Monday, September 04, 2023

From Jenna Orkin The Albanian town that TikTok emptied Juvenile Crimes - Chapter 12 (part 2 of 2) Striving For Success, Destined for Disappointment - Wesley T. Miller Big Farms and Flawless Fries Are Gulping Water in the Land of 10,000 Lakes Home insurers cut natural disasters from policies as climate risks grow The endless battle to banish the world’s most notorious stalker website The Transformative, Alarming Power of Gene Editing Chinese nationals posing as tourists have accessed US military bases and other sensitive sites: report ST is 19 years old. Despite a school career in mainstream education where she was studying for her A levels, she has spent the past year as a patient in an intensive care unit run by the Hospital Trust which brings this application. She has a rare mitochondrial disorder which is a progressively degenerative disease. According to the expert1 evidence which is before the court, there is no cure which might enable ST to resume her life outside the clinical setting of the intensive care unit. She is mechanically ventilated through a tracheostomy. She is fed through a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy tube and is currently undergoing regular haemodialysis. Her disease has resulted in a number of related health problems including impaired sight and hearing loss, chronic muscle weakness, bone disease and chronic damage to her kidneys and lungs. 2. The collective view of her treating hospital clinicians is that ST is now in, or fast approaching, the final stage of her life. In February this year, as her condition appeared to worsen, the Trust issued these proceedings to determine the validity of a lasting power of attorney which ST had apparently signed some three months earlier and, specifically, to seek declarations in relation to her capacity and her future medical treatment. Macron says enforcement of abaya ban in French school will be ‘uncompromising’ Inside the Race to Kill Lantern Flies

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