david morrison 🇺🇦

12.1K posts

david morrison 🇺🇦

david morrison 🇺🇦

@dcm50

healthcare nerd, photographer , former policy on pandemic influenza policy

london uk Entrou em Şubat 2009
5.2K Seguindo838 Seguidores
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Gareth Harney
Gareth Harney@OptimoPrincipi·
11) I love this delightful detail where the curtain screen is flung over, revealing some of the green painted wall underneath. So playful and creative. Again for emphasis, you almost never see decoration from inside any Roman temple, let alone a Republican one!
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TheRealThelmaJohnson
TheRealThelmaJohnson@TheRealThelmaJ1·
Elon has me throttled harder than Roger Stone in a strip club parking lot, you all. I'm going to ease off some and see if he loosens the leash. Love you all.
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Paul Rees. ex Rucksack.
Paul Rees. ex Rucksack.@HannahIamthest1·
A truck loaded with thousands of copies of Roget's Thesaurus spilled its load leaving New York. Witnesses were stunned, startled, aghast, stupefied, confused, shocked, rattled, paralyzed, dazed, bewildered, surprised, dumbfounded, flabbergasted, confounded, astonished, and numbed.
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
Your cat is leaving a chemical on your face. Its name is F4. The translation is “you’re family,” and cats only leave it on people and animals they trust. F4 was identified in 1998 by a French researcher named Patrick Pageat. Pageat found five different chemicals coming out of glands on a cat’s cheeks, chin, and forehead, and labeled them F1 through F5. F2 has to do with mating. F3 is for territory, and cats use it to mark furniture and door frames. (You can buy a synthetic version of F3 at any pet store, sold under the brand name Feliway.) F4 is the social one. The face-rub itself has its own name too. Scientists call it bunting when face hits face, and allorubbing when the whole body gets involved. F4 builds what researchers call a colony scent. In a wild cat colony, the cats rub against each other constantly until they all smell the same. The shared smell works like a family ID. Cats with the colony scent don’t fight each other. Cats without it get treated like intruders. A study of feral cats at Church Farm, run by biologist David Macdonald, found this rubbing made up 15.7% of all social interactions in the colony. Cats are picky about who gets F4. They reserve bunting for individuals they bond with. A stranger walking in won’t get bunted, even if they try to pet the cat. A new cat being introduced to the home won’t get bunted either. Furniture and walls get F3, the territory chemical, not the social one. Bunting comes out only for the social bond. When your cat plows its face into yours, you’ve been chemically classified as family. The behavior comes from kittenhood. Kittens rub their faces on their mom as a greeting and as a way to beg for food. Adult cats keep the move and redirect it at the people and animals they bond with. When a cat rubs its face on yours, it’s doing the same thing it used to do to its mother. In feral colonies, this rubbing flows in one direction, and the direction reveals status. Cats on the edges of the group rub toward cats at the center. Lower-status cats rub toward higher-status ones. Kittens rub toward the adults that raised them. The pattern is consistent enough that researchers use it to read social status in the colony. So when your cat plows its face into yours, the gesture also says “you’re the one with the food and the warm bed.”
고양이 트윗 번역계猫ポスト翻訳垢🐱@nihongowacaran

이것이 고양이의 애정 표현이다

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Jon Douglas
Jon Douglas@atranscendedman·
Researchers show TMPRSS2 cuts the SARS-CoV-2 spike only after it shifts shape, triggering membrane fusion and entry, while antibodies that block this cut can stop infection and inspire vaccine design. nature.com/articles/s4159…
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LX
LX@LXSummer1·
Krasnodar Krai, Russia 🛢️🔥 More footage of the burning oil refinery! In total, 252 people and 62 units of equipment are involved in the fire extinguishing, mainly the forces of the Russian Emergencies Ministry, local channels report.
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Financial Times
America’s special relationship is ‘probably Israel’, says UK ambassador to US ft.trib.al/cDNNmjU
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Dr. M.F. Khan
Dr. M.F. Khan@Dr_TheHistories·
A vibrant moment in rural Rajasthan, India, likely during the 1980s... 🇮🇳 A family or group of individuals are taking a tea break at a small outdoor establishment. The men are wearing colorful turbans, a distinct cultural marker of the region. This scene is characteristic of work by renowned documentary photographers capturing Indian life during that era.  © Reddit #drthehistories
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Dr Dan Goyal
Dr Dan Goyal@danielgoyal·
For the last three years the NHS (England) have run at 93% bed occupancy. This is the worst in the history of the NHS It is the worst in the entire OCED We also have 40% fewer beds than the OCED average Again, for the cheap seats: the NHS is too small!
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Joni Askola
Joni Askola@joni_askola·
European countries need to wake up and fix their economic and social policies. If people cannot afford to live, they will vote for anyone promising to burn the system down. We either deliver real stability and prosperity, or we hand the continent over to insane populists
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Prognostic Chats
Prognostic Chats@PrognosticChats·
Infection control manager who got rid of masking & staff + admission testing, checking back to see the last time the ward was Covid free
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Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
Today marks the 40th anniversary of the Chornobyl disaster at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant. It was the largest man-made disaster in human history.
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Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en

Today is the 40th anniversary of the greatest technological disaster of the 20th century - the explosion at Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant. This catastrophe could have had still much more disastrous global impact had it not been a sacrifice of the first responders. At 1:23 a.m., in 1986, two explosions destroyed the fourth power unit of the station. The reactor was left exposed, and flames, smoke, and radioactive materials were released into the atmosphere. At that moment, no one yet understood the full scale of the tragedy. Within minutes, the first firefighting crews from Prypyat and Chornobyl arrived at the plant, led by Lieutenants Vladimir Pravik and Viktor Kibenok. Later, the chief of the unit, Leonid Telyatnikov, joined the firefighting efforts. They faced a task the significance of which would only become clear later: to prevent the fire from spreading to the adjacent third power unit. Had the fire spread further, the consequences for Ukraine and the whole of Europe could have been incomparably worse. The firefighters had no special radiation suits and no accurate data on radiation levels among the scorching fragments of graphite and metal. All they had were canvas uniforms, helmets, and water hoses. The firefighters worked almost blindly. They climbed external ladders to the roof, laid out hoses, sprayed water, and extinguished dozens of fire hotspots. These hours would later be called a feat of heroism. For them, however, it was simply a job that had to be done at any cost. They did not know they were already receiving lethal doses of radiation. By morning, the fire was contained. Those few hours were decisive. They provided the opportunity to begin the further cleanup of the accident and to prevent a much more catastrophic scenario. In the first hours after the accident, 28 firefighters fought the reactor that night. Six of them: Pravik, Kibenok, Ignatenko, Vashchuk, Tishura, and Titenok - received doses incompatible with life. They were buried in sealed zinc coffins under concrete slabs. Following them, thousands of liquidators arrived in Chornobyl - engineers, military personnel, medics, and miners. They cleared the contaminated territory, dropped sand and boron from helicopters, and built a sarcophagus over the destroyed reactor. But it was those very first hours that determined whether the world would have time for that struggle. On the 10th anniversary of the tragedy, a monument titled "To Those Who Saved the World" was installed in Chornobyl in honor of the accident's liquidators. This is no exaggeration. Were it not for their heroism, the radioactive cloud that spread to the west and northwest could have been thousands of times denser. The consequences were felt even in the United States, but a catastrophe of planetary scale was avoided only thanks to the self-sacrifice of those first liquidators. Forty years later, Chornobyl remains a reminder of the price of technological errors and human responsibility - but also a reminder of the people who were the first to face the fire at the nuclear plant and who did everything in their power to ensure the disaster did not become even worse.

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Euromaidan Press
Euromaidan Press@EuromaidanPress·
Jeffrey Stephaniuk's Chornobyl Dictionary was prepared for a short course on the nuclear disaster and published on the occasion of a speaking tour by the editor of Ukraine's ecological newspaper Zelenyi Svit. It is a reference — alphabetical, precise, sourced, covering everything from the technical sequence of the explosion to the names of officials who lied, the villages that weren't evacuated. It also includes the doctors who were silenced and the radiation norms that were quietly raised so fewer people would have to be moved. What makes it remarkable is what it preserves: the texture of institutional denial in real time euromaidanpress.com/2015/04/27/the…
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Tom Burgis
Tom Burgis@tomburgis·
A mystery moneyman's donations could carry Nigel Farage to power. He lives in Thailand and is “intensely private”. I’ve spent months investigating who he is, what he wants and his crypto fortune. Here, for the first time, is the story of Chris Harborne theguardian.com/politics/2026/…
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Artur Nadolny
Artur Nadolny@ArturNadol7566·
THE INSPECTOR WHO INSPECTED TOO HONESTLY Dr Shyam Kumar @ukorthopod is an orthopaedic surgeon. A good one. Unblemished record. So the Care Quality Commission (@CareQualityComm) recruited him as a part-time inspector to help hold NHS hospitals to account. He took the job seriously. Too seriously, it turns out. Between 2015 and 2019 he raised concerns about botched hospital inspections, a bullying culture inside the CQC itself, and a surgeon at Morecambe Bay whose hip replacement on an elderly patient left her unable to walk. He asked the CQC to review that surgeon's cases. He was told the trust did not want to do so for reputational reasons. A Royal College of Surgeons review later found problems with 26 out of 46 of that surgeon's operations. The CQC's response to Kumar? They called his concerns fanciful. They dug for dirt on him. Then they sacked him. In September 2022 a Manchester Employment Tribunal ruled he had been unfairly dismissed. The tribunal found his safety disclosures had directly influenced the decision to get rid of him. The judgment noted that CQC officials spent their energy gunning him down rather than focusing on patient safety. He was awarded £23,000 for injury to feelings. Not damages for a ruined career. Not accountability for the officials who ran the smear operation. Just £23,000 and a declaration. The CQC issued a statement saying it had learnt from the case and improved its processes. A decade earlier it said exactly the same thing after the Mid Staffordshire Public Inquiry found it had victimised its own whistleblowers then too. The system that was built to protect patients ran a seven-year campaign against the man raising the alarm. Then it said sorry and carried on. Source: @BBCNews, The Guardian, BMJ, Westminster Confidential (@davidhencke)
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Dr Haseena Wazir
Dr Haseena Wazir@DrHWazir·
Almost half of UK hospitals are reportedly deploying advanced practitioners to cover gaps in doctors’ rotas. That should raise serious questions about NHS workforce planning. This is not about individual staff. It is about how roles are being used within an increasingly stretched system. The problem is doctor substitution being normalised as a workforce workaround. Nearly 40,000 doctors applied for around 10,000 NHS speciality training jobs in 2025. Thousands of future GPs and Consultants turned away due to Government caps. And instead of fixing that bottleneck, Wes Streeting and Keir Starmer cut 1,000 extra specialist training posts from the NHS pipeline. Doctors are being blocked from training while hospitals are actively trying to cover doctor rota gaps. That is not good workforce planning. Patients and staff deserve properly staffed medical teams, not substitution dressed up as a solution. theguardian.com/society/2026/a…
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