[20 Nov 2013] Gaza leukemia patients adversely affected by israeli...
The Leukemia patients\' lives in the impoverished Gaza Strip remain in danger as they have not received medications for over 11 months. The...
The Leukemia patients\' lives in the impoverished Gaza Strip remain in danger as they have not received medications for over 11 months. The ministry of Health expects that the patients are to suffer severe complications if they don\'t get their medications promptly.
1m:56s
4761
[12 Feb 2014] Israel refuses to allow Palestinian patients to seek...
Israel refuses to allow many Palestinian patients from Gaza to seek medical treatment in the occupied territories.
According to Palestinian...
Israel refuses to allow many Palestinian patients from Gaza to seek medical treatment in the occupied territories.
According to Palestinian sources, sick people whose transfer documents are marked \"State of Palestine\" are barred from entering Israel. The logo was added to medical transfer documents by Palestinian officials in December. This came after the Palestinian Authority won recognition as a UN observer state despite U-S and Israeli opposition. 70 Palestinian patients who need to go to Israeli hospitals have already been denied entry. Israeli officials are yet to comment on the issue.
3m:37s
6556
[03 Nov 2013] Sepas Charity Organization sells goods to support cancer...
This is the slogan for a charitable activity organized by Sepas Charity Organization.
Sepas has organized its sixth charity market for the...
This is the slogan for a charitable activity organized by Sepas Charity Organization.
Sepas has organized its sixth charity market for the patients who suffer from cancer or those who have recovered from the disease. The charity organization not only cares about financial needs of the patients, but it also considers their mental needs.
2m:38s
6006
PressTV - Gaza patients suffer from medicine shortage - Jul 11, 2011 -...
To put more pressure on besieged Palestinians in Gaza, Israel has increased its arrest and humiliation of Gazan patients seeking medical treatment...
To put more pressure on besieged Palestinians in Gaza, Israel has increased its arrest and humiliation of Gazan patients seeking medical treatment outside of the enclave.
2m:14s
7361
[23 Oct 2013] Iran cancer patients, hemophiliacs main victims of US...
Will the United States lift its illegal unilateral sanctions on Iran? Well, it seems like it won\'t unless Washington stops listening to Israel....
Will the United States lift its illegal unilateral sanctions on Iran? Well, it seems like it won\'t unless Washington stops listening to Israel. But who is mainly affected by the sanctions? Reports from Iran\'s health sector show cancer patients and hemophiliacs are hurt far more than the country\'s nuclear program. The sanctions have hindered Iran\'s international financial transactions. And that has made the importation of vital medicines extremely difficult. The country\'s pharmaceutical industry is also unable to produce those medicines because of a shortage of raw materials. But after the latest round of nuclear talks with Iran, the United States hinted that it\'s ready to ease the pressure. However, Washington is under immense pressure from Israel and Saudi Arabia not to lift its illegal embargo, which is hurting ordinary Iranian citizens.
4m:42s
6925
[05 Feb 2014] Gaza cancer rates on rise due to Israeli use of banned...
Patients and doctors have protested inside Gaza\'s Shifa hospital as they marked the World Cancer Day. The number of cancer cases has been on the...
Patients and doctors have protested inside Gaza\'s Shifa hospital as they marked the World Cancer Day. The number of cancer cases has been on the rise in recent years following two Israeli wars on the blockaded coastal strip. An average of one thousand cancer cases has been recorded annually among Gazans for the last two years.
The Gaza Health Ministry says the Israeli regime\'s use of internationally banned weapons has sharply increased the number of cancer cases. During the 22-day Israeli war at the turn of 2009, Norwegian Doctor Mads Fredrik Gilbert who volunteered at Gaza\'s Shifa hospital said that some victims had traces of depleted uranium in their wounds. The majority of Israeli high-tech weapons contain depleted uranium. Most cancer patients lived in areas that were heavily bombarded by Israeli forces during the last two Israeli wars. Lack of medicines as well as cancer patients\' inability to receive treatment abroad due to closure of crossings by both Israel and the Egyptian military is putting their lives at grave risk. Experts have said that Israeli forces used internationally banned weapons like White Phosphorous and weapons containing depleted uranium against the civilian population of Gaza. Experts say such weapons are carcinogenic.
2m:6s
6540
[Islam & Life] New Anti-terrorist measures - Effects on Doctors and...
The British government has launched its latest strategy to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism and extremism.
The Prevent Strategy...
The British government has launched its latest strategy to prevent people from being drawn into terrorism and extremism.
The Prevent Strategy 2011 sets out plans for how the government deals with all forms of terrorism. According to the new policy doctors and health professionals will be asked to identify people who are allegedly vulnerable to being drawn into terrorism. In this edition of the show we ask the following question; how will the new anti-terrorist measures affect doctors and Muslim patients?
24m:15s
7898
[23 June 2012] israel Keeps Killing - News Analysis - English
[23 June 2012] Israel Keeps Killing - News Analysis - English
As children in Gaza live and die on contaminated water, as patients die in Gaza's...
[23 June 2012] Israel Keeps Killing - News Analysis - English
As children in Gaza live and die on contaminated water, as patients die in Gaza's hospitals due to lack of electricity and medicine and as Gazans experience a 5 year old siege that is stripping them of basic necessities, that is not enough for Israel: During the past 6 days, numerous air strikes have killed over a dozen Palestinians. Where is the int. community in the face of Israeli aggression, and for how long will they remain silent?
24m:38s
5870
[30 May 13] US Sanctions create problems for Iran MS patients - English
Marking the World MS Day; Iran\\\'s M. S. Society has held a ceremony to commemorate the World MS Day to focus attention on the disease which...
Marking the World MS Day; Iran\\\'s M. S. Society has held a ceremony to commemorate the World MS Day to focus attention on the disease which damages the body\\\'s nerve system. World MS Day is the only global awareness raising campaign for the disease. Every year Iran for its part launches such a campaign to provide the public with information about MS and how it affects the lives of people often between 20-40 years old. The uneven distribution of MS worldwide has been the subject of investigation over the last few decades. Although the main cause of MS is still unclear, genetic susceptibility as well as other factors including age, latitude, trauma, gender, pregnancy, race, viral infections and psychological and behavioral factors have been studied.
Saman Kojouri, Press TV, Tehran
2m:44s
4818
[23 Oct 2013] Sanctions mostly affect Iranian patients: Kaveh Afrasiabi...
Press TV has conducted an interview with Kaveh Afrasiabi, author and political commentator, about the illegal US-engineered sanctions imposed on...
Press TV has conducted an interview with Kaveh Afrasiabi, author and political commentator, about the illegal US-engineered sanctions imposed on Iran.
4m:40s
5208
Dr Adeeb Rizvi Is efforts - English
In 1972 Dr. Adib Rizvi set up a tiny urology clinic in Karachi to treat kidney disease--and his work hasn\\\\\\\'t stopped since.
His goal was...
In 1972 Dr. Adib Rizvi set up a tiny urology clinic in Karachi to treat kidney disease--and his work hasn\\\\\\\'t stopped since.
His goal was free healthcare for every sick person who walked through the hospital doors.
Today, at 75, Dr. Rizvi still goes to work 7 days a week, keeping pace with the needs of his patients.
\\\\\\\"Retirement with death,\\\\\\\" he says with a smile.
1m:14s
4894
[23 Feb 2014] Modern hospital hotel to attract health tourists to Iran -...
A new service in Iran\'s health tourism sector. On Sunday, a different hospital was inaugurated in Tehran which can attracts hundreds of thousands...
A new service in Iran\'s health tourism sector. On Sunday, a different hospital was inaugurated in Tehran which can attracts hundreds of thousands of patients from across the world to Iran.
The complex has 17 hospital floors and 21 hotel floors, with over 100 beds, 40 beds at intensive care units, and 17 operation rooms. \"Gandhi hospital hotel is providing the most advanced medical services in spaces common between hospital and hotel for the first time in the Middle East. We want to change the patients\' mentality and help them recover faster when they experience services they cannot find in an ordinary hospital\", says Doctor Mohammad Hassan Bani Assad, the General Manager of the hospital.
2m:14s
5225
Nuclear- Medics report for Depleted Uranlium - English
Unconventional weapons used against Gazans
Doctor Mads Gilbert is a member of a Norwegian triage medical team present in the besieged Gaza Strip....
Unconventional weapons used against Gazans
Doctor Mads Gilbert is a member of a Norwegian triage medical team present in the besieged Gaza Strip. The team has exposed that Israel has used depleted uranium weapons in its war on the impoverished territory which is home to 1.5 million Palestinians. He described the conditions inside Gaza in an exclusive Press TV interview.
Press TV: What can you tell about the uranium findings?
Dr. Mads Gilbert:The findings about the uranium I cannot tell you much about, but I can tell you that we have clear evidence that the Israelis are using a new type of very high explosive weapons which are called Dense Inert Metal Explosive (DIME) and are made out of a tungsten alloy.
These weapons have an enormous power to explode.
The power of the explosion dissipates very quickly and the strength does not travel long, maybe 10 meters, but those humans who are hit by this explosion, this pressure wave are cut in pieces.
This was first used in Lebanon in 2006, it was used here in Gaza in 2006 and the injuries that we see in Shifa [Hospital] now, many many of them I suspect and we all suspect are the effect of DIME weapons used by the Israelis.
On the long term, these weapons will have a cancer effect on those who survive. They will develop cancer we suspect. There has been very little research on this but some research has been among other places in the United States, which show that these weapons have a high tendency to develop cancer. So they kill and those who survive risk having cancer.
Press TV: And what do you have to say about this?
Dr. Mads Gilbert:All that is happening in Gaza here now is against international law, it is against humanity and I think it is against what it means to be a decent person. You don't treat other people like this. Even if you disagree with him… maybe even if you fight with them, you don't treat civilians, children and women like this.
And I have an appeal to the Israeli doctors and nurses. They are my colleagues. We belong to the same international community, the medical community. I wish that the good doctors and nurses in Israel tell their government to stop these atrocities. We cannot continue with this. We may differ in opinions, but you cannot treat the civilian Palestinian population in Gaza in this way.
Today, they were bombing in Gaza City; we received 150 wounded and more than 50 killed.
Press TV: Only at Shifa?!
Dr. Mads Gilbert:Yes, here in Shifa. I treated a ten-year-old boy. He had his whole chest filled with fragments from the bomb. On his lap was another person's leg that had been cut off. We resuscitated him and did everything we could do to save his life but he died between our hands.
This is such a terrible experience and behind the numbers that you report all the time, there are human beings, families, women, grandmothers, children. That is in fact the reality in this situation. Those who are paying the price for the Israeli bombardments now are the common people, the Palestinian people.
Half of the population in Palestine are below 15 years and 80 percent of the people in Gaza live below the level of poverty defined by the UN. Now they don't have food, they don't have electricity. It's cold they don't have warmth and in addition to that, they are killed.
This must be stopped.
Press TV How many people did you see that are effected by this weapon?
Dr. Mads Gilbert: Almost all of the patients we have received have these sever amputations. They seem to have been affected by this kind of weapon. Of course, we have many fragment injuries and burns but those who have got their limbs cut off, constitutes quite a large proportion.
You know we have a lot to do. Palestinian doctors, nurses and paramedics do an incredibly heroic job to save their people. Doctor Eric and I are just a small drip in the ocean, but we learn from them. Unfortunately, we don't have the time to do research, we have to save lives, but this question should be researched by the international community.
1m:58s
19896
US community Learns about Rural Healthcare from Iran - 24 April 10 -...
The United States and Iran have not had official ties since the 1979 Islamic Revolution but Americans and Iranians often have similar problems....
The United States and Iran have not had official ties since the 1979 Islamic Revolution but Americans and Iranians often have similar problems.
Doctors in both countries, for example, often struggle to bring quality healthcare to their patients in rural areas.
Now, a Mississippi delta neighbourhood is learning from the Iranians on how they have successfully run a rural healthcare plan.
Al Jazeera's Rosiland Jordan reports from the rural town of Greenwood, Mississippi. (Apr 24, 2010)
3m:7s
4584
An interview with Dr A K Susheela fluoride poisoning of the soft...
An interview with Dr AK Susheela on her work in India diagnosing and treating patients with fluoride poisoning of the soft tissues With early...
An interview with Dr AK Susheela on her work in India diagnosing and treating patients with fluoride poisoning of the soft tissues With early diagnosis the early symptoms are easy to reverse Western doctors are totally oblivious of this disease which may be impacting millions of people living in fluoridated countries with a plethora of common complaints
18m:10s
10069
Bahraini medics recount hospital horror - 20Mar201 - English
Bahraini authorities have been accused of heavy-handedness in handling pro-democracy protesters.
According to medics at Salmania hospital in the...
Bahraini authorities have been accused of heavy-handedness in handling pro-democracy protesters.
According to medics at Salmania hospital in the capital Manama, the security forces surrounded the hospital and disallowed people, including health workers and ambulance staff, to enter or leave the facility.
The hospital staff have told Al Jazeera that doctors and nurses were beaten up and that many doctors were still under arrest.
Many patients were allegedly also attacked by the military.
Our special correspondent has this report from Manama.
2m:26s
8914
Islamic Republic of Iran unveils 5 nano products - English
Only two days before Iran's fourth Nanotechnology exhibition 5 new nano products unveiled on Monday promise an impressive collection on display...
Only two days before Iran's fourth Nanotechnology exhibition 5 new nano products unveiled on Monday promise an impressive collection on display this year.
Nano-Capillary Electrophoresis that makes the study and identification of single molecules possible; a nanospectrometer which can help identify the properties different chemical compounds; a Deep reactive ion etching or DRIE... a tool that can deposit thin films of material making the production of nanostructures possible. And ... a high resolution nano-imaging system
The nano-imaging system has great applications for drugs that undergo preclinical or animal testing. It can provide a high resolution image of the body of the animal and show the researchers exactly how their bodies have reacted to the drug.
Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad hailed the efforts made by societies and researchers who have managed to break the western monopoly on hi-tech nano products.
Despite political pressures and economic sanctions Iranian scientists have managed to make great advancement and take impressive steps in nano technology.
While the most eye-catching product unveiled is nano-drug that can be used to effectively cure cancer.
This drug is produced only in one country and the price is around $2000. Now patients in Iran can get it for half to one third of that price and as President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said on Monday the costs will be covered by insurance
Doxorubicin is a compound that destroys cancer tumors but it also has terrible side effects. The nanoliposom form only targets the tumors not healthy cells of the body.
The new drug has received the approval of the food and drug division of Iran's Health ministry and will hit the market soon.
2m:16s
5797