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週四(2/1)1.整形抽脂死亡2.“辟穀” 斷食
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板橋區文化路一段421巷11弄1號 (陽光甜味咖啡館)
埔捷運站1號出口 旁邊7-11巷子進入20公尺 看到夏朵美髮左轉 PM 7:00-9:30
整形抽脂死亡
Hong Kong woman dies after undergoing liposuction at Taiwan clinic - ASEAN/East Asia
by danny mok thestar
A Hong Kong woman died in a Taiwan hospital on Tuesday after undergoing surgery in a local cosmetic clinic.
Local police said the 52-year-old woman, surnamed Ma, was having surgery at Just Make Plastic Clinic on Zhongxiao East Road in the eastern district of Taipei.
The surgery was reportedly a liposuction procedure and Ma suffered complications while anaesthesia was being administered. She was taken to Cathay General Hospital where she died.
Police told the South China Morning Post no one had been arrested in connection with the case as of Wednesday night. The doctor, surnamed Liu, the anaesthetist and two nurses involved are under investigation.
Liu and his colleagues were seen leaving a police station on Tuesday night. They did not respond to media enquiries. He was reportedly suspended from duty.
Body dysmorphia in Hong Kong – doctor fears disorder is rife, with low self-esteem causing plastic surgery addiction
The clinic’s founder and head Dr Pete Lee Jin-liang said in a statement on Wednesday the cause of the incident had yet to be ascertained.
Lee, who graduated from National Yang-Ming University’s medicine school, said the surgeon involved was qualified, with good experience of the surgeries of this kind. The surgical procedure also complied with his clinical professional knowledge.
“We deeply regret the incident,” he said, added that the clinic would provide assistance to investigators regardless of the cause.
Lee, a famed plastic surgeon who is also the son-in-law of Taiwan TV programme host Hu Gua, founded the clinic in 2008 and it is frequented by local entertainers.
We deeply regret the incident
Dr Pete Lee Jin-liang, Just Make Plastic Clinic
Police in Taipei said Ma’s family would go to Taiwan to handle related matters.
The anaesthetist involved in the woman’s liposuction was also involved in previous medical incidents.
In 2004, he received a five-month jail term from a court for his involvement in a liposuction after which a woman died. He later paid a penalty in exchange for the prison term.
In the same year, the family of a four-year-old boy sued him after the child died during a surgery. The anaesthetist was later acquitted.
Q:
What is your opinion about a woman dies
after undergoing liposuction at Taiwan clinic?
What is your opinion about plastic surgery?
Why plastic surgery is popular these days?
What types of cosmetic surgery you would
like to try?
Sharing your viewpoints of your beauty standards?
Does plastic surgeon making big money?
“辟穀” 斷食
Science Examines People Who Claim Not To Eat
collective-evolution.com
Breathariansim refers to the practice of sustaining oneself without food. This concept is not new; in fact, for thousands of years, various cultures around the world have written of this ability. In the third book of the Yoga Sutras, for example, approximately 25 Siddhis are listed as having extraordinary abilities. This is a common theme throughout Buddhism, and various other spiritual traditions as well. Clairvoyance and psychokinesis are just some of the special traits attributed to the Siddhis, as is the liberation from hunger and thirst.
Though modern day science has seen evidence of extended human capacities like telepathy, remote viewing, and pre-cognition, very little work has gone into examining breatharianism. Some brilliant minds do believe it’s possible, however, including Nikola Tesla. In 1901, he made the following argument:
My idea is that the development of life must lead to forms of existence that will be possible without nourishment and which will not be shackled by consequent limitations. Why should a living being not be able to obtain all the energy it needs for the performance of its life functions from the environment, instead of through consumption of food, and transforming, by a complicated process, the energy of chemical combinations into life-sustaining energy?
Liberation from food and hunger does indeed sound unrealistic and, from what we know of modern day biology, impossible. But the history of science has shown us many times that the impossible can become the possible in an instant. A great example of this is the recent discovery that humans can actually influence their autonomic nervous system using the power of the mind.
Let’s take a look at what happened when people who claimed that they don’t eat were examined by science.
Breatharianism
The Qigong practice of Bigu, and other -Qigong practices (which include the liberation from food) examined by science have yielded some extraordinary results. A study published in the American Journal of Chinese Medicine, as seen in the the US National Library of Medicine, demonstrated that a woman with special abilities was and is able to accelerate the germination of specific seeds for the purposes of developing a more robust seed stock. This is one example of many; you can find the study and read more about it here.
The Catholic Charism of India also involves the claim of living well without eating food. Dean Radin, Chief Scientist at the Institute of Noetic Sciences, explains the concept in his book Supernormal: Science, Yoga, and the Evidence for Extraordinary Psychic Abilities:
The implication is that the human body can transmute ambient energy into nutrients, and through the practice of cultivating this ability one can live comfortably for as long as one wishes without food, and possibly without drinking water. This is described as a siddhi in the Yoga Sutras as Pada 111.30: liberation from hunger and thirst.
Q:
Your opinion about breathariansim?
Can people really survived without eating
food?
Is that good not to eat to keep good
health?
How to go on diet?
How to keep healthy?
How to keep energize?
Do you known any other alternative
treatments?
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