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RanandyRonee

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Rwdd Proposed San Diego County plan to provide legal aid for migrants
 Researchers at Stanford Medicine are using virtual reality to help those who suffer from hoarding disorder.Carolyn Rodriguez and her team created a virtual home using scans of participants actual possessions. These virtual environments were then loaded into a VR headset. They can actually practice letting go of items, and this can be a stepping stone to rea stanley cup l-life discarding,  sai gourde stanley d Rodriguez, a professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine and director of the Hoarding Disorders Research Program. Individuals with hoarding disorder have difficulty letting go of their possessions. Letting go can range from discarding, donating, recycling, and that act of parting with their possessions causes them to have a lot of distress,  she said.  @scrippsnews Researchers at Stanford University have developed a way to help those suffering from  HoardingDisorder, by recreating their belongings using  VirtualReality. This way, users can practice throwing away items virtually before doing the real thing.  research  news 鈾?original sound - Scripps News   An estimated 2% to 6% of the population suffers from hoarding disorder,according to the International OCD Foundation.Symptoms are almost three times more common in older adult stanley canada s.Some symptoms of hoarding disorder include inability to get rid of possessions, extreme stress when attempting to throw out items, and not trusting others to touch your possessions,according to the Cleveland Clinic. The VR sessions were well-tolerated and partici Vbew San Diego OBGYN weighs in on over-the-counter birth control
 FORT MEADE, Fla. 鈥?The Polk County Sheriff s Office in Florida is conducting a death investigation after a                             man s body was found i stanley website n a canal partially in the mouth of an alligator                         on Thursday.  Deputies say the body of 45-year-old Michael Ford II was found around 7:30 a.m. in the water west of Fort Meade. They say a nearly 12-foot-long, 449-pound alligator had part of Ford s body in its mouth.                                                     stanley usa                                                                                  The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is assisting the sheriff s office in the investigation. An FWC trapper captured and killed the alligator. Deputies announced  Saturday that one of Ford s hands and feet were found in the alligator s stomach during a necropsy. An autopsy showed he apparently died by drowning, but deputies say a final cause of death is pending toxicology results. The final autopsy report will also determine if the alligator played a role in Ford s death, according to FWC.                                                                                                                                     Ford had lacerations and other injuries caused by the gator stanley ca , according to deputies. Ford s family and friends said they had not heard from him since June 23. The investigation is ongoing.             This story was originally published on                             WFTS