At 48, the Los Angeles-based celebrity OB-GYN of clients like the Kardashians and Rihanna went in for a routine mammogram. The doctor spotted and ordered a biopsy of a lesion of atypical cells in her left breast that could become cancerous over time. Aliabadi was told that everything was fine and to come back in six months.
Lisa Watson suffers the devastating effects of incontinence daily, and believes mid-urethral surgery, otherwise known as vaginal mesh surgery, could change everything. The surgery was paused in Ireland in 2018, and she is calling for the pause to be lifted By anyone's standards, Lisa Watson is a busy woman. During the week, the Wicklow-based mum of two is a credit union risk manager and at weekends she puts on her make-up artist hat.
An elderly woman is refusing to leave a hospital where she has been an in-patient for 719 days even though she has been medically assessed as needing no further treatment, the High Court heard.
In 2019, Jenna Keindel came across a research paper that would change her life. The Canadian, then aged 37, found it through a Facebook group of people affected by limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD), a condition that causes progressive muscle weakness. Keindel was diagnosed with it when she was 16. The paper suggested that another condition, called anti-HMGCR myopathy, a rare autoimmune disease that causes severe muscle weakness, shared some symptoms with specific subtypes of LGMD and was sometimes misdiagnosed as LGMD.
In May, 11-year-old Nathan Jachimiek's son Ian broke out in a rash. "He's never had anything like this before so this was new for us as parents," said Jachimiek. The couple gave him Benadryl and brought him to the Good Samaritan Emergency Room in San Jose out of an abundance of caution. Jachimiek says a doctor never evaluated his son, they just sort of waited, and while they did, Ian seemed to be getting better. Enough so, that the family tried to leave the ER.
Some families very recently have fed back to me shocking examples of being stigmatised or gaslit - criticised for either being part of the independent review or for campaigning for better services. Families have heard that they are criticised for being in the review, and that they are in the review on the basis that they are seeking compensation. The families tell me that there are instances where they feel they have reason to believe they can trace that back to colleagues that work in NUH.
This funding was more than just a financial award-it was a crucial investment in understanding and eventually treating a devastating disease. Advancing research in FD/MAS benefits those living with this rare disease and holds great potential for broader medical applications.