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Latest News US

Man Wearing ‘Do Not Resuscitate’ tattoo Faints, Leaves Doctors on Ethical Dilemma

A 70-year-old man with a "Do Not Resuscitate" tattoo was rushed, unconscious, to an emergency room in Miami, Florida, earlier this year.(Photo: Courtesy of the New England Journal of Medicine)
A 70-year-old man with a “Do Not Resuscitate” tattoo was rushed, unconscious, to an emergency room in Miami, Florida, earlier this year.(Photo: Courtesy of the New England Journal of Medicine)

Man Wearing ‘Do Not Resuscitate’ tattoo Faints, Leaves Doctors on Ethical Dilemma

 

US Today reports that an unconscious 70-year-old man, with a tattoo on his chest that said ‘Do Not Resuscitate’ was rushed to an emergency room in Miami, Florida, earlier this year.

He had no identification, family or friends with him when he arrived.

However, he had a tattoo across his chest that said “Do Not Resuscitate.” It included a signature.

The man’s ink left doctors in an ethical dilemma — save the man’s life or honor the tattoo and let him die?

The unidentified patient died the next morning.

The case was published in the New England Journal of Medicine on Thursday.

“This patient’s tattooed DNR request produced more confusion than clarity, given concerns about its legality and likely unfounded beliefs that tattoos might represent permanent reminders of regretted decisions made while the person was intoxicated,” one of the paper’s author, Gregory Holt, a doctor at the University of Miami Hospital, wrote.

The article said the man, who had a history of pulmonary disease, was taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital in a deteriorating condition that turned deadly.

Doctors first decided not to honor the unusual DNR request “invoking the principle of not choosing an irreversible path when faced with uncertainty,” according to the study.

What ethics experts say

But they were conflicted enough to ask for an ethics consultation. The consultants disagreed with their decision.

“As unorthodox as it is, you do get a dramatic view of what this patient would want,” Ken Goodman, co-director of the University of Miami’s ethics programs told the Atlantic Journal.

Social workers later used the man’s fingerprints to track down his DNR paperwork, required in Florida to make such a request legally valid, supporting the end of life wishes inked on his skin.

Arthur Caplan, head of the division of medical ethics at the New York University School of Medicine, told The Washington Post that a tattoo should be a binding request.

“A tattoo, I think, is best seen as a way to alert medical staff to your wishes,” he said. “It’s useful to back up a living will or an advanced directive.”

Caplan says there are no legal penalties if doctors ignore a tattoo, but letting a patient die without the proper documentation could cause a problem.

“The safer course is to do something,” he said, noting that it puts doctors in a predicament that requires difficult decisions.

“We were relieved to find his written DNR request,” the authors of the paper concluded. Report courtesy, US Today.

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Africa Latest News US

Libya is ‘Worst Mistake’ of My Presidency – Obama

Obama
Obama

 

Libya is ‘Worst Mistake’ of My Presidency – Obama

Reports | SIGNAL

US President Barack Obama has said failing to prepare for the aftermath of the ousting of Libyan leader Col Muammar Gaddafi was the worst mistake of his presidency.

Mr Obama was answering a series of questions on the highs and lows of his time in office on Fox News.

He said, however, that intervening in Libya had been “the right thing to do”.

The US and other countries carried out strikes designed to protect civilians during the 2011 uprising.

But after the former Libyan leader was killed, Libya plunged into chaos with militias taking over and two rival parliaments and governments forming.

So-called Islamic State (IS) gained a foothold, and Libya became a major departure point for migrants trying to reach Europe.

The BBC reports that a UN-backed national unity government arrived in the capital Tripoli earlier this month but is waiting to take charge.

The leader of the faction ruling western Libya has threatened to prosecute any of his ministers who co-operate with the UN-backed administration, contradicting an earlier announcement the ministers would stand down.

President Obama gave the brief but revealing answer speaking to Chris Wallace:

CW: Worst mistake?

Obama: Probably failing to plan for the day after, what I think was the right thing to do, in intervening in Libya.

It is not the first time President Obama has expressed regret over Libya. He told the Atlantic magazine last month the operation went as well as he had hoped, but Libya was now “a mess”.

In that interview, he also criticised France and the UK, in particular saying British Prime Minister David Cameron became “distracted” after the intervention.

It was a rare rebuke for a close ally and one which BBC correspondents at the time said angered Downing Street.

President Obama told Fox that his biggest accomplishment in office was “saving the economy from the great depression”.

He said the best day of his presidency was when he passed the healthcare reforms. The worst, he said, was responding to the mass shooting at Sandy Hook elementary school.

Mr Obama discussed his legacy in a BBC interview last year, saying his failure to pass tighter gun control laws was the biggest frustration of his presidency.

February 2011: Protests against Colonel Gaddafi’s regime erupt in Libya

March 2011: UN Security Council authorises a no-fly zone over Libya and air strikes to protect civilians

October 2011: Gaddafi is captured and killed by rebel fighters

2012: Splits emerge as the transitional government struggle to rein in local militias

September 2012: The US ambassador and three other Americans are killed when Islamist militants storm the consulate in eastern Benghazi

June 2014: Disputed elections are held. Two governments are formed: one in the capital Tripoli, the other UN-backed administration in eastern Torbruk

January 2015: The UN announces a new interim government but it is yet to take charge

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Science US

‘US SpaceX Zuma Satellite Has Nothing with South Africa’s Zuma’

SpaceX
SpaceX

 

‘US SpaceX Zuma Satellite, Has nothing with South Africa’s Zuma’

It is expected that SpaceX will launch the United States Government’s top-secret Zuma mission satellite this evening.

But against speculations that the Zuma in the SpaceX project has something to do with South African President, Jacob Zuma, Fortune has said they have no relationship.

Thursday launch became impossible but the firm did not categorically say that launch will be Friday.

According to documents obtained by Wired last month, the Zuma mission involves carrying a Northrop Grumman-made satellite into low-Earth orbit for the U.S. government. That’s pretty much all we know about it—it’s not even apparent which government branch or agency is the client here.

Elon Musk’s firm was originally supposed to launch the Zuma payload on Thursday evening. However, SpaceX said in a couple of tweets that it was delaying the launch so it could more closely look at component-test data relating to another mission.

Fortune writes that it still has a slot for Friday evening but will take as long as it needs to examine the data.

“Specifically, the company is looking at data relating to the nose cone—known as “fairing”—that protects the payload. The Zuma mission’s fairing will be jettisoned to expose the satellite once SpaceX’s Falcon 9 clears the Earth’s atmosphere.

Northrop Grumman (noc, +0.17%) is itself in the process of buying a spaceflight firm called Orbital ATK, which serves the International Space Station and will bring the weaponry and aerospace giant into competition with SpaceX.

A couple months ago, the digital firm launched a “miniature space plane” for the U.S. Air Force.

A SpaceX delivery of a satellite for Israel’s Space Communications went horribly wrong last year after the Falcon 9 rocket exploded. However, SpaceX signed a new deal with the Israeli company last month to launch another two satellites into orbit”

 

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Africa US

Six African-Americans Win Local Elections in US

Minneapolis city council member Abdi Warsame, left, Imam Abdisalam Adam, center, from the Islamic Civic Society of America and Imam Saad Roble, President of the World Peace Organization, attend an event in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Dec. 15, 2015. Credit/voa
– Minneapolis city council member Abdi Warsame, left, Imam Abdisalam Adam, center, from the Islamic Civic Society of America and Imam Saad Roble, President of the World Peace Organization, attend an event in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Dec. 15, 2015. Credit/voa

 

Six African-Americans Win Local Elections in US

Four Somali-Americans won races for public office in local elections that took place around the U.S. on Tuesday.

The elections of Ralph Northam in Virginia and Phil Murphy in New Jersey were capped with the elections of two African-Americans as lieutenant governor, with Justin Fairfax winning a separate race for that post in Virginia, and Sheila Oliver becoming New Jersey’s first black, female lieutenant governor as Murphy’s running mate.

In a contest between two Somali immigrants running for a seat on the Minneapolis city council, the incumbent, Abdi Warsame, narrowly beat challenger Mohamud Noor, 50 percent to 47 percent.

Bill de Blasio won re-election to a second term as mayor of New York City, easily beating his Republican challenger, New York State Senator Nicole Malliotakis, in the longtime Democratic stronghold and hometown of Republican U.S. President Donald Trump.

Democratic political party members and their progressive allies across the United States had much to celebrate on Election Day 2017 in addition to major victories in the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races.

“From January, up to now our situation was good and now we have won the election with the public vote. I am very happy,” Warsame said.

Warsame was elected in 2013 as the first Somali-American to serve in a municipal office.

During his campaign, he said his goals for a second term include strengthening relations between the Somali community and police. He has also proposed developing a mall in the Somali community.

Noor did not immediately accept the result.

“It’s clear tonight that the outcome of this election has not yet been decided. We will fight to make sure every vote is counted, and the numerous irregularities that were reported are fully investigated,” Noor posted on his Facebook page.

Also in Minneapolis, Abdulkadir Hassan, a Somali-American, won a seat on the Park and Recreation Board.

In Hopkins, a city west of Minneapolis, Fartun Ahmed won a seat on the Hopkins School Board, after securing the endorsements of all three retiring Hopkins School Board members.

In Washington state, Zak Idan became the city of Tukwila’s newest council member, replacing a man who decided not to run after holding the seat for 36 years.

At least six Somali-American candidates who were running for various offices, including Noor, lost elections.

Last year, Somali-Americans celebrated their biggest political victory when Ilhan Omar, a former refugee and a Muslim, won a seat in the Minnesota state legislature, reports VOA

 

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US

U.S Bomber Drills Unsettles North Korea Ahead Trump’s Visit to Asia

U.S. aircraft flew across the Korean Peninsula and practiced attack capabilities by releasing live weapons at a training area/ Photo credit/AFP
U.S. aircraft flew across the Korean Peninsula and practiced attack capabilities by releasing live weapons at a training area/ Photo credit/AFP

 

U.S Bomber Drills Unsettles North Korea Ahead Trump’s Visit to Asia

United States (U.S) President, Donald Trump is billed to make his first presidential trip to Asia on Sunday. Ahead of that visit, two US bomber jets have conducted drills over South Korea, a move that has unsettled the North Korea.

The goal of Trump’s visit to Asia will be to increase international support for efforts to deprive North Korea of resources as leverage to coerce it to give up nuclear weapons, U.S. officials said.

“The president recognizes that we’re running out of time (to deal with North Korea) and will ask all nations to do more,” White House national security adviser H.R. McMaster told reporters at a briefing in Washington.

News of the drills was first reported by North Korean state news agency KCNA on Friday, which said the exercises involving South Korean and Japanese fighter jets were a “surprise nuclear strike drill”.

“The reality clearly shows that the gangster-like U.S. imperialists are the very one who is aggravating the situation of the Korean peninsula and seeking to ignite a nuclear war,” KCNA said.

Reuters said Trump arrives in Asia on Sunday, “beginning his first trip to the region as president in Japan before heading to South Korea and China, then Vietnam and the Philippines”

President Trump has seen a series of missile tests by North Korea and its sixth and largest nuclear test as threats and fueling the most critical international challenge of his presidency.

McMaster said Trump, who has approved a variety of sanctions against North Korea while pressing China to do more, is at the beginning of his drive for Pyongyang to give up nuclear weapons. Trump has warned he would “totally destroy” North Korea if it threatened the United States.

“I think we have to be a little patient here for at least a few months to see what more we and others can do, including China,” said McMaster. “I don’t think we need to reassess our strategy now. I think we have to give it a couple of months, a few months, and then see what adjustments we might need to make.”

China’s influential state-run tabloid the Global Times said in an editorial on Friday that pressing China will not help solve the Korean peninsula nuclear crisis.

“The complexity of the nuclear crisis means that all sides may have to make some concessions to reach a peaceful solution. China is playing the most difficult role in the process, and is the real hope of peacefully addressing the crisis. Neither side should press China in an extreme way,” it said.

Seoul held a National Security Council meeting on Friday to discuss possible unilateral sanctions against Pyongyang, and may announce the measures ahead of Trump’s arrival in South Korea, a presidential official said.

“The United States has wanted the South Korean government to take further steps to sanction the North. Unilateral sanctions by South Korea wouldn’t have much practical impact but it has a symbolic importance,” the official said.

 

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US

UK to investigate Banks over Zuma

UK
UK

 

UK to investigate Banks over Zuma

 

HSBC and Standard Chartered banks may be under torchlight as the UK Chancellor has asked financial regulators and the Serious Fraud Office to review whether the banks are linked to a corruption scandal in South Africa.

At the centre of the allegations are South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma and a wealthy business family, the Guptas.

Mr Zuma and the Guptas strongly deny wrongdoing, and say they are victims of a “politically motivated witch-hunt”.

“Lord Peter Hain has raised concerns the banks may “inadvertently have been conduits” for laundered money.

The Labour peer is due to raise the issue in the House of Lords later.

The Treasury said it had sent Lord Hain’s comments to financial regulator the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)”, reports BBC

Lord Hain told the BBC he had written to Chancellor Philip Hammond saying a whistle-blower had indicated the banks “maybe inadvertently have been conduits for the corrupt proceeds of money”. The peer is due to raise the issue in the House of Lords later.

A Treasury spokesman said: “We take allegations of financial misconduct very seriously, and have passed Lord Hain’s letter on to the Financial Conduct Authority and relevant UK law enforcement agencies, including the National Crime Agency and Serious Fraud Office, to agree the right action,” a spokesperson said.

The BBC’s correspondent in Johannesburg, Andrew Harding, said Lord Hain’s letter was “a new twist in a giant corruption scandal that is shaking the South Africa state, and damaging the reputations of a number of global companies”.

But leaked emails and official investigations have fuelled claims that the Guptas have bought influence in government in order to loot state enterprises.

In South Africa, the scandal has already ruined British public relations company Bell Pottinger and damaged auditors KPMG, which removed its top executive team in the country.

A spokeswoman for the FCA said it was already in contact with the banks named by Lord Hain and would “consider carefully further responses received”.

Lord Hain, a leading anti-apartheid campaigner who grew up in South Africa, urged UK authorities “to track that stolen money down and make sure that British financial institutions help return it to South African taxpayers”.

It is claimed that money was taken out of South Africa via Hong Kong and Dubai.

Lord Hain, a former Northern Ireland secretary, alleged in his letter to the chancellor that the issue was “a result of the corruption and cronyism resided over by President Zuma and close allies the Guptas”.

Brothers Ajay, Atul and Rajesh Gupta have interests in computer, mining, media, travel, energy and technology and employ about 10,000 people through their company Sahara Group.

HSBC declined to comment, while Standard Chartered had yet to respond to requests for a response, reports BBC.

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US

Trump angry with press over nuclear report

US President Donald Trump (R) and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hold a meeting at the White House in Washington, DC

Trump angry with press over nuclear report

 

US President Donald Trump has questioned broadcasters and threatened to have their licenses revoked Wednesday, after an unflattering story about his nuclear policy.

Trump was angered after NBC News reported he had asked to dramatically increase in America’s nuclear stockpile, calling it “made up.”

“It’s frankly disgusting the way the press is able to write whatever they want to write, and people should want to look into it,” Trump lashed out angrily as he met his Canadian counterpart in the Oval Office.

Although Trump has a history of being combative with the media, he did not want to have media organs formally restricted.

“No. The press should speak more honestly, I mean, I’ve seen tremendously dishonest press. It’s not even a question of distortion.”

His secretary of defense backed him publicly.

“Recent reports that the president called for an increase in the US nuclear arsenal are absolutely false,” Pentagon chief Jim Mattis said in a statement.

“This kind of erroneous reporting is irresponsible.”

The US television network reported that Trump told generals and security aides over the summer that he wanted a “nearly tenfold increase” in the US nuclear arsenal.

“With all of the Fake News coming out of NBC and the Networks, at what point is it appropriate to challenge their License? Bad for country!” Trump tweeted.

The US Constitution is understood to guarantee press freedom, but television networks rely on access to broadcast frequencies granted by government agencies.

Citing three officials who were in the room, NBC said Trump’s response came when he was shown a slide showing the steady reduction of nukes since the 1960s.

After the briefing, the secretary of state is alleged to have called Trump a “moron,” although Rex Tillerson’s spokeswoman has denied that allegation.

Trump denied requesting more weapons. “I never discussed increasing it. I want it in perfect shape. That was fake news,” he said.

Such a move would abrogate key international arms control treaties and upend decades of non-proliferation policy, with deep ramifications across the globe.

“Right now, we have so many nuclear weapons I want them in perfect condition, perfect shape. That’s the only thing I have discussed,” Trump said.

As president and candidate, Trump has often mused aloud about America’s nuclear weapons power, saying there is no point in having them if you do not use them.

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