gonna take all of us. some point our first responders who are on the front line, our health care workers who are on the front line, they're going to run out unless we can get more. and it's a huge issue. >> how are you -- explain to me who you go to to get more of this right now. are you having to deal directly yourbut as you get older,thing. it naturally begins to change, with fema? do you have to go through the causing a lack of sharpness, or even trouble with recall. governor first and he goes to fema? thankfully, the breakthrough in prevagen helps your brain explain the bureaucracy in all of this as you try to and actually improves memory. essentially get in line with the the secret is an ingredient originally discovered... federal government to get field hospitals built, to get these in jellyfish. supplies sent your way. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown >> well, you know, louisiana has to improve short-term memory. been tested, and we've been tested often. and, you know, a lot of this -- prevagen. healthier brain. better life. we base a lot of our planning on how we handle hurricanes, and some of it is applied here. but typically we will go out and try and buy personal protective equipment as a city. we put in an order in november when we first saw this, but no order has been able to be filled. and so we then reached to the state, who has supplies of their own, and they will disperse those. but really right now we're waiting on the strategic national stockpile, the federal government to filter these down to the states. they have been, but i just think there needs to be a little bit more, a lot more. and so there is a bureaucracy, i totally get how important it is to stay connected. but we all communicate with each customers can do what they need to do, other. i will say we have had great whenever they need to do it online. federal and state support with we care about keeping you safe. that pilot program, with the (vo) we are open 24/7 online, drive-thru testing. they just resupplied us so you can keep managing all you need from home yesterday and today so we can go for another week doing those and through the verizon apps and verizon.com. tests. and that includes ppe for the and sometimes, you can find yourself testers. >> do you have any evidence yet heading in a new direction. that you're starting to see any but when you're with fidelity, slowdown, or is everything just a partner who makes sure every step is clear, still accelerating? there's nothing to stop you from moving forward. >> it's accelerating, and the governor's been very clear. the mayor has been very clear. we're going to run out of hospital space within a week. we're going to have ventilator issues in a week. the state is mobilizing with the federal government and we're onboard to take over our convention center. and when fully ramped up, 3,000 beds. we'll be the largest monitoring facility in the country. >> collin arnold, battling this pandemic. good luck, sir. i hope we can get these needs met as fast as possible. by the way, a quick correction on our data of the number of deaths in the united states because we appear to have a bit of a hiccup with our data a moment ago. the number of cases is, as we said at the top of the show, nearing 100,000. the death toll is now around 1,500. you saw that the number got entered in somehow 2,300. that was a mistake, and we wanted to correct that as soon as we saw it. let me turn now to doctor leana nguyen. quorum is president. the motion is adopted. she is the city of baltimore's health commissioner and an emergency physician. doctor, it's nice to see you. i want to start with what is >> well, after some last-minute going to be the question of the drama on the house floor this moment in about 15 minutes with afternoon, the house overwhelmingly approved a $2 this task force and frankly all trillion coronavirus spending weekend long, is we're on day, i bill. guess, 13 of the guidelines. it went to the president's desk. day 15, the expiration of these he signed it moments ago, and we're likely to see this, it's national guidelines. $350 billion for small business, in your medical opinion, what should the task force be telling 240 billion for health care us about these guidelines on day relief, deliver up to $1200 to 16? >> the task force should say americans. basically, it's a bridge loan that we need to not only continue the guidelines, we have for everybody. is probably the best way to look to double down on them. at it. in some cases the direct payment look, we have an out of control is not a loan, but it is a bridge. situation at the moment. garrett haake is on capitol we are seeing what's happening hill, catches up what has been a in new york city. bit of a bizarre and we're seeing what's going to happen in louisiana, in extraordinary day, and obviously a huge week. michigan, and we don't even know what's next. we don't know what the next hot so, garrett, we expected this to spot is going to be because we pass. i'm surprised that they were lack a lot of data. able to get it done today and but we know that other places are going to be facing these didn't have to bleed into tomorrow. same issues with equipment how did they get through this shortages, with lack of hospital drama as fast as they ended up beds, with staff who are getting doing? >> well, congressional leaders sick. we need to do so much more to in the house put up the strengthen our health care capacity and get tests up and proverbial bat signal late last night they needed to have enough running. but in the meantime, there's for a quorum today when they something that every american, realized that thomas massie, the every person can do, which is to republican from kentucky was stop as much as we can and going to call for a recorded reduce the rate of transmission, vote. and members scrambled to get back here to get this thing flatten that curve as we heard done. about. this is not the time to pull chuck, look, these folks wanted back. this is the time to double down to get this finished. and do everything we can because they wanted to get the money out into the public both to we really have a very small businesses and individuals as window of opportunity here. quickly as possible without further delay, and quite >> one of the bigger issues that honestly, they didn't want to i know new york city is dealing come back to washington any longer than they possibly had with and we just heard that from our reporter, ron allen, on the to. we've already had five members, ground, which is health workers four members of the house, one are coming down with the virus. congressman diagnosed with coronavirus. this is not a place anyone wants and we're running -- you know, to be right now. and i think that lit a fire we may find enough ventilators under these members. >> okay. and not have enough personnel to if they're not here, how does run the ventilators. is there -- what should be the negotiations begin? plan to deal with this issue? >> well, it's going to start it's an inevitable problem. almost immediately. the speaker alluded to that it was something that was anticipated in many of these today. these are conversations she is having with her chairpeople more pandemic playbooks, but how do we deal with this situation now? or less right away. is it having to call up backup they need to plus up the money for states. they need to fix the problem health care -- retired health with how d.c. gets funded so care workers to replace these folks? what would you like to see, that the district gets more dr. wen? money in this. and probably about the same time >> well, i'd like to see first that these checks to individuals of all us doing everything that start going out in about three, we can to protect our existing four weeks, they're going to health care workers because if need to be back here to start putting something into motion to we run out of masks and gowns, get more money sent out to as we have already, we're going individuals. to run out of doctors and so those conversations are going to be happening more or less right away. nurses. and it's frankly just it is a very good question about unconscionable that we can't when both bodies come back more provide our frontline workers, who are putting their lives on completely. the line, with something as the senate has said they're not basic as masks. coming back until april 20th. and i'm seeing my colleagues beg the speaker said she expects it will be sooner than that. on social media for supplies. and we know that this is not chuck? >> thank you very much. >> garrett, well done. just an issue for the areas that you wrapped up just in time, and are hard-hit. everywhere else in the country the president is beginning plus is going to be facing this issue shortly. so we need to equip our existing the coronavirus task force. here it is. we'll do our best to split the health care providers before we spin from the facts. start even talking about which >> -- medical resources and other providers we're going to equipment needed to fight the bring in. but you're right. we need other creative solutions global pandemic. because we can have all the it's been a brutal pandemic for equipment in the world and all over 150 countries all over the the bed space in the world, but if we can't do something as care world. we've had great success over the for our providers, then we're not going to be able to treat last month. patients either. >> you know, today we're talking we, as you know, the millions about potential new hot spots in and millions and pieces of detroit, new orleans, chicago. equipment have been delivered successfully by us, purchased but let's say you're salt lake and delivered, and we've made it city, right? you're not a hot spot. available to the states. maybe you will, maybe up won't become one. albuquerque, new mexico. and the governors have been very what would you advise those gracious, for the most part, i medical communities to start would say. doing right now? a couple aren't appreciative of >> i would advise them to look at what's happening in the hot the incredible job. they have to do a better job spots and know that they could themselves. that's part of the problem. well be next. but generally speaking, i have they may well be next because to tell you the governors have they don't even know what's been great. i just spoke to the governor of happening in their communities because of lack of testing. new jersey, governor murphy. we know that throughout the country whatever cases we're and he is very thankful. currently reporting are a severe governor cuomo has been very underestimate, that the actual numbers are going to be a lot nice. they've really appreciated what higher than what's actually the federal government has done. listed in terms of number of you look at the hospitals that are being built all over the cases. and so these other cities that country by the army corps of don't think that they're hot engineers and fema. spots yet could be the next hot spot, and now is the time to it's been really incredible. prepare. actually the time to prepare was nobody has seen it, built hospitals in two or three days, weeks ago, but we can't go back portable hospitals. in time. we can only navigate from where this afternoon i invoked the we are now. >> right. >> so prepare now. defense production act for anticipate instead of keeping general motors to accept, our reacting to what's already perform federal contracts for happened. >> right. ventilators. ventilators are a big deal, and yeah, the what went wrong is going to be there after we're done dealing with this pandemic, we've delivered thousands of and i know there's going to be a them. and oftentimes you don't need lot of what went wrong that we're going to have to deal ventilators very much. with. but you're right. hospitals don't have very many. we've got to deal with this right now. dr. wen, thank you for your and now we're turning out that expertise in coming on. i appreciate it. here's a live look at the we have to produce large numbers. white house right now where the but we've been able to do that, coronavirus task force briefing and we're going to be doing a is expected to begin shortly. lot more. once that happens, we will of this invocation of the dpa course bring it to you live and do our best to separate our the should demonstrate clearly to spin from the facts. up ahead, more on the next all that we will not hesitate to use the full authority of the potential hot spots. right now it's new york. federal government to combat but next week, as i said, it this crisis. could be places like chicago. we thought we had a deal as an you heard from dr. bririrx example general motors. and i guess they thought otherwise. yesterday. she's very worried about cook they didn't agree. and now they do. county. i'm going to talk to chicago's they do agree. and i think we might be able to mayor next about the actions she's taking right now. pull it. but we let them know the way we felt. and they can't be doing that. it's very important that get to the bottom line and quickly. we'll do what we have to do and immediately exercise all available lawful authorities to get the job done. this afternoon i also signed an executive order investing, and your brain is an amazing thing. very, very strongly investing but as you get older, it naturally begins to change, the department of health and human services and the department of homeland security causing a lack of sharpness, or even trouble with recall. with the full authorities available under the defense thankfully, the breakthrough in prevagen helps your brain production act to respond to the and actually improves memory. the secret is an ingredient originally discovered... outbreak of the terrible virus, the invisible enemy, as we say. in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown my order also establishes that peter navarro, a very trusted to improve short-term memory. person from the white house, and prevagen. healthier brain. better life. he has been an incredible -- he has done an incredible job for me in terms of negotiation, in i know that every time that i suit up, terms of understanding where the there is a chance that that's the last time. world is going economically, but my order 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guy, and outback steakhouse. he will do a fantastic job. i'd like to maybe ask before i continue, peter, to say a few words, please. peter? thank you. >> thank you, mr. president. of course, you know, the harvard joke. you can tell a harvard man. you just can't tell them much. so on a serious note, let me give you a little idea the has you covered withe fast, reliable internet.finity defense production act and why with advanced security to help keep you secure online. it is so important. we are engaged in the most and with the most tv shows, movies significant industrial and streaming apps all in one place. mobilization since world war ii. we have a wartime president with simple digital tools you can get the help you need fighting an invisible enemy. or even trouble shoot your services on your own. and we have the full force of download the xfinity my account app government coupled with the full or just say help into your xfinity voice remote. power of private enterprise bearing down on this problem for we are working to make things a little easier on everyone. the american people. download the xfinity my account app today. what we had to do today with president trump's order with respect to general motors, i want to give you a little background on that. we need industrial mobilization to make adequate ventilator, particularly in the very short run to help the people of welcome back. while new york may remain the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak in the united states, the surgeon general -- and you saw dr. birx yesterday -- is warning that cities like detroit and chicago could see a surge in cases in the next week. chicago has already reported more than 1,100 cases so far. and, again, as deborah birx said, cook county, which comprises chicago has seen a surge in new cases. joining me now is the mayor of chicago, lori lightfoot. madam mayor, good to see you. sorry it's under these circumstances. we heard the white house has been tracking this data. you and governor pritzker, i know, have been sort of early on adopters of some of these measures before it looked as if you guys were going to be a hot spot. now that you are, tell me what your scientists are telling you about when this is going to hit. >> well, look, i think we're going to see a steady rise in cases, certainly over the next week or two. that's consistent with the odeling that we've been looking accordingly. we're doing everything to make sure that we get our people to stay home to save lives. we've instituted a number of measures to really compel people to stay inside. the city of chicago issued an order a week to ten days ago mandating that if you were sick, even a little bit, that you must stay home. so we're taking these steps, looking at the data, looking at what's happening in other parts of the country where the surge is ahead of us. we are trying to do everything we can now to flatten the curve as quickly as we can so we can get to the other side of the virus. but we're going to be in this, and it's going to keep escalating for another couple of weeks easily. >> all right. let me start with the basics. hospital capacity, beds. are you starting now to identify overflow places, convention center, things like that, united center? is that in the plans or fema? what are your plans on that front? >> so we've done a number of things. we're on a daily call with all the hospitals in the city of chicago, and we're talking to hospitals in the region. what we're pushing them to do is expand their capacity as much as possible. in addition, we have set up a series of hotels which will accommodate, if you will, stepdowns, so people who are coming out of hospitals but still need some care but not acute care, or people who need to isolate or quarantine and can't do that safely at home. in addition, we're looking at recommissioning some hospitals that are closed in the area, and we're talking with both fema and the army corps of engineers to put at least 500, if not more, hospital beds in one of our large convention centers. so we are being very pro-active and making sure that we get ahead of the curve and that we are able to handle the surge that we believe is coming. we've done an all-call for additional medical support. we have a medical corps, a number of volunteers, but we're pushing, retired doctors, nurses, really everything you need to set up a health care system, we need that not only to staff the hospitals that are coming online, the hospital spaces, but also the hotel spaces that we've commissioned over the course of this last week. so we're trying to be as proactive as we can based on the science and the data, understanding what the surge is going to be in our city. >> tell me about on the equipment front. how much of this is on your plate in trying to make sure there's enough personal protective equipment and ventilators versus the governor versus the federal government. and i guess my question is if you inventory your capacity, you go to the dpogovernor and say, need "x," "y," and z, can you go to the federal government, i guess i'm trying to understand how mayors like you are supposed to navigate this bureaucracy. >> well, look, the reality is we're not going to get the kind of help from the federal government that i think all of us need. you've been watching and seeing governor cuomo every single day, mayor de blasio. new york is the epicenter of this virus in our country, and they're not getting the support that they need. it was very clear to me in early discussions back in january that we were not going to get the kind of support from the federal government even at that point where the surge hadn't happened. so we luckily prepare for these kind of circumstances all year long. we are okay with the numbers that we're seeing right now. but if we get anywhere close to the worst-case scenario, the modeling that we've seen, all of us are going to be in trouble. the federal post negovernment n step up. i'm glad that just today the federal government has commissioned gm in their joint venture to build new ventilators, but that's absolutely necessary and really should have come online weeks ago. a process for the federal government seems to be too little, too late. but i hope that they recognize that this wave that we're seeing wash across the country from the coast is only going to get worse, not better in the short term, and they need to step up their capacity to be able to service the needs of states and cities like chicago and illinois. we're working hand in glove with our governor to make sure that we are building out the capacity. as i said before, we restock our stockpile all year long, and thank god for that. but if we hit the peak, we're all going to be in trouble. >> can you imagine reopening chicago in some sort of normal way anytime in the month of april at this point? >> i think that's going to be challenging in the month of april. but certainly we have started to look like what chicago will be when we start the recovery process. that's going to be absolutely necessary for body, mind, and spirit. it's going to be important for us to be able to step up and support even more support for our small businesses, reopen our convention business and tourism. but we're a ways away from that. we have some nation plans that are in place right now, but really the primary focus on a day to day basis is meeting the daily challenge that this virus has brought to our doorstep. >> mayor lori lightfoot, boy, i tell you, are you still in your first year? i think it's coming, right? >> i haven't even hit my one-year anniversary yet, my friend. >> that's what i thought. i was like, yeah, i would say one day is a month. one month probably feels like a year. madam mayor, good luck out there and stay healthy and safe yourself. >> thank you. up ahead, the president has just implemented a powerful tool in his arsenal. the drastic measure he's taking is one that dates all the way back to 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indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try neuriva for 30 days and see the difference. welcome back. we are of course awaiting the white house coronavirus task force briefing. and as you heard from our guests on the front lines of this fight today and all this week, health care workers are raising alarms about the lack of lifesaving medical equipment in the photo against the coronavirus, including ppe, becoming one of those acronyms we all know so well know. personal protective equipment and ventilators that are also in critically short supply. the federal government has a tool to deal with this. it's called the defense production act. it allows the government to take control of the supply chain to ensure the u.s. has the necessary equipment they need when the country is in danger. the president signed an executive order invoking the dpa last week, but he didn't implement its power, use its power, until moments ago when he directed general motors to manufacture ventilators. this comes after 100 current and former national security officials released a letter on wednesday urging the president to use the dpa asap. >> joining me now is former secretary of defense chuck hagel. secretary hagel, obviously you're somebody that thought this should have been invoked. you heard the mayor of chicago. this should have been invoked weeks ago, and i'm reading here the company that gm is working with for their kokomo, indiana, plant, ventec, they said they can get up to a capacity of 10,000 ventilators a month, but it ain't going to be this month. mr. secretary, so what is the best way. should this be invoked not as a one-off, but should he go across the board here now? >> well, chuck, he has to go across the board. first let's recognize, as your guests preceding me have so articulately noted, this is a national crisis, and i mean a national crisis. it's part of a pandemic, global pandemic, but an international crisis. when that happens in a nation, you harness your industries. you harness all the resources available to you. it should have been done weeks ago. it's not too late. we have to do it now, and it's got to be industry-wide. >> so, look, i understand the hesitancy to do this. explain to me. you've dealt with these private companies. you know, the white house wanted to use it as sort of a cudgel to get companies to do this on their own. they've been very hesitant to use it because i think it really sort of ideologically goes against the grain of sort of the free market conservative that's out there, of which you would describe yourself as one, i think. >> that's right. but a clear message has to be given to the citizens of this country from our national leadership. the state leadership can't do its part of it. mayors and governors are on the front line in this war, this battle, the president has even noted. but it has to come from the top. and it can't be sugar-coated. this is serious business. we're losing people, hundreds of people every day around the world. more cases, more deaths. and we're just probably at the front end. that's what our medical experts are telling us. so you need to alert people to the seriousness, the deadly seriousness of what we're dealing with here. and that means you talk straight. you don't sugar-coat it. you don't try to panic people. but people have to have confidence and trust in their leadership, that their leadership, no matter how bad, is telling them the truth, that we're all working together, both nationally and internationally by the way. this is an international dynamic as well as a sovereign issue for this country. >> let me talk about our defense readiness at a time, you know, it's been interesting to watch on one hand we know that there's been a troop freeze, if you will, on troop movements, meaning, you know, people cycling in and cycling out. that is going to be on a 60-day freeze. what is your biggest concern as a former defense secretary about troop readiness right now besides on the health front? i'm talking about, you know, how concerned should we be in iran or another one of our perceived enemies might look at this as a time to strike, be it on cyber or be it, you know, on what we're doing in iraq? >> well, it's there. it's serious. it's real. there is a national security component to this national crisis, chuck. it's not just health. it's not just economy. but it's also an international security issue. for example, we have just taken the uss teddy aken them out of

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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Poppy Harlow And Jim Sciutto 20200331

beginning. a report this morning that doctors at a major hospital right here in new york city are being told to think very carefully about who does and does not get a ventilator. it is another symptom of a nationwide problem hospitals just don't have what they need. >> yeah. rationing, amazing we're getting there. in cities across the country, field hospitals are now going operational because of the expected overflow at hospitals in convention centers, even in new york city's central park. and next hour the navy hospital ship comfort will take on its first noncoronavirus patients to help take the pressure off other new york hospitals. >> cases are surging across the country, in new emerging hot spots. three out of four americans now are under stay at home or shelter in place orders. and signs in california that the social distancing guidelines may be working. we have got a lot to get to this hour. >> all of us here doing our part. let's begin in new york with cnn national correspondent brynn gingras. tell us what it is like in new york there. just the scenes of seeing tents going up in central park to treat the affected. just amazing. >> yeah. it is just -- it is. it is amazing. coronavirus is quite literally changing the landscape here in new york city. it is different. it is very different. not only do we have a giant military hospital ship in our harbor, but we have tents up in central park, we also just got word, guys, that the u.s. open where that is played that tennis center, that's also going to be transformed into a hospital with about 350 beds. we're also learning about fema working with the city to get 250 ambulances here and staff to deal with the surge. but let me talk about this hospital here behind me. in central park, a place where people usually are sunbathing, when it is warm out or exercising. now it is a hospital from a christian group that came up here over the weekend and brought with them all these tents, 68 beds will be able to be utilized by covid patients and we're hearing patients will be coming today and could be coming from any of the five boroughs in new york city. and there will also be icu units inside those hospital tents as well. so, again, just another measure that is being taken to help with the surge. i should mention, even with all this help that we're seeing here in new york city, the governor saying we still need more help. actually putting out a plea yesterday saying anyone who can give, you know, their expertise to come to new york city, we need your help and we will repay you by sending our people to you should you need it. so that is a situation that continues to be the case here in new york city. >> truly wanting to work together across state lines, brynn, thank you for that reporting. just remarkable to see those -- that park, you know, we run in it families take their kids there, it is now a makeshift hospital. it is incredible. >> it shows too how people are contributing, right? that's a christian group there, we have individuals, of course, families doing their part by staying at home. there is a national effort to come together and respond. >> you're so right. all right, let's talk about another city dealing with the surge, ryan young joins us in detroit. just, you know, it seems like overnight it has been the past few days, weeks, that michigan has been hit so hard, specifically detroit. >> yes. so tough too you hear the numbers. yesterday, the number that stuck out to me was over 1800 new cases in the last two days, that was yesterday. look, guys, i've been across the country. what you see is this eerie silence that sits over a city once they figure out they may be the next hot spot. that is happening here. there is no traffic anywhere around the city now. it seems like everybody is taking that shelter in place quite seriously. look behind me this is the tcf center, where the world famous auto show would be held. that's been canceled. what will happen here, this will be transformed into a field hospital with some 900 extra beds. they're getting ready for the capacity. what we're told, they're going to split the patients in severity so there will be the worse on one side and people who have covid-19 in another place. but we talked to an emergency room nurse this morning, who is telling us how difficult this has been, especially when it comes to the families. >> wanting to talk with their family members to discuss and the involving the patient's families in the discussion. but, you know, they're alone. and that's heart breaking to us because we know how important it is to have family around. >> reporter: real quick here, poppy and jim, just to think about this and the impact it is having in this area, look, in michigan over 180 people have died so far. and the superintendent of schools here in detroit put a tweet out that really sums things up. two employees died and three parents died and that was yesterday. the numbers are probably going to get worse today. it is really difficult here. >> yeah. more and more i think, you know, ryan and poppy, people like us, we know people who have been affected by it and that's going to happen to more and more americans. ryan young in chicago, in detroit, thank you very much. now to new orleans, another city affected by this confirmed cases soaring as hospitals brace now to potentially run out of ventilators and other equipment, by this weekend. joining us now is colin arnold director of new orleans office of homeland security and emergency preparedness. good to have you back. i thank folks like you. i know you're taking time out of your day, you got a lot on your plate, to help get information out. when we spoke last week, you said that this outbreak will be the defining crisis of our generation. in the last week, what have you seen on the ground there that has brought that home to you. >> well, thanks for having me, good morning. new orleans and louisiana in general continue to see very high rates of infection and deaths. right now we're at 1480 cases. 86 deaths and we're a community of 400,000. so we're tracking at about 5% on the mortality rate and it is just -- that's high. and our population has a higher rate of underlying health conditions, we're preparing for a significant amount of hospitalizations and unfortunately it is, of course a significant amount of deaths. >> horrible news and horrible to see when these hot spots emerge. i wonder what you think about some of the action taken, for example, by the governor yesterday, in kentucky. with a strict order it bars basically almost anyone, few exceptions, from leaving the state. and anyone who comes back into kentucky has to be kwaurn teequ for two weeks. is that advice that you think would be prudent in new orleans now? i think what the mayor and the governor have done with the stay at home mandate, which was early in this process, is working. and i think that we need to encourage that both in our community and communities around this country that staying at home and isolating yourself from other people is the way that we can beat this. it seems rudimentary, but it is the way that we can stop the spread of this and flatten the curve. and that's what this is about. >> so what happens, collin, when you see communities, cities within states, issuing these orders, but then state wide the orders not issued or even neighboring states, louisiana has it, mississippi, texas do not. does that then mute the effect of social distancing and allow this to spread further? >> we have discussed neighboring states. the main thing that is important that you have, you know, your state leadership and your city leadership, you know, coordinating and communicating and working together and so far in this, that is absolutely what i have seen. we have a very successful drive through testing program that, you know, came down from the federal government as far as materials and supplies. managed by the state and run locally. and it has worked really well. we had a lot of success. we'll have over 5,000 tests today and 11 or 12 days. and we're continuing that. and i think that that's important. the state is leading our charge on medical surge capacity. we have taken over our convention center. we're building a thousand beds, ready by the end of the week and we can surge in phases up to 3,000 beds if we need to. that's all been the states taking the lead on that. we appreciate, we understand now the united states navy, the medical corps will be coming down to assist with that operation as well. >> listen, you're doing great work there. just want to send our best to you for that, but also the people in new orleans and louisiana. collin arnold, thanks so much. >> anytime, thank you. with us now, dr. celine gounder, clinical assistant professor of medicine and infectious diseases at nyu. we have so many questions for you. i want to start with the question of testing because we heard so many competing claims about how widely available and how quickly these tests would be available. the president said yesterday he hasn't heard about testing as an issue in weeks. what are the facts? and can americans who need tests get tests today? >> so the tests are still very much in short supply. we as doctors are having to really focus that resource on patients for whom it is going to change our medicaling management. so, you know, if we're debating is this truly covid-19 versus maybe this is somebody who just has straight up heart failure or an exacerbation of their emphyse emphysema, knowing that is crucial. if someone does not have covid-19, can be managed at home safely where they're not at risk for getting infected relative to being in the hospital, that's something we want to achieve. i think that's really false. i think it is really just being directed at those who are sickest where it is going to change what we're going to do for them. >> dr. gounder, excuse me, the question i'm getting the most from friends and family members is do i wear a mask or don't i? we heard from the president yesterday that there may come the point where it is advised that all americans should wear masks. didn't say definitively. but as early as an hour ago, the latest cdc guidance and w.h.o. guidance is you don't need to wear a mask out if you're not ill. is that -- what should americans do this morning? >> there is two different purposes for wearing masks, one to protect yourself and to protect other people. i have been speaking to experts who study quite literally the droplets and gas you exhale or sneeze or cough out including one such researcher up at m.i.t. publishing on this as it relates to the coronavirus. and what she tells me is that the dichotomy between droplets and aersoles is a false one and we have to assume some is spread by aerosoles. that is a greater concern for healthcare workers who have heavy exposure. for the general public, we should be wearing masks on the order of scarves or ban ddannas not to protect ourselves but it may trap anything we're carrying if we're carriers or infected. >> fair enough. >> dr. gounder before you go, the other question i often get and i'm sure you as well is what are the next couple of weeks going to look like? we hear of a ramp ing up of cases. what should people at home be expecting? >> i think we should be expecting to hear the death toll is going to be increasing. i think we should expect to hear that healthcare workers are going to be getting sick and frankly dying from this. and that hospitals are going to be overwhelmed. and possibly having to turn away patients. i think that is something that we should all anticipate in the coming weeks. >> that's astonishing. the wall street journal this morning, big hospital here in new york, deciding who should get ventilators and who should not, but to turn away patients, that could be a reality in weeks in america is mind boggling. thank you as always. joining us in the next hour, i'll be speaking to dr. anthony fauci, the nation's top doctor about the spread of the coronavirus, get as much information as we can. still to come this hour, president trump tells a group of governors yesterday that he hadn't heard complaints about coronavirus testing in weeks. at least one of those governors publicly disagreed. also, doctors turning to instagram to ask for equipment donations. we have that story, four people are dead and hundreds more are repo reporting feeling ill on a cruise ship that is sailing to the coast of florida. will officials in that state let them dock? 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>> we shouldn't leave our house. that's the first thing to remember that we don't know yet if masks really work. we don't have the evidence base for it. we absolutely have centuries of evidence about social distancing. so what i'm doing to protect myself and my family is i'm leaning in to those stay at home orders, but there are essential -- and there are first responders that have to go out. i think it is really important that if you wear a mask, you don't do anything different with respect to staying away from other people that you would if you weren't wearing a mask. either way, we need to really be disciplined out in public. >> what do you think we have learned? what is the lesson learned from this crisis in terms of the ability to save more lives next time something like this hits, in terms of testing and what we use, for example, the administration, the cdc, not allowing and not using the w.h.o. test that was developed, banning private hospitals from using tests they developed. was that a mistake that can direct us in the right direction next time? >> so i think there will be time after this is all over for post mortems and assessments of blame and assessments of what went wrong. right now we have to stay focused on going forward. we can't have our experts diverted into analyzing the past. i do think that we will see the testing, rapid testing should be an absolute priority. i think we should open wide the floodgates to tests being developed from all sources. but of course our fda and our cdc officials, they're worried. and it is their job to be worried about false results. if you get a bunch of false positives or false negatives, that creates a problem and the american people -- we're going to have tests that are reliable and valid and so there is a trade-off. i think these are -- these times are really important for analyzing the trade-offs between security and scientific validity. but also rapidity and how quickly we can ramp up and scale up. >> i think we all know as humans that failures are what we all learn the most from. and that's where that question comes from, as well as this, as someone who advised the president and his team on health issues and who has the background that you have, what do you think the impact has been of the president for weeks until recently downplaying the magnitude of this pandemic and saying things like just in mid-march, he said it is something nobody expected when we now know there was this 69 page briefing book put together by the nsc that played out what happens in a pandemic and asks questions like is there sufficient personal protective equipment for healthcare workers who are providing medical care? i ask this of all the doctors out there, the ones in brownsville, brooklyn, who told us yesterday they're going to home depot some of them to buy protective gear. that guidance in 2016 was not taken by the administration, what can we learn from it going forward? >> i think the president isn't always briefed on every single preparedness activity that is going on at the staff level. and i'm actually encouraged that those plans and those conversations were going on. i know that the global health team both -- >> they didn't heed the advice and the president is saying no one thought anything like this could happen, but they did. >> a lot of people in the white house and in all the agencies of course did think something like this could happen. the fact that there is a briefing book shows you that everyone was thinking about this, just six months prior to this event the president signed an executive order on pandemic flu preparedness. >> but, katie, why -- my question is it is great to have a briefing book. but if it is not utilized, and if there are doctors dying right now, and nurses dying right now, and first responders without the proper gear, i'm asking what lessons can be learned and applied for the future? >> it is a good question. i think that probably one of the most important lessons is the role of our state partners. i will say that the states are an integral essential part of our pandemic preparedness efforts over the past years and years. and those essential partners really have the freedom to stockpile things for their own people and not be at the mercy of the federal government. >> so the states shouldn't rely on the national stockpile? the states shouldn't be asking the federal government now? >> i don't think any governor wants to be in a position where they're at the mercy of federal decisionmakers who have to look out for the entire country. i think every governor that the system that we have was designed so that governors wouldn't have to be in that position. and any state or governor that is pointing the finger at the federal government's lack of preparedness and any supply shortage is at least equally exposing that state's lack of preparedness. what is the lesson going forward, it is that we need to be prepared at the state level and local levels as well as the federal and there is a lot of room for improvement at all levels. >> katie talento, appreciate you coming on. come back, please. thanks for your time. jim? north america's largest convention center is about to be used to fight coronavirus. we'll be there live and we're just moments away from the opening bell on wall street. the dow looks set to slide at the start as the bleak economic news just continues. goldman sachs has significantly downgraded its outlook for the u.s. economy. talking about a major contraction here and it seems the collapse of the labor market will be even worse than feared. ♪ you should be mad they gave this guy a promotion. you should be mad at forced camaraderie. and you should be mad at tech that makes things worse. but you're not mad, because you have e*trade, who's tech makes life easier by automatically adding technical patterns on charts and helping you understand what they mean. don't get mad. get e*trade's simplified technical analysis. from anyone else. so why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase relieves your worst symptoms which most pills don't. get all-in-one allergy relief for 24 hours, with flonase. which most pills don't. listerine® cleans virtually 100%. helping to prevent gum disease and bad breath. never settle for 25%. always go for 100. brout the bold™ let's go around the country now to see how different cities are experiencing this. chicago, one of several major u.s. cities trying to make room in hospitals now for covid-19 patients. >> omar jimenez joins us now. what are you seeing and hearing there? >> well, poppy, big struggle for cities across the world, frankly, trying to make sure their hospitals don't get overwhelmed in the midst of this pandemic. so the city of chicago, state of illinois and u.s. army corps of engineers are working to transform chicago's convention center into an alternate care facility. their goal by the end of the week is to have at least 500 beds set up. for most of the day yesterday they were unpacking medical supplies. that's first phase. their goal by the end of this all is to have at least 3,000 beds set up in three different sections of this mccormick place center here. all of this is to ease the burden on hospitals as we continue to see the number of coronavirus cases rise here in the state of illinois. >> omar jimenez, good to have you there. now to rosa flores, live in florida, and the clash there over a cruise ship. tell us what is happening. >> reporter: well, jim, the zaandam cruise ship is headed to florida and the situation there has worsened. eight people tested positive for covid-19, four individuals died, the cause of death not determined yet and dozens of others are exhibiting flu-like symptoms this is expected to arrive wednesday or thursday, but does not have permission to dock. that decision will be made by broward county commissioners and unified command. here is the thing, governor ron desantis announced he, the u.s. coast guard and the white house do not want this ship to dock, saying that he wants to make sure there are hospital beds for floridians here in the state. here is the thing, 305 u.s. citizens are on board, including 49 floridians. we know canadians are on board. a lot of passengers and families are going to social media making a plea asking for mercy and compassion so that florida can take them in. >> we'll see what happens when it gets there wednesday or thursday. rosa, thank you in miami. to atlanta, the mayor there says hospitals could reach capacity by may 3rd if not sooner. amarah walker joins us from atlanta. >> a stay at home order remains in effect here in atlanta and there is no timeline as to when that will be lifted. in a facebook audio call to her city's constituents, the mayor said she was concerned that as you were mentioning the hospitals here could reach capacity by may 3rd, possibly sooner. she said the city ordered 1200 ventilators and they should arrive by april. now, three hours south of here in a city called albany, georgia, very different scene, the hospitals there have already been overwhelmed and the georgia national guard deployed three medical teams to be on the ground there to help the hospitals on the ground for the covid-19 response. the icus have reached capacity, that's according to the healthcare system. and they say the main challenge now is meeting the demand of critical care staffing. there are reported 27 confirmed deaths in albany, according to the healthcare system and that accounts for about 30% of all coronavirus deaths in georgia. jim, back to you. >> listen, if there is any doubt this is a national issue, listen to those accounts from around the country. amara walker, great to have you there. >> look at this, a stunning visual. that's an aerial shot of more than 800 cars lined up outside of a food bank near pittsburgh, just yesterday. the officials say people started to arrive three hours before the drive through emergency distribution began. every car load received 50 pounds of groceries, no questions asked, the greater pittsburgh community food bank waived all economic requirements during this pandemic. just a reminder, when we go to the grocery store what can we give to those who are waiting like that. >> every one of those cars is a family affected by this. well, doctors, nurses, medical staff, they are treating infected patients every day, often if you can believe it without the right protective gear. what happens when those doctors, the healthcare workers get sick? 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are you seeing the first signs of this spreading widely? >> yes, jim, good morning, thank you for having me. and, you know, just in that last segment, a lot of americans have heard about the shortages that we are having. we're now seeing an even new iteration and seeing this across the country, is that hospitals are reaching out to doctors to say are you comfortable practicing in another specialty? because we know we're going to have shortages of er and icu doctors. what we need to be focusing on is not letting our doctors get sick in the first place across the country. >> no question. let me ask you this, a concern is that many doctors and healthcare workers don't have sufficient protective gear as they're treating patients. are you, do your colleagues feel like you're risking your lives as you treat the infected? >> we do feel we are not getting the protection we need. and they do say that er doctors were the ma gifrs macgyvers of medicine. i have another colleague who is testing it better to clean her mask using a rice cooker or dehydrator. we're pushed to that level. one thing i do want to say, this cannot go unnoticed, we are watching out and sharing our precious resources with each other, physician to physician. and it is very encouraging to see fellow physicians standing above the fray, and looking out for each other, even with our very little resources to take care of our fellow each other, our community, and to take care of our country. that cannot go unnoticed. >> it is not. you're doing great stuff. and deserve credit. i want to ask you, a lot of hospitals are saying when this peaks, when the cases spike, their concern is their facilities will be overrun, they won't have enough ventilators and they'll have to be rationing healthcare. is that a prospect you're now preparing for? >> we all are very concerned about that. the reality, jim, is our hospitals and icus run at 100% capacity even before we have the covid pandemic or whatever is going on. so we know when something comes in like this, we're going to have more demand and we are seeing states fight for resources and precious resources. so, yes, i'm definitely concerned once we see that peak, we won't have enough of the ventilators, masks, medications, doctors, any number of things and we have to decide where to allocate those resources. which is not a decision that i or any doctor wants to be making. >> no. it is remarkable reality. before i let you go, the infected -- they have to suffer on their own, no contact with their families to reduce the risk of spreading this to others. what is that stress like on patients? >> you know, that's a great question. and as an er doctor, i view my job as giving somebody medications and doing diagnostics, just as much part of my job is reaching out, holding that patient's hand, helping them find ways to connect with their loved ones. that is still part of my job for my patients in the er and for our greater americans to help them connect with each other to help all of us as we go through this very scary and uncertain time to be there and help them connect. >> yeah. listen, thank you so much, again, and we wish you, we wish your team and we wish all the people you're treating there the best of luck in the coming days and weeks. >> thank you so much. >> so on top of the health impact on so many and the risks that all those healthcare workers are putting themselves in front of every day, you got the economic impact, tens of thousands of workers being furloughed because of coronavirus and economists are now saying this is going to get much worse. straight from the world's best plant scientists, comes miracle-gro performance organics. organic plant food and soil that finally work... for twice the bounty. guaranteed. miracle-gro performance organics. they have businesses to grow customers to care for lives to get home to they use stamps.com print discounted postage for any letter any package any time right from your computer all the amazing services of the post office only cheaper get our special tv offer a 4-week trial plus postage and a digital scale go to stamps.com/tv and never go to the post office again! the economic damage from this is just staggering. we've never seen something like this. this morning goldman sachs officially downgraded its outlook for the u.s. economy, this as 10,000 workers are being furloughed across the country. perhaps many of you are watching today. >> christine romans is with us. we'll get to the global report in a moment because it's startling. what are we looking at in terms of furloughed workers across so many industries. >> just in the past 36 hours, tens of thousands of them. retail workers are almost 10% of all the employed people in the country, and you're not going to stores and malls, right? so you've seen furloughs from marriott, hilton, hyatt, macy's, kohl's, gannett. the rescue package from congress, the big stimulus, it has provisions in there to try to keep that infrastructure for some of these companies intact. if you have a furlough, they don't tell you to go away forever. they say if the work comes back, you can have that job. keep your health care and the government pays your salary for the next four months. >> at least -- >> christine -- sorry, sorry. a contraction of 34%, by one-third. that's remarkable. >> we have to rub our eyes to see is there a decimal missing there. a 34% contraction. goldman goes on to say they think there will be a snapback in the third quarter, more like a v-shaped recession than a u-shaped recession that everyone is talking about. those numbers are not that controversial, really. when you look at some of the modelling other people have, we stopped pa big part of the american economy, just stopped it in its tracks like we've never done before. the numbers are terrifying, but they reflect just how dramatic the move here was. the big question for me was how much stimulus will get out there. the bills are coming and the checks aren't, right? how quickly will the money be there? will there be more after that, and what does it look like on the other side for the economy? we just don't know. >> christine romans, thank you so much. right now three out of every four americans have been ordered to stay at home. is that enough? is enough being done to actually slow the spread of coronavirus? dr. fauci joins us next. from your allergy pills? flonase relieves your worst symptoms which most pills don't. get all-in-one allergy relief for 24 hours, with flonase. shbecause xfinity mobilehen ygives you more flexible data.. you can choose to share data between lines, mix with unlimited, or switch it up at any time. all on the most reliable wireless network. which means you can save money without compromising on coverage. get more flexible data, the most reliable network, and more savings. plus, get $300 off when you buy a new samsung galaxy s20 ultra. that's simple. easy. awesome. go to xfinitymobile.com today. a good tuesday morning to you. i'm jim sciutto. >> and i'm poppy harlow. america hits a milestone as the nation fights this pandemic. 575 americans died yesterday alone from covid-19. that is the largest number of deaths that we have seen in a single day so far in the united states. the death toll across the country has now risen above 3,000. we will hear from the white house on their updated guidelines today. also this morning, a sobering report. doctors at a new york city hospital are being told now to think carefully about who and who does not get a ventilator. hospitals across the country are desperate for more supplies. staff, bed space, and we are now seeing field hospitals going operational. convention centers, in that image in the left of the screen, that is a tent hospital in new york city's central park.

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