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SAN DIEGO, Calif. – If COVID-19 cases spike this fall, hospitals want to make sure they have enough ventilators. But that's only one part of the equation. They'll also need more trained staff to help operate the complex machines. "When governors have been asking for tens of thousands of ventilators, that's great, but there's only a finite group of people that are skilled and trained and authorized to use those ventilators," said Jim Archetto, Vice President of Gaumard Scientific. The machines help patients breathe, pumping oxygen into their bodies. "But what's critically important is how you control that pressure. If you pump too much pressure into a patient, your lungs will explode," explains Archetto. The stakes couldn't be higher, so hospitals are now working on training more staff members to help operate the devices. That's where Gaumard comes into play; their lifelike robots simulate not only medical emergencies but also emotions. "We'd really rather have these nurses and docs practice on a simulator before they're working on a live patient in a critical care situation," said Archetto. Pediatric Hal is a 5-year-old patient simulator who can breathe, bleed, move, cry, and talk. "He can actually be plugged into a real ventilator, and that ventilator can take control of his breathing functions," said Archetto. Companies like Gaumard have seen a spike in demand for this specialized training. Archetto says they've received calls from medical schools, hospitals, and even manufacturing companies needing to test their new ventilators. With in-person training on hold, Gaumard is using Zoom to train professionals virtually on how to use their simulators. "I can provide whatever symptoms I'd like for him to mimic, for COVID, or anything for that matter," said Archetto. Lincoln Healthcare, located just outside of Philadelphia, had already developed a program using Hal to train their at-home nurses on how to operate ventilators. "We really wanted to make sure our nurses were armored with the best training, the best emergency preparedness that could arise in the home," said Autumn Lincoln, vice president and co-founder of Lincoln Healthcare. When the pandemic hit, they opened up the 2232
A construction worker was killed while working on Disneyland property in Anaheim, California, early Thursday, police said.The 38-year-old man was working for a contractor for the park when he became pinned under a large metal plate in a trench, Anaheim Police Sgt. Daron Wyatt said.The worker was installing a large pipe when "construction equipment struck a crossbeam, dislodged the plate, which fell and struck him," Wyatt said.Anaheim Fire and Rescue were able to rescue him from the trench, but he was pronounced dead at the scene."We are saddened by this tragic accident involving a contractor and on behalf of Disneyland Resort extend our deepest sympathies to this gentleman's family, friends and coworkers," said Liz Jaeger, Disneyland Resort spokeswoman. 775
A Georgia family got a special holiday surprise last week after finding an owl hiding inside their Christmas tree.The discovery came last Thursday evening when Katie McBride Newman and her two children, India and Jack, were finishing dinner.India, 10, had started to clear the table and was in another room when Newman heard her exclaim, "Oh my gosh!""She comes very dramatically into the dining room and goes, 'Mama, that ornament scared me,'" Newman told CNN. "Then she bursts into tears."Newman said she's a big fan of owls, so the tree actually had about a dozen owl ornaments gracing its branches. At first, Newman said she thought India had just been spooked by one of those.So Newman checked it out, ready to calm her daughter's fears. But when she peered into the tree for the ornament, she saw the owl turn its head and look straight at her."And I'm like, 'Oh, that's a real owl,'" Newman said. Meanwhile, India had disappeared into the other room, in tears again.Owl may have been in their tree for over a weekThe family had purchased the tree from a store about two days after Thanksgiving, so at first they thought the owl must have flown in and taken refuge inside their tree, Newman's husband, Billy, told CNN.The family left their windows and doors open that night, hoping the bird would leave on its own -- but it didn't.The next day, they called the Chattahoochee Nature Center, a non-profit environmental center about an hour away from their home in Newnan. An employee there told them to leave the owl some raw chicken, concerned it may not have eaten in a few days.The employee stopped by Saturday morning. She caught the bird and identified it as an Eastern screech owl, common in the Georgia area, a spokesperson for the nature center, Jon Copsey, told CNN. She also checked for injuries and gave it some food and nutritional supplements.The owl was pretty thin, igniting the theory that the bird must have been inside the tree since they bought it, Billy Newman said.Returning the owl to the wildThe employee left the family some instructions: Leave the bird in a crate in a darkened room and release it after dark.At dusk on Saturday, the family left the open crate outside. By 9:30 p.m., the owl had disappeared.Copsey said the family did everything right in the situation -- closing it off from the rest of the house, trying to help it escape on its own and calling a wildlife rehabilitation professional.Katie Newman, though, says she swears she can still hear the owl at night, hooting away. 2531
"Wheel of Fortune" host Pat Sajak had emergency surgery this week to correct a blocked intestine, forcing "Wheel of Fortune" to cancel its tapings on Thursday. On Friday, tapings resumed with a familiar face as host. Vanna White, the long time hostess of "Wheel of Fortune," stepped into Sajak's role as host on Friday. "Wheel of Fortune" tweeted that Sajak's surgery was "successful." "Our taping on Thursday was canceled because host Pat Sajak underwent successful emergency surgery to correct a blocked intestine. He is resting comfortably and looking forward to getting back to work. Taping resumed today as scheduled and Vanna White has stepped in as host," the tweet read. Sajak, 73, has hosted Wheel of Fortune since 1981. White joined Wheel of Fortune a year later. 786
A 62-year-old former Marine reclaimed a world record he originally set in 2011 by holding an abdominal plank for an astonishing eight hours earlier this month, the 176