makes a difference in this world. i want to sleep. good evening, everyone. i m alison camerata. welcome to cnn tonight . you ve seen the video of the brave police officers rushing into a school to save children. tonight we ll talk to an er doctor who was standing by ready to treat the victims, but none of the ambulances he expected ever arrived. some of our politicians today, saying there s nothing we can do about gun violence. doctors disagree. plus the overdose drug narcan will soon be on the shelves of grocery stores, gas stations, even vending machines. do they have it at your child s school? should parents keep it at home? we ll explain what you need to know. and tonight we bring you our next pulse of the people, this one on how technology like artificial intelligence is changing all of our lives. i sit down with a group of gen xers millennials and gen. z is to find out what level of glee or panic this causes now. technology is moving too fast for me personally, i can sa
stain on the soul of america. russia is not achieving its strategic objectives. russia tried to deny any enlargement of nato. the social democratic party has concluded that sweden should join nato. live from london, this is cnn newsroom with isa suarez. welcome to the show, everyone, it is monday, may 16th. we begin with the consequences of russia s war on ukraine. finland and sweden have announced they intend to join nato, reverse ago neutral stance held by the two nations for decades and really paving the way for major expansion of nato s military alliance directly on russia s doorstep. now, what you are looking at right now, a live images coming to us from helsinki in finland where finnish lawmakers are gathered to consider the issue. swedishish use are set to do the same in 30 minutes or so both parliaments are widely expected to endorse the decisions, from there nato says the approval process could move very quickly. finland s acceptance would also double r
, that s done an in depth article on this. the average stay for depression is 6 to 7 days. he was there 40 days, and what they say is that there were a couple of reasons number one. he d had a stroke, so they were trying to make sure that his medicines weren t interfering with his treatment for the stroke. and so also after having a stroke, you re more prone to depression. there are changes chemical changes in your brain as well as the depression that comes from having lost some of your you know, he had auditory processing issues. so some of your capabilities family member had a very similar experience, and it does generally get better with time. it s something that can kind of self heal in the brain. um i think that it s going to be incumbent upon the senator when he s back, and when he s healed to just to talk to his voters about where he s at how he s been able to how he is. doing the job when he s in the hospital. what he s test staff to do listen. mental health is a real issue in
cases instead of covid cases is because of the level of testing in north korea, it s extremely low. the vast majority of those people showing symptoms in all likelihood haven t been tested. making matters worse experts say the country lacks significant health care infrastructure, it s likely almost none of the country s 25 million people have been vaccinated and to date north korea hasn t secured any vaccines through organizations like covax despite being eligible. since the outbreak began the country s bureau led by kim jong-un has criticized the anti-epidemic sector for being careless, irresponsible and incompetent because kim says state provided medicines weren t supplied to people through pharmacies in time and for failing to recognize the current crisis, isa. i know you will stay on top of the story for us. thanks very much. while the coronavirus pandemic is hitting china s economy harder than expected new government data for april shows the world s second largest economy suff
is it doctors fault? who made a mistake here? dr. poti: i m going to say it s complicated. i m not going to say there s one entity here that s responsible, but there was a lot of money to be made by promoting the treatment of pain to the highest level. big pharma made a lot of money on this. and i was taught in residency you give people as much pain medicine as they need. you get them out of pain. we will judge your hospital. we will judge your emergency room based on your pain scores. that s how we were taught. and we were also told these medicines weren t all that addictive. we started handing out pills like crazy. 100 million americans have chronic pain. so, we did a disservice as doctors and as prescribers like we took data that was bullshit, and then we went forth with it said oh prescribe it to everyone, they won t get addicted. we know what we re doing. guess what, we didn t know what we were doing. ou ever worked with dr. francis? oh yeah, he s ok. just ok? guess who just g