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武清龙济秘尿外科(天津市武清区龙济医院外科医院) (今日更新中)

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2025-05-30 12:54:42
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  武清龙济秘尿外科   

SANTEE, Calif. (KGTV) -- There's a jail in East County that’s designed like an open college campus. The warden says it helps prepare the inmates to one day re-enter the outside world.Team 10 investigative reporter Jennifer Kastner got a tour of Santee’s Las Colinas Detention and Reentry Facility, which houses women. Supporters of the design say it’s a step in the right direction for the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, which runs the San Diego County jails. The Department has faced years backlash over accusations of inmate abuse and death.The big question is, does this jail design work?10News is examining the design as part of The Transparency Project, a new 10News initiative that’s supported by the nonprofit Solutions Journalism. The Transparency Project was born out of the passing of a new state law that’s pulling back the curtain on how local officers operate and investigate themselves.On the day that 10News visited Las Colinas, inmate Monica Estrada read her poetry to us. She says she is finally finding her voice.“I’ve done time throughout San Diego, Riverside County [and] Banning. I’ve been to prison [and] this is the first time I've ever learned and gotten some skills that I’m going to use to build a foundation for when I leave here,” she tells us. Estrada is serving time for drug sales, although at first glance, it's hard to tell that she's incarcerated.San Diego County Sheriff’s Department Captain James Madsen run the Las Colinas jail.“It eases their transition into the outside world because we treat it like it's an outside world,” he says of the jail’s open design. “It was designed that way to give these ladies a feeling of community,” he adds.The innovative design is an example of what the Sheriff’s Department believes it's doing well during a time of increased hostility toward law enforcement.“The last thing a deputy wants is a negative interaction with an inmate,” says Capt. Madsen.However, operations haven’t always gone smoothly for the San Diego County jails.In April, a woman named Destiny Guns escaped from the Las Colinas facility after climbing several fences and walls. A week later, she was recaptured. There's also security video from 2017 showing deputies punching an inmate at the San Diego Central Jail. The inmate was wheeled off on a stretcher.Another example is that of Paul Silva, a schizophrenic inmate who was rushed to the hospital from the Central Jail. His family’s attorney says that a stun gun was used on him four times before he went into cardiac arrest. He later died.“On a daily basis, what are you doing to make sure that your officers aren't discriminating [and] aren't inflicting cruel and unusual punishment?” we ask Madsen.“We monitor, we talk to our deputies, we move around and really…the deputies buy into the philosophy of reentry and rehabilitation. They understand that these folks are going to be in the community,” he responds.Madsen says the Sheriff’s Department is building up its inmate safety program. “We've hired more staff [like] more medical staff, more psychologists [and] psychiatrists,” he adds.The Sheriff’s Department has faced criticism in recent years for a high inmate suicide rate. Two years ago, a Grand Jury report revealed that "46 people have committed suicide in San Diego County Jails in the past 12 years.” Another part of the report reads, “The suicide rate in San Diego County Jails is the highest in all of California's large county jail systems."Wednesday, a spokesperson for two County supervisors sent 10News the following statement after a recent San Diego Union-Tribune investigation revealed at least 140 deaths in County Jails over the last decade."Any death under these circumstances is tragic, and we will be working with the Sheriff to determine what more we can do to reduce these incidents. A comprehensive review of all aspects of our jail system’s inmate care programs is being conducted, and we would like to see an additional independent review of best practices in other jail systems. It’s critical, in particular, that we do a better job of helping those dealing with mental illness and addiction. We’re moving to close the revolving door of people cycling through jail and emergency rooms through significant improvements to our behavioral health system. We have individuals who are winding up in jail in a crisis situation, and we need to reach these individuals much sooner and get them the treatment that they desperately need."This month, the Sheriff's Department reported it has been making changes based on recommendations from an independent suicide prevention expert including enhanced monitoring, new mandatory suicide prevention training and the creation of response teams to track self-harm reports, attempted suicides and suicides.“They're doing yoga outside. They're working with each other. They're playing organized sports,” says Patricia Ceballos with the Las Colinas Reentry Program. She helps run the jail’s wellness and vocational programs.Ceballos says the jail was designed to create a normative environment so that the women can focus rehabilitation and reentry. “Being able to empower, support, educate and provide tools to people to be successful and thrive in our community are important to us in the Sheriff's Department,” she adds.Even the living quarters are unique. There are no cells.“It does not feel like jail. To me, it feels like more of a high-security rehab,” says Melanie Jones. She was selling meth before she was sent to the jail. Now, she's studying culinary arts. “I'm a new person today,” she adds.The Las Colinas jail was completed three years ago with almost 0 million dollars from the County General Funds.10News asked the Sheriff's Department how many inmates have returned after being released. The Department reports that it looks at three-year snapshots for all County jails. The return rate for 2014-2016 was reportedly 36.6 percent. The return rate for 2015-2017 was reportedly 37.3 percent. The Department claims it’s in the process of evaluating the data for 2016-2018. So, while the effectiveness as a whole may not yet be certain, it is still clear there are positive changes on personal levels.“My voice is powerful and when I speak, people listen,” Estrada tells 10News. When she is released, she plans to write a book. “Some chicken soup for the inmate's soul. When life happens, try a bowl,” she laughs.The Sheriff's Department has a similar men's jail in Otay Mesa with an open campus design, although it is older and smaller. The Department reports that there are currently no plans to re-design the other existing jails in San Diego. 6644

  武清龙济秘尿外科   

Scientists and medical professionals across the country are working to learn about the coronavirus’s effect on children. There's still a lot they don't know about how the virus affects children.With children often not showing as many symptoms as adults, experts say kids can help us learn more about the novel coronavirus. Dr. Beth Thielen, a pediatric infectious disease physician and professor at the University of Minnesota, says people could be looking to children, especially as they go back to school, to find out more about the coronavirus."I mean, I hope so. I think this provides a very rich opportunity to understand a lot of basic things about the immune system and why diseases manifest differently in adults and children," says Dr. Thielen.Dr. Thielen says from possible protective measures of the MMR vaccine in children to t-cells, there's so much people can learn from how children's bodies combat viruses."It is thought that t-cells play a substantial role in helping to clear viral infections from the lungs. There are people looking at t-cell responses but they've lagged a bit behind with the data coming out on t-cell responses hasn’t been as prominent as the antibody studies," says Dr. Thielen. She adds, the reason people are looking at t-cells and children is because t-cells decline with age."I think they are critical. We all have them, they work to protect us from infection and potentially they are more efficacious in younger people potentially. Although, I think that really hasn’t been clearly worked out for SARS COV2," says Dr. Thielen.Dr. Jay Varkey, an epidemiologist at Emory Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia, agrees. Dr. Varkey says scientists are also looking into why children older than 10 years old, are more likely to have more serious symptoms with COVID-19."I think the reasons for that are complex. I think part of that might be related to some sort of existing t-cell immunity, and to what that is whether that’s to memory cells that are acting against a previous seasonal coronavirus that would just cause cold like symptoms, or whether its related to something more complex -- I don't think we’re there in terms of understanding," says Dr. Varkey.Dr. Varkey says, while children can help us understand COVID-19 better, it's also up to the adults to make sure they're growing up in a healthy, safe environment."We will learn much from kids but one of the messages we’ve been emphasizing in the hospital is that if we, again- and I answer this both not just as an infectious disease physician but also as a parent to two school age kids--we as adults have a responsibility to try and make our community safe to actually allow in-person learning," says Dr. Varkey."I think that we often think of children as getting a lot of these infections and the fact of the matter is most adults are getting exposed, as well, but our immune systems are sort of experienced at seeing them and we don't get sick," says Dr. Thielen.Dr. Thielen is a member of the Pediatric Infectious Disease Society and says she and other doctors in their scientific groups are advocating for more pediatric research to truly understand how certain diseases, including COVID-19, behave in children. 3217

  武清龙济秘尿外科   

SANTEE, Calif. (KGTV) – Two teenaged girls had a frightening encounter with a stranger the parking lot Sportsplex USA Santee Thursday night.“He’s lucky I didn't walk out to minutes earlier,” Beau Branton said. His 14-year-old daughter was one of the girls involved.Branton plays in an adult softball league. Their game finished around 11 p.m. His daughter and her 13-year-old friend were there. After the game, they went to the pickup truck to get warm, while Branton finished up on the field.That’s when a man came over to the teens sitting in the car.“They saw him coming over and when they saw him coming over, they freaked out and locked it," Branton said. "He started yanking on the handle to get in.  When he realized he couldn't get in, he just stood there and didn't say anything, just a blank stare.”After a few seconds, the man seemed to give up and leave.“(My daughter) got out to come get me,” Branton said. “She came out from the truck, and towards the Sportsplex, that’s when (the stranger) came from behind a car and started chasing her.”His daughter got back into the truck in time to watch the man drive away.“He had a hoodie on, backpack,” he said, “cleanly shaven, he had two shaven notches on his eyebrows.  They watched him get into a red minivan and drive away.”San Diego Sheriff's Department said the suspect is described as a Hispanic man in his early 30s, about 5-feet 9-inches tall, and weighing about 170 pounds. He reportedly has short brown hair.He also had two shaved lines through his right eyebrow.The suspect reportedly fled in an early 2000's model, dark, red minivan with faded paint and a sticker on the back window.Deputies are working with the girls to create a sketch of the suspect and are asking any other witnesses to come forward.Lt. Chris Steffen says they are not yet sure of the man's intentions and that he might not have known the girls were in the car. But he says they take every case involving juveniles and strangers seriously.Anyone with information is asked to call SDSO at 858-565-5200.  2095

  

SEDGWICK, Colo. – A man suspected of killing three members of a Kentucky family who were found dead Monday was arrested Monday afternoon near a small town in northeast Colorado.Edward Siddens, was arrested around 4:20 p.m. in Sedgwick, Colorado, which is just south and west of borders with Nebraska.He was wanted by Kentucky State Police out of Allen County, Kentucky. In connection to the deaths of Jimmy Siddens, his wife, Helen Siddens, and their son, Jimmy Siddens II. It's unclear how Edward Siddens might be related to the deceased.According to Kentucky authorities and local media reports, a county water employee was checking the family’s meter Monday and found two bodies on the ground. Authorities found another body nearby.The Sedgwick County Sheriff’s Office says it was notified shortly after 4 p.m. Monday that Siddens as in the county.Siddens was believed to have been driving a stolen vehicle when he was found by deputies in the town of Sedgwick. The sheriff’s office says deputies were involved in a “short low speed pursuit” with Siddens before he was arrested without incident.The sheriff’s office confirmed that Siddens was the man arrested Monday, and said it was working with Kentucky state police. Allen County is more than 1,000 miles away from Sedgwick. 1298

  

SANTA ANA, Calif. (CNS) - Kobe Bryant's widow, Vanessa, responded Thursday to a lawsuit filed against her by her mother demanding financial support and claiming the late Laker legend had vowed to take care of her financially for life.In a statement posted online, Vanessa Bryant accused her mother -- Sofia Urbieta Laine -- accused her mother of trying to "extort a financial windfall from our family." Bryant said she and her husband long supported her, allowing her to live in their properties free of charge."She was a grandmother who was supported by me and her son-in-law at my request," Bryant said. "She now wants to back charge me per hour for supposedly working 12 hours a day for 18 years for watching her grandchildren. In reality, she only occasionally babysat my older girls when they were toddlers."Bryant said she has tried to make peace with her mother to no avail."Earlier this year, I was looking for a new home for her and, a week later, she went on television and gave an interview disparaging our family and making false accusations while living rent-free in a gated apartment complex in Newport Coast," she said. "Even after that betrayal, I was willing to provide my mother with monthly support for the rest of her life and that wasn't good enough. She, instead, contacted me through intermediaries -- contrary to what she claims, my phone number hasn't changed -- and demanded million, a house and a Mercedes SUV."Bryant said she refused, causing her mother to make "false and absurd claims" while demanding "more money than my husband and I ever spent to provide for her while he was alive.""She has no regard for how this is affecting my children and me," Bryant said. "She wants to live off of my daughters and me for the rest of her life while continuing to collect monthly alimony from her ex-husband since 2004. My husband and I have never discouraged or kept her from providing for herself. This lawsuit is frivolous, disgraceful and unimaginably hurtful. My husband never promised my mother anything, and he would be so disappointed in her behavior and lack of empathy."Laine filed a lawsuit Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court.First reported by People magazine, the lawsuit claims that Laine worked as "a longtime personal assistant and nanny" for her daughter and Kobe Bryant. The suit also claims that Kobe Bryant had "promised to take care of (Laine) for the rest of her life.""Unfortunately, Kobe Bryant's promises did not see the light of day as he is now deceased, and Vanessa Bryant took each and every step she could to void and cancel all of Kobe Bryant's promises made to (Laine)," according to the suit. "Vanessa Bryant did not intend to honor any of the Bryants' representations, agreements and promises at any stage."The suit claims Laine, while serving as a nanny for the Bryants, worked around the clock without being afforded meal or rest breaks, while also working holidays and weekends. She also claims Vanessa Bryant forced her out of the home she was living in while Kobe Bryant was alive.Kobe Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter Gianna were killed in a January helicopter crash in Calabasas that also claimed the lives of seven other people. 3214

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