Beautician from Thailand battles British heirs for £400k inheritance
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Thai woman files theft report but police mistakenly list her as thief - video
Invite a thief into you house... why not ? -
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Canada
Trump's upcoming best seller -- how to lose friends (Canada) and disgust people. -
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Construction Worker Shocked After Metal Beam Touches Power Line in Krabi
Picture from responders. A construction worker in Krabi narrowly escaped death after receiving a massive electric shock when a metal beam he was lifting accidentally made contact with a power line. Rescue workers from the Krabi Pitak Pracha Foundation were called to the scene in Soi Nakorn Tham, Krabi Municipality, where a house was undergoing renovation. Upon arrival, they found the injured worker, identified as Mr. Pathompong, 36, from Bangkok, lying on the fourth floor of the building. He had sustained burn injuries but remained conscious. Emergency responders quickly transported him to Krabi Hospital for urgent medical treatment. According to Mr. Bird, a member of the rescue team, the incident occurred while Mr. Pathompong and three other workers were installing a steel beam on the fourth floor of the structure. As they lifted the beam, one end accidentally touched a power line, causing an electric shock that threw Mr. Pathompong onto the roof and left him injured. Doctors have since confirmed that the worker is out of immediate danger but remains under close medical supervision. Authorities have urged contractors and workers to exercise extreme caution when working near power lines to prevent similar incidents in the future. -- 2025-02-05 -
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Pregnant Thai woman accuses husband of domestic violence
time to move on and find a new new partner - the police need to jail this POS -
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Foreign man attacks Phuket woman for honking while crossing road
Nice to see the pedestrian crossing in the op photo being fully utilised by all. -
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Interesting view on having PSA test
Just to clarify - not to argue. There are different types of Brachytherapy - the seeds that your refer to and HDR which is done in conjunction with a PET Scan. With HDR the therapy is carried out through what I can only describe as large needles inserted through the Perineum and guided into an exact location through computer mapping informed by the PET scan. HDR is sometimes said to be only 30% effective but my oncologist disagrees in cases like mine where it appeared that previous Radio Therapy had 'missed' a small area. One of its main advantages is the precision that it can achieve. In my case the residual tumour was right in the centre of my prostate on one side only. The needles, were guided into the exact spot by imaging using the map obtained through the PET scan. So far there has been no return but this was a secondary treatment following Radio Therapy a few years earlier. I am not sure, as I didn't have a low grade of PC (I wish I did) but I believe the seeds are used with lower grades of the disease and in cases where 'watchful waiting' (monitoring) has taken place over an extended period and the cancer is now becoing active. There appears to be several new treatments around and on the horizon at the moment but the key to it all is to catch it early and that is why a PSA test is so important - or maybe one of the newer tests somebody mentioned above. It doesn't matter really if it turns out you don't have PC. This is one of those diseases that can either take years and years to become really active (if at all) - or it can romp through your body very quickly. What the naysayers need to consider is that once the disease breaks out of the Prostate Capsule, the pathways used by UK hospitals (I can't speak for other countries), do not include curative treatment. They can (will) only use measures that will slow the disease down. A lot of guys avoid testing because they have heard that if they are found to have the disease, the subsequent treatment will put them out of action in the bedroom department. That is not always the case these days and there is a lot that can be done to help. Yes, its a 'big thing' for a bloke, it terrified me, I was relatively young on diagnosis but it doesn't always happen and sometimes, function can return several months or even years after treatment. I don't keep up with the latest developments in dealing with PC as I'm (hopefully) past that now but there's always some news on the subject, usually good. The one thing I do know that remains key, is to get tested and regularly. I wish the UK government would stop their nonsense and introduce a sceeening programme for men over 50. I don't care how many false positives there are - the alternative can be deadly. Far too many men are dying of a disease that, in most cases, is readily treatable in its early stages and a bonus is that early treatment is normally less invasive in many cases. To be totally brutal on this, the most common areas for the disease to spread to are the bones, lungs and brain and it doesn't stop. As Sheryl says, it can be an agonising death.
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