Mercedes Ninci was moved to tears on Wednesday in the edition of Lo de Mariana,by El Trece, after seeing the images of a fire that broke out in a community dining room in Villa Itatí. "It is a place of tremendous solidarity, a priest and a nun are working, who have an impressive recycling place. And there would have been a short circuit in the light entry box to the cartoneros cooperative," he said.
And then she broke down in tears. "Itmakes me bad so much poverty,those of us who tour the villa, the Villa Itatí is tremendous. For something to happen to all these people who are so honest and so laburante is tremendous," Mercedes said when asked about her anguish. "The truth is that we can't go on like this. If we Argentines do not unite and do not give a plate of food to the one that does not have, this country does not get ahead. Excuse me, but I'm sick of the disposable ones, and the people in this villa are disposable. I'm tired of the disposable ones, I can't do it anymore, let's start helping the other."
After being visibly moved on television, Mercedes Ninci broke down behind the camera and had to be assisted by an ambulance that arrived at the channel and transferred her to a medical center on Mitre Street, as reported this Thursday Pía Shaw in Los Angeles morning. The journalist received help and containment from the production of the cycle led by Mariana Fabbiani, and also from Dr. Guillermo Capuya,who was present in the studio. And who, according to Ninci, "prolonged his life."
The LAM panelist said her colleague was under pressure, causing her to have a severe headache. As soon as she was taken to the medical center, Ninci contacted Pía to tell her that she was waiting for a puncture "to see if I had, or not, a loss of blood vessel, or something like that," the journalist said in her own words about the intervention she was then given. And he added that by that time -- on Wednesday at noon -- the headache had already gone, but he clarified that "it was sudden and tremendous." "Ithought I was dying and my four children were left without a mother,"he said.
Around 3 p.m., Mercedes Ninci was discharged and back at home she contacted Pía Shaw again. That time, it was through audio sent to him by WhastApp. Previously, he had been in charge of calling his parents in Cordoba to bring them peace of mind about his health and that they would not find out through the media. "I'm fine, at home. The only thing: they won't let me move until Saturday. A pocket because I can't go to work either on the radio or the channel. Nor climb the stairs of the house. They won't let me do anything," she was heard saying to the journalist in an audio that the panelist played on Thursday in the cycle led by Ángel de Brito.
"I'm fine, luckily. I got a scare," Ninci continued, adding that he is in "very good health. "I was scared because you're talking on the air and suddenly you have a pear-to-the-pear headache that blinds you. You don't know the scare I got,"he continued, who thanked the support and restraint he received from Dr. Capuya and the Lo de Mariana team.
For his part, Shaw reported that after the medical check-up, Mercedes Ninci's diagnosis was "migraine headache and that a hemorrhage was ruled out." "Nothing serious, a scare," the journalist summarized.
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