Hiker attacked, dragged by bear who crushed his arm in its teeth — and miraculously survives
"I just kind of thought 'this is it.'"
"RUSHED" · 총 164건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 86,805건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.3(균형)입니다. 긍정 4,377건(5.0%)·중립 80,381건(92.6%)·부정 2,047건(2.4%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 14.9(중도 균형)입니다.
"I just kind of thought 'this is it.'"
At least 12 people were wounded as gunfire erupted Saturday near a busy street festival in Ohio. Some people at the event in Toledo scrambled for cover while others rushed to help the victims. No suspects were in custody hours afterward, Toledo Deputy Police Chief Joe Heffernan said. He said it appeared that at least […]
KUALA LUMPUR, June 7 — A total of 27 individuals, including tahfiz students and residents of an elderly care home,...
At least 12 people were wounded by gunfire Saturday as multiple shots rang out near a busy street festival in Ohio, leaving eventgoers scrambling for cover while others rushed to help the victims. The post At Least 12 People Injured by Gunfire at Ohio Festival as Police Hunt Suspects appeared first on Breitbart.
Gunfire erupted Saturday near a busy street festival in Ohio, wounding at least 12 people and sending some eventgoers scrambling for cover while others rushed to help the victims.
SAHIWAL: A woman and her daughter suffered severe burn injuries after her husband and brother-in-law allegedly doused them with petrol and set them ablaze in Shadman Colony on Friday afternoon. Rescue 1122 shifted the injured mother and daughter to Sahiwal Teaching Hospital for treatment. Eyewitnesses said the fire also destroyed household furniture and utensils before the suspects fled the scene. Reports said Sobia Parveen, sister of complainant Muhammad Bilal and a resident of Vehari City, married Shaban Bhatti of Chak 65/5-L, Tehsil Sahiwal, around 15 years ago. The couple has five children. Police said domestic violence had reportedly persisted throughout the marriage, with Sobia allegedly subjected to frequent abuse and severe beatings by her husband and brother-in-law. A few months ago, she left her husband’s home due to the continued violence and started living in a rented house near Shadman Chowk along with her children. She had been working as a domestic help to support the family. On Friday, Shaban and his brother, Muhammad Azim, allegedly barged into the rented house, poured petrol on Sobia and one of her daughters, and set them on fire. The suspects also allegedly torched household belongings before escaping. Neighbours informed Rescue 1122, which rushed the victims to Sahiwal Teaching Hospital. Farid Town police registered a case against Shaban Bhatti and Muhammad Azim under sections 336, 324, and 109 of the Pakistan Penal Code on the complaint of Muhammad Bilal. Police had yet to arrest the suspects till the filing of the report. RAPE SUSPECTS HELD: Police claimed on Saturday to have arrested two suspects who allegedly raped a 12-year-old girl at village 18/11-L, Tehsil Pakpattan on Friday. Reports said parents of the girl ‘N’ had gone to visit their ailing parents at 90 Mor. During their absence, suspects ‘A’ of Khanewal and ‘Nv’ of Burewala allegedly forced their entry into the house and raped the girl. They made a video and took away Rs100,000. On the complaint of the girl’s father, Saddar Police Chichawatni registered a case under Section 375A of the Pakistan Penal Code and arrested the suspects. Underage marriage bid: Yousafwala Police foiled an attempted child marriage in Masoo Colony on Friday night and arrested the bridegroom, his father, and the bride’s father. Eyewitnesses said the Nikah Khwan and several other participants fled the scene when police arrived at the wedding venue. Reports said Imran Mughal, a resident of Chak 80, was arranging the marriage of his underage daughter, Mariam, to Ahsan Ali, a resident of Kaur. The wedding procession had reached Shadman Town when police received information regarding the bride’s age. Acting on the tip-off, police raided the venue and arrested the bride’s father, Imran Mughal, the bridegroom, Ahsan Ali, and his father, Muhammad Rafiq. A case was registered under Sections 4, 5, and 6 of the Punjab Child Marriage Restraint Ordinance, 2026, on the complaint of Sub-Inspector Imtiaz Ali. Police said the three suspects were booked and shifted to lock-up, while raids were being conducted at different locations to arrest the Nikah Khwan and other participants who escaped during the raid. ARRESTED: The Anti-Corruption Establishment (ACE) arrested an assistant sub-inspector (ASI) for taking Rs15,000 bribe in connection with the registration of a case with Yousafwala Police. According to the report, Allah Dita, a resident of Chak 96/9-L, approached his old friend Abdul Qayyum, ASI at Civil Lines Police, seeking assistance in registering a criminal case. Qayyum claimed that the SHO of Yousafwala was his friend and assured him that the case would be registered, but demanded Rs30,000. The deal was eventually settled at Rs15,000. Allah Dita reported the matter to the ACE that conducted a raid and recovered Rs15,000. Subsequently, a case was registered against Abdul Qayyum on the complaint of Allah Dita. Published in Dawn, June 7th, 2026
He had been rushed to a private hospital with fever and shortness of breath in the early hours of June 6, and placed on ventilator support
Multiple people were rushed to the hospital after shots were fired at what was supposed to be a family-friendly festival in Ohio on Saturday.
Sir Malcolm Walker says 'two-tier policing isn't just happening on the streets' as he revealed cops rushed to one of his stores three minutes after a phoney accusation of racism.
A police spokeswoman said emergency services had responded to reports of an assault on Bondi Road about 6.45am on Sunday.
TEPEACA, Puebla — A major emergency response was triggered in the municipality of Tepeaca, Puebla, following an intense explosion involving four LP gas tanker trucks. Emergency teams from multiple agencies rushed to the scene to contain the blaze and prevent further risks to the surrounding community. Following the initial incident, local and federal authorities conducted […] The post An intense explosion involving four LP gas tanker trucks rocks Tepeaca, Puebla appeared first on Mexico Daily Post.
He had been rushed to a private hospital with fever and shortness of breath in the early hours of June 6, and placed on ventilator support
An avalanche of selling on Friday crushed stocks. It was a dramatic reversal from record highs earlier in the week.
Nazri Bah Eng says the 49-year-old was weak and crying and he rushed her back to his village chief's house, where she was fed.
A cyclist is in critical condition after being rushed to a hospital following a collision in Brampton early Saturday morning. Emergency crews were called to the area of Chinguacousy Road and Daviselm Drive just after 1:30 a.m. for reports of a crash involving a vehicle and a cyclist. Police say the driver of the vehicle […]
A long trade war looms. Trump’s scattershot protectionism, chaotic tariffs and belligerence against our natural allies guarantees that US trade policy will remain a hot mess We are in for a long trade war. In the months since “Liberation Day” last year, when Donald Trump let loose a volley of tariffs against imports from everywhere, countries have rushed to build new relationships in the hope of maybe circumventing the US to protect the global trading system. Continue reading...
Salim Kumar experienced health issues and was rushed to hospital in the morning. He had undergone a liver transplant a few years ago
Hong Kong police have arrested a 69-year-old taxi driver after he allegedly knocked down and killed a 34-year-old woman in a shopping district in the early hours of Saturday. The incident happened at around 2.12am near Park Lane Shopper’s Boulevard in Tsim Sha Tsui. The taxi driver was travelling along Nathan Road towards Mong Kok when he struck the 34-year-old woman as she was crossing Granville Road. The woman sustained serious injuries and was rushed unconscious to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in...
A daughter has been charged after her mother was rushed to hospital when she allegedly drank water laced with bleach.
“The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease” — Sir William Osler (1849-1919) IN 1986, Carlo Petrini founded the ‘slow food’ movement in Italy to counteract the so-called ‘fast food’, by promoting local food cultures, traditional cooking and sustainable farming. Inspired by this, the concept of ‘slow medicine’ took birth: a patient-centred approach to healthcare that prioritises time, listening, and comprehensive care over rapid, high-tech, intensive interventions. It emphasises quality, the patient’s context and shared decision-making to avoid hurried, unnecessary, harmful treatments. There is no doubt that modern medicine is revolutionising healthcare. In emergency situations diagnoses are generated in minutes. Imaging technologies are replacing exploratory surgery. Algorithms now identify patterns invisible to the human eye. This advancement has saved countless lives. Yet amid this relentless drive for efficiency, questions are emerging: what do we lose in this fast-paced medicine? Most health challenges are the result of an imbalance in our lives, and most quick-fix solutions actually exacerbate these imbalances. The slow medicine approach focuses on identifying the root cause of our health challenges, creating a thoughtful, step-by-step and long-term response to restore balance in our lives, because good care requires time, attention, and reflection. It reminds us that patients are not just a set of signs and symptoms to be fixed, but individuals whose illnesses are embedded in social, psychological and cultural contexts. For countries like Pakistan, slow medicine is particularly relevant. Slow medicine is built on three principles: careful deliberation before intervention; minimal necessary treatment rather than maximal possible treatment; and respect for the patient’s lived experience and values. It asks physicians to pause and think before acting. In medicine, as in life, acting quickly is not always acting wisely. The concept has gained attention in response to the global problem of overdiagnosis, overtreatment and rising costs of healthcare. As diagnostic tools become more sensitive, medicine increasingly detects abnormalities that may never cause harm. Small lesions, borderline results and incidental findings often mean further tests and interventions, leading to unnecessary physical, psychological and financial stress. Slow medicine offers a different approach. It suggests that not every abnormal result or every symptom requires a battery of tests and immediate action. Observation, patience, context and careful history-taking can be more valuable in many situations. Although the principles of slow medicine can be applied to any clinical interaction, there are at least four areas where they are most relevant. Chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular disease evolve over years, shaped by lifestyle, environment and stress. Managing them effectively requires careful and thoughtful history-taking, a good doctor-patient relationship, continuity of care and gradual adjustment. Understanding why the condition exists in the first place is more important than simply making changes to the prescription. Secondly, mental health conditions such as depression, anxiety and trauma are closely related to relationships and social contexts. In healthcare systems like Pakistan, mental health consultations are brief, fragmented and heavily reliant on medications. Very few psychiatric consultations end without a prescription. Yet psychological healing often depends on something more essential: being listened to and understood — things that cannot be rushed. Geriatric care is another area. Older patients frequently have multiple conditions, medications and vulnerabilities. Aggressive interventions may prolong life but at the cost of dignity and comfort. Slow medicine shifts the question from ‘what more can we do?’ to ‘what is worth doing?’ In many cases, less intervention results in better quality of life. End-of-life care perhaps represents the most profound expression of slow medicine philosophy. The goal is no longer cure but care: relief of pain and suffering, preserving dignity, and respecting patients’ and family’s wishes. This requires patience, tolerance and time and cannot be rushed. For countries like Pakistan, slow medicine is particularly relevant. Many of the country’s health problems are shaped by societal conditions: poverty, unemployment, rampant inflation, political uncertainty, violence, etc leading to medicalisation of social distress. Patients and physicians both get trapped in seeing these problems through the biomedical lens, ie, quick assessment in which patients’ complaints are addressed through various lab and radiology tests, followed by medicines, while the root cause of their complaints are hardly ever asked about or addressed. Doctors are neither trained nor feel comfortable enquiring about social factors as most wonder that even if they inquire about them what can they can do about it. No wonder the burden of almost all conditions — communicable and non-communicable — is extremely high in Pakistan. Ultimately, slow medicine is not about rejecting urgency where it is necessary — emergencies demand rapid action, and modern medicine excels in such moments. It is about recognising that much of healthcare does not occur in emergencies. It unfolds over time — in chronic illness, in mental health, in ageing and in recovery. In these areas, haste can do more harm than good. At its heart, slow medicine is a reminder of what medicine has always aspired to be: not just a technical but a human one — one that demands not only scientific advancement, but also wisdom, humility, compassion and humanity. It asks clinicians to see beyond the scan, the lab report and the prescription pad, and to engage with the person behind the patient. It reminds us that the true practice of medicine is in caring for people. In 1953, Sir Robert Hutchison wrote A physician’s prayer: “From inability to let well alone; from too much zeal for the new and contempt for what is old; from putting knowledge before wisdom, science before art, and cleverness before common sense; from treating patients as cases; and from making the cure of the disease more grievous than the endurance of the same, Good Lord, deliver us.” More than 70 years later, his prophetic words remain strikingly relevant to modern medicine. The writer is professor emeritus, psychiatry, Aga Khan University. mmkarticle@gmail.com Published in Dawn, June 6th, 2026