Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉

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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉 banner
Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉

Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉

@BoogRoberte

Ignorante de tout.Picoreuse de VRAIS savoirs.'I sometimes allow myself to be stupid'.Hope never fall into gratuitous nasti-pettiness? rtwt ≠ agree! @RoberteBoog

France Katılım Nisan 2020
192 Takip Edilen48 Takipçiler
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉
Sink into my morose mood.Voluntarily. Watch some Asian series-kind syrupy blue- badly subtitled (officially to improve my English & understand far worlds in which 2 of my friends reside).Maybe it feels good to have an almost respectable reason to shed big tears over a cheap stuff
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉
@elonmusk Can't agree. God has planted in us passion for science, so it’s okay to explore & push limits, but not because of the purpose u describe. Leave His own job to God: Is 45:18, Ps 115:16. Let's focus on the job He gave us in Genesis 1. Either way we'll export our problems elsewhere.
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Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Mostly true. What matters is securing the long-term future of consciousness, both on Earth and other heavenly bodies. We cannot just focus on Earth, because there are irreducible external (eg massive meteor) and internal (eg global nuclear war) cataclysmic risks. The Moon is faster to make self-growing, but is more susceptible to problems on Earth. Mars will take longer to make self-growing, because it is so hard to reach, but is more secure from Earth disasters for that same reason. Both the Moon and Mars should have self-growing civilizations. Making this happen is the prime directive of SpaceX.
Jaynit@jaynitx

Former SpaceX astronaut Garrett Reisman reveals the single prism Elon Musk runs every major decision through "He measures pretty much every major decision by whether or not it brings the day when we have a self-sustainable colony on Mars sooner or later" "That's the prism by which he makes every single decision he makes" "He's got an idea and he'll keep pushing, and he gives us aggressive timelines that we have to work to" "We work really hard to try to meet them. It's hard when you're doing stuff that's this complicated to predict exactly how long it's going to take" "We end up falling a little bit behind, but we do our best"

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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉 retweetledi
Dr Hélène Rossinot
Dr Hélène Rossinot@helenerossinot·
Merci @LEstRep54 💪🏻
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tern@1goodtern·
The temperature is over 30° and one of our neighbours is burning a chopped down tree in their garden, filling up all our houses with smoke when closing the windows turns the house into an oven. Some people are just so spectacularly a) inconsiderate and b) stupid.
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉 retweetledi
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tern@1goodtern·
A friend passed this to me, saying it might be helpful - it's about getting help on Long Covid from your GP, it's for a UK setting, but some of it will be applicable anywhere - read the note at the end for more too. "I work in AI. I used it to research and write my mum a letter about her Long COVID. Her GP called her the next day after 3 years of being dismissed! *Reposting here as myself since it blew up in another support group and people really want help with this… feel free to add/DM me.* So I work in AI, specifically in healthcare tech. So when my mum had been fobbed off by her GP for the third year in a row about her Long COVID, I figured I should actually do something useful with what I know. This isn't about gaming the system or bending rules. Everything I'm sharing here is publicly available on NHS and government websites. I just used AI to find it, understand it, and turn it into something a GP couldn't easily brush off. Here's what most people don't know. The NHS publishes detailed guidelines that GPs are expected to follow. NICE published a specific Long COVID guideline called NG188 that sets out exactly what a GP has to do when a patient comes to them with ongoing post-Covid symptoms. Most patients have never heard of it. Most GPs don't follow it unless someone pushes them on it. The other thing most people don't know: verbal dismissal is easy to ignore. A formal written letter that references specific guidelines creates a paper trail. The GP now has a documented duty of care they're expected to respond to. It genuinely changes everything. My mum is 61. Not remotely tech savvy. She would never have found any of this herself. I spent about 20 minutes using AI to pull the relevant guidelines, match them to her situation, and draft a letter. She sent it to her GP by email on a Tuesday. Her GP called her on Wednesday afternoon. First time in three years a GP had called her. She now has a referral to a Long Covid clinic and a written management plan, after years of being told it was probably anxiety or just her age. Posting her letter below with her details redacted. Copy it, adapt it to your situation, send it by email not in person. You need a timestamp. You need a record. That's what actually forces a response. ─── [Her letter, personal details redacted] ████████████████ ████████████████ ████████, ██████ ██ ██████ 2025 Dr ████████████ ████████████ Surgery ████████████████ ████████, ██████ Re: Formal written request for Long COVID assessment and personalised management plan Dear Dr ████████, I am writing to formally request appropriate assessment and management for post-COVID-19 syndrome (Long COVID), and to create a written record of this request for my medical file. I contracted COVID-19 in ████████ 2022 and have experienced the following ongoing symptoms for over three years: • Severe fatigue and post-exertional malaise, symptoms worsen significantly following any physical or cognitive exertion • Cognitive dysfunction, difficulty with memory, concentration, and word retrieval • Breathlessness disproportionate to exertion • Heart palpitations and episodes of tachycardia • Disrupted sleep despite significant fatigue • Generalised pain and joint discomfort These symptoms have substantially impaired my ability to work, maintain daily activities, and quality of life. CLINICAL BASIS FOR THIS REQUEST NICE guideline NG188, COVID-19 rapid guideline: managing the long-term effects of COVID-19, was developed jointly by NICE, SIGN and the Royal College of General Practitioners. It applies to any patient with new or ongoing symptoms four or more weeks after acute COVID-19. Under NG188 section 5.2.1, GPs are expected to use a multidisciplinary approach to guide rehabilitation, including physical, psychological and psychiatric aspects of management. Under NG188 section 5.2.2, GPs must work with the patient to develop a personalised rehabilitation and management plan, which must be recorded in writing. NICE states explicitly that healthcare professionals are expected to take this guideline fully into account. This is not optional guidance. Under GMC Good Medical Practice (2024), where a GP cannot adequately manage a patient's condition, they are required to refer to a specialist with the relevant expertise. Under the NHS Constitution, I have the right to be referred to an appropriate specialist where my GP is unable to provide the required clinical management. I have not received a personalised management plan or specialist referral in three years of presenting with these symptoms. WHAT I AM FORMALLY REQUESTING 1. A holistic clinical assessment consistent with NICE NG188, including physical, psychological and functional domains 2. A personalised rehabilitation and management plan recorded in writing, as required under NICE NG188 section 5.2.2 3. Referral to the Long COVID clinic or appropriate multidisciplinary rehabilitation service 4. A written response to this letter within 14 days I would like this letter to be added to my medical record. I am not requesting anything outside published NHS guidelines. I am asking for what those guidelines state I am entitled to receive. Yours sincerely, ████████████████ Date of birth: ██/██/████ NHS number: ███ ███ ████ Based on: NICE NG188 (January 2024) | GMC Good Medical Practice (2024) | NHS Constitution (2023) *Verify current guidelines at nice.org.uk before sending.* ─── Same approach works for basically any condition where you're being dismissed. MCAS (I am currently writing myself a letter to escalate my own issues with this), fibromyalgia, EDS, POTS, chronic fatigue. The escalation pathways exist for all of them, most people just don't know how to use them. If it’s useful I could build a tool that does this automatically for you. You answer a few questions about your condition, it finds the relevant guidelines and drafts the letter for you. If that sounds useful, DM me or comment. Happy to write one manually for anyone in the meantime. Not medical advice! Keep seeing your GP. Call 111 if anything gets worse."
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉 retweetledi
Marc Gozlan
Marc Gozlan@MarcGozlan·
Quand du tissu thyroïdien se trouve à la base du crâne, dans l’iris ou dans l’ovaire. Des cas surprenants de thyroïde ectopique lemonde.fr/blog/realitesb… [Rediff]
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ExAvocatine(DrEnMaturation)
Il est né avec un handicap, c’est pas la faute de Dieu qui l’a créé ainsi. La médecine et les chirurgiens ont fait un superbe travail, mais c’est Dieu qui est remercié. Il faut savoir fermer les yeux sur beaucoup de choses pour être croyant quand même.
Anna Lulis@annamlulis

Born with a cleft lip and palate—but by the mercy and grace of God, he was healed after surgery. His disability did not make him “less” human. It made him more vulnerable and deserving of love. Every child, regardless of their disability, is valuable and worthy of life.

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LordPuppyLawyer
LordPuppyLawyer@lawyer_lord·
Je n’ai pas toujours vécu à Paris. J’ai même habité 8 ans à côté de la Gare du Nord (côté boboland quand même 😅). Et j’adore vivre ici ! C’est en province que vous comprenez pas sous le prétexte qu’on râle tout le temps 🤷🏻‍♀️😂
Aurore@aureaeleftheria

Je pense au contraire qu'il faut avoir vécu à Paris toute sa vie pour ne pas ressentir la sensation d'étouffement provoquée par une ville aussi dense. (La banlieue selon les endroits c'est déjà mieux qu'intra-muros).

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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉
@elonmusk Sincerely wish that were true & that u r just as attached to truth. I had sincere admiration for u, that of a person with atypical reasoning who recognizes some1 similar (in other areas & on a larger scale, of course). But r u still capable of lucidity, including about yourself?
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉
@DocArnica Faudrait déjà définir la célébrité... 😁 Récemment 3 de mes petites-filles se sont rendues compte que je suis qqchose comme un monument historique... m'ont demandé si j'ai connu De Gaulle. Ben non, mais son 1er min, oui. J'ai même pu raconter une anecdote.
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DocArnica
DocArnica@DocArnica·
C’est pas des fous de marketing à la ville pour les tombes . Tu payes plus cher pour 30 ans que 2 fois 15 ans
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Aymerik
Aymerik@Aymerik_D·
@nicolasberrod En l'occurrence l'image d'illustration de l'article montre le CHRU de Vandœuvre-Brabois, et non pas le CHRU de Nancy centre où a eu lieu ce décès curieux
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Nicolas Berrod
Nicolas Berrod@nicolasberrod·
Curieuse histoire : une patiente de 69 ans a été retrouvée morte dans les toilettes des urgences du CHU de Nancy, hier soir. D'après les syndicats, le service n'était pas en tension. Une enquête a été ouverte par le parquet, une autopsie va avoir lieu. leparisien.fr/societe/sante/…
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉
@JennMGreenberg A crime, an abuse, it's horrible. But the worst part is everything that accompanies the act. Yes, much more than the act itself. x.com/i/status/18538…
Roberte Boog@RoberteBoog

@NZadourian @elefelefl Oui, il y a "l'après", curieusement pas "pénalisable". & Tout le "pendant & autour" de l'acte criminel, guère punissable. Bref, tout ce qui n'est pas contenu dans le mot viol, ou tout terme qui tente de qualifier, "contenir" (restreindre ?) un crime. x.com/RoberteBoog/st…

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Jennifer Greenberg 🕊️
Jennifer Greenberg 🕊️@JennMGreenberg·
My kids chose tonight to ask me why they’ve never met my parents. They’re old enough now that, “They weren’t nice,” doesn’t work anymore. So I told them about how my dad beat me up, and my mom saw him do it several times, but did nothing. She didn’t get help, that I know of. Didn’t tell anyone, that I know of. As far as I’m aware, everything was swept under the rug, and the abuse continued. And my 10YO asked me, “Is that abuse? Even if she didn’t hit you?” I wanted her to be able to decide for herself, so I asked her, “Well, if you saw someone getting beat up, what would be the right thing to do?” She thought for a moment and she said, “Yeah. That’s abuse.” So, now I’m extremely depressed, but pretending not to be because it’s family time. I feel like my kids got robbed of having grandparents on my side. I feel like they got robbed of having relationships with my siblings (because that’s a whole mess I can’t even explain on X). I feel like my whole family died but I can’t talk about the details. It’s weird. Anyway … if you’re going through something like this, and you’re feeling alone and singled out, know that you’re not alone. It’s not you. It’s them. Abuse is so much more than one event. It’s like an earthquake that sends aftershocks throughout your entire life. I haven’t seen my dad in 20 years, and still his sin is affecting what should be the most innocent and pure parts of my life.
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉 retweetledi
Marc Gozlan
Marc Gozlan@MarcGozlan·
Quand un accident de voiture masque la cause d’un trouble neurologique À lire sur 'Réalités Biomédicales' lemonde.fr/realites-biome…
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Oscar ✨
Oscar ✨@Oscarrjavier95·
Pregunta incómoda:Necesito entender esto ¿Para qué sirve ese pequeño espacio en la tapa del inodoro? 🤔👀
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Dr. M.F. Khan
Dr. M.F. Khan@Dr_TheHistories·
Instead of hiding his daughter with Down syndrome, Charles de Gaulle raised her proudly and she became the heart of his life.... When Charles de Gaulle died in 1970, he made a quiet request that surprised many. He did not want a grand state funeral in Paris. He asked to be buried in the small village of Colombey les Deux Églises, beside his daughter Anne. For him, that resting place mattered more than any monument. Anne was born on New Year’s Day in 1928, youngest of three children. She had Down syndrome, a condition surrounded by fear and misinformation at the time. Doctors and society often blamed parents and urged families to hide children like her from public view. For families of power and status, sending such children away was considered normal. Charles and his wife Yvonne refused. They raised Anne at home with her brother Philippe and sister Élisabeth. There was no secrecy, no shame, no separation. She was simply their daughter. To the world, de Gaulle was distant and unyielding. A leader shaped by war, discipline, and command. But inside his home, Anne revealed a side few ever saw. With her, he laughed freely. He sang songs, told stories, and played games. Friends noticed that the man who rarely showed emotion softened completely in her presence. He called her my joy. Anne asked nothing of him except love, and in that simplicity, he found peace. She was never treated as fragile or inferior. She was respected fully, included always, and loved without condition. That love did not end within the family. After the war, Charles and Yvonne founded the Fondation Anne de Gaulle. They turned a château into a home for young women with intellectual disabilities, many of whom had been abandoned. At a time when support barely existed, they chose action over silence. Anne’s life was short. She died of pneumonia in 1948, just after turning twenty, in her father’s arms. In his grief, de Gaulle whispered that now she was like the others, finally free from the limits the world had placed on her. After her death, he carried her photograph everywhere. He believed her presence protected him, even during an assassination attempt years later. Whether faith or fate, he never doubted her importance in his life. Charles de Gaulle found his deepest calm not in leadership or victory, but in loving a child the world did not understand. His family showed that dignity is not about ability. It is about how fiercely we choose to care. © Soul Whisper #drthehistories
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉
@TheShadowIntelX Right & wrong. Studies can help create structure/diagrams on which to build, even if it means destructuring them later. & Some people, with extraordinary abilities, will come out on 🔝 even without 🎓 But other valuable individ. need 🎓 to be given a chance: it's social reality.
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Shadow Intel
Shadow Intel@TheShadowIntelX·
Elon Musk just put the entire university system on trial. Not the curriculum. Not the professors. The premise. Musk: “You don’t need college to learn stuff. Everything is available basically for free. You can learn anything you want for free.” For a thousand years, universities held one monopoly. Access. You paid the toll or you stayed ignorant. The internet erased that in a decade. Every lecture. Every framework. Every textbook. Free. From any screen on Earth. The six-figure tuition is no longer buying knowledge. It is buying a signal. Musk: “There is a value that colleges have, which is seeing whether somebody can work hard at something, including a bunch of annoying homework assignments, and still do their homework assignments.” That is the product. Not intelligence. Not creativity. Not vision. Compliance. You are paying $200,000 to prove you can tolerate bureaucracy on a schedule. Musk: “Colleges are basically for fun and to prove you can do your chores. But they’re not for learning.” The entire system is a sorting machine for corporate HR. It does not measure what you can build. It measures whether you can sit still, follow directions, and deliver on command. Four years of obedience dressed as education. Musk: “If you’re trying to do something exceptional, you must have evidence of exceptional ability. I don’t consider going to college evidence of exceptional ability.” The system optimizes for average. It rewards the compliant. It certifies the patient. It quietly filters out everyone who refuses to wait for permission. The ones who reshaped the modern world never finished the test. Musk: “Gates is a pretty smart guy, he dropped out. Jobs is pretty smart, he dropped out. Larry Ellison, smart guy, he dropped out.” They did not drop out because it was too hard. They dropped out because the speed limit was too low. The most dangerous thing a university does is convince a generational talent that finishing the syllabus is the achievement. It is not. It is the floor. A degree is a receipt for compliance. The future has never belonged to people who finish their homework. It belongs to the on
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉 retweetledi
Zdenek Vrozina
Zdenek Vrozina@ZdenekVrozina·
This may be one of the more important long COVID papers in a while. A new study in Frontiers in Immunology suggests that COVID can trigger new-onset insulin resistance - and that this may drive abnormal NETosis in neutrophils months after infection🧵
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Rob. F. BOOG 💉+ 💉+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+🦠+💉+💉 retweetledi
Laurence Coiffard
Laurence Coiffard@Cosmetexpert·
Petit thread explicatif pour comprendre pourquoi on ne doit pas appliquer une crème solaire (ou un produit avec filtres UV) quotidiennement - en population générale (pour des situations particulières, c'est au cas par cas) ⤵️
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