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Calling ambulance when experiencing chest pain may deliver better outcomes – Research
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A research published on the Medical Journal of Australia on Monday found that calling an ambulance when experiencing chest pain rather than organising other transport to a hospital means faster intervention and may deliver better outcomes.
The research was led by professor of cardiology at Concord Repatriation Hospital in Sydney, David Brieger and Dr Eleanor Redwood from Prince of Wales Hospital and Community Health Services.
Researchers analysed data from the patients with confirmed ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) from 43 hospitals during Feb. 23, 2009 to Dec. 31, 2017.
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Australian Tennis Open proceeds despite growing COVID-19 infections
The staging of this year’s Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne in the midst of the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic has become a naked demonstration of the subordination of public health and every other aspect of life, including sport, to the profit-driven dictates of the wealthy corporate elite.
“Profits before lives” is literally the theme under which the global season-opening event is taking place. The Victorian state Labor Party government is helping more than 1,200 international tennis players, their support staff and broadcasters fly into the country on special charter flights for next month’s slightly delayed competition, and is allowing them to forgo normal quarantine requirements. This is despite growing numbers of the participants testing positive to COVID-19, which may include the more infectious variants that first came to light in Britain.
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NSW has warned that coronavirus restrictions will not be relaxed until testing numbers rise, after a hospital worker was among seven new cases of community transmission reported over the weekend.
Chief Medical Officer Dr Kerry Chant said five of six new cases reported on Sunday were from the same household in western Sydney and the other was a close contact.
Testing plea: Dr Kerry Chant at Sunday s briefing.
James Alcock
The cases were tied to the sole case reported on Saturday from the 24 hours to 8pm the previous night, which authorities believed to be linked to the Berala cluster.