Idaho Man Loses 7 Teeth After His Vape Explodes In His Face

This guy literally almost lost his face while vaping.

Attention all vapers: those pens may not be as chill as they appear. Though vaping may look like the healthiest, most advanced means of herbal consumption, the seemingly gentle inhalation devices can backfire on you in a big way. There haven’t been many reports of vape-induced injuries, but a man in Idaho almost lost his whole damn face when his vape recently exploded mid-puff. And he has the pics to prove it.

Earlier this week, Andrew Hall of Pocatello, Idaho disclosed his violent vaporizing experience via Facebook. He logged on while he was in the ICU and detailed all of the injuries he suffered as a result of the explosion. “I’ve lost at least 7 teeth,” he told his followers in a post that has since gone viral. He claims to have sustained second-degree burns to his face and his neck, and said that he has “been pulling chunks of plastic, teeth, and foreign objects” from his mouth, throat, and lips. And he was courteous enough to supply photo evidence of all of those gruesome wounds.

He also says the explosion caused “a huge amount of damage” to the room in his house where it all went down. We wish Andrew a speedy recovery, and next time he wants to inhale, maybe he’ll consider lighting up the old fashioned way.

Idaho Man Loses 7 Teeth After His Vape Explodes In His Face

This 4-Year-Old Has Already 1,000 Books, So You Should Just Go Home Now

Daliyah Maria Arana, a 4-year-old bibliophile from Georgia who has already read 1,000 books, was right at home as “Librarian for the Day” at the Library of Congress.

Daliyah shadowed Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden on Thursday.

“She just kept saying how the Library of Congress is her most favorite, favorite, favorite library in the whole wide world,” Daliyah’s mother, Haleema Arana, told the Washington Post.

Daliyah read her first book on her own at 2 years, 11 months old. Since then, she has read more than 1,000 books through the 1,000 Books Before Kindergarten program. Having already met the goal, she wants to reach 1,500 books by the time she actually starts kindergarten in the fall.

Haleema Arana reached out to the Library of Congress to try to make the visit happen.

The library responded. And on Thursday, Daliyah was shadowing Hayden, meeting library staff, sitting in on executive meetings and making suggestions for additions to the library. She suggested the library add whiteboards in the library hallways so kids could practice writing.

Hayden tweeted photos of the two of them from the day — in one, she and Daliyah are walking together, both with their hands rested behind their backs, the four-year-old looking up at Hayden in awe.

‘Superbug’ Resistant to All Antibiotics Killed Nevada Woman

A Nevada woman in her 70s who’d recently returned from India died in September from a “superbug” infection that resisted all antibiotics, according to a report released Friday.

The case raises concern about the spread of such infections, which have become more common over past decades as germs have developed resistance to widely used antibiotics.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention “basically reported that there was nothing in our medicine cabinet to treat this lady,” report co-author Dr. Randall Todd told the Reno Gazette-Journal. He’s director of epidemiology and public health preparedness for the Washoe County Health District, in Reno.

The report was published Jan. 13 in the CDC journal Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

As reported by Todd and his colleagues, the woman fractured her right leg while in India and underwent multiple hospitalizations in that country over two years. The last such hospitalization occurred in June.

She returned to the United States but was admitted to the Reno-area hospital on Aug. 18 with a severe inflammatory reaction to an infection in her right hip.

On Aug. 19, doctors isolated a sample of a known antibiotic-resistant “superbug” — known as carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae (CRE) — from the patient.

CDC testing subsequently revealed the germ was New Delhi metallo-beta-lactamase (NDM) — a highly resistant form of CRE typically found outside the United States.

“Antimicrobial susceptibility testing in the United States indicated that the isolate was resistant to 26 antibiotics,” the researchers reported. In effect, the germ “was resistant to all available antimicrobial drugs,” they said.

As soon as CRE was identified, “the patient was placed in a single room under contact precautions,” Todd’s group wrote. The woman later developed septic shock and died in early September.

The doctors say the case — the first ever in Nevada — highlights the fact that patients treated in hospitals in other countries can acquire these extremely dangerous infections.

“The patient in this report had inpatient health care exposure in India before receiving care in the United States,” the team noted. In such cases, U.S. health care facilities “should obtain a history of health care exposures outside their region upon admission and consider screening for CRE,” they said.

Dr. Lei Chen is epidemiologist program manager for the health district, and a co-author of the new report.

She told the Reno Gazette-Journal that it’s always possible that staff at a foreign hospital “don’t do a good infection control, or they don’t have good hygiene, and it could be spread.”

Todd said other patients in the same unit at the Reno hospital were also tested for the infection, but none tested positive.

“Had any of the other patients been infected with this, they would have had the same resistance,” he said. “This is kind of scary stuff, and that’s why we jump on things like this very quickly. We were pleased that the hospital responded as quickly and comprehensively as they did.”

Both doctors stressed that the growing problem of antibiotic-resistant germs is caused by the overuse of these drugs — often for conditions for which they are useless.

For example, people will often ask for an antibiotic for a cold or flu, which are caused by viruses. Antibiotics target bacteria, not viruses.

“Even if you’re able to talk your doctor into prescribing them, and many people are able to do that, that is not going to help your cold or the flu in any way, shape or form,” Todd said.

Grandma Keeps ‘Falling Out Of Wheelchair,’ So She Installs A Camera To See If Nurses Are Lying

Minnie Graham spent the last years of her life in a nursing home in Garland, Texas. One day, the beloved 98-year-old great-great-grandmother began telling her family that the staff was mistreating her.

Minnie said the female hospice worker assigned to her was especially cruel.

Then came the bruises. And the black eyes. Minnie’s family, particularly her granddaughters, wanted immediate answers.

The hospice workers told Minnie’s kin that she had fallen out of her wheelchair, hence the strange and sudden bruising. Her granddaughters, however, didn’t believe them.

So, Minnie’s determined family decided to take a ballsy and proactive approach by setting up a clock rigged with a hidden camera in her room. They watched and waited — and what they found horrified them.

By turning to technology and following their instincts, Minnie’s loved ones were able to uncover and expose the truth before she passed away.

Watch the video below to see what Minnie’s family captured on those hidden tapes, and please SHARE this with your friends on Facebook.

UK male four months pregnant after receiving sperm donation

Gloucester, January 8: A British man who fell pregnant after he used Facebook to find a sperm donor has said he is now four months pregnant and will be the “greatest dad”.

Hayden Cross, 20, said his first attempt using donor sperm had been successfull and he would continue his transition process to remove his breasts and ovaries as soon as he gives birth.

Hayden, born a girl 20 years ago, had lived as a man for three years and was taking male hormones but was desperate to have a baby.

The unemployed former Asda worker asked the NHS to freeze his eggs before he completed his full transition, in the hope he might have children years later.

But when NHRS refused to carry out the process, Hayden decided to use an anonymous sperm donor he found on Facebook and go ahead with pregnancy using local hospital maternity services.

Hayden admits that he still feel uncomfortable carrying a child and struggle with the physical changes.

“It’s a very female thing to carry a baby and it goes everything against I feel in my body”, Hayden said.

Hayden, who had school crushes on both boys and girls and whose parents split when he was 14, was initially “confused” by his feelings, but now calls himself bisexual.

10 Things I Wish I Knew Before I Became an Emergency Room Nurse

1. Unlike most specialists, you need to know how to treat people of all ages and needs.
Emergency nursing is considered a nursing specialty, but we’re also generalists. We take care of children and the elderly, pregnant patients and psychiatric patients, patients with special needs — you name it, we do it. It’s essential to regularly brush up on medical information and keep current in your continuing education, because you have to be prepared for any kind of patient to walk through the door.

2. Deciding who to treat first is really, really hard.
We do get the stereotypical “emergency” cases — heart attacks or trauma victims — but we also see patients who are not able to get care from a primary care physician. A triage nurse will do an “across-the-room survey” to see who needs to be seen immediately and who can wait a little longer. In most emergency departments, only experienced nurses [with] advances certifications perform triage.

Miniature brain and skull found growing inside 16-year-old girl’s ovary

Doctors in Japan were left stunned recently after discovering a tiny brain growing inside a tumor in the ovary of a 16-year-old girl.

The tumor itself was only noticed when doctors were removing the girl’s appendix. She had not suffered from any negative symptoms prior to its discovery. A much bigger shock then followed when surgeons went to work on the tumor itself, as it was found to contain a small mass of highly organized neural tissue, roughly 3 centimeters (1 inch) in width, that resembled a cerebellum – the brain region that coordinates motor control and balance.

Ovarian tumors that contain other types of body tissue are known as teratomas, and are fairly common. Usually they harbor nothing more than hair, muscle, or fat, although in some instances they have been found to contain miniature structures that resemble actual body parts, which are called homunculi.

On rare occasions, doctors have reported teratomas featuring brain cells, although finding such a complete and well organized chunk of neural tissue is virtually unheard of. Describing the amazing discovery in the journal Neuropathology, the surgeons who removed the tumor explain that “three layers of the cerebellar cortex were well formed,” and that the fibers that connect neurons to one another – known as dendrites – were starting to take shape.

Myelin, which insulates nerve fibers in order to allow for the speedy transmission of electrical impulses, was also found on much of the white matter. This, say the researchers, reflects the advanced maturation of the neural tissue.

Next to the cerebellum-like structure was a club-shaped clump of central nervous system tissue resembling a brainstem, which normally connects the brain to the spinal cord.

Fortunately, the girl has now had the tumor removed and is recovering well.

Woman Works In Nursing Home, Snaps Picture Of Resident’s Hand That’s Going Viral

Sometimes we get embarrassed about body image issues that we simply can’t control. But every once in awhile, an angel pops into our lives to remind us that the features we dislike about ourselves actually tell a story and make us who we are as an individual.
One such angel is Brandalyn Mae Porter. She works with elderly people in a Texas nursing home, and her positive way of looking at our biggest insecurities has made a world of difference.
While painting a new resident’s nails, Brandalyn had the chance to turn the woman’s negative outlook into something wonderful.

Brandalyn shared her story with the Love What Matters Facebook page:

“Today I painted a new residents nails at work and as we were going over colors, she mentioned she wanted clear.
The only thought that came to my mind was ‘CLEAR?! That’s no fun.’
I asked her why she wanted clear and she said, ‘My hands are ugly, I don’t want to draw attention to them.'”

“I then carefully responded with, ‘Your hands tell the story of your life. They tell the story of love, of care and adventure. These hands have touched and held things that most people can only wish to one day.’
And with that, she went with the color pink for her nails.
Sometimes what we are so insecure with, others find beauty in.”

Woman Works In Nursing Home, Snaps Picture Of Resident's Hand That's Going Viral

Brandalyn was able to convince the resident that her hands are not only beautiful, but they are a window into her life experiences that younger people just don’t have yet!
We’re lucky to have such caring people in the world – especially people like Brandalyn who dedicate themselves to making sure our elders spend the rest of their lives surrounded by peace and happiness!
It really does take a special type of person to do this, and Brandalyn is special!

The US Virgin Islands Wants to Pay You $300 to Visit in 2017

Truth be told, one doesn’t really need much enticement to plan a trip to the US Virgin Islands. With its year-round perfect temperatures, iconic white sand beaches, passport-less travel policy for U.S. citizens and rum cocktails that go down like glasses of water (consider yourself warned), it’s a popular tourist destination year-round.

Now, to celebrate the 100th anniversary of St. Croix, St. John and St. Thomas becoming American territories, the islands are offering one more reason to book a trip in 2017 — $300 to spend once you get there.

As part of the USVI Centennial Commemoration, people who book a three-day trip through USVI.com using the promotional code “CP1” will receive $300 in spending credits to use during your travels. There is, of course, a catch: the idea here is to get visitors to experience more than the beach chairs at your hotel. The credits must be used to actually explore the island, which could mean visiting an art museum, taking a food tour, spending the afternoon in a botanical garden, booking an eco-adventure or exploring the area via kayak.

The US Virgin Islands Wants to Pay You $300 to Visit in 2017

Unfortunately you can’t just use this $300 anywhere on the island. Instead, there will be designated places willing to accept the spending credits in lieu of cash. You’ll also need to stay at one of the participating hotels, though that should be less of a burden since there are a few dozen on the list. As an added bonus, travelers visiting in March will receive a commemorative “centennial” souvenir.

A 3-night minimum stay is required and you’ll also need to book your trip by October 1, 2017 for travel between January 2 and December 31, 2017, which leaves most of the year wide open. Sounds like the perfect way to decompress after a stressful holiday season… or before next year’s is upon us.