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Missouri Supreme Court has opened the door to abortions being halted again

Missouri Supreme Court has opened the door to abortions being halted again

Independent27-05-2025

The Missouri Supreme Court has opened the door to abortions being halted again by sending the case back to a judge for reconsideration.

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Boy, 2, born with one kidney fights for life after being stung 150 times by wasps when he bumped into nest on toy car
Boy, 2, born with one kidney fights for life after being stung 150 times by wasps when he bumped into nest on toy car

The Sun

time24 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Boy, 2, born with one kidney fights for life after being stung 150 times by wasps when he bumped into nest on toy car

A TODDLER missing a kidney is fighting for his life after being stung more than 150 times by wasps in a nightmare accident. Little Beckham Reed, two, was swarmed head-to-toe by yellow jackets after bumping into their nest while riding in a toy car with his cousins in Georgia. 3 3 His parents, Mariah and Peyton, raced him to hospital where he was given morphine and Benadryl before being sent home. 'They said his breathing was okay so they didn't need to keep him,' family friend Tiffany Hewatt wrote on a GoFundMe set up to help with mounting medical bills. But horror struck less than a day later when Beckham's skin turned yellow. He was rushed to another ER and diagnosed with multiple organ failure affecting his heart, liver and his only kidney. 'Due to his age and size and the amount of stings he had, his little body was unable to handle the amount of toxins in his body,' said Hewatt, a registered nurse. Beckham was admitted to the ICU at Memorial Savannah Hospital and hooked up to a ventilator, dialysis machine and pumped with life-saving IV meds. 'There is no antivenom for yellow jackets so all they can do is support his body while the toxins work their way out,' Hewatt explained. On Wednesday, Beckham's hemoglobin dropped to a dangerously low 6.8 — forcing doctors to give him more blood. He's also being tube-fed and was recently taken off blood pressure meds. 'We know the dialysis and sedating meds are causing the BP drop. Baby mauled to death by family pitbull in horror dog attack at home Beckham is waking up more and we know this is good news because he is STRONG and a great kicker,' Hewatt added. 'However, we don't want him pulling the vent or other lines so they have to keep adjusting his sedating meds.' The family is desperate to see if his only kidney will recover once he comes off dialysis. Doctors hope that could happen as soon as tomorrow, though concerns remain the brave tot might yank out his lines. 'We are so ready for him to be off the vent and to hear his voice again,' Hewatt wrote. The family's GoFundMe has been launched to help cover soaring hospital costs. It comes after an adorable seven-month-old baby girl was mauled to death by the family's pitbull in a harrowing attack. Little Elizah Turner was bitten by one of her family's three pitbulls on inside their home in Columbus, Ohio. The tot was rushed to a nearby fire station in May before being taken to Nationwide Children's Hospital, where she was pronounced dead. Cops said there were multiple dogs inside the home at the time of the horror, but it's still unclear which one bit the infant. Columbus Police Sgt. James Fuqua told local outlet WBNS the incident is being treated as a "tragic accident" and no charges are expected.

I thought I was exhausted... doctors discovered I had deadly heart condition hiding behind everyday fatigue
I thought I was exhausted... doctors discovered I had deadly heart condition hiding behind everyday fatigue

Daily Mail​

time42 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

I thought I was exhausted... doctors discovered I had deadly heart condition hiding behind everyday fatigue

At just 26, Rachel Freedman had the stamina of someone in their 50s. The graduate student from New York City would have to catch her breath after walking up the subway stairs, going on a grocery run and even taking a shower. On hikes with friends, she felt 'like a gorilla' was sitting on her chest as she struggled to keep up. Freedman assumed she just needed to lose weight and started exercising more to get her energy back. But after being rushed to the hospital in May 2019 for an undisclosed issue, an electrocardiogram (EKG) showed an abnormal heart rhythm. Though doctors insisted 'it was probably not a big deal,' Freedman's mother urged her to get further testing. Cardiologists at NYU Langone Health performed an echocardiogram, an ultrasound of the heart, and found obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), which causes the walls of the heart to slowly thicken and block blood flow. The one-in-500 genetic condition often causes no symptoms, leaving thousands of patients unaware they have it until they suffer heart failure or cardiac arrest. It's also the leading cause of sudden cardiac deaths in young people, which have surged in the US. Freedman, now 32, said: 'I had no idea what it was. How could I have this and not know?' Heart attack deaths have spiked in the US, with recent Harvard research suggesting a 17 percent increase in the years following the Covid pandemic. Those researchers found many of these attacks occurred at home, suggesting symptoms or precursors had been 'missed' until it was too late. Doctors told Freedman her heart muscle was more than 30 millimeters thick, three times more than an average healthy person's, suggesting her condition was advanced despite her being only 26. This usually happens in the septum, the wall dividing the heart's two bottom chambers. This crowds the heart's main pumping chamber, making it work harder to deliver blood throughout the body and triggering erratic heartbeats that can cause cardiac arrest. Freedman soon began taking medications to decrease her heart rate, lower cholesterol and relax the heart, including beta blockers, blood thinners and statins. Doctors also implanted a defibrillator into her chest three months later, which jolts the heart from an irregular rhythm back into a normal one. Despite losing 60 pounds in a year to put less stress on her heart, her symptoms did not improve and she 'was really limited.' Dr Daniele Massera, Freedman's cardiologist, said: 'She could only walk six minutes on the treadmill. At 26, you'd expect much more. She was having fainting spells despite medical therapy. 'Rachel wanted to avoid surgery at all costs, but if you faint and have a diagnosis of HCM, that's a very high-risk situation.' In August 2020, 15 months after her diagnosis, Freedman underwent a septal myectomy, a type of open-heart surgery meant to remove a portion of thickened heart tissue. It generally takes three to four hours. After surgery, Freedman completed four months of cardiac rehabilitation, which typically involves light cardio and strength workouts and education on heart-healthy interventions like diet and quitting smoking. Nearly five years later, Freedman can keep up with her friends on hikes and walk up the stairs without having to stop and catch her breath. Her chest pain is gone, and she can now walk the Brooklyn Bridge to get home instead of taking the subway. She also got married in 2022 and is pursuing a master's degree to become a high school guidance counselor. Freedman said: 'To my doctors, I'd say, "Not only did you save my life, you changed my life."'

Senate bill hastens end of wind, solar tax credits and imposes new tax
Senate bill hastens end of wind, solar tax credits and imposes new tax

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Senate bill hastens end of wind, solar tax credits and imposes new tax

WASHINGTON, June 28 (Reuters) - The latest version of the Senate's massive budget bill that the Senate is racing through for a vote as soon as Saturday deals a fatal blow to the use of tax credits in place since 2005 to spur more wind and solar energy and would set a new tax on those projects for the first time, renewable energy proponents said on Saturday. Despite hopes earlier in the week that the Senate would rework the budget megabill's language about the future use of Inflation Reduction Act tax credits to extend their use and make them more usable, the new version of the bill introduced by Senate leadership overnight will effectively repeal the incentives for solar and wind immediately. Instead, it imposes a new tax on wind and solar projects completed after Dec. 31, 2027 if they cannot prove they have not used any Chinese components, while offering a new tax break for coal production. It also accelerates the phase-out of clean energy manufacturing tax credits that have attracted billions in investments throughout the US, especially in Republican states. The clean energy industry and environmental groups decried the last-minute changes to the bill, saying that it will raise household energy costs and deprive the US of new, necessary and fast electricity capacity at a time of massive power demand amid a rush of construction of power-hungry data centers to power AI development. Trump's former advisor and head of DOGE Elon Musk blasted the bill on his social media platform X on Saturday, warning that the bill will "destroy millions of jobs in America" and cause "strategic harm." "It is utterly insane and destructive. It gives handouts to industries of the past while severely damaging industries of the future," he said. Energy security organization SAFE said in a statement that the bill, as written, would give an advantage to China, which dominates the clean energy and electric vehicle industries and is racing to outpace the US in AI development by taking away financing for energy storage, mineral processing and power projects. "Where the original Senate version was a recipe for energy stagnation, this is outright energy surrender—all but guaranteeing Chinese dominance of critical minerals, industrial supply chains, and AI development," said Avery Ash, head of government affairs for SAFE. Green energy opponents praised the bill for ending support for renewable energy. Trump on Friday evening called for the end of the credits and said they no longer need support. 'If, as supporters of the IRA are complaining, repealing these subsidies will 'kill' their industry, then maybe it shouldn't exist in the first place," said Tom Pyle, president of the American Energy Alliance.

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