EtherBreather
EtherBreather
EtherBreather

You'll regret not doing it more than doing it

Spend as much time with her as you and she can manage.

My wife felt super nauseated and overwhelmingly fatigued for about 4-5 days before a positive test for both pregnancies. Sending all vibes. Also don’t worry if it doesn’t happen this time. Took us 6 months of rigorous trying. (Sex every two days, she would lie with her pelvis elevated for 15 min afterward, etc)

Actually I'm pretty sure the running would be WAY more tiring. But I can't think of that building without that memory. Which is a good thing.

I once made out with a girl on top of a conference table in an empty classroom on an upper floor in the CoL one summer almost 20 yrs ago.

Not really, they didn't force him to remove it, just made it a condition of riding their plane, and the nuance is important in this case, as it relates to rights versus privileges.

Nobody gets to decide except the wearer. Southwest didn't decide what this guy wore, he did! But, of course, and hilariously, SW did get to decide who rides on their planes, with 100% discretion.

The challenge is to avoid getting Herpes.

If anything, I think it's clear that there's no one best way to achieve optimal health; and that paying attention to your own body's needs, pregnant or not, tuna or no tuna, is the best way to ensure a sense of wellbeing.

It is.

Choices in personal healthcare always affect others, as people will utilize more resources (emergency rooms, etc) when their health worsens.

People seem to forget that the head, INCLUDING THE BRAIN, ages also. Probably 80% of people will have dementia by age 100-105. fun!

I see what you're saying, but "brain death" is a very specific medical and legal outcome. It is important not to use the term colloquially or incorrectly, as confusion over brain death presents lots of societal problems.

Brain dead is legally dead.. At least in California

Not personally. Of course, trach site skin or soft tissue infections exist, but when one refers to infection risk in the setting of tracheostomies, it is typically regarding VAP, which of course is generally a much worse infection than cellulitis. Overall, my main rationale for having patients trached is to

I'm an ICU doc and I'd like to clear a few things up. A trach does not increase risk of infection. Overall, traches PROBABLY lower the risk of ventilator-associated pneumonia (by reducing days on the vent), and thereby reduce ICU days. No change in mortality though. They are certainly more comfortable than

Gonna need some data for big claims like "reduction in emergency c sections or operative births"

I thin it's actually "acellular pertussis"

Perhaps you meant "cardiothoracic surgeon", not cardiologist. Either way, his training in medicine has clearly failed him.

Holy shit his arguments are: