Tell him!!! Virtually broke all his PL records and left with only the title of Arsenal’s top scorer. You have been trying to make peace with that reality ever since.
Like I've always said, @thierryhenry is a hater!!! Now you can see what we've been saying all along. Instead of the constant criticism, just get the ball to Ronaldo and watch the results. Catch up to him??? You'll need two lives to even play catch up.
@Ausbones Question not exactly complete. You need to add repetition to be able to differentiate transcortical sensory aphasia from wernicke aphasia.
In this case if repetition is impaired then the lesion is at superior temporal gyrus where as if repetition is preserved then temporoparietal
👀Ronaldo drives into the box, attracts 4 defenders, passes the ball to Our no 10 and see what a creative midfielder does, he literally takes the ball back to his half from this attacking position😭🤦♂️.
The entire Portugal 🇵🇹 midfield need to step up, they can’t win games like this. Attackers get nothing from them and it’s disappointing.
#PORDRC https://t.co/vClvdCbGM2
So much is happening at the same time.
A hospital CEO is suspended.
Doctors are on strike.
Nurses are threatening industrial action.
I also read that ministers are receiving awards.
Party foot soldiers are defending positions they would have condemned if the other side had done the same.
Meanwhile, patients are caught in the middle.
So who is solving the real problem?
An emergency department designed to accommodate about 30 patients cannot safely function when more than 60 patients occupy the same space.
That should not be a political argument.
It is a patient safety concern.
There is substantial evidence linking emergency department overcrowding to delayed care, medical errors, staff burnout, longer hospital stays, and increased mortality.
If a health leader, regardless of who appointed him, raises concerns about unsafe conditions, the response should be to investigate, provide resources, and take corrective action.
Confrontation does not create hospital beds.
Suspending people will not reduce congestion.
I see a worrying deterioration in the relationship between the Minister of Health and health professionals, particularly doctors.
That is not healthy for any healthcare system.
Ministers are not expected to be experts in every technical aspect of the sectors they oversee.
They are expected to provide leadership, exercise sound judgment, build consensus, and bring stakeholders together around solutions.
I hope we can move toward a more constructive relationship between policymakers and the professionals delivering care before the situation deteriorates further.
Now, does a two-week suspension justify industrial action?
That is a legitimate question.
Professional associations should also reflect on whether strikes have become the default mechanism for seeking redress.
A strike attracts attention.
It does not necessarily solve the underlying problem.
There must be room for sustained advocacy, negotiation, and institutional problem-solving before patients become collateral damage.
Or perhaps industrial action has become so common because it is the only language politicians respond to.
As for the ministerial awards, I struggle to understand what exactly is being celebrated.
@Ausbones Could be a PE, troponin done too early ( other cardio enzymes like myoglobin and ck-mb could have been requested).
Regardless this question appears short of certain relevant pointers. Or options could help r/o
@Ausbones Consumptive coagulopathy, otherwise known as DIC. Patient will have prolonged PT and aPTT, decreased platelets, low fibrinogen, elevated D-dimer.
Ironically, the day an Article 71 officeholder suffers a stroke or heart attack, they will likely be airlifted to the US, UK, etc. Yet the ordinary citizen may find themselves lying on a hospital floor without adequate monitoring equipment ( under makeshift approach).