到百度首页
百度首页
陕西中耳解剖放大模型
播报文章

钱江晚报

发布时间: 2025-05-30 06:14:26北京青年报社官方账号
关注
  

陕西中耳解剖放大模型-【嘉大嘉拟】,嘉大智创,外科缝合器械包 20套装(学生用)厂家直销,福建全口乳牙模型,湖北四倍牙体形态(右侧14颗),青海高级肝脓肿穿刺训练模型,广东开放式微生物寄生虫学辅助教学系统,聊城高级婴儿头部双侧静脉注射穿刺训练模型

  

陕西中耳解剖放大模型湖南一次性CPR训练屏障消毒面膜,江苏胎儿血液循环及胎盘模型(3部件),德阳高级婴儿头部及手臂静脉注射训练模型,湖北胸椎与脊神经模型,锦州组合式多功能护理实习模拟人(女性),头颈部正中矢状切模型购买,南昌糖尿病模型

  陕西中耳解剖放大模型   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Kion Gould still lives at the La Jolla Crossroads Apartments, where one year ago on his birthday a gunman opened fire, hitting him and six others.He survived, but his friend Monique Clark died. He spent a month in the hospital recovering from three gunshot wounds. When he got out, he went back to his gym routine and says now he’s physically back in shape. But “mentally, there is anguish,” he says.His life has become a study in what happens to mass shooting victims who survive.The shooting plays out in his head often, reliving the day in vivid detail.“It seemed like it happened yesterday,” he says.It was April 30, 2017. Gould says things were winding down at the pool and they were about to head to dinner in Pacific Beach.He was heading toward the pool gate when he noticed a man lying by himself on a lounge chair.He remembers telling him, “It’s my birthday, come have a good time. We’ve got food, we’ve got drinks, we’ve got girls. That’s exactly what I said.”The man, now identified as Peter Selis, did not respond with words. Instead, he pulled out a .45 caliber handgun.“I didn’t think it was a real threat until he basically raised the gun toward my head,” said Gould.He remembered thinking part of him wanted to jump on top of the man and rip the gun away. But something held him back as he tried to rationalize the situation. Why would someone have a gun there?“What stopped me was the thought that he was a special needs person that had a toy,” he remembered. “Then I thought he was an undercover cop.”But within seconds it became clear it was not a fake and he intended to use it. Reflexively, Gould raised his arms over his face.Selis’ first shot hit his left arm.“I remember seeing blood dripping down my face so I thought I was shot in the head.”He turned to run and was hit twice in the back.He was able to make it out of the gate and up a set of stairs where he collapsed overlooking the pool.“I was up above everything and I was witnessing him shooting everyone. Like he’s just there shooting, reloading. Shooting, reloading.”Meantime, Kalli Seely was down on the pool deck. She had her purse strung over her shoulder and was on her way out when the shooting began.“I heard the first gunshot and looked automatically at Kion for some reason,” said Seely.But she couldn’t tell what was going on yet.“Then I felt something hit my arm,” she said. “I thought somebody threw something at me.”It wasn’t until she heard a friend yell “gun!” that she realized what was happening.She had been shot twice. Once in the arm and once in her left breast.“I was like ‘am I going to die?’ because that’s what you think when you get shot in the chest,” she thought.Later she would learn the bullet did not strike any vital organs but she ended up nearly passing out on the lawn outside the pool. Someone picked her up and brought her to a sidewalk on Judicial Drive where they waited for an ambulance.But as police arrived, they began closing off all the roads around the complex, blocking even ambulances from getting through. A few minutes later, Seely says a security guard drove by and took her and two other victims to the area where first responders were waiting.“Within 20 minutes we were in the hospital while the rest of them were scared, bleeding, in the pool area with the guy still shooting,” she said.By the time police killed Selis, seven people had been shot.Gould’s friend Monique Clark later died.“She had always been a happy person,” he said.Clark almost didn’t come. Gould said they had been hanging out several days before when he accidentally closed his car door on her finger, breaking it.“She was just mad at me. She didn’t hate me,” he said. But she was reluctant to come until Gould worked his charm to convince her.“I would gladly give my life for her to be here,” he now says, specifically because of her three children.“I would trade places with her, easily, without a doubt so she could be there for them. She will be forever in my heart.”Gould was eventually taken to am ambulance and remembers being conscious until he was sedated at the hospital.It turned out, the bullet did not make it through his arm into his head. Only a fragment had struck his eyelid.“The doctor was surprised I stopped the .45 with my bone,” said Gould.Doctors credited his strong physique for saving his life. While some of the fingers on his left hand are now numb, he says his body has made a full recovery.That’s only one step in the healing process though, he says.“There’s an aftermath that happens to all of this,” referring not just this shooting, but to victims of all shootings.“People just have developed [a] numbness to ‘oh, there’s a shooting. And another shooting.’ ”Seely agreed, observing mass shootings become widely publicized, then the media and the public move on to the next. The pain of the victims, especially the ones who survive, often gets forgotten she says.“There’s a deep pain that doesn’t go away and it lives with you everyday and it never stops.”Both describe it as a lingering weight.“I try and push it to the back of my head and forget that it’s there, but as soon as things are quiet and I go to mundane, everyday tasks it creeps right back in,” said Seely.Gould says he and another one of the shooting survivors have enrolled in an experimental PTSD treatment study at UCSD. But he’s skeptical it will help.Even though the shooter is dead, Gould says his hatred towards Selis can be all-consuming.“He created, this tragic, unforgiving, relentless thing that’s continuing to influence our lives. And you can never have that back.” 5625

  陕西中耳解剖放大模型   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — In the late '80s Gary Cheatham founded Auntie Helen's in a one-car garage in North Park in 1988.Gary did fluff-and-fold laundry first for one, then for a handful of friends who were sick with AIDS."Everybody could do it. But nobody would do it. And I think that makes him a superhero in my eyes," says Auntie Helen's current Executive Director, Rod Legg.Fear and stigma at the time hurt the LGBT community as much as the disease, but word spread quickly about Gary's services, and Auntie Helen's grew. Sadly, so did the disease.HIV and AIDS claimed more than 100,000 lives in the U.S. in the 1980s. Many of Gary's clients and friends who died willed their estates to Auntie Helen's.Their belongings accumulated in Gary's garage, which was also where he did laundry. Eventually, with help from a few high-powered friends and other activists, Gary opened Auntie Helen's thrift store in 1989.The laundry service and the thrift store are still located in North Park."We also do COVID-19 [laundry], which is our frontline medical workers. That's a tie in to the past, we had to do that. We had to offer that," Legg says.They're expanding the store, and their outreach, giving out free groceries to their regular clients (about 25-35 individuals) and now also to frontline workers.With COVID-19 leaving so many more people on hard times, they started delivering groceries — no questions asked, no referral needed. At one point, to more than 300 people.Legg explains, "this is everybody's HIV in a sense... We don't know where we're at. We're all wondering what's going to happen the next day, but most importantly is neighbor to neighbor we need to make sure we're taking care of each other."All in keeping with the legacy of Gary Cheatham, about whom, Legg says, "this man was way before his time... Can you imagine the faces of the people that got the hugs, and the clothes? We should all be our heroes, for each other." 1943

  陕西中耳解剖放大模型   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Looking for something to fill up your day during the school year?Now that the kids are back at school, it's the perfect chance for you to pick up a new skill as well!At local community colleges, several non-credit classes are available either free or for a low fee. Class can teach you new skills, from auto service to belly dancing to music.Here are a few interesting non-credit classes to check out locally:Beginning Upholstery (MiraCosta College): Learn the craft of upholstery in this hands-on class focusing on basic fundamentals, techniques, and terminology of upholstery. Students will learn how to properly plan and complete an upholstery project, perfect for newbies or do-it-yourselfers. Students can even bring their own personal projects to class to work on as well.Beginning Ukulele (MiraCosta College): Pick up the "uke" in a beginner course, where students will learn the basics of ukulele tuning and skills.Beginning Belly Dance (San Diego Continuing Education): Learn the foundation skills to belly dance, including techniques, posture, shimmies, edulations, and traveling steps. No prior dance experience is needed! Community Emergency Response Team Training (Palomar College): Students will learn about disaster preparedness for hazards that could impact their area, such as fire safety, light search and rescue, team organization, and disaster medical operations.Arts and Music (San Diego Continuing Education): Students study a variety or art and/or music topics, from appreciation to application. Students can expect to explore, perform, or create arts and musical experiences first hand.Watercolor and more (MiraCosta College): All skill levels are welcomed to find their art and some stress-reducing fun learning to watercolor paint. Students will learn easy techniques and skills to create a masterpiece of their own. 1869

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - If you're driving along I-5 in Logan Heights, you might see Frankie Ortiz in a mariachi costume on the bridge above you.He told 10News Photojournalist Zach Wonderlie, he just wants to make San Diego smile!Ortiz said he gets encouragement on social media from people who enjoyed seeing him dance. 332

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Just ahead of this holiday week, San Diego's Cross Border Xpress (CBX) unveiled new biometric facial comparison technology. The CEO of the sky bridge that connects travelers directly to the Tijuana International Airport told ABC 10News that it will further secure and streamline travel into the United States.The U.S.-Mexico border is still closed to non-essential travel because of COVID-19. CBX CEO Jorge Goytortua said CBX is still not encouraging people to travel right now but if they do, they can take advantage of this technology.“Within seconds, the technology will recognize the passenger in a [Customs and Border Protection (CBP)] database,” said Goytortua. He told ABC 10News that the comparison process happens only at a time and place where travelers are already required by law to verify their identity by presenting travel documents. Goytortua says that when a traveler arrives at the CBP processing area, he or she will have a photo taken at the primary inspection point. A CBP officer will do a review by retrieving the traveler's passport or visa photo from government holdings. The new photo will be compared to the previously collected photo.“It's going to be a hands-free process. It's going to be a much faster process,” he told ABC 10News.He added that CBX does not have access to the photos. Only CBP officers can see them. If travelers are still concerned about privacy, he said it's not mandatory to use the technology. “You can ask the officer if you don’t want to be processed like that then you will be processed the traditional way with your document read it on the scan. A CBP officer [will] research on their system and make sure that the person that is presenting the document is the one there in front of the officer,” he stated. 1790

举报/反馈

发表评论

发表