Page 8 - ஊ ஆரோக்கியம் முறை மருத்துவமனை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Police investigate serious crash involving motorcycle near New Palestine
wthr.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wthr.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
1 critically injured in east side crash
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Poem by late Indiana woman is now a song on a gospel album
CAROL JOHNSON, The Times-Mail
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BEDFORD, Ind. (AP) Maybe it was the way people look at the person with a terminal illness. The people who mean well, but their expressions turn sad when finding out the young girl before them has brain cancer.
Whatever it was, it’s why Haley Jenkins laughed and smiled despite knowing her life would end too soon.
Valerie Byers knew her daughter wasn’t always as happy as she projected. Jenkins was diagnosed with stage III astrocytoma in February 2011. She then developed a second tumor, a glioblastoma. Her prognosis for beating the disease was never good, but she overcame all the odds and squeezed every drop of life out of the next almost seven years before discontinuing treatments.
Indianapolis shooting: Suspect s criminal history raises questions
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Coronavirus
by: Dr. Mary Gillis, D.Ed.
Posted:
Feb 26, 2021 / 09:08 PM EST
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) This time last year, News 8 met Tyler Hoeppner. In between checking patient vitals and digging through doctors’ notes, the sports journalist turned nurse shared his story of taking on a new career.
Now, he’s sharing a different story what it’s like to be a front-line worker taking on the COVID-19 pandemic.
Hoeppner with the rest of the doctors, nurses and IU Health Methodist Hospital staff was thrown into something unlike anything he’d ever seen before.
“Learning how to treat this thing? Nobody knew,” he said. “At the very beginning, it was like, if this is how it’s going to go, it’s going to be brutal because the amount of things we were doing at the pace we were doing them was just unheard of. The number of people we intubated on a shift…you just didn’t do.”