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21 million people are wrong: YouTube not the way to know what it s like to have schizophrenia

21 million people are wrong: YouTube not the way to know what it’s like to have schizophrenia We’re sorry, this service is currently unavailable. Please try again later. Dismiss Opinion 21 million people are wrong: YouTube not the way to know what it’s like to have schizophrenia May 8, 2021 — 10.00am Save Normal text size Advertisement Last week my friend’s son waited in the emergency department of a Sydney hospital for four days. He is 21 and has schizophrenia. On the first night he got up and walked out. The police went to his home, broke down the door, tackled him to the ground and took him back to the ED. A security guard was installed at the end of his bed, the injuries sustained during the police scuffle left untended. He’s a mental patient after all. It’s not a physical problem. The entire scenario could be interpreted as symbolic of society’s attitude towards schizophrenia, which is a combination of fear, neglect and wonderment

Decorated scientist main suspect in baby death

Crime by Elise Williams Premium Content Subscriber only The mother who police have listed as the main person of interest in relation to a suspicious child death can be revealed as a decorated medical researcher working for one of Queensland s most prestigious research institutes. The Courier-Mail can reveal Sabita Neupane, 32, remains the focal point of a police investigation into the death of her five-month-old baby girl, who died under suspicious circumstances in the family s Annerley home last month.  It can also be revealed the couple told police the baby s father, Sunil Srivastav, found the infant deceased in her cot on the morning of November 16, after Ms Neupane is said to have put the baby to bed on the evening of November 15. 

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