
EXCLUSIVE Shocking 'link' between Bryan Kohberger and Luigi Mangione revealed... and doctors say that's not even worst part
Known as visual snow syndrome (VSS), experts say the condition leaves sufferers seeing the world through a haze like they are using a 'broken television', and struggling to hold down a job, relationship or even converse with loved ones.
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Daily Mail
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
10m Americans in multiple US states told to shut windows TODAY as toxic chemicals spark air quality emergency
Officials have issued an air quality alert for around 10 million Americans, telling them to minimize outdoor activities and shut all windows on Tuesday. A National Weather Service (NWS) map shows parts of Minnesota, Michigan, Illinois, New York, Vermont, Indiana and Maine are under advisories until midnight as wildfire smoke from Canada drifts into the US. The alerts stem from elevated levels of ground-level ozone and fine particulates, prompting precautionary measures. In Upstate New York, Vermont, and Maine, residents are advised to limit strenuous outdoor physical activity to mitigate health risks, according to the New York State Department of Health. The NWS has specifically warned residents in northeast Minnesota, eastern Michigan, northeast Illinois and northwest Indiana to keep windows closed overnight to prevent smoke infiltration. Current advisories indicate that ozone levels are not expected to reach 'dangerous' levels (AQI 201 or higher) in any affected region. The highest ozone-related concern is in Michigan's St. Clair to Monroe counties and New York's Niagara to Southern Erie counties, where levels are in the 'Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups' range (AQI 101-150). Other regions are primarily under fine particulate alerts, with no ozone warnings suggesting dangerous conditions, which are small enough to penetrate deep into the lungs and affect the heart. Last week, six US lawmakers wrote to Canada's ambassador, complaining that wildfire smoke drifting south was making it hard for Americans to enjoy the summer. In response, the premier of Manitoba accused them of 'trivializing' a deadly crisis. The fires continue to spread across thousands of acres. May and June were especially destructive in western Canada, where about 30,000 people were forced to evacuate in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, prompting states of emergency in both provinces. In eastern Canada, a wildfire that ignited Monday on Newfoundland's Bonavista Peninsula doubled in size overnight, destroying several cabins near Chance Harbour, according to CBC News. The smoke is now crossing the US border, blanketing millions of Americans. Air quality alerts are in place until 11pm ET several New York counties, including Niagara, Orleans, Monroe, Wayne, Northern Cayuga, Oswego, Jefferson, Northern Erie, Genesee, Wyoming, Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and South Erie. The Air Quality Index (AQI) is expected to exceed 101, signaling potential health risks. Separately, an advisory for fine particulates is active until midnight in Lewis, Livingston, Ontario, and Allegany, including cities such as Lowville, Geneseo, Canandaigua, and Wellsville. Similar alerts for fine particulates, with AQI levels predicted above 100, are in effect from 10 AM to midnight in regions including Northern St. Lawrence, Franklin, Clinton, Essex, and St. Lawrence counties. Northern Herkimer, Hamilton, and Warren counties, including Old Forge and Glens Falls, are also under a fine particulate advisory with the same timeframe. 'When pollution levels are New York State Department of Health recommends that individuals consider limiting strenuous outdoor physical activity to reduce the risk of adverse health effects,' 'People who may be especially sensitive to the effects of elevated levels of pollutants include the very young and those with pre-existing respiratory problems such as asthma or heart disease. 'Those with symptoms should consider consulting their personal physician.' In Michigan, St Clair, Livingston, Oakland, Macomb, Washtenaw, Wayne, and Monroe counties, including cities like Port Huron, Pontiac, Detroit and Ann Arbor are under advisories. However, a statewide Air Quality Alert for fine particulate matter put in place on Monday remains in effect. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency has issued air quality alerts for northern Minnesota, affecting millions of residents. The alerts cover northeast and northwest/north central Minnesota, with varying levels of concern based on the Air Quality Index (AQI), including counties like Koochiching, St. Louis, Cook, Lake, and Itasca, and cities such as International Falls, Ely, Duluth, Hibbing, and Grand Marais 'Light winds will allow existing wildfire smoke across northern Minnesota to linger into this evening and overnight,' the NWS said. 'Concentrations are expected to be highest along and near the shores of Lake Superior. An additional round of heavy surface smoke from wildfires across southern Canada is expected to transport into northern Minnesota on Tuesday. In Illinois, the Air Pollution Action Day covers McHenry, Lake, Kane, DuPage, Kendall, Grundy, Northern Cook, Central Cook, Southern Cook, Northern Will, Southern Will, and Eastern Will counties. Similarly, northwest Indiana's Air Quality Action Day includes Lake, Porter, Newton, and Jasper counties, encompassing Gary, Hammond, Merrillville, Portage, and Valparaiso. Ozone levels here are also expected to be unhealthy for sensitive groups The Vermont Agency of Natural Resources and the Maine Department of Environmental Protection's Bureau of Air Quality have issued advisories, respectively, affecting millions in the northeastern US. In Vermont, an Air Quality Health Advisory for fine particulates with an AQI approaching or exceeding 151 ('Code Orange') is in place until midnight for Caledonia, Addison, Chittenden, Franklin, Essex, Grand Isle, Lamoille, Orange, Orleans and Washington counties. The advisory in Maine, which lifts at 11pm, covers Northwest Aroostook, Northeast Aroostook, Northern Somerset, Northern Piscataquis, Northern Penobscot, Southeast Aroostook, Central Piscataquis, Central Penobscot, Southern Piscataquis, and Northern Washington counties.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE I spent $10K on a nose job...and woke up with part of my face missing
A mother-of-four has been left looking 'smashed' and struggling to breathe after a $10,000 nose job. Ashley Caselli, now 37, underwent a revision rhinoplasty, or nose job, with Dr. Lindsay Sturm in January 2021, in the hopes of resolving her breathing issues. But when she woke up from the around three-hour procedure, the Iowa native says she was immediately plunged into a world of constant worries about her new nose. 'It just looked smashed,' she told 'It doesn't look finished. It looks like I am missing a piece of my face; My nose doesn't even have a tip anymore.' Once a social mom who loved taking pictures of herself with her children, Caselli is now consumed by fear whenever she leaves the house and is always photoshopping herself in family pictures. She also said her breathing is now 'much worse', and that she wakes up several times every night with a dry mouth and has to pull up her nose when she runs to get air in. She said: 'It's just no way to live. It really hurts your self-confidence; it hurts your way of thinking whenever you do things and want to take pictures with your family. 'Every day, I look in the mirror and I am saddened by it, and when people look at me, I constantly wonder, are they looking at my nose?' Caselli is one of at least eight patients to have come forward in recent months alleging harm by Sturm, who ran a clinic in Iowa until February this year. The cosmetic surgeon and otolaryngologist, a surgeon specializing in the ears, nose, throat, neck and head, has also been accused of causing the death of her patient Angela Kettwig in a lawsuit, although she denies the allegation. The lawsuit is pending. Others to come forward include Christine Heintz, who paid Sturm $20,000 for a 'mommy makeover' in November 2021, which included a breast reduction and lift, abdominoplasty and liposuction. Just after the surgery, she said that a 'giant hole' opened in Heintz's right breast going back to her ribcage, with doctors saying most of the breast had died and could not be saved. She underwent further reconstructive surgery in January 2023 which resulted in her losing most of her breasts. In another case, patient AJ Gomez-Han visited Sturm in 2024 for skin removal surgery to his thighs and arms. Afterward, he developed a bacterial infection that evolved into an open bleeding sore and required six weeks in the hospital to fix. Sturm has not responded to previous claims against her and did not respond to request for comment on Caselli's case. Caselli has not filed a lawsuit, however, because the procedure happened too long ago for her to file a claim under Iowa law. After her clinic, Sturm Cosmetic Surgery, abruptly closed on February 9, it told patients in an email that 'due to personal, emergent medical concerns, Dr Sturm is unavailable to provide ongoing care.' Caselli is pictured above in the profile view before and after the procedure Her nose is shown above from the underside before and after the procedure The Iowa Board of Medicine charged her with professional incompetence, including failure of a physician to exercise a degree of care ordinarily exercised by the average physician, in May 2025. Sturm opted not to contest the charges and has voluntarily surrendered her license, without admitting wrongdoing. She also filed for bankruptcy in June, according to local media reports. In Caselli's case, the mother and property manager went for her first nose job with a different surgeon in 2018 to open up her airways and resolve a long-term breathing issue. The initial procedure 'wasn't terrible,' she said, but she was still having trouble breathing out of one side of her nose and felt one side also appeared 'cuppier' than the other. This led her to contact Sturm, who said she would be able to help Caselli breathe better and have a more appealing nose. In a pre-op appointment, Caselli said Sturm told her that the previous surgeon had 'removed all the cartilage' from her nose, leaving it without proper support. (It is extremely unusual for surgeons to remove all the cartilage from a patient's nose). Sturm suggested extracting some cartilage from the top of Caselli's right ear and implanting it into her nose to help with the breathing issue, Caselli said. Caselli agreed, saying she was won over by the chance to be operated on by a female surgeon and Sturm's apparent personable and kind nature. Just before the surgery in 2021, the pair prayed together for a successful procedure and a good outcome. Caselli said after the surgery she had to wear a nose bandage and splint, a plastic device placed outside the nose after surgery to support its new shape, for about two weeks but, even with the swelling from surgery, became concerned about her nose every time she removed a bandage to wash it. 'I actually voiced my concerns because I did see some issues,' she said. 'One side of my nose that I wanted changed originally, that was still the same, and the side that was a little swollen didn't look right. 'I was also concerned because in the profile view of the side of my face, it looked different, the tip of my nose was missing, well, it didn't have a tip.' She said Sturm initially told her that the appearance could be linked to the swelling from surgery but then retorted that she shouldn't ask for a perfect nose because no one's nose is perfect. 'I was shocked by that,' Caselli said. 'I told her that I am not trying to achieve the perfect nose, I just want a functioning nose that looks nice and normal, but this doesn't. It looks normal it looks very messed up. 'She tried to make me feel bad for that.' Caselli also said that at one point a hole opened up in the middle of her nose after a suture came loose following the surgery. During the procedure, Sturm was also meant to perform liposuction on the bottom of Caselli's chin, but Caselli said that this wasn't done properly, with the area she wanted removed 'still there' when she woke up from surgery. Sturm offered to do a fat transfer to Caselli's nose after the surgery, Caselli said, but she refused, and says she's now seeking help from a new surgeon. Caselli also claimed that her breathing is now 'much worse' than before, with now having to breathe through her mouth most of the time. She said she holds up the end of her nose sometimes when she runs to get air in and is also waking up throughout the night, suffering from a dry mouth and breathing issues. 'I hope revealing this helps people,' she said. 'The irony here is that she was an expert and she still messed up my nose. Everyone should know the difference between a cosmetic surgeon and a plastic surgeon. 'I am lucky, but unlucky, people go through worse things, terrible things, but they can cover their bodies. For me, I can't cover my face.'


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Hundreds of thousands in Surrey are in a post-covid NHS backlog
Hundreds of thousands of people in Surrey are stuck in an NHS backlog, facing long waits including for crucial operations and cancer treatments, according to local health efforts to address delays caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, thousands are still waiting well beyond the national target of 18 a recent Surrey County Council meeting, NHS managers revealed while progress is being made, more than 200,000 people are still awaiting measures like harm reviews, waiting list checks, and the opening of Ashford Elective Centre are being implemented, but staff shortages and IT issues continue to affect waiting times. The results were given at the council's Adults and Health Select Committee meeting on 11 July, reports the Local Democracy Reporting Integrated Care Board, including Frimley Park and Wexham Park hospitals still has about 89,000 people waiting for treatment – and more than 4,000 of those have been waiting over a a slight improvement from previous years, only 55% of patients are being treated within the NHS national Surrey Heartlands ICB, which covers hospitals like Ashford & St Peter's, Royal Surrey and Epsom, is further waiting list peaked in 2023 but has since come down significantly. About 143,000 people are waiting for non-urgent but important elective care operations. NHS managers said the total waiting list across Surrey Heartlands' three hospitals has decreased from a peak of approximately 162,000 in September 2023, to about 143,000 by March 61,500 patients are waiting more than 18 weeks for treatment, while over 2,000 people have been on waiting lists for over a figures far exceed pre-pandemic levels, where waits beyond a year were rare.