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和田割包茎11岁
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发布时间: 2025-06-01 15:36:08北京青年报社官方账号
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CHICAGO, Ill. – Starting on Wednesday, you can order a four-patty Double Big Mac and a single-patty Little Mac at participating McDonald's. The fast-food chain said Tuesday that it wants to satisfy Big Mac appetites of all sizes “We know sometimes that craving is small, and sometimes it’s truly huge, while other times our classic Big Mac is just right,” 368

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. – A flight attendant may have recently exposed passengers to hepatitis A, according to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC says it was notified on Oct. 1 that an “aircraft contact investigation” was needed because an attendant showed hepatitis A symptoms during flights, and the person had handled food and beverages."Because the flight attendant had diarrhea on several flights within the infectious period, contact investigations were done to notify passengers," wrote the CDC in a statement. "The airline is notifying other crew staffing those flights." 609

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Complaints about coronavirus-related scams are surging.The Federal Trade Commission says complaints are double what they were a week ago – around 7,800 so far this year. And, that's just what's been reported.Officials say the scams have cost Americans nearly million, with the average person losing about 0. The top coronavirus-related fraud complaints are travel-based with refunds and cancellations.Other scams include reports about problems with online shopping, mobile texting scams, and people posing as government officials or businesses.There are also claims about methods and supplements that can boost your immunity to the virus that simply aren't true. CBD is one of them. The National Consumers League is warning people that's false. In general, the organization says many CBD products are unregulated, untested and possibly mislabeled.“I’m very confident there's not a pill, a supplement, something that everyone should be running out and grabbing that's going to keep them from getting this virus,” said Dr. Ned Legare with MDVIP. Dr. Legare says the evidence about boosting immunity can fall short. He says good nutrition works. A poor diet makes you susceptible to disease.Also, he says staying physically active causes your antibodies and white blood cells to circulate faster. That means they could detect and fight bugs more quickly. Being active and well rested lowers stress hormones, which reduces your chances of getting sick. Studies have proven healthy adults who are sleep deprived are more likely to get a cold.“Good sleep doesn’t just start when we get into bed. It’s more of a wind down process and destressing process right to get good quality sleep, so you're not in bed kind of tossing and turning kind of anxious," said Dr. Fareeha Hussaini, a sleep specialist and assistant professor at the University of South Florida.Another false claim about fighting coronavirus is that hot baths, showers or steam therapies kill the virus. Steam therapy can only thin mucus and ease congestion that comes with cold or flu symptoms. The Food and Drug Administration has also warned several companies that make essential oils, teas and other supplements to stop making virus fighting claims.Click here for 2243

  

CHICAGO, Illinois (WBBM) — Federal charges were filed against Donald Greene Sr. and Donald Green Jr. -- a Chicago area father and son -- for allegedly selling body parts on the black market from people who thought they were donating to science.The pair also allegedly sold parts they knew were diseased without telling their buyers.Bodies known to have HIV, sepsis and hepatitis kept on ice, then sold.Some were sold for up to 0,000.The father and son duo was behind the now shuttered Biological Resource Center of Illinois.Per a search warrant, a mother was told her son’s tissues would be donated to colleges and research centers.Instead, parts of him sold for ,000.In the charges filed, United States attorneys repeatedly call it a scheme "to defraud customers of the Biological Resource Center of Illinois."It's not illegal to dismember and broker body parts -- per se.But it is illegal to knowingly sell remains positive for infectious disease.It is alleged the Greene’s did this from 2008 to 2014.The federal document charging the Greene’s alleges the men sold to Detroit Medical Center’s sports medicine department at least one specimen that “had previously tested positive for hepatitis. This fact was concealed by Donald A. Greene Sr.'s scheme to defraud."Greene Sr. is charged with wire fraud.While Greene Jr. faces a felony for intentionally concealing a crime.Authorities were led to the Greene’s while investigating Detroit body broker Arthur Rathburn, who is now in federal prison. 1517

  

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – A flight attendant may have recently exposed passengers to hepatitis A, according to the Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The CDC says it was notified on Oct. 1 that an “aircraft contact investigation” was needed because an attendant showed hepatitis A symptoms during flights, and the person had handled food and beverages."Because the flight attendant had diarrhea on several flights within the infectious period, contact investigations were done to notify passengers," wrote the CDC in a statement. "The airline is notifying other crew staffing those flights." 609

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