Belq Trump executive order on pharmaceutical regulations a beautiful thing, trade adviser says
A 39-year-old surfer died after a shark encounter in Maui on Saturday, officials in Hawaii said.The man encountered the shark in Paia Bay around 11:10 a.m. local time, the Maui Fire Department said. Ocean Safety officers transported the wounded man to shore via a jet ski, according to the County of Maui Facebook page. He received treatment on the shore before being taken to a hospital, where he died.The man has not yet been publicly identified. Baldwin Beach Park and Lower P 257; ia Park were closed after the deadly encounter, and shark warning signs were posted
stanley cup from Tavares Bay to Baby Beach, authorities said.Saturday s attack was the only deadly shark encounter in Hawaii in 2023, though there have been more than a half dozen incidents involving sharks in Hawaii this year, according to the state s Department of Land and Natural Resources. On Dec. 8 last year, a snorkeler die
stanley cup d in a shark attack. Around 40 species of sharks live in the waters around Hawaii, but only about a dozen of the more than 300 species of sharks in the world have been involved in attacks on humans, according to the National Oceanic and A
stanley cup tmospheric Administration. Tiger sharks are considered the most dangerous shark species in Hawaiian waters, according to the Department of Land and Natural Resources.Officials have not specified the type of shark involved in Saturday s attack.In 2022, Florida accounted for 39% of unprovoked attacks in the U.S., with New York Aunw Facebook bans Trump for at least two years
In 2013, Dr. Judy Robinson was the chief of OB-GYN care at Methodist Hospital, the largest hospital in Indiana, and also held the same title at HealthNet clinics in the state, catering to a mostly underserved community. Dr. Robinson was shocked at the unusually large number of high-risk pregnancies, some of which resulted in tragic outcomes -- for either the mothers or their newborns. As she prodded for answers, she says she was stunned
af1 to find that midwives had been given permission by management to oversee high-risk pregnancies without OB-GYN supervision. Whistleblower host Alex Ferrer, a police officer-turned-lawyer-turned judge, explores Dr. Robinson s extraordinary journey of courage and truth in Doctors vs Midwives: Dangerous Deliveries airing Friday at 8/7c on CBS.Dr. Robinson has brought some 3,000 babies into the world in a career spanning over 30 years. I get to participate in the most important day of a person s life - the birth of their baby, she told Ferrer. When I was in private practice, I delivered people s second, third babies. But Dr. Robinson felt unfulfilled in her suburban private practice. She wanted to do more for those with less. So, she took a position at HealthNet clinics ndash; then affiliate
jordan d with Methodist Hospital ndash; which catered to low-income, disadvantaged women.She said, I feel like I m ndash; I m making a difference. Typically, the
af1 patients that I would see were very high risk. They had hellip; multiple medical problems assoc