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Slump in dental treatments across Dorset | Bournemouth Echo

Slump in dental treatments across Dorset | Bournemouth Echo
bournemouthecho.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bournemouthecho.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New facility helps Indianapolis victims of human trafficking take back control

Ascent 121 provides free, long-term trauma recovery services for survivors of human sex trafficking and exploitation. Author: Sarah Jones Updated: 8:51 PM EDT July 15, 2021 INDIANAPOLIS A local non-profit that works with survivors of human trafficking and commercial sexual exploitation opened a new space on the city’s east side.  Ascent 121 provides free, long-term trauma recovery services for survivors of human sex trafficking and exploitation. Human trafficking is an illegal industry worth more than $150 billion and it s happening right here in Indiana. It s absolutely happening here, it s just more education needs to happen about what it really looks like and challenging those preconceived notions of what it looks like, said Trisha Prickett, the Lift program director at Ascent 121. 

Modern microbes provide window into ancient ocean

 E-Mail Step into your new, microscopic time machine. Scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder have discovered that a type of single-celled organism living in modern-day oceans may have a lot in common with life forms that existed billions of years ago and that fundamentally transformed the planet. The new research, which will appear Jan. 6 in the journal Science Advances, is the latest to probe the lives of what may be nature s hardest working microbes: cyanobacteria. These single-celled, photosynthetic organisms, also known as blue-green algae, can be found in almost any large body of water today. But more than 2 billion years ago, they took on an extra important role in the history of life on Earth: During a period known as the Great Oxygenation Event, ancient cyanobacteria produced a sudden, and dramatic, surge in oxygen gas.

Family donates stuffed animals to MultiCare Deaconess Hospital to honor late-daughter

Family donates stuffed animals to MultiCare Deaconess Hospital to honor late-daughter December 9, 2020 6:44 PM Kaitlin Knapp Updated: SPOKANE, Wash. Every year, Andrea Berndt and her daughter Stephanie give out donations or do an act of kindness. It’s in honor of Andrea’s other daughter. Ashley Rose died in 1989 from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, or SIDS. On Wednesday, they donated around 50 stuffed animals and blankets for families at MultiCare Deaconess Hospital’s NICU. “It kinda brings a bright spot and helps to know you’re not alone,” Andrea said. “There’s people out there thinking about you and that have been through what you’ve been through.”

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