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(KGTV) - Has there really been a rash of Facebook accounts being cloned?No.The message being virally sent around warning people about a second friend request being received is bogus and should be ignored. 217
(KGTV) — The 4th annual D6 Night Market, a collection of food and entertainment, returns May 19th to Mira Mesa.This event is free and open to the public, taking place at the Mira Mesa Community Park on Saturday, May 19, 2018, from 4:00 pm – 10:00 pm.The park is located on Mira Mesa Blvd. across from Mira Mesa High School (1 block east of the Mira Mesa Mall) at 8575 New Salem Street San Diego, CA 92126.RELATED: San Diego County Fair's sweet treatsD6 Night Market, is named for San Diego’s City Council District 6 (“D6”), a culturally diverse district in San Diego.Listed below are a few of the things to check out:? A “Village of Neighborhoods,” showcasing for youth activities, opportunities for adult volunteerism, and places of worship. 790

(KGTV) -- The U.S. Geological Survey says a pair of earthquakes struck Costa Rica's Pacific Coast Friday evening, including magnitude 6.0 temblor. There were no immediate reports of damage.The first quake was reported at 11:22 p.m. and was centered in the port town of Golfito on the southern Pacific Coast, according to USGS.The jolt was followed by a smaller but strong magnitude 4.9 quake centered in San Vito, about 40 miles east of Golfito. That quake struck about 27 minutes after the quake in Golfito.Stay with 10News for updates to this story. 606
(KGTV) - The sound of gunfire was met with fear and disbelief by students at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita Thursday. Two students died and three others were injured on campus, officials said. In the hours following the shooting on campus, the teenage survivors shared their emotional stories. “It was very scary; we ran, we heard the one shot and four after and we just started running,” said a female student. “All I heard was all these kids running and just screaming and calling their parents; it was very sad.” RELATED: Santa Clarita high school shooting: 2 killed, 3 hurt; Suspected shooter in 'grave' condition “It was like a balloon pop, super loud, and everyone started running and it was really scary,” said a boy who had been outside the school when the shooting happened. His concern was for his sister, who had arrived on campus early for choir rehearsal. She texted him that she was safe, but the shooting had happened close to her. "I'm just not gonna forget it," said a girl as her mother clutched her outside the school.Other students shared the experience of running away from campus. “So we were waiting outside of the locker room cause it wasn’t open yet, and all of a sudden we just we were with all of our friends and we heard the gunshots and we were, ‘Let’s go, let’s run.' We ran through the field, we went through the gate cause it was open and we had to go underneath the pipeline so we literally crawled underneath the pipeline. And there were construction workers and they like, helped us get through the hill and into the neighborhood, and we just kept walking until we got to the park.” Some of the children sought refuge in the first moments of the crisis with a man who lives near the school. “Coming out of my house to go get my coffee and I saw all kind of kids running up the street, screaming, crying, yelling. And it really saddened my heart, you know. And they were saying, ‘can we go in your house’ and there must have been 20 of them in my house. I wanted to make sure they were safe so we got them in there.” RELATED: Mass shootings in the United States: When, where they have occurred in 2019 Throughout the emergency, the young survivors helped each other. “I never looked back. We just all kept running, and we were all helping each other, like ‘oh, do you have a ride, do you have a ride’ because it was just like a big group of us running through this neighborhood, trying to get away. Everybody helped each other; I was actually really surprised because I thought people would just panic and push people out of the way but everybody was helping each other. Everybody worked as a community to help each other like these kids,” said a female student.The survivors who sheltered in place at the school were evacuated on buses and reunited with their parents. 2816
A 19-year-old died after inhaling deodorant spray to get high, according to a new case report, and doctors who treated the man in the Netherlands are using the case to highlight the fatal consequences of inhaling chemicals.Such cases are "very rare," according to Dr. Kelvin Harvey Kramp of Maasstad Hospital's intensive care unit in Rotterdam.Kramp explained that because deaths from deodorant inhalation are not common among the general population, the "consequences aren't really known," causing people to continue this dangerous behavior.The patient, who had a history of psychotic symptoms, had been admitted to a rehabilitation center for cannabis and ketamine abuse and was taking antipsychotic drugs.During a relapse in July, he placed a towel over his head and inhaled deodorant spray to get high, according to the report, published Thursday in the BMJ. He became hyperactive, jumping up and down, before blood flow stopped suddenly, causing him to go into cardiac arrest and collapse, the report says. He was admitted to the hospital and placed in a medically induced coma when staff failed to revive him.The "patient did not had enough brain function to sustain life," Kramp said. Nine days after he was admitted, doctors withdrew care, and the man died.There are three theories about what caused the cardiac arrest, Kramp said: The inhalant could have oversensitized the patient's heart, which can make any subsequent stress, like getting caught by a parent, cause cardiac arrest. Also, inhalants decrease the strength of contraction of the heart muscle. Another possibility is that inhalants can cause spasm of the coronary arteries.The patient's hyperactivity could mean he was experiencing a "scary hallucination," Kramp said, adding that if that was the case, the first theory would be applicable.Solvent abuse is not a new phenomenon, the report points out, and is primarily found in "young and vulnerable people," according to Kramp.The group most affected by solvent abuse is 15- to 19-year-olds, studies show. People in rehabilitation centers or prisons are more likely to abuse household products, the report added, meaning there could be a greater risk of cardiac deaths in these environments.In these secure environments, people have less access to other substances, and household products are easily available, explained Roz Gittins, director of pharmacy at the British drug charity Addaction, who was not involved in the report.The toxic chemical butane, often used in sprayable household products, has a similar effect to alcohol, Kramp said. "The intention of abusers is to experience feelings of euphoria and disinhibition."Other health effects of inhalants include liver and kidney damage, hearing loss, delayed behavioral development and brain damage.Chemicals like butane have a very quick and short-acting effect, which can make people want to take more, Gittins said.The report's authors hope increased awareness will help reduce further inhalant-related deaths, through education in schools around the fatal consequences of solvent abuse."To stop the abuse, we can only try to increase awareness about the possible dramatic consequences of inhalant abuse among youngsters, parents, medical personnel," Kramp said.Up to 125 deaths are caused by inhalant abuse every year in the United States, according to the report.Stephen Ream, director of UK-based charity Re-solv, said that in 2016, "there were 64 deaths associated with these products," with butane gas accounting for at least a third of those."The breakdown by product is more difficult to establish, but we would suspect that about four or five deaths a year are associated with aerosol products," he said."Solvent abuse is also more of a problem in the northern regions of the UK, with rates particularly higher in Scotland and the North East of England."According UK drug advice organization Talk to Frank, more 10- to 15-year-olds were killed from abusing glues, gases and aerosols than from illegal drugs combined between 2000 and 2008. 4074
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