I was wondering if it was a scammer thing. Makes sense, thanks!
I was wondering if it was a scammer thing. Makes sense, thanks!
This, in addition to the other comment calling it a scammer cleared it up for me. I initially read it as “doing yogas…”. Guess I’m out of touch.
Can someone explain this to me? I don’t get it.
That’s the standard these days. BLS, ACLS, PALS, NRP, ATLS are the ones I know of and all have ~8-12hr online course preceding a ~2-4hr in person course.
In addition, this article is about his “plans” to do this. Not about his actions. Every election cycle around this time the incumbent president puts out articles about his (because there’s been no her yet) “plans” to reclassify or otherwise loosen marijuana restrictions, but nothing ever happens.
Oh I’m quite aware that this is a highly complex issue that has evolved over decades and blaming it single handedly on one thing is disingenuous. Nonetheless, I still blame that article single handedly. (/s because tone doesn’t convey well over text)
I like how it starts out ALMOST coherent and legalese, but then quickly derails into unhinged rambling with ACCENTUATED capital WORDS like it MATTERS.
This article I single handedly blame for the obesity epidemic.
Published by Harvard (one of the many reasons I discredit them to date, including that their current patient care model is centered around making money not providing high quality care) and paid for by the sugar industry for a paltry $50k.
This spawned the era of “low fat diet” where companies cut the fat content of their products, which made it taste like shit, so dumped heaps of sugar into it.
I was wondering how in the hell they got IRB approval for a placebo of “I’ll just cut on you but not do surgery”. Saw it was 2002, but still was surprised. Then I saw it came from VA in Texas, and all questions were answered.
Right, I read that part. I’m not very knowledgeable on the topic, but wouldn’t a top bunk have a railing?
For what it’s worth, I’ve seen plenty of inmates who “fell from the top bunk” and they have obvious knuckle marks on their cheeks from being punched. So I’m a little suspicious of those kinds of “falls”.
I’m usually one to discount news stories for being dramatic and misleading, but this one is pretty rough. Unsure how she fell in the first place, but the video of her on the floor with the pointed toes is rough to watch. That’s a hard one to fake, and is a clear sign of spinal trauma.
We had TPLO on our girl. Scheduled the consultation, then in between consultation and surgery the other ligament blew. So they did both legs at the same time. The cost was about $5-6k in total. First 1-2 weeks was rough because she couldn’t use half of her legs, and so would require being carried out and would balance on her front legs to pee. I’m hindsight, it was hilarious.
She’s just as rambunctious now as she was before tearing her ligaments, so it was absolutely the right choice.
Much as I like to SLAM journalists for their SAD uninformed opinions, this is a complex medical subject that doctors study for years. While this journalist didn’t explain it in detail, I don’t fault then for being a professional on the topic. But it’s not hard to find an OBGYN to consult on this.
It is treated typically in the same surgery where they visualize it. It’s literally the lining of the uterus stuck to stuff in the belly. Usually it’s bowls, can be liver or other stuff though. They carefully pull it off of the abdominal structures and that usually works for endometriosis.
Endometriosis is a tough one. It presents as abdominal cramping pain, which literally a million things can present as that. The only way to diagnose it is via direct visualization, AKA surgery. I’m not a surgeon, but it’s a good idea to avoid surgery if at all possible. Even the most successful uncomplicated surgery can cause lifelong problems with adhesions and obstructions. A surgical complication could be as severe as death.
If we could have a diagnostic tool that is reliable and noninvasive, that would be wonderful. But it currently doesn’t exist.
This is more of a fluff piece than actual advancement. Here is the meat of the article:
Hippocratic says its Constellation model outperformed real nurses 79% to 63% in identifying a medication’s impact on lab values; 88% to 45% in identifying condition-specific disallowed over-the-counter medications; 96% to 93% in correctly comparing a lab value to a reference range; and 81% to 57% in detecting toxic dosages of over-the-counter drugs.
Basically, these are low hanging fruit things, not the primary job of those “expensive” nurses. We need to look at this AI against scheduling appointments, determining whether the complaint is critical to go to ER, can wait a few days, or routine and can be handled over the phone.
I don’t get it. Enlighten me?
Is that the nowhere king?
It’s an open world sandbox type game, loosely based on Norse mythology. Loosely as in barely relevant. Base building, exploration, combat, crafting are the key concepts. There are some grinding parts, but overall very enjoyable.
I would akin it to Rust, Ark, and those kinds of games. Palworld is similar, but the map is randomly generated so each person has a slightly different experience.
Yeah, much better at the bottom. I suspect that this allows them to be loaded each time we load comment section (allowing you to be paid for your efforts), regardless of how long the comments section is?
That’s a heck of a slippery slope I just fell down.
If responses generated from AI can be held criminally liable for their training data’s crimes, we can all be held liable for all text responses from GPT, since it’s being trained on reddit data and likely has access to multiple instances of brigading, swatting, man hunts, etc.