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He looks sick.
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I'll bet anything that he's never read her diary.This rappers name is Xan Frank. He got Anne Frank tattooed in his face.
I wore shorts year round when I lived in Iowa.
I’m black if that matters
A Minnesota man described by friends as being “super drunk” crashed his car while speeding down a highway Sunday morning, leaving his 20-year-old girlfriend for dead, prosecutors say.
Police tracked down 21-year-old Michael Campbell at his Minneapolis-area home on Tuesday after finding his wallet left behind at the wreckage, the Star Tribune reported.
Ria Patel, his girlfriend and a St. Thomas University student, died at the scene.
Campbell was taken to a hospital for a medical evaluation and then booked into Hennepin County Jail.
He reportedly admitted to drinking before leaving his home with Patel. Friends told cops that they didn’t know the couple was gone, and said that he was “super drunk” the last time they saw him, according to the Tribune.
He crashed his Ford Focus into a stoplight and then left the scene, prosecutors allege.
Campbell told investigators that he fled from the accident site because he was “traumatized” to see Patel's state, the paper reported.
A witness told police she saw a man — later identified as Campbell — digging around in the car and leaving the scene before cops arrived.
Prosecutors charged Campbell with two counts of criminal vehicular homicide. His bail was set at $250,000.
Nah, Excelsior.#Handles
#SwingItOrDontBringIt
That looks like the richmond district.
A man's tattoo left doctors debating whether to save his life
(CNN)Picture this: A man is admitted to the hospital, unconscious, with a history of serious health problems and a high blood alcohol level. He has no identification and no family with him. On his chest, he has a tattoo: "Do Not Resuscitate."
What would you do?
It sounds like a worst-case-scenario question from a medical ethics course, but it really happened recently at a Florida hospital. A newly published study in The New England Journal of Medicine explored the ethical and medical conundrums the staff faced when presented with a 70-year-old patient whose denial of potentially life-saving treatment was right there on his skin.
At first, doctors wanted to ignore it
According to the study, authored by a team of medical professionals from the University of Miami, the doctors attending to the man didn't want to honor the tattoobecause there was no way to be absolutely sure that's what the man wanted.
"We initially decided not to honor the tattoo, invoking the principle of not choosing an irreversible path when faced with uncertainty," the study said. The doctors chose to treat the patient with antibiotics and other life-saving measures.
However, they called in the hospital's ethics consultant, who had a different opinion.
Differing view from an ethics
consultant
Laws about do not resuscitate orders are sometimes complex and vary from state to state. According to an article in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, "Clinicians are morally and legally obligated to respect the preferences of patients to forgo life-sustaining treatment." However, this typically means an official signed a do not resuscitate agreement such as a Physician Order for Life Sustaining Treatment.
Tattoos, while clearly administered with a patient's wishes, aren't legally binding, and are usually considered too ambiguous to act upon.
The emergency responder may wonder: (D)o the letters stand for Do Not Resuscitate? Or Department of Natural Resources? Or someone's initials? Second, the tattoo may not result from a considered decision to forego resuscitation. Errors in interpretation may have life and death consequences," the Journal of General Internal Medicine article said.
In the case of the man in the Florida hospital, the facility's ethics consultant said the doctors should honor the tattoo.
"They suggested that it was most reasonable to infer that the tattoo expressed an authentic preference, that what might be seen as caution could also be seen as standing on ceremony, and that the law is sometimes not nimble enough to support patient-centered care and respect for patients' best interests," the study reads.
There was also another development that supported the consultant's decision: The hospital's social work department located a copy of the man's Florida Department of Health "out-of-hospital" do not resuscitate order, which supported the request on his tattoo.
The outcome
Ultimately, a do not resuscitate order was issued, and the man died. The authors of the study said they were "relieved to find his written DNR request," but the initial confusion over the tattoo brought up a curious issue that has been debated in the medical community on several occasions.
CNN has contacted the authors of the study and is waiting to hear back.
He needs some milk!He looks sick.
I don't get the Jim Jones pic?
His kid looks like cam’ron could be the father
who's mans?
Haha.He needs some milk!
Was over this song third time i heard it these **** love it thoI'm surprised, I'm already tired of hearing this joint.
Also are they slap boxing if actual fighting. Like if your slap boxing and dude pops you, your gonna be dazed because you didn't expect itIf you have young fighters that you train this is a must watch video.THIS my bros is how you close the fight when you have your opponent hurt. Fighter in gray unloaded a 5 punch/slap combination that had the fighter in the blue trunks staggered and confused. I bet if the video were 30 seconds longer we WOULD'VE seen a KO for sure.
Also are they slap boxing if actual fighting. Like if your slap boxing and dude pops you, your gonna be dazed because you didn't expect it