Le corps d’un jeune homme a été retrouvé en mer à Baie-Mahault

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Guadeloupe FranceAntilles

Dimanche 14 Août 2022 – 08h01

Recherche d’un disparu en mer – dr

Hier, les services de secours ont été contactés pour secourir un jeune homme emporté par les flots à Baie-Mahault. Le corps sans vie de la victime a été retrouvé ce matin.

C’est à 18h28, samedi 13 août que le service des pompiers a été contacté pour porter secours à un homme emporté par les flots à Birmingham Baie-Mahault. L’homme, âgé de 23 ans a disparu à 40 mètres du rivage. 

Une ambulance, deux véhicules légers, l’unité de sauveteurs spécialisés héliportés, 9 sapeurs pompiers dont un officier ont été dépêchés sur les lieux. La gendarmerie et le SMUR se sont joints à eux.

L’eau trouble et la tombée de la nuit ont rendu les recherches difficiles qui ont été stoppées à 21h pour reprendre ce matin. Le drône et le jet sky des services de secours ont été mobilisés. Le corps sans vie du jeune homme a été retrouvé au petit matin.

Recherche d’un disparu en mer à l’aide d’un drône

– dr

Sur le même sujet

  Opération policière contre les « …

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It pays to be a whistleblower: SEC awards $16 million to two people Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced last week awards of more than $16 million to two whistleblowers who provided information and assistance in a successful SEC enforcement action.

The first whistleblower prompted the opening of the investigation and provided information on difficult-to-detect violations. This whistleblower also identified key witnesses and provided critical information, which helped staff in their investigation. As a result, this whistleblower will receive an award of approximately $13 million. The second whistleblower submitted important new information during the course of the investigation and will receive an award of more than $3 million.

“The information and assistance provided by these two whistleblowers in helping to identify complex wrongdoing demonstrates the importance of the whistleblower program to the SEC’s enforcement efforts,” said Creola Kelly, Chief of the SEC’s Office of the Whistleblower. “These whistleblowers reported critical information that aided the SEC’s investigation and provided extensive, ongoing cooperation that helped stop the wrongdoing and protect the capital markets.”

The SEC has awarded more than $1.3 billion to 281 individuals since issuing its first award in 2012. All payments are made out of an investor protection fund established by Congress that is financed entirely through monetary sanctions paid to the SEC by securities law violators. No money has been taken or withheld from harmed investors to pay whistleblower awards. Whistleblowers may be eligible for an award when they voluntarily provide the SEC with original, timely, and credible information that leads to a successful enforcement action. Whistleblower awards can range from 10 to 30 percent of the money collected when the monetary sanctions exceed $1 million.

As set forth in the Dodd-Frank Act, the SEC protects the confidentiality of whistleblowers and does not disclose information that could reveal a whistleblower’s identity.

For more information about the whistleblower program and how to report a tip, visit www.sec.gov/whistleblower.

(source: SEC)

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European travel conglomerate expanding presence in Jamaica Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass
Loop News

30 minutes ago

L-R: Director of Tourism, Jamaica, Donovan White, Philip Ivesan, Commercial Director Group Products and Purchasing at TUI Group and John Lynch, Chairman of the Jamaica Tourist Board

The Jamaica Tourist Board announced last week that TUI Group, one of the largest European travel and tourism conglomerates, has indicated its intention to expand its presence in Jamaica in summer 2023 with increased flights. The announcement was made in a meeting with one of its Senior Executives and Senior Jamaica Tourist Board officials on August 8.

Currently, TUI operates 10 flights out of Gatwick, Manchester, and Birmingham in the United Kingdom. These flights support both cruise and land stop over arrivals. The plan is to have up to 8 flights dedicated to stop over arrivals by summer 2023.

Commenting on the development, Minister of Tourism, Jamaica, Hon Edmund Bartlett, said:

Part of Jamaica’s recovery efforts has been to strengthen partnership with our tourism stakeholders like TUI Group and their intention to increase flights signals confidence in the destination. This move will undoubtedly augur well for the destination in terms of arrivals and economic activity in terms of jobs and overall earnings.

Director of Tourism, Jamaica, Donovan White, also commented, saying:

Each flight carries roughly 340 passengers which means about 3000 passengers weekly who spend 11 to 12 nights in the destination. This is a very positive step as we work towards full recovery from the fallout of the pandemic.

TUI Group fully and partially owns several travel agencies, hotel chains, cruise lines and retail shops as well as five European airlines. The group also owns the largest holiday aeroplane fleet in Europe and holds multiple European tour operators.

For more information, please visit www.visitjamaica.com

(Source: Jamaica Tourist Board)

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Patients praise HSA’s new neurosurgeon for life-changing procedures Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

The Health Services Authority’s (HSA’s) new neurosurgeon Dr Dwaine Cooke has hit the ground running, performing several life-saving surgeries, and garnering the respect and support of his patients who have been delighted with the quality of care he and the staff have provided.

Speaking about his experience, one patient, Andre Yates said:

Many years of lower back trauma and a slip-and-fall in January 2022 caused me to be in pain and leaning to one side. Eventually, I could not work nor concentrate.

Mr Yates was referred to Dr Cooke who recommended spine surgery.

“(Prior to the surgery) Dr Cooke sat with me to ensure that my employer’s request was met and even called me to check in,” Mr Yates explained.

Mr Yates was impressed with and grateful for the level of care, respect and professionalism the doctor and the staff showed him.

Several weeks have passed since my surgery and I am healing, mostly pain-free. Dr Cooke and the HSA team did a great job; they delivered care with a holistic approach to my needs.

Mr Yates continued.

Mr Yates mentioned that he has told many others of his experience and recommended that they visit Dr Cooke if in need.

Andre Yates, HSA patient

Another patient, Wainford Selvin, recalled narrowly avoiding a car accident after experiencing a seizure in traffic.

In sharing his traumatic experience, Mr Selvin said:

I had my first seizure while driving by a stoplight in George Town. Luckily, I had a friend in the passenger seat who assisted and guided me home safely. That same day, I had three more seizures and was experiencing stiffness in my neck and uncontrollable twitching of my body. That’s when members of my household had to call an ambulance.

Mr Selvin was soon introduced to Dr Cooke who explained that he had a 2.5-inch brain tumour and recommended brain tumour removal surgery.

“Since the surgery and to this day, I’m 100 per cent back to normal,” Mr Selvin declared. “Dr Cooke and his crew did a perfect job on me, and I would recommend anyone to him. His personality and professionalism put both me and my family at ease and we were very comfortable with him, which made undergoing the surgery much easier.”

Most recently, Dr Cooke performed a lifesaving procedure on a patient who was in a coma and suffering from a saccular aneurysm, also known as a berry aneurysm, a rounded sac containing blood, that is attached to a main artery or one of its branches and typically found on arteries at the base of the brain. Over time, pressure from the aneurysm on the already weak artery wall can result in the aneurysm’s rupture causing blood from the artery to move into the brain which can lead to death.

Dr Cooke performed a post aneurysm clipping, successfully waking the patient from the coma. The patient is now undergoing rehabilitation.

Dr Cooke has done thousands of surgeries prior to his tenure at the HSA. He received his medical degree from the University of the West Indies- Mona, Jamaica, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery having received numerous honors and distinctions. He earned his Doctor of Medicine in Neurosurgery at the University of the West Indies-Mona along with an Enfolded Fellowship in Neurosurgery at the Halifax Health Sciences, Nova Scotia, Canada. He also completed an Epilepsy Surgery Fellowship at Yale New Haven Hospital, Connecticut, USA.

He worked as a neurosurgeon in Jamaica at the Kingston Public Hospital (KPH), Bustamante Children’s Hospital (BCH), Andrew’s Memorial and Medical Associates Hospital. His position as a neurosurgeon allowed him to perform groundbreaking neurosurgical procedures and train residents and medical students.

He served as Joint Head of the Epilepsy Surgery Programme at KPH and BCH where he established an epilepsy surgery programme and commenced the multidisciplinary management of potential surgical treatment of drug resistant epilepsy candidates, the first of its kind in the English-speaking Caribbean. He has served as the Caribbean representative of the Young Epilepsy Section (International League Against Epilepsy) and presently serves as the vice president of the Epilepsy Society of the Caribbean. He is also a fellow of the American College of Surgeons.

“Neurosurgery is my passion. Although operating on the brain and spinal cord involves many complex procedures, I perform every surgery with precision, patience, skill, temperance and with my patient’s future in mind,” noted Dr Cooke. “It’s a pleasure to join the medical team at the HSA. I am touched by the positive feedback I’ve received from my patients and colleagues.”

Dr Cooke treats multiple diseases affecting the brain and spine including tumours and infections, head injuries, seizures, intracranial bleeding and swelling, degenerative diseases of the spine, such as a slipped disc, back pain and nerve pain. He specialises in epilepsy surgery, which seeks to surgically remove tumours and other causes of seizures that are unresponsive to regular treatment.

Prior to joining the HSA, Dr Cooke led a medical team that successfully performed a groundbreaking brain surgery in June 2020 on a patient at the Kingston Public Hospital who had a tumour sitting on the brain over the area that controls speech. He and his team performed the surgery with the patient fully awake, allowing them to communicate with her throughout the procedure. The outcome was the successful preservation of the patient’s speech and her ability to sing.

“We are delighted to welcome Dr Cooke whose talent, experience and reputation precedes him,” stated Medical Director Dr Delroy Jefferson. “The addition of neurosurgery to our extensive and continuously growing list of specialist services is a benefit to our patients and the Cayman community who can get the treatment they need here on island rather than having to be referred overseas.”

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Epi. Week 31: Health spotlight on COVID, Monkey Pox, Alzheimer’s Loop Cayman Islands

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Cayman Compass

The Public Health department published its weekly Public Health Spotlight on Communicable and Non-Communicable Diseases on Thursday, August 11, 2022. Below are the key messages on Monkeypox, Alzheimer’s disease and COVID-19.

Monkeypox

According to Public Health, internationally, 29,833 confirmed cases of monkeypox have been reported, from 90 different countries (data as of August 10, 2022).

Over the past week, the number of monkeypox cases reported has increased by 25 per cent, and in the America’s the number of monkeypox cases reported increased by 41 per cent.

The total number of monkeypox deaths reported to WHO is 11. There were four deaths reported during the past week; one in Brazil, two in Spain and one in India.

Jamaica has reported three cases of monkeypox to date and the first two had recently travelled. However, the third case was locally-acquired, which means the individual had not recently travelled abroad and had no epidemiological link to the previous two cases.

There continue to be no known cases of monkeypox virus detected in the Cayman Islands, and there are no suspected cases currently being investigated.

Alzheimer’s Disease

Regarding Alzheimer’s, Public Health explained that Alzheimer’s disease is a progressive disease, which affects memory and cognitive skills. In the early stages, it can present as mild memory loss particularly for recently learned information, and in late stage can develop where individuals are unable to manage a conversation. Activities such as driving a car, cooking a meal or paying the bills can prove challenging to individuals with Alzheimer’s.It typically occurs among individuals over the age of 65 years. There is currently no cure available. Globally, Alzheimer’s disease is attributed to be the cause for 60-70 per cent of dementia cases.

According to the recent 2021 Census in the Cayman Islands, 193 Alzheimer cases were reported in Cayman which was slightly higher in females than males, 111 cases compared to 82 cases. This equates to an incidence of 3 cases per 100,000 population.

The most commonly reported difficulties in everyday life among individuals with Alzheimer’s were remembering or concentrating, walking or climbing stairs, and washing all over.

There are no known approaches that have been shown effective in preventing Alzheimer’s disease. However, some factors such as increased physical activity, blood pressure control (among those with high blood pressures) and cognitive training may reduce the risk of cognitive decline.

COVID-19 – Epidemiological Week 31July 31 – 6 August 6, 2022 (Data as of 08-08-2022)

International Situation

The reported weekly cases globally remained stable during Epi Week 31, and the reported weekly number of deaths decreased by 9 per cent.

Cayman Islands Local Trends

Detection of cases continues to decline by 25 per cent with 240 cases detected in Epi Week 31 compared to 322 in the previous week.

The case rate has fallen to 345 per 100,000 population from 464 cases per 100,000 population.

PCR testing has decreased by 22 per cent with a testing rate of 785 tests per 100,000.

Genomic sequencing data indicates the dominant variant circulating is BA.5 and its subvariants (data from early July).

Hospital Admissions

Eight new hospital admissions were registered during Epi Week 31, the same as the previous week. Of the nine new admissions, 4 were admitted due to COVID-19 morbidity and 4 patients were detected on screening. A total of 11 patients required inpatient treatment, the same as the previous week.

Vaccination

During Epi Week 31, there were 88 adults who received a COVID-19 vaccine (34 first dose and 54 second dose) and 10 children (8 first dose and 2 second dose).

COVID-19 trend

COVID-19 case detection and testing continue to decline in the Cayman Islands. However, Public Health is reminding members of the public that measures to reduce their risk of catching COVID-19 and passing it on to others include good hand hygiene, staying home when symptomatic or positive and getting your booster vaccination.

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Mujer pierde $5 mil tras caer en pescaíto en Río Grande

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Una mujer de 43 años fue víctima de fraude bajo el alegato de que le habían secuestrado a su hija, a eso de las 2:35 de la tarde del viernes, en el estacionamiento del supermercado Econo, en Río Grande.

 Según la querellante, recibió una llamada telefónica donde una voz de hombre alegó tener su hija secuestrada, porque había perdido droga de su propiedad.

El sujeto le exigió  11,500 dólares para liberar a su hija. La mujer, le contestó que solamente tenía cinco mil dólares. La persona la citó para el estacionamiento del supermercado para que le diera el dinero.

Ella le dió  el dinero a una mujer de tez blanca, estatura baja, con pelo largo negro y delgada.

La agente Karla Faris, del distrito de Río Grande, quien lo refirió a personal de la División de Propiedad y Fraude del CIC de Fajardo para que continúen con la investigación.

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Hieren de bala a dos hombres en Ponce

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Dos hombres resultaron heridos de bala a eso de las 3:50 de la madrugada de hoy en la calle Mayor Cantera intersección calle Tricoche, en Ponce. 

Según información preliminar, la Policía recibió una llamada a través del Sistema de Emergencias 9-1-1 donde se les alertó sobre la situación. Al verificar, se encontró que uno de los hombres era atendido por personal de Emergencias Médicas en el lugar de los hechos y el otro había sido transportado por un ciudadano a un hospital de la zona. 

Uno de los heridos fue identificado como Alex Emanuel Rosario González, de 36 años, quien resultó con heridas de balas en ambas piernas, y ambos glúteos, fue atendido en el hospital Doctor Pila de Ponce, donde se le diagnosticó sangrado interno y perforación en la vejiga.  

El segundo afectado, Antonio Hernández, de 42 años, recibió heridas de bala en la espalda y fue atendido en el hospital San Lucas de Ponce con una perforación en la columna vertebral y en el bazo.  

Ambos perjudicados fueron referidos a una institución hospitalaria del área metropolitana para continuar con tratamiento especializado. 

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Una megainundación amenaza California y podría ser el desastre natural más caro de la historia

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Un estudio publicado en la revista Science Advances alerta de que el cambio climático podría provocar en California una megainundación equiparable a la que devastó el estado estadounidense en 1862. El calentamiento global ya ha duplicado la probabilidad de que este evento se produzca en los próximos 40 años y los científicos advierten de que el riesgo sigue aumentando.

Si la inundación llegara a producirse y su magnitud fuera comparable (o incluso superior) a la de la llamada Gran Inundación del siglo XIX, las pérdidas económicas totales (la suma de los daños directos y las pérdidas indirectas debidas a la interrupción de los negocios y la economía) podrían ser de un billón de dólares. Esto convertiría a la inundación en la catástrofe natural más cara de la historia mundial.

La Gran Inundación de 1862 fue el mayor cataclismo de su naturaleza del que se tiene constancia en la historia de California, Nevada y Oregón. Fue provocada por las lluvias que se sucedieron a lo largo de varias semanas entre diciembre de 1861 y enero de 1862. Solo en California murieron 4.000 personas y un tercio de las propiedades quedaron destruidas.

Estudios anteriores afirman que inundaciones de igual o mayor magnitud que las de 1862 se producen entre cinco y siete veces por milenio, es decir, cada 100-200 años. Sin embargo, los científicos creen que el cambio climático está aumentando el riesgo de que se produzcan.

Para prepararse para la posible catástrofe, la investigación pide que se intensifiquen las posibles medidas que podrían mitigar los daños, como por ejemplo la restauración de las llanuras de inundación y la reparación de diques.

Nota original de RT Español.

Imagen ilustrativazumapress.com / Allison Zaucha / www.globallookpress.com

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UPDATE: Flash flood warning as tropical wave affects Barbados Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

[Update: 7 pm, August 13, 2022]

A flash flood warning is in effect for Barbados

Issued by the Barbados Meteorological Services on Saturday, August 13, 2022, at 5:59pm.

This alert message is valid from 6pm tonight and will be updated or terminated at 6am on August 14, 2022, or sooner if conditions warrant.

Current situation

Accumulations of 10.0 to 35.0 mm have already been recorded across the island. Conditions are saturated in some areas, particularly in the southern sections of the island.

Predictions

Maximum rainfall accumulations of 10.0 to 50.0 mm in moderate to heavy showers are expected throughout the night.

[Original story: 7:43 am, August 13, 2022]

Here’s the weather forecast for today, Saturday, August 13, 2022, from Barbados Meteorological Services.

Weather Outlook

Today: A tropical wave moving over Barbados and the eastern Caribbean is expected to generate occasional scattered light to moderate showers and thunderstorms. A favourable upper-level diffluent pattern mainly over the southern windward islands is likely to offer additional support for deep convective activity.

Temperature

Barbados Forecast Max/Min Temps: 29/23.

August 13

Morning

Synopsis: A tropical wave will begin affecting the island.

General Forecast: Mostly cloudy with breaks of sunshine with a few intermittent scattered light to moderate showers.

Night

Synopsis: A tropical wave will be affecting the island.

General Forecast: Mostly cloudy with clear breaks with the occasional intermittent scattered light to moderate showers.

August 14

Morning

Synopsis: Surface to mid-level instability will be affecting the island.

General Forecast: Mostly cloudy to overcast with the occasional intermittent scattered light to moderate showers and a very slight chance of isolated thunderstorms.

Night

Synopsis: A surface to mid-level shear line will be affecting the island.

General Forecast: Mostly cloudy to overcast with the occasional intermittent scattered light to moderate showers, a few periods of rain and a very slight chance of isolated thunderstorms.

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‘Plasklachten zijn een uiting van een goedaardige vergroting van de prostaat’

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: De Ware Tijd Online

door Valerie Fris PARAMARIBO — “Heel vaak zien wij mannen bij de poli met plasklachten die denken dat zij prostaatkanker

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