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喀什妇科医院那里好
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发布时间: 2025-05-30 01:14:08北京青年报社官方账号
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RELATED: High surf closes La Jolla Children's Pool wall, Ocean Beach PierThe lifeguard service sent out a Twitter message to the public Sunday 145

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Monday.According to the AP, authorities said the toddler apparently slipped from her grandfather's hands while he was holding her outside a port-side window on the 11th story of the Freedom of the Seas cruise ship while it was docked in San Juan. "It's a very grave scene, very regrettable and tragic," Elmer Roman of the Puerto Rican Department of Public Security 367

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in order to pad his pockets.Dr. Yasser Awaad allegedly forced children to endure grueling medical tests — including sleep deprivation — multiple times, though the children never needed them.Mariah Martinez was just nine years old when she said she was referred to Awaad for headaches. At the time, Awaad worked for Oakwood Healthcare, which is now owned by Beaumont Health.Martinez says Awaad wanted her to undergo an electroencephalogram or EEG, and then told her she had epilepsy. Martinez says she was confused because she'd never had a seizure."I didn't know what epilepsy was at that point," she said.Martinez said the diagnosis scared her."Being told you're abnormal, or the tests are abnormal, means I'm not like everyone else, and at that age, you just want to fit in," Martinez said.She said the anti-seizure medication not only made her drowsy – it made her headaches worse."I kind of withdrew into myself, didn't want to be around people," she said.It wasn't until Awaad suddenly left his practice four years later and Martinez saw a new doctor that she found out she never had epilepsy."I lost, I feel like a piece of my childhood. All the time, I could have been learning to do things, playing with the other kids, I could have friends, I could have joined a sport – you never know," Martinez said.Martinez was not alone."I think it's despicable and deplorable that he would do this to any innocent child, let alone several hundred," medical malpractice lawyer Brian McKeen said. McKeen and a team of attorneys are suing Awaad and the hospital."When you look at all the evidence in this case. The conclusion is inescapable. That this was done intentionally," he said.McKeen alleges Awaad ran an EEG mill: the more tests he ran on the kids, the more money he made. At a 2018 deposition, McKeen claimed Awaad made "hundreds of thousands" of dollars for running the tests; money Awaad later said he was "entitled to."McKeen says one of Awaad's pediatric neurology colleagues even blew the whistle on him to Oakwood administrators back in 2003."She told them he's doing unnecessary EEGs, he's diagnosing kids with epilepsy that don't have it, and he's giving kids unnecessary drugs, and they did not do anything about it. They swept it under the rug," McKeen said.McKeen says Awaad also falsely diagnosed Martinez's sister with epilepsy, and in a different family, he's accused of misdiagnosing four out of five siblings.Hundreds of medical licensing records show that since 2010, the state has been accusing Awaad of violating the public health code for wrongly diagnosing kids with epilepsy. The state complaints use words like "negligence" and "incompetence" to describe Awaad, yet he still held on to his medical license.In 2012, he was put on probation and forced to pay a ,000 fine."That wasn't enough. They should suspend his license. He should never be allowed the opportunity to practice medicine and violate the trust of any other patient," McKeen said.In June, a jury awarded Mariah Martinez million for her case against Awaad. The second lawsuit of the 267 pending against Awaad is currently underway in Wayne County Circuit Court."I don't know if I'll ever be 100 percent," Martinez said.Beaumont Health and its lawyers chose not to comment, citing pending litigation and patient privacy laws. A spokesman also said that they have not had a relationship with Awaad since 2017.Beaumont spokesman Mark Geary declined to provide someone to talk on camera, but released the following statement:"The litigation involving Dr. Yasser Awaad and Oakwood Healthcare dates back more than a decade to 2007. We cannot comment about the specifics of this case or others because of pending legal proceedings and patient privacy laws. After his employment with Oakwood Healthcare, Dr. Awaad was briefly employed by Beaumont to provide medical education and clinical curriculum for residents and medical students in pediatric neurology. He completed this work in 2017 and has not had any relationship with Beaumont since that time."Meanwhile, the Michigan Attorney General's Office has filed another administrative complaint against Awaad's license. The hearing was supposed to be held next week, but Awaad's lawyers asked for it to be delayed. It's now scheduled in March.This story was originally published by Heather Catallo on 4344

  

— and it came 14 days early. Ian and Hailey Roell's father, Paul, is a member of the Army National Guard. He's been deployed since the middle of last school year and they weren't expecting him to be home until sometime in January. But their mother, Stephanie, found out just a few days earlier that Paul would be home for Christmas, so she decided to come up with a way to surprise her kids. "They didn't give the soldiers their flight info until 20 minutes before they had them leave the barracks," she said. Stephanie contacted Ian's school and set up a plan to surprise her son. She said the school was on board as soon as she brought them the idea and they came up with a way to make it happen, without giving Ian any idea of what was going on. Around noon, teachers brought their students to the gym to "play some games." They let the kids play a couple of games, before getting to the important one. During Ian's game, the teachers blindfolded three kids and asked them to feel the hands and face of "someone behind them" and guess who they were... as you can imagine, Ian's "secret person" was the best of the bunch. 1125

  

You can help NASA discover new planets.On Wednesday, the agency announced its new website called Planet Patrol, where astronomers can hunt down new worlds, with the public's help.NASA said they’d sort through images collected by NASA’s Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite or TESS for short.“Automated methods of processing TESS data sometimes fail to catch imposters that look like exoplanets,” said project leader Veselin Kostov in a press release. “The human eye is extremely good at spotting such imposters, and we need citizen scientists to help us distinguish between the look-alikes and genuine planets.”TESS captured hundreds of thousands of snapshots over a year, but scientists need help because there are too many pictures to examine.Kostov said that computers are excellent at analyzing data, but sometimes fail to determine potential planets from fakes.Participants will answer questions as they sift through the images to help Kostov and his team of researchers narrow down the list of potential planets. 1027

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