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క్యాన్సర్పై పరిశోధనలకు పద్మభూషణ్కు ఎంపిక - పేద కుటుంబంలో జన్మించి ఉన్నత శిఖరాలకు చేరిన నోరి దత్తాత్రేయ, అంతర్జాతీయ రేడియేషన్ ఆంకాలజిస్ట్గా గుర్తింపు, ప్రస్తుతం తెలుగు రాష్ట్రాల్లో ప్రభుత్వ సలహాదారుగా కీలక బాధ్యతలు
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NewsTranscript
00:00Hello, sir.
00:25So, we are going to talk about the first time you will talk about the ETV show.
00:30Padma Bhushan, you are not a person, you are not a person, you are a person, you are a person.
00:36You are very happy to hear everything.
00:37Thank you, thank you for the time.
00:40Padma Bhushan is a great pleasure.
00:45But in our country, our government, our treatment, and patient care,
00:52I would like to think about Padma Bhoshan and I would like to think about it.
00:58I would like to challenge these challenges.
01:03I would like to try to get an innovation in cancer treatment,
01:11get a worldwide recognition, and I would like to do it.
01:15What do we do in our society, in our country, in our country, in our country, in our country, in our country?
01:23And what do we do in our country?
01:27That's why I want to take advantage of this opportunity.
01:31In our society, especially in our country, in San and India,
01:37we are trying to improve the cancer.
01:41We are trying to take care of Telangana, to Revantharaya, and to other people.
01:47So, we are trying to take care of Chindrabaap.
01:49We have a chance to take care of Brahman and the advisor.
01:53So, we want to look for the cancer.
01:58We want to reveal the treatments of this different treatment.
02:03We want to enhance the next step for the cancer-care.
02:09I have a question about the epithelang.
02:14What advice do you think about the cancer cases?
02:28What advice do you think about cancer cases?
02:32In our country, 60-70% of cancers are preventable, back-over-related, 70% is preventable, but they are not prevented here.
02:45Health education awareness is not available in the case of the case.
02:51That is why we have a good solution to the center code.
02:57If you do this, you can control the cancer, and you can control it.
03:02You can control it in the United States.
03:05This is the center of the United States.
03:10The number one is to make cancer as a notifiable disease.
03:14What is that? Notifiable disease.
03:17The number one is to make cancer in any clinic, in any radiology center, in any nursing home, in any hospital, any cancer diagnosis.
03:26The number one is to report from the state department, online.
03:30If you have any number, you can understand it.
03:32You can do it in any center. It is mandatory in America.
03:36The number one is to make a correct number.
03:39Then, another one is to make covid example, so it can make covid conditions, as well, and we need to control it in the United States.
03:52So, you can control the covid conditions.
03:53We need to control everything, for all the work conditions, we need to do.
03:58So, for example, notifiable disease can be done in the US, but it can be done in the US.
04:05That is what we have done.
04:07The second thing is, there is a cancer atlas.
04:11Atlas is not a booklet, a bible.
04:15The source is written in Rajiv Gandhi's 6th history project.
04:23In the database, we have to double the case in the government, and we have to get a subsidy.
04:29But we have to get the NTRR in the database.
04:32In the database, we have clear and clear information, authentic information.
04:3890% of the cases are covered, wherever cancer is treated, they pay the money.
04:45So, the data is available in the computer.
04:47In the database, we have a directory, atlas, bible, etc.
04:53They pay the data to be authentic in the computer.
04:59So, this is like a road map.
05:01This is every five years, we can upgrade.
05:04The third thing is, we have a command and control center.
05:08What do we call command and control center?
05:11The first thing is, there are NGOs and people who have been doing the medical screening.
05:18When they have the medical screening, the people who have been doing the medical screening,
05:20they will take the reports.
05:22They do the government.
05:23They do the government.
05:24They do the health department, or they do the health department.
05:28They're not required.
05:30When the command and control center is doing the data from the command and control center,
05:32we collect the data from the center.
05:34Now, everyone has a mobile screening for the 3rd time.
05:40There is a report on the online government.
05:44What we call it is, we have to do the screening.
05:50But we do the screening.
05:55We coordinate the central command and control center.
05:59The second thing is that R.A. Girish Sriri is a double star.
06:06There is also a payment, but it is a double star.
06:09There is also a treatment included.
06:11If you have a mastectomy or a laryngectomy, then it is a subsidiary treatment.
06:18What I would recommend is to prevent preventive tests.
06:24There is also a mammogram, cervical pap, PSA testing.
06:29There is also included if you have any questions.
06:33There is also a lot of tests.
06:36The treatment is a double star.
06:39But if you have any treatment, then you have a double star.
06:45There is also a double star.
06:49Some are not included yet.
06:50Some high-end treatments.
06:52Radiation, surgery, robotic surgery, immunotherapy, bone marrow transplant.
06:58These are also included one by one.
07:01If you have any treatment, you can have any bone marrow transplant.
07:06It is not.
07:07You can have any bone marrow transplant.
07:09So, there is also a comprehensive package.
07:14A family of patients who have been treated with cancer.
07:18The medical care, the medical care, the medical care, and the medical care.
07:20The medical care, the medical care, and the medical care, is the medical care.
07:24We have to do this with cancer incidence.
07:27We have to do it with the prevention, prevention, early detection, and screening.
07:34Sir, where are you going to get AI?
07:37You are also doing AI related to the data related to the data related to the data related to the data related to the data related to the data related data.
07:44How do you work out with AI?
07:48AI is going to change the paradigm. It will be a paradigm shift in cancer.
07:55For example, you have to do breast cancer.
07:59For breast cancer, you have to do the radial neural reports.
08:02You have to scan the x-ray mammogram.
08:05There is a lot of research.
08:08So, AI applies to the brain power.
08:16There is only one area where there is a vessel.
08:20There is a calcification.
08:23There is a lot of information in the database.
08:27There are millions of cases of information.
08:29This is the report more authentic.
08:32So, detection of cancers will be done much earlier than humanly possible or radiologically possible.
08:41But the most important thing for physicians, the public, all of them understand this course.
08:47AI is only a co-pilot, not the pilot.
08:50The pilot is still the physician.
08:52So, don't make the co-pilot into the pilot.
08:55Human intelligence, differential diagnosis, they support this.
09:01If you are interested in krishnajilla, you are a great program.
09:06There is no proof in the future.
09:10I have to do a lot of work on the car.
09:13I will get a lot of work on the car.
09:15Why do you get a lot of work on the car?
09:17I think we will get a lot of work on the car.
09:20My story is not unique.
09:22It is quite unique to everyone.
09:26If you are a pastor, you are a pastor. I am a pastor.
09:31So, I am a pastor. I am a pastor.
09:35My father was a pastor. My mother was a pastor.
09:40My brothers were a pastor.
09:45Family ties, family help, family support, family affection.
09:53Sir, I am a pastor. I am a pastor.
09:59I am a pastor.
10:02I am a pastor.
10:07What is your life?
10:09There are many cases.
10:11There are many cases.
10:14Especially in the Predda Hospital.
10:17There is a famous hospital in Sloan Cateringan.
10:20New York.
10:21The first case is a complicated case.
10:24Everyone has lost their own.
10:26I am a pastor.
10:28In those cases, they are developed in an individual treatment.
10:32They are not able to protect them.
10:36They are not able to protect them.
10:38They are in the hospital for the age of 12 or 27.
10:41They are from Israel.
10:43They are not able to put a patient in London.
10:46If I had to go to the hospital, I would have to go to the hospital.
10:51So, I got to go to the hospital.
10:53So, I had a specialized treatment.
10:55I had to go to the hospital.
11:00In the hospital, I had to go to the hospital in 2026.
11:05I had to go to the hospital.
11:06I had to go to the hospital.
11:10There was a negative path for the past.
11:13I had to go to the hospital.
11:19Every year, I got a new year greeting card.
11:23I got to go to the hospital last year.
11:27Dr. Nori, we are celebrating 42 years of our wedding anniversary this year.
11:37And then, you will be gratified that I did something good as an oncologist.
11:43That is what I worked with.
11:45Without a regular treatment, I would always have to go to the hospital.
11:49cancer patients or therapy patients.
11:52So, every time we work with a therapy,
11:56we work with success and failures.
11:59We work with various departments,
12:01but when it comes to the doctor,
12:03life depends on it.
12:04So, what stress is that?
12:06It's a special feeling.
12:09Especially for oncologists,
12:12it's a special feeling.
12:13You are dealing with human life.
12:17You are dealing with human life.
12:19What you do will change,
12:21make or break their life.
12:23So, whatever you do,
12:25you have to be very careful.
12:27And apply it very diligently.
12:31If you need more help from other specialties,
12:34take help.
12:35But make sure you provide a customized treatment for that patient.
12:40Then the result will be good.
12:42If you have a lung cancer instance,
12:44you have to be very careful.
12:46You have to be very careful.
12:47You have to be very careful.
12:49But now,
12:50you have to be very careful.
12:52What do you think?
12:54if you have a history of smoking?
12:56You have to be very careful.
12:57So, what are you doing so much?
12:58Because of its COVID-19,
12:59you have to be very careful.
13:00When the lung fibrocy and lung infection is gone,
13:02you have to be very careful.
13:03And once they have pre of smoking,
13:04you are having some pre-existing smoking history.
13:05You have to be very careful.
13:06If it is very careful,
13:07you have to be very careful,
13:08you have to be very careful about your own smoking.
13:10developing stages.
13:11That's right.
13:12That's right.
13:13That's right.
13:14But in this area, be careful.
13:17If you have a history of smoking, COVID or no COVID, be careful.
13:21Go for screaming and stop smoking first.
13:25One day, we have to stop smoking.
13:28And we have to stop smoking.
13:31So, do you have to stop smoking?
13:35Why do you want to stop smoking?
13:37This is the universal care implementation.
13:41Patient should not be burdened.
13:45So, selling their home, selling property to provide money for the treatment.
13:50It's not ethical.
13:53So, the government programs can be enhanced.
13:57It is a good thing.
14:04In the registry, the preventive aspect is included.
14:09The areas are covered.
14:12With good technology, good faculty, good treatment.
14:15So, the registry applies to that.
14:19They will have more access.
14:21They are affordable and unaccessable.
14:23In the collegesê, if you can get used a little burden—
14:31It depends for the immediate cares—
14:34Theilateral hospitals can altro.
14:36NoEP should have done this for our…
14:37We are not going to do our job.
14:41So, these hospice treatments are very hard.
14:45They are not able to do a lot of effort.
14:47They are not able to do a lot of pain in their lives.
14:52These hospice treatments are also implemented in the US and countries.
15:00In the US, we have hospice care in the US.
15:04There are many centers.
15:06Some government sponsors and some private centers.
15:08We also have a palliative and pain center.
15:16There are some in-patients or some out-patients.
15:18We also have a palliative and pain post-gradiate course.
15:26We have a post-gradiate school.
15:29We are not able to do this.
15:31We are not able to do this.
15:32We are not able to do this.
15:34We are not able to do this.
15:36We are able to do this.
15:38Now, what is the answer?
15:40If you can prevent it, prevent it.
15:43If you can treat it, early stage 1, 2 and 3, cure them, treat them.
15:49If you cannot do that, give them good palliative.
15:53The mood continues.
15:55If you have a disease, it is not a cure.
15:58There is a cure for the stage 3 and 4.
16:00The treatment is not a cure.
16:03Then, you have to do it.
16:05Molecular oncology, immunotherapy, and advanced cancer.
16:09The advanced cancer is also controlled by the self-customer.
16:12That's why we released a release last week in America.
16:16About 75% of all cancers, of all stages, are living longer than 10 years.
16:23That's why we have awareness, early detection, screening, and treating of advanced cancers with new techniques.
16:31Molecular treatment, molecular oncology, and immunotherapy.
16:35Sir, we have to talk about the disease now.
16:39We have to talk about the screening.
16:41However, we have to talk about the vaccination.
16:45There are many myths now.
16:49Are there any myths?
16:50Are there any myths?
16:53A myth is a myth.
16:54We cannot support myth, misinformation.
16:57For cervical cancer vaccination is 100% effective.
17:02It is not 5 years research, not 10 years research, but 20 years research.
17:07In America, Europe, Australia, and other countries, this is being done routinely.
17:14Now, many people in India are doing cams to vaccinate.
17:21Oh, no.
17:22I really applaud them for doing that.
17:24I think there is more awareness, more accessibility to our vaccines.
17:29I think myth is a myth, a myth is a myth.
17:32It is 100% effective.
17:35Just like polio.
17:36If you have a vaccine, you can forget about polio.
17:39If you have a vaccine, you have a cervical cancer, you can forget about cervical cancer.
17:43Hope makes them live longer.
17:46It's always hopeful.
17:48And then go for a second opinion, if you are not getting good answer.
17:52If they ask a doctor, you can't give them a doctor.
17:54It is usually the work in America.
17:56When someone says a doctor, you know you and someone like me.
17:58If they ask me, I can't give them a doctor.
18:00It's not right.
18:01Second opinion is okay.
18:03And the doctors should not feel different.
18:06The patients should not feel shy.
18:08The cancer has been a long time in the past.
18:12The cancer has been a long time in the past.
18:16No one, no second opinion, no one, no one.
18:19The cancer has been a long time in the past.
18:24The cancer has been a long time now,
18:26and now has the life of the cancer.
18:29Dr. Nore, 178.
18:31The camera person, Ramya, ITV News, Hyderabad.
18:38You
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