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Family claims baby’s leg had to be amputated due to Maltese doctors’ mistake

Family claims baby's leg had to be amputated due to Maltese doctors' mistake
Mar 7 2023 Share

As reported by Australian news platform 7News.com.au, a 10 month-old baby boy’s leg had to be partially amputated below the knee following a mistake by a Maltese medical team. 

Zayn Seguna, born to a Melbourne based family, was taken to Mater Dei Hospital to be treated for bronchiolitis, aged seven months, last year. 

His mother Joanne claimed that doctors informed her that they had damaged an artery while inserting a central line during treatment, restricting blood flow and quickly resulting in extensive muscle and tissue damage. 

7News was informed by Joanne that he was given a blood thinner after the line was pilled out. Zayn remained in hospital for more days but his condition did not improve. 

This led to the family being flown out of the country via air ambulance for emergency surgery, with Zayn undergoing surgery at the Great Ormond Street Hospital in London. 

The family, now back home in Australia, have written a complaint letter to Mater Dei Hospital claiming negligence on behalf of the doctors who failed to report to Zayn’s parents the need to send the baby to another hospital with urgency to address the artery damage. 

Meanwhile, a fundraiser has raised more than $90,000 to help the Seguna family with the recovery. Joanne revealed that despite having lost his leg, Zayn has made great progress. 

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Puttinu’s Good Friday walk is back for the 18th edition

Puttinu's Good Friday walk is back for the 18th edition
Mar 7 2023 Share

The 18th edition of the Good Friday Walk by Puttinu Cares will take place on the night between Thursday 6th April and Good Friday 7th of April 2023, with the beginning time being midnight. 

Participants will be kicking off the marathon from Pjazza tas-Santwarju in Mellieħa and will pass through Xemxija, St Paul’s Bay and continue all the way to Furjana at the Fosos. 

The distance is set to be around 17 kilometres and will take approximately 4 to 5 hours to finish. A €10 donation will be collected from the beginning site. 

Free transport will be offered before the marathon begins at 1030pm from Furjana and back after the walk. Participants who wish to make use of this service are urged to book ahead of time.

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Today’s kids will probably reach age 100

Today's kids will probably reach age 100
Mar 7 2023 Share

According to demographers, kids who are aged 5 today will have a much better chance of becoming centenarians. 

It is very likely that the norm for newborns in wealthier nations such as Europe or the USA will be reaching age 100 by the year 2050. This changes how we typically view a normal life – youth, middle age and retirement/old-age.

The world population hit the 8 billion mark last November, but according to National Geographic, the growth rate is slowing with numbers expected to peak by the mid-point of the century. 

In essence, a less populated world inhabited by older people could be the very real future we’re approaching. Psychology professor and founding director of Stanford Centre on Longevity Laura Carstensen says that we have an opportunity to redesign our lives into an extended middle age. 

Technological advances will be part and parcel of the lives of kids getting older. Retiring at age 65 would also not make sense as the three-stage life will not make sense either. 

The education system can even change, beginning later in life and lasting longer with more early years of play and gap years in between studying. A 100 year life isn’t ‘about striving to stay younger for longer, its about staying healthy and connected enough to maintain a sense of purpose.’ 

#MaltaDaily 

Escobar’s ‘cocaine hippos’ to be relocated as they keep having sex

Escobar's 'cocaine hippos' to be relocated as they keep having sex
Mar 7 2023 Share

The descendants of Pablo Escobar’s ‘cocaine hippos’ are set to be relocated in India and Mexico in an attempt to control their booming population. 

Experts claim that the 4,000 pound animals won’t stop having sex and that they have taken over Colombia’s waterways, poisoning wildlife with their toxic urine and faeces. 

There are worries, expressed by the likes of Nature journal, that this hippo population could boom ten times to around 1,500 in just 20 years due to them constantly reproducing. 

Local governor Aníbal Gaviria said that transferring 70 of the hippos is very risky, as moving them means moving the pathogens and viruses they carry as well. He explained that sending them back to their native home would have done more harm than good. 

The goal is “to take them to countries where these institutions have the capacity to receive them, and to (home) them properly and to control their reproduction,” said Gaviria.

The small herd of hippos arrived in Colombia in the late 1980s by the wealthy cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar. After his 1993 death, the animals were left to roam freely and populate the region of Magdalena Medio. 

The local environmental agencies have recorded two assaults on residents in 2021, with unsuccessful attempts at sterilisation in 2022 failing. This led to the hippos being declared as invasive species. 

#MaltaDaily