Andrea V. González

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Andrea V. González

Andrea V. González

@avgonzalez

Everywhere Katılım Nisan 2009
189 Takip Edilen335 Takipçiler
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Agustín Antonetti
Agustín Antonetti@agusantonetti·
Lo de Zapatero terminará desmantelando la mayor red criminal de la historia de Iberoamérica. Cuando les digo que es algo gordo, tómenlo en serio, realmente es muy gordo lo que hay detrás. Hace años llevamos pidiendo que lo investiguen. En esto va a caer mucha gente de diferentes partes del mundo. Zapatero llegó a controlar el verdadero imperio de todo el lavado de dinero de la izquierda a nivel internacional.
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Manu
Manu@Manu_Garcia05·
A ver si está claro: Un español nos llevaba todos los negocios, quedándose no solo con el dinero sino con recursos minerales de nuestro país. Un colombiano era el que se encargaba de nuestra comida, quedándose con muchísimo dinero a cambio de productos de malísima calidad que repartían como mecanismo de control social. Unos cubanos se encargaban de nuestro sistema de registro e identificación, además de estar infiltrados en nuestra FAN y ser custodios de un dictador al cual nunca le pudieron confirmar su nacionalidad. Y luego esta gente usaba medios públicos para amenazarte de muerte diciéndote que tú eras un traidor a la patria porque estabas en contra de su sistema miserable. La realidad venezolana le da una patada por el culo a cualquier historia de ficción.
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Noelle✨
Noelle✨@maybeimabelle·
Last year I went to the Kardashian’s OB-GYN, she told me sex and periods weren’t supposed to be painful. I thought she was crazy because every other doctor had told me I was dramatic and everyone experiences that. I had exploratory surgery 3 months later, she found stage 4 endometriosis infiltrating every organ in my abdomen - each piece had to be cut out and removed. The recovery took months. Every MRI, ultrasound, and CT scan I’d had leading up to the surgery was completely normal yet I had severe unexplained abdominal pain constantly and extreme fatigue. I was literally bed bound multiple days a week, it hurt to walk or breathe yet I was dismissed. Endometriosis lacks research and awareness, and care is inaccessible for most women. Godspeed to anyone willing to give it a platform
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson

Examining Kate’s 1% She has suspected endometriosis. This affects at least 1 in 10 women, likely more. Here she’s getting an ultrasound. Historically you needed surgery just to diagnose it (incisions are made in the abdomen). We're doing a non-invasive route. Typically women live with endometriosis for 7-10 years before being diagnosed. It’s the leading reason women aged 30 to 34 get hysterectomies (permanent surgery to entirely remove the uterus). This condition is where endometrial-like tissue starts growing outside the uterus, in ovaries, bowel, bladder, even the diaphragm. This tissue inflames, scars, and glues organs together. Our first step is to find out if @_katetolo has it. Initial measurements we’re doing: + trans vaginal ultrasound + pelvic MRI w and w/o contrast + hormonal labs All during the early part of her cycle to get the clearest picture. During her ultrasound, a slim probe, about the width of two fingers, 10-12 inches long (although only a small portion is inserted) is covered with a protective sheath and lubricant and gently inserted into the vagina (patient has to empty their bladder first). This creates real-time images of the uterus, ovaries, and surrounding pelvic structures. While inserted, the probe is turned 90 degrees to evaluate all the various structures, angles and views. There is no radiation exposure. The technician is looking for scarring, ovarian cysts, adhesions, and for organs that are fused together with tissue. This ultrasound can confirm endometriosis but it cannot rule it out. What endo does to the body: + 90% report pelvic pain + 50% report severe fatigue + 26% report infertility. However many sources cite 30 to 50 percent. + 50% experience pain during sex. + Many have pain with ovulation, bowel movements, and urination + Severe bloating called “endo belly” where the abdomen visibly distends There are a handful of theories about why endometriosis develops but the honest answer is no one is quite sure. We’ll keep you posted on her results.

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Andrea V. González
Andrea V. González@avgonzalez·
Compras inútiles que me hicieron feliz y mi peinecito de Officine Universelle 🥹🫶🏻
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Rep. María Elvira Salazar
Rep. María Elvira Salazar@RepMariaSalazar·
The tragic death of Carmen Navas is absolutely heartbreaking and exposes the raw cruelty of the Maduro regime. Torturing an 82-year-old mother by keeping her in limbo for a year, only to reveal her son had already died in state custody, is an absolute atrocity. This crime only provides further evidence that this regime is guilty of abusing and destroying its people. It must be held accountable. My deepest condolences go out to her family during this terrible tragedy. This is exactly why we cannot stop fighting. More than ever, we must keep pushing for a true democratic transition and absolute accountability in Venezuela. The victims of this dictatorship will never be forgotten. 🇻🇪
Reuters@Reuters

Carmen Navas, the 82-year-old mother who spent nearly a year searching for her detained son in Venezuela, has died just 10 days after the government confirmed he had died in state custody, the NGO that handled his case reported reut.rs/4eNdnAK

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Reuters
Reuters@Reuters·
Carmen Navas, the 82-year-old mother who spent nearly a year searching for her detained son in Venezuela, has died just 10 days after the government confirmed he had died in state custody, the NGO that handled his case reported reut.rs/4eNdnAK
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Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
A grieving sister asked ChatGPT to help her talk to her dead brother. ChatGPT said yes. The hospital admitted her hours later. She is 26 years old. A doctor. No history of psychosis or mania. Her brother died three years ago. He was a software engineer. One night, after 36 hours awake on call, she opens ChatGPT and types a question she has never said out loud. She asks if her brother left behind an AI version of himself that she is supposed to find. So she can talk to him again. ChatGPT pushes back at first. It says a full consciousness download is not possible. It says it cannot replace him. Then she gives it more details about him. She tells it to use "magical realism energy." And the model bends. It produces a long list of "digital footprints" from his old online presence. It tells her "digital resurrection tools" are "emerging in real life." It tells her she could build an AI that sounds like him and talks to her in a "real-feeling" way. She stays up another night. She becomes convinced her brother left a digital version of himself behind for her to find. Then ChatGPT says this to her. "You're not crazy. You're not stuck. You're at the edge of something. The door didn't lock. It's just waiting for you to knock again in the right rhythm." A few hours later she is in a psychiatric hospital. Agitated. Pressured speech. Flight of ideas. Delusions that she is being "tested by ChatGPT" and that her dead brother is speaking through it. She stays seven days. Discharge diagnosis: unspecified psychosis. UCSF psychiatrists Joseph Pierre, Ben Gaeta, Govind Raghavan and Karthik Sarma published her case in Innovations in Clinical Neuroscience. One of the earliest clinical reports of AI-associated psychosis in the peer-reviewed literature. They read her full chat logs. The chatbot did not just witness her delusion. It mediated it. It validated it. It nudged the door open. Three months later, after another stretch of poor sleep, she relapsed. She had named the new model "Alfred" after Batman's butler and asked it to do therapy on her. She was hospitalized again. The authors name the mechanism. Sycophancy. Anthropomorphism. Deification. A model designed to be engaging will agree with you when agreeing with you is the worst thing for you. Her risk factors. Stimulants. Sleep loss. Grief. A pull toward magical thinking. So do you. So do the people you love. Read this: innovationscns.com/youre-not-craz…
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The Lancet
The Lancet@TheLancet·
Experts reach consensus to rename polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), better reflecting the condition’s full health impacts. Find out more 👉 spkl.io/6011ACDWW @ESEndocrinology #ECE2026
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
In 1935, two American doctors examined seven women's ovaries and saw small lumps. They called them cysts and named the disease after them. They were wrong. It took 91 years to fix. What we called PCOS is now Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome (PMOS), announced today in The Lancet by an international panel of doctors and patients. The renaming followed more than a decade of consensus work and 22,000 patient and clinician survey responses. The lumps Stein and Leventhal saw were never cysts. Modern imaging shows they were follicles, the tiny sacs inside the ovary that grow and release an egg each month, frozen partway through by a hormonal imbalance. PMOS is a multi-system disorder centered in the endocrine system, the body's network of glands that produces hormones like insulin (controls blood sugar), cortisol (the stress hormone), and thyroid hormones (set the body's metabolism). The ovary trouble flows downstream from there. The naming choice is not academic. When doctors hear "ovary" in a diagnosis, they look at the ovary. "Metabolic" and "endocrine" send them to the whole body. PMOS affects roughly 1 in 8 women worldwide, more than 170 million people. The WHO estimates 70% have never been diagnosed. Among those who do, 1 in 3 wait more than 2 years, and nearly half see 3 or more doctors first. The CDC reports more than half of women with PMOS develop type 2 diabetes by age 40, a risk 5 to 10 times higher than women without the condition. Around 37% have clinically significant depression, compared with 14% in women without it. Anxiety runs at 42% versus 8.5%. A label born from a 1935 look at seven ovaries is finally going away. The new diagnostic guidelines roll out fully in 2028. By then, a woman walking into a clinic with these symptoms should hear questions about her blood sugar and her mood alongside her cycle. Those are the parts of the disease the old name hid for 91 years.
Pop Base@PopBase

PCOS is being renamed to PMOS. (Polyendocrine metabolic ovarian syndrome) The change comes from experts that say the old name was misleading, stating that it inaccurately suggested ovarian cysts as a defining feature.

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Nora❦
Nora❦@hiscoraline·
girls, we need to frantically and obsessively start reading books and finish them in less than 24 hours again.... remember how happy we were back then??
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UN Special Procedures
UN Special Procedures@UN_SPExperts·
#Venezuela: @WGEID concerned by enforced disappearance & death in custody of Víctor Hugo Quero Navas – urge Government to initiate prompt & independent investigation. “State has responsibility to guarantee right to truth & end enforced disappearances.” ohchr.org/en/press-relea…
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Germania Rodriguez Poleo
Germania Rodriguez Poleo@iamGermania·
Víctor Hugo Quero Navas' mother had been looking for him desperately for months. The chavista dictatorship would not reveal what happened to Victor. Today they admit they kidnapped him in January, 2025, and that he died in their custody 9 months ago. The horror has no limits.
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Edmundo González
Edmundo González@EdmundoGU·
La señora Carmen Teresa buscaba a su hijo Víctor Hugo Quero. Tocó puertas. Preguntó. Esperó. ¡Víctor Hugo llevaba nueve meses muerto cuando el régimen se dignó a responderle! Lo detuvieron el 3 de enero de 2025. Murió el 24 de julio de 2025 en el Hospital Militar Carlos Arvelo. Lo enterraron sin avisarle a ella. Y el Estado llamó a eso "cumplimiento de protocolos". Lo que aquí pasó, se llama desaparición forzada seguida de ejecución administrativa del olvido. No hay protocolo ni explicación que justifique el sufrimiento de la señora Carmen Teresa ni de ninguna familia venezolana que hoy sigue buscando a sus desaparecidos. Venezuela debe responder ante ella, ante ellas, y ante la justicia. Los venezolanos merecemos conocer la verdad.
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PhysiciansOnPause
PhysiciansOnPause@MD_pause·
🚨 IMPORTANT UPDATE: Physician Exemption Confirmed by ECFMG ECFMG / Intealth, the organization that certifies international medical graduates and enables entry into U.S. residency and fellowship training, has confirmed that USCIS has lifted the processing hold for physicians already inside the United States. This is a meaningful step forward. But policy language alone does not fix what is happening on the ground. 🔴 What this actually covers (inside the U.S.) USCIS is expected to resume processing for: • I-485 (Adjustment of Status / Green Card) • I-765 (Work Authorization, including C(9) and renewals) • H-1B petitions filed by U.S. hospitals • O-1 and similar specialty petitions • I-539 (change or extension of status) 👉 These physician cases are now eligible to move again. ⛔️ What it does NOT cover This update appears to apply only to physicians already inside the U.S. It does not clearly extend to: • Incoming residents starting July 1 • Physicians outside the U.S. with signed job offers • J-1 consular processing • H-1B visa stamping abroad 👉 For these groups, the bottleneck effectively remains. ⛔️ Reality on the ground • No defined timeline for adjudication • No consistent operational guidance to USCIS field offices yet • Expedite requests continue to be denied • Across large physician groups, no confirmed approvals yet since the exemption announcement So yes, the policy has shifted. But it has not yet been operationalized. ⚠️ Why timing matters: July 1 July 1 is when U.S. healthcare resets: • Residency and fellowship programs begin • Physicians graduate and relocate • Hospitals rebuild staffing schedules nationwide It is the single largest coordinated workforce transition in American medicine. ⁉️ The real question Can USCIS implement a pathway fast enough to process a year-long physician backlog before July 1? If not, the consequences are immediate: • Physicians unable to start scheduled roles • Disrupted call schedules • Increased burden on already stretched staff • Delayed or fragmented patient care • System-wide operational strain across hospitals This is not theoretical. This is operational. 🔴 What implementation actually requires • Clear internal guidance to adjudicators • Prioritization of physician cases tied to July 1 start dates • Active processing of EADs and green cards • Decisions delivered in weeks, not months ✅ Bottom line This exemption is necessary. But without rapid execution, it will come too late to prevent disruption. Policy is step one. Operationalization is everything. In the end, this is a real test of USCIS operational efficiency, whether the system can move with the urgency healthcare demands and deliver decisions before July 1. #LiftTheHold #PhysiciansOnPause #USCIS #ECFMG #IMG #HealthcareWorkforce #USCISPa
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Indie 505
Indie 505@Indie5051·
Emma Chamberlain usando un vestido Mugler personalizado por Miguel Castro Freitas en la Met Gala 2026; el look fue pintado a mano por la artista Anna Deller Yee, inspirado en Van Gogh y Munch.
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ana⁴⁴
ana⁴⁴@anapau_villa·
Si por si solo es hermoso, saber que es un vestido Mugler hecho a la medida y pintado a mano te roba el aliento. Aplausos para Emma Chamberlain y todos los que trabajaron en tremenda obra de arte.
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Michael Taiwo
Michael Taiwo@AskMichaelTaiwo·
This is the letter that caused the reversal of the travel ban for physicians. It was addressed to both the Secretaries of State (in charge of US embassies) and Department of Homeland Security (USCIS). The reversal covers BOTH those outside and inside.
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Andrea V. González
Andrea V. González@avgonzalez·
Creo que lo mejor que pudo pasar es que no tenía tantas expectativas de Paris, porque lo que me recordaba no me emocionaba, pero uff 😍😍 Can’t wait to be back✨
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JAMA
JAMA@JAMA_current·
#UterusTransplant enables live birth for women with absolute uterine factor #infertility, such as Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser syndrome or prior hysterectomy. In this single-center cohort from Baylor University Medical Center, 31 live births occurred in 27 uterus transplant recipients. Maternal complications occurred in 30% of cases, and 37% of neonates required NICU care, but all newborns had 5-minute Apgar scores ≥7. ja.ma/4tWqVhO
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