Apologies to my English speaking Readers - this entire blog, and videos presented, are in German, the subject has to do with German (and also Austrian) Politics.
Entschuldigung an meine englischsprachigen Leser - dieser gesamte Blog und die präsentierten Videos sind auf Deutsch, das Thema hat mit deutscher (und auch österreichischer) Politik zu tun.
Image by Lothar Dieterich from Pixabay
Ich präsentiere hier eine Zusammenfassung von Themen auf die ich letztlich aufmerksam wurde. Ich fand z.B. sehr verwunderlich und schlichtweg unfassbar die Verschwendung von Steuergeldern, besonders wenn wir daran denken dass dies ja nicht das erste Mal passierte - man denke da an die Schweinegrippe 2009 zurück. Das folgende video deckt auf:
Maskendebakel: Wer zahlt die teure Beschaffung des Bundes?
Im März 2020 beschloss das Bundesgesundheitsministerium, selbst Schutzausrüstung zu beschaffen: mit mehr als 700 Verträgen über insgesamt rund 6,4 Milliarden Euro. Jetzt sitzen Lieferanten auf der bestellten Ware und warten auf ihr Geld.
Eines der Kommentare:
Erinnert doch irgendwie an 2009, dort hat der Bund auch jede Menge Steuergelder im Namen der Pandemie verbrannt..... Profiteure der Angst (Arte-Doku 2009) Fragt man sich nur was die Qualitätsjournalisten daraus lernen..........
Im direkten Zusammenhang damit - wir reden jetzt über März 2020 - erinnere ich mich dass es ein Ausfuhrverbot für Atemmasken gab. Auf einer Google Suche wurde ich fündig:
Beim Corona-Schutz endet Europas Solidarität. Der Krisenstab der Bundesregierung reagiert nun auf die gestrige Beschlagnahmung von Atemmasken in Frankreich. Sie nimmt die Beschaffung jetzt selbst in die Hand.
Eine weitere Überschrift:
Atemschutzmasken und Desinfektionsmittel ausverkauft
Die einschneidendste Maßnahme ist aber der Ausfuhrstopp. Aufgrund der Krisenlage durch die Epidemie habe sich der globale Bedarf an medizinischer Schutzausrüstung bedeutend erhöht, so die Bundesregierung. Das Exportverbot diene dem Schutz von Leben und Gesundheit der Menschen und stehe damit im Einklang mit den Regeln der Europäischen Union, unterstreicht Wirtschaftsstaatssekretär Ulrich Nussbaum, der die formelle Anweisung unterschrieben hat.
„Die Deckung des Bedarfs mit den genannten Gütern ist für die Aufrechterhaltung eines funktionierenden Gesundheitssystems in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland unerlässlich“, heißt es zur Begründung. Ich empfehle den gesamten Artikel hier zu lesen.
Jedoch geht es weiter, und über diese Masken diskutieren wir noch immer, hier der Anfang, ein Artikel vom Jänner 2020:
Es gibt dort noch so einige weiterführende Links, doch möchte ich in die Gegenwart zurückkehren - ein Video auf das ich erst gestern aufmerksam wurde, stammt von September 2020:
Dr Daniele Ganser Corona und die Medien - Düsseldorf 11 September 2020
Während der Corona-Krise hat der Schweizer Historiker und Friedensforscher Dr. Daniele Ganser in Düsseldorf am 11. September 2020 erstmals öffentlich einige Bemerkungen zum Thema Corona gemacht.
Schlussendlich lassen wir einen renommierten Virologen zu Wort kommen:
Virologe Hendrik Streeck zur neuesten Entwicklung der Corona-Lage am 23.10.20
Im Interview äußert sich Virologe Hendrik Streeck zu den aktuellen Zahlen der Infizierten und warnte im Gespräch mit Moderator Michael Krons davor, nur die bloßen Zahlen für die Entwicklung der Corona-Pandemie zu berücksichtigen.
Über das Thema Berchtesgaden teile ich hier eine satyrische Ansicht von Claudio Michele Mancini:
Zitat von CCM
...ich wills mal so sagen: In der eigenen Nase verliert der pädagogisch erhobene Zeigefinger signifikant an Bedeutung. enen Nase verliert der pädagogisch erhobene Zeigefinger signifikant an Bedeutung
Apropos "Erhobener Zeigefinger" - wer Lust und Laune hat, seht euch die Österreichische Pressekonferenz vom 23.10. bei unserem Gesundheitsminister Rudi Anschober auf Facebook an:
Rudi Anschober was live. Pressekonferenz zur Ampelschaltung
Some time ago I joined a new Print-On-Demand platform, headquartered in Montreal, Canada. There are a multitude of items I can put my designs on, and to see an overview of it, just check my AOW STORE. But in this blog, I like to highlight my collection of Facemask that have become mandatory in many places around the globe. So why not make it a fashion accessory that is unique and not mass-produced!
There are basically two types of masks, which I want to introduce to you:
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Measure from the beginning of one ear, over the tip of your nose, to the start of your other ear.
Adult Large 29-30cm
Adult Medium 27-28cm
Adult Small 26-27cm
Youth Large 24-25cm
Youth Small 22-23cm
Cotton Sateen Face Coverings
Note: there are additional designs also available - more may be added
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Measure from the beginning of one ear, over the tip of your nose, to the start of your other ear.
Adult X-Large 30.5 cm
Adult Large 29 cm
Adult Medium 27.5 cm
Adult Small 26 cm
Youth Large 25 cm
Youth Medium 23.5 cm
Youth Small 22 cm
A radical nature-based agenda would help society overcome the psychological effects of coronavirus
12/10/2020
what I posted about in April:
FOREST BATHING - WALD GEGEN CORONA-VIREN
A radical nature-based agenda would help society overcome the psychological effects of coronavirus
Matthew Adams, University of BrightonMore of us than ever are stuck indoors, whether we are working at home, self-isolating, or socially distancing from other households. Long periods of isolation are already impacting many people’s mental health and will continue to do so.
On the other hand, people have reported discovering outdoor spaces on their doorstep as they are forced to stay local. Many say they have felt happier for doing so.
This reinforces the surge of research exploring the psychological benefits of connecting to nature that has developed in recent years. The idea is also growing that encouraging time in and engagement with nature has enormous potential in terms of mental health and wellbeing.
There are more and more programmes explicitly aimed at helping people with experiences of distress by providing structured contact with nature. These are variously referred to as nature-based interventions, ecotherapy or green care. A growing evidence base suggests they are effective in alleviating distress and fostering recovery and resilience – for people but also, at least potentially, for nature too.
I think programmes like this need to be rolled out en masse, with a few vital provisos.
Natural connections
My work often involves evaluating nature-based interventions from a psychological perspective. I have repeatedly witnessed the benefits of time spent in nature for those involved.
One organisation I work with, called Grow, takes small groups of six to eight people – often strangers at first – into nature. Participants all suffer, or have suffered, from debilitating forms of psychological distress and are recruited on that basis. Like many such services, Grow operates with funding from sources like the National Lottery, larger charities and local council grants to run a number of programmes a year.
Clients are not yet referred through or commissioned by the health service. Your doctor might be more likely today to suggest you get outside more in a move towards green prescriptions. But institutionalised health provision is still catching up with the evidence of the benefits of structured, supported and sustained contact with nature.
At Grow, trained professionals run a series of activities to help participants connect to nature on daily trips, once a week, for eight weeks. Activities include mindfulness, silent walks, foraging, sharing food, identifying flora and fauna, building fires, arts and crafts using natural objects, and reflective diaries, alongside more traditional active conservation activity like planting, clearing and coppicing.
Colleagues and I have collected surveys, diaries and interview data about the project over a number of years. Our findings reveal how transformative the experience has been for participants. (I was so impressed I later became a trustee of the charitable organisation involved.) We found plenty of evidence of the psychological benefits of nature connection, but also, vitally, something else – a deepening of social connectedness.
For people struggling emotionally, socially or psychologically, just being in nature seems to rekindle their ability to relate to and engage with others. Feeling present and “held” by the natural environment can nurture new and positive forms of social contact, which in turn enhances experiences of nature.
So for me, while there are always important caveats (such as the need for on-hand trained professional support), the benefits of a range of nature-based projects are unequivocal. They can be used as therapeutic interventions for people struggling to cope. They also work preventatively, by helping to maintain a sense of wellbeing, happiness, awe and belonging.
A human right
The impact of coronavirus-induced isolation on mental health is already mirrored in rising psychiatric diagnoses. And so the need for these kinds of interventions has never been greater. It is not enough to just encourage people outdoors. For many, access to nature is practically difficult. For others, it is an alien concept.
There are projects like Grow across the world and they are chronically underfunded. We need more of them. We need our governments to be funding projects like this as a matter of urgency, rolling them out on a national scale. Doctors, nurses and other primary care professionals should be able to refer people to local green care services as part of a wider shift towards “social prescribing”.
This is not only a psychological issue. Access to nature is not equal. The richest 20% of areas in England offer access to five times the amount of green space as the most deprived 10%.
If nature is so fundamental to our wellbeing, it should be understood as a right rather than a luxury. This is why diverse organisations such as walkers’ rights group the Ramblers and the mental health charity MIND are increasingly calling for legally binding targets that guarantee people’s access to nature. This should be part of a radical shake up of health and care policy.
Mutual healing
We also cannot ignore the fact that nature is in retreat, decimated as ecological devastation is wrought across the globe. In this context, contact with nature might seem futile, contradictory even. There is arguably something perverse about asking nature to make us well at the same time as we are destroying it.
But the movement is evolving rapidly. One of the most promising developments I’ve seen is the growth of “reciprocal restoration” projects – interventions explicitly designed to combine restoring people with restoring natural environments.
The potential for more collective forms of green care, such as the mass mobilisation of volunteers, is well worth exploring. Evidence also suggests that the more access to nature we have, the more we come to care for and want to defend the natural world.
There are already signs that we are at last more willing to face up to the realities of ecological crisis – if the shift in nature documentaries, the rise of Extinction Rebellion and the growing youth climate movement are anything to go by.
So perhaps it’s possible that an ambitious push for nature-based interventions might further encourage a groundswell of action that is truly restorative – of both humans and nature.
Matthew Adams, Principal Lecturer in Psychology, University of Brighton
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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And since I have your attention, consider checking this important resource and consider signing:
Great Barrington Declaration As infectious disease epidemiologists and public health scientists we have grave concerns about the damaging physical and mental health impacts of the prevailing COVID-19 policies, and recommend an approach we call Focused Protection. |
MORE NEWS TO CONSIDER:
Coronavirus: WHO backflips on virus stance by condemning lockdowns
Lockdowns have been used to control the coronavirus around the world.
Now a WHO official has questioned the success of them.
Dr. David Nabarro from the WHO appealed to world leaders yesterday, telling them to stop “using lockdowns as your primary control method” of the coronavirus.
He also claimed that the only thing lockdowns achieved was poverty – with no mention of the potential lives saved.
“Lockdowns just have one consequence that you must never ever belittle, and that is making poor people an awful lot poorer,” he said. ...........................READ MORE
OTTO RAPP
This blog is primarily art related - for my photography please go to
Otto Rapp Photo Blog
*
Since April 2020 I have also dedicated a category of my blog to the current Corona Virus crisis.
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