The communitythe community is now giving backand these funds will go towards luis recovery. It as you can see this place is closed until further notice, and while santiago doesnt know when it will reopen again he says it will be at least another couple weeks until its even possible. Reporting ra 9means a lot. It means a lot because some times you think that youre by yourself. Sometimes you dont think that a lot of people really care for you. And seeing all this. It means a lot for us. Roe oys. If youre looking to help the family. We have how you can donate on wcpodotcom new tonight. Nearly 30thousand more people have guns in the state of ohio. Ohio. The Attorney Generals Office just released its 2015 report. The reports findings suggest that more people got guns in 2015. Than they did in 2014. Only 11hundred licenses were denied. And thats up for the year as well. This as we know is a hot button issue. This week more at madison high school. The Butler County Prosecutor Says the alleged
Joe warrens jaw and teeth in the years before warren was killed. So a unique feature for our visitors who come to the museum here in Silver Spring is a chan to see through the Looking Glass as it is into a working museum laboratory. This special lab was equipped to help us prepare and manage the wide range of artifacts in the museums care. What you see on the counter there now is a set of human remains, anatomical specimens, bones, that are laid out on the counter there and museum staff person doing some lab work in preparation of dealing with some objects in conservation, but we could use this lab to manage paper materials, other types of tissue or to prepare objects for longterm storage or for exhibit or display. So our last stop on our visit to the medical museum is here in front of one of the museums storage rooms where we manage our growing 25 million object collection. You can see just a few of the paintings in the museums holdings here in the row behind me and the large painting
Storage rooms where we manage our growing 25 million object collection. You can see just a few of the paintings in the museums holdings here in the row behind me and the large painting there features our the museums founder Surgeon General William Hammond who founded the museum in 1862. One thing that i personally find important about working here at this museum is the stories that we tell are the stories of americas soldiers, sailers, air men and marine and marines. Its important to share the sacrifices that they made for doctors and researchers and innovators to be able to help convey their stories and glad to be able to share that with visitors who come to see us every day here at the museum. This was the second of two programs from our visit to the National Museum of health and medicine, the first focused on the museums civil war collection. You can watch all of our american artifacts programs in their entirety by visiting cspan. Oval history. On sunday, october 25th American Histo
From peru with the skull of a Civil War Soldier showing essentially the same type of surgical treatment. We then give the visitor a chance to see the types of tools used. At the end of the exhibit an opportunity to see the types of tools used for modern tpi rehabilitation, which includes, interestingly enough, video games and the Important Role that Service Animals play in helping tbi patients recover and go about their daily lives. So weve come to the third of the three exhibit galleries here at the medical museum and weve moved here to an exhibit on Biomedical Engineering which features this artificial kidney. The kidney here was invented by a dutch physician who developed this technology in nazi occupied holland and the first generation of this device was built using scrap parts from downed german airplanes and left over kitchen utensils. When dr. Kolf moved to the United States he developed this generation of the device and the artificial kidney we have here on display was used at
Thats a big word. 3d stereo lit graphic prints of soldiers injured in the war in iraq. These 3d casts were done at what was then still Walter Reed Medical Center and if you can imagine taking cat scan data and pushing those through a 3d printer, they provide the surgeon a real world model of that soldiers injuries. These were soldiers injured in the war, survived their injuries, were recovering at walter reed and the surgeons used these models to help plan future injuries. So learn what gone could be recovered or discarded, to plan for the prosthetic that might be used to reshape and protect that soldiers skull and then also found themselves limiting the number of surgeries and decreasing the chances of infection and haste thing the recovery of that Service Member and restoring some measure of the quality of life that they deserved. The last feature in the exhibit on innovations in military medicine focuses on walter reed, major walter reed. Walter reed who is known for his work in the