Friday, November 4, 2016

Astonishing video shows a baby's old heart still BEATING in a dish after it was removed during a transplant and other top stories.

  • Astonishing video shows a baby's old heart still BEATING in a dish after it was removed during a transplant

    Henry Dolan, pictured with mother Mollie, underwent the heart transplant this weekend after being born with two heart defectsThis is the astonishing moment a baby's heart keeps beating in a hospital bowl after it was removed during a life-saving transplant. Henry Dolan underwent a heart transplant this weekend after being born with two serious heart conditions five months ago.His parents Mollie and Sam Dolan, from Minnesota, have shared the incredible live updates on their Hope for Henry Facebo..
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  • Adelaide woman Vicki Brown in custody for starving Chihuahua

    Adelaide woman Vicki Brown in custody for starving Chihuahua
    Adelaide woman Vicki Brown in custody for starving Chihuahua Posted October 17, 2016 13:26:11 A South Australian woman who starved her pet Chihuahua to death before throwing it in a bin has been remanded in custody while she awaits sentencing in an unusual move that has been applauded by the RSPCA.Vicki Brown, 59, was found guilty of ill treating an animal to cause death.The Christies Beach Magistrates Court has previously heard the dog's emaciated body was found in a..
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  • Gold Coast drugs: 'This will be the summer of multiple unknown overdoses'

    Gold Coast drugs: 'This will be the summer of multiple unknown overdoses'
    When things go bad, blame flakka. Sixteen people were hospitalised for taking drugs on the Gold Coast over the weekend - the worst mass overdose in decades. It's been widely reported the drug was flakka, but until the toxicology report comes back, no-one knows for sure.They had probably taken some kind of New Psychoactive Substance (NPS) - synthetic drugs designed to mimic cannabis, cocaine, ecstasy and LSD. Toxicologists have so far identified about 350 NPS, and are finding about two new ones ..
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  • Geelong mother left traumatised after two-year-old pricked by dirty syringe in public toilet

    Geelong mother left traumatised after two-year-old pricked by dirty syringe in public toilet
    Alleira, 2, was pricked by a dirty syringe at Geelong's Eastern Beach. (9NEWS) A Geelong mother faces a nervous wait of six months to find out if her two-year-old daughter will be given the all clear, after the toddler was pricked by a dirty syringe.Ashlee Vipont took her daughter Alleira into a public toilet at Geelong’s Eastern Beach last Friday when the dirty syringe fell from the toilet paper dispenser.“The toilet paper was kind of stuck so she placed her hands up there, and as we’ve pulled..
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  • Queensland zombie walk dying, not dead

    Queensland zombie walk dying, not dead
    Jamie McKinnellAustralian Associated PressOrganisers of one of the world's largest zombie walks have been thrown a bone after Brisbane City Council agreed to waive some of its fees for holding the gathering.Rising council fees were cited in an announcement on the Brisbane zombie walk's Facebook page that declared the 2016 walk - to be held this weekend in the CBD - would be the last."Unfortunately, bureaucratic red tape and constant behind the scenes disputes with the Brisbane City Council has t..
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  • No need for pap test until age 25: study

    No need for pap test until age 25: study
    Sarah WiedersehnAustralian Associated PressA dramatic decline in the incidence of cervical cancer in Australia has led to a change in the recommended age for a woman's first cervical pap smear to 25.Currently women aged 18 to 20 are routinely screened for cervical cancer but from next year women won't receive a prompt for their first test until around their 25th birthday.The change in age was recommended by the Medical Services Advisory Committee last year and researcher Megan Smith from Cancer ..
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  • Devil of a medical find

    Devil of a medical find
    ONE of Tasmania’s much-loved marsupials could be the new superhero in the fight against superbugs.A University of Sydney research project found Tasmanian devils’ milk contained peptides that can kill some of the most deadly bacterial and fungal infections, including golden staph.Devils will not have to be milked for humans to take advantage of their “wonder milk.”After the researchers scanned the devil’s genome and discovered the six naturally occurring antimicrobial peptides, they then replicat..
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  • Brisbane mum finds meth in plastic egg in six year old's bedroom

    Brisbane mum finds meth in plastic egg in six year old's bedroom
    Yahoo7 News on October 17, 2016, 10:20 am A Brisbane mother has taken to Facebook to tell of her shock at finding meth stashed inside a plastic egg in her six year old son's bedroom. Crystal Hill told Yahoo7 she wanted to warn parents after she discovered two bags of the drug, which is commonly called ice, hidden an orange plastic egg that resembled the kind commonly found in a chocolate product aimed at children.“I was cleaning out Jonahs (sic) room (aged 6) on friday and inside his old ..
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  • An overheating exhaust fan saw the the Mersey Community Hospital's emergency department close on Sunday afternoon

    An overheating exhaust fan saw the the Mersey Community Hospital's emergency department close on Sunday afternoon
    Mersey Community Hospital's emergency department resume business post overheating exhaust fan incident An overheating exhaust fan forced the Mersey Community Hospital's emergency department to close on Sunday afternoon.Large fans were used on Sunday night to successfully remove the smell from the affected area by emergency services.Early Monday morning, the department was deemed clear of the odour the exhaust fan had produced.RECOVERED: Adjunct Associate Professor and Executive Di..
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  • An industry's answer to deadly opioid addiction: More pills

    An industry's answer to deadly opioid addiction: More pills
    Cancer patients taking high doses of opioid painkillers are often afflicted by a new discomfort: constipation. Researcher Jonathan Moss thought he could help, but no drug company was interested in his ideas for relieving suffering among the dying.So Moss and his colleagues pieced together small grants and, in 1997, received permission to test their treatment. But not on cancer patients. Federal regulators urged them to use a less frail - and by then, rapidly expanding - group: addicts caught in..
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Vincent Stanford's video confession for murdering Stephanie Scott played in court .The truth is (not) out there: how the Australian government stopped investigating UFOs .
Stroke patients missing out on life-saving treatment after hours .Melbourne weather: Damaging winds cause chaos throughout Victoria .

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