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Athletixs

Athletixs

@athletixs

Marlow, South East Katılım Ağustos 2017
162 Takip Edilen25 Takipçiler
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Our World in Data
Our World in Data@OurWorldInData·
It’s a common misconception that life expectancy has increased only because fewer children die. Historical mortality records show that adults today also live much longer than adults in the past. It’s true that child mortality rates were much higher in the past, and their decline has greatly improved overall life expectancy. But in recent decades, improvements in survival at older ages have been even more important. The chart shows the period life expectancy in France for people of different ages. This measures how long someone at each of those ages would live, on average, if they experienced the death rates recorded in that year. As you can see, life expectancy in France has risen at every age. In 1816, someone who had reached the age of 10 could expect to live to 57. By 2023, this had increased to 84. For those aged 65, it rose from 76 in 1816 to 87 in 2023. The data for many other countries shows the same. This remarkable shift is the result of advances in medicine, public health, and living standards.
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RustySpark
RustySpark@Rustyspark01·
@DrNeilStone She was actually an air stewardess. As her couple of years nursing in the 1980's make her the world's authority on anything medical, she probably has similar views about her piloting expertise. She's probably on a pilots FB group, lecturing them about how gravity is a hoax 😂
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Neil Stone
Neil Stone@DrNeilStone·
Apparently my medical degree is an "indoctrination certificate" Would you say the same about a pilot's flying licence?
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Doctor Who
Doctor Who@bbcdoctorwho·
After almost 60 years, two restored episodes of THE DALEKS' MASTER PLAN are now streaming! 📺 🇬🇧 In the UK? Watch on BBC iPlayer 🇺🇸 In the US? Watch on the Doctor Who Classic YouTube channel
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Athletixs
Athletixs@athletixs·
@CartlandDavid @KateShemirani Because it was impossible to separate the impact of Kate’s influence from the network of Kate’s friends who surrounded Paloma and gave her the same bad advice that fruit juices and coffee enemas would cure her! The photo above is the part of the coroners report that explains it
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Dr Dave Cartland BMedSc MBChB Ex-MRCGP
Keep going @KateShemirani what they have put you through at a time of grief is abhorrent.
Kate Shemirani@KateShemirani

Justice must be based on evidence, not narrative. For almost two years I have been publicly blamed and portrayed in a certain way, received death threats while at the same time I was asking for clinical records, monitor data, investigation reports and disclosure documents following the death of my beloved daughter Paloma Scarlet Shemirani. This case involved a Serious Incident, a police investigation, intensive care admission and a Coroner’s Inquest. In such circumstances, clinical records, monitor data and investigation evidence are critically important and should be preserved and reviewed as part of any investigation. Throughout this process I did not go quiet because I knew that records, timelines and documents would eventually matter more than headlines, opinions or media narratives. What is now becoming increasingly clear is that there are serious unanswered questions regarding the retention, preservation and disclosure of primary physiological monitor data and investigation materials. All of the clinical material that we do now have, including the 999 call with heart beat clearly audible throughout, ECGs, blood results, troponin levels, blood gases, monitor figures, DICOM scan files indicating massive reduction in volume of the mediastinal mss , autopsy findings of no evidence of old or new infarct and eyewitness accounts, does not support a any cardiac arrest prior to emergency intervention. Instead, the clinical picture and subsequent deterioration are more consistent with iatrogenic drug-induced and clinical intervention injury following emergency treatment. This is not a matter of opinion or media narrative. This is a matter of records, data, timelines and investigation integrity. For a long time I have asked the same simple question; What primary monitor data existed, who reviewed it during the Serious Incident investigation and inquest preparation, and where is that data now? That question still has not been properly answered. This has never been about arguments, blame or publicity. It has always been about records, evidence and what actually happened. I did not go quiet because the truth is found in documents, data and timelines not in headlines. Today it was Paloma. Who is next? Justice must be based on evidence, not narrative. I will have justice. @DailyMail @NickFagge1 @BBCBreaking @mariannaspring @UnityNewsNet @CartlandDavid @DaveAtherton20 @SECAmbulance @dancody79 @NHSEngland @SECAmb_APP @airambulancekss @kiwiben89

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Athletixs
Athletixs@athletixs·
@CartlandDavid @KateShemirani I think that if Kate Shemirani had encouraged Paloma to have chemotherapy for her lymphoma then there’s an 80% chance her daughter would be alive and well. As did the coroner, which is why Kate Shemirani was judged to have significantly contributed to Paloma’s death
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OpenVAET.info
OpenVAET.info@open_vaet·
OpenVAET.info@open_vaet

Together with my beloved colleagues - and with the invaluable help of @BornFree_isms - we spent two weeks of our lives wading through the mythomania and insanity of @MakisMedicine, so you don’t have to ! Read how everything he ever told you is false ⤵️ blog.openvaet.info/p/william-maki…

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LA🇨🇦
LA🇨🇦@BornFree_isms·
An online persona that never existed in reality…. The truth lies in years of records of misconduct and those scourged by @MakisMedicine. A disturbing pattern of pathological deviant behavior- including zoophilia— for which there is no place in society. openvaet.info/p/william-maki…
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AW
AW@AthleticsWeekly·
A recap of Keely Hodgkinson's rather incredible indoor season 🌪️ ✅ World indoor 800m champion ✅ Ran a championships record (1:55.30) ✅ Set a world indoor 800m record (1:54.87) ✅ Produced an outright PB in the 400m (51.49) ✅ Ran the fastest leg of anyone in the world indoor women's 4x400m relay final (50.10) ✅ Set what was then a NR in Birmingham (1:56.33)
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Those wheels you’re looking at are 0.75 millimeters thick. That’s half the thickness of a US dime. Each one was carved from a single block of aluminum, and NASA sent six of them to Mars knowing they’d eventually shred. Curiosity was built for a 2-year mission. It landed in August 2012, and by December that year NASA had already extended the mission indefinitely. Thirteen years and 35.5 kilometers later, the rover is still going, but the wheels started cracking just 14 months in. The damage came faster than anyone at JPL predicted. Sharp embedded rocks were punching straight through the skin between the treads. So NASA assembled a Wheel Wear Tiger Team (a crisis problem-solving tradition that goes back to Apollo 13) and got to work. In 2017, they uploaded a traction control algorithm from Earth that adjusts each wheel’s speed in real time based on the terrain, reducing force on the front wheels by 20%. They rerouted the rover to softer ground and started driving backward when possible, because pulling wheels over rocks produces less force than pushing them into rocks. The wildest part: if enough treads snap off, Curiosity is designed to find a sharp rock on Mars and use it to deliberately rip out the damaged inner section of its own wheel. JPL tested this on a replica rover and found Curiosity can keep driving on just the outer third. They predict this won’t be needed until around 2034. Every 1,000 meters, the rover pulls over and uses the camera on its robotic arm to photograph its own wheels so engineers on Earth can count every crack. Each wheel also has tiny holes that spell “JPL” in Morse code, which Curiosity uses to measure distance by photographing its own tracks in the dirt. These photos directly changed the next rover. When NASA built Perseverance, engineers 3D-printed about 70 different tread designs before landing on 48 curved treads instead of Curiosity’s 24, with thicker skin. They tested the new wheels over 60 kilometers and got zero damage by Curiosity’s original failure definition. “A boring graph with no data on it,” as one JPL engineer put it. A $2.5 billion machine doing self-surgery with rocks on another planet because the mission outlasted its design by 6x.
Curiosity@CuriosityonX

【Breaking 🚨】 Curiosity wheels taken yesterday, showing the damages caused during the 13 years it has been on the Red Planet

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CloudiaMarks
CloudiaMarks@CloudiaSkies82·
The long awaited ‘evidence’ shared by struck off nurse and skier/inventor. They’ve ’back drawn’ the info from the data they have (no idea what this means) And Paloma’s troponin levels on admission to hospital were ‘only’ 55 ….. 😬
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British Athletics
British Athletics@BritAthletics·
It's gold for Georgia Hunter-Bell 🥇 Judged to perfection and she takes the win over 1500m in a world-leading 3:58.53 💪 #WorldIndoorChamps
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Matt Lawton
Matt Lawton@Lawton_Times·
That’s the second fastest time in history from Keely Hodgkinson; slower only than her own world indoor record. Some way to win what is actually her first world title.
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Athletixs
Athletixs@athletixs·
@Poppyjuice @CloudiaSkies82 @KateShemirani Having scrolled through everything on Sons of Liberty, I suspect this wasn’t meant to be put out. Looks like an AI attempt to fake the code summary but it couldn’t handle generating text?? Even top right image is slightly different (times plus extra adrenaline doses)
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Poppyjuice
Poppyjuice@Poppyjuice·
@athletixs @CloudiaSkies82 @KateShemirani But ECGs would only have been acquired whilst there was a sustained output. So tell you nothing about what was going on prior to ROSC. But she doesn't explain this. Just uses lots of technobabble to mask up the fact that she's talking dribbling bollocks.
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Athletixs
Athletixs@athletixs·
@CloudiaSkies82 @Poppyjuice @KateShemirani I think that they wanted the raw data from the device thinking it would be more detailed, but not all ambulance services download that. Presumably they also have a more detailed printout that includes ECG snapshots, unless this has been made in AI/photoshop.
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CloudiaMarks
CloudiaMarks@CloudiaSkies82·
@Poppyjuice @athletixs @KateShemirani Kate said that the lifepak printouts weren’t available; but they had got the ‘figures’ the info produced, and they’d been able to ‘back draw’ the charts …. I’m not entirely sure what that means, but it sounds like they’ve created the pictorial representation themselves.
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Athletixs
Athletixs@athletixs·
@CloudiaSkies82 @Poppyjuice @KateShemirani The other odd bit is the SpO2 and pleth traces. It’s hard to work out what these are meant to be as SpO2 doesn’t seem to have been picked up on the lifepak 15. After ROSC, monitoring was switched to the smaller air ambulance monitor as Paloma was moved to the ambulance
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CloudiaMarks
CloudiaMarks@CloudiaSkies82·
@Poppyjuice @athletixs @KateShemirani This makes sense, Thank you for taking the time! There’s a very clear timeline for poor Paloma that progressed exactly as expected, even to us lay-people. I don’t think Kate recognises her own incompetence.
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