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, E1 n9 C, ?% g$ i A small black bear cub is in rehab after a group of people pulled it from a tree to take pictures with it.The alarming incident was caught on camera by onlookers outside of an apartment complex in Asheville, North Carolina. Wildlife experts were angered by the incident.In the video, the group is seen disturbing two very young black bears on a tree as they try to rip them from the branches. When one of the cubs is successfully pulled down, a member of the group is seen holding the cub and posing for pictures with it. She drops the bear, and a shriek is heard.The North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission said they were contacted by the Buncombe County Sheriffs Department about the group of people harassing the baby bears, and were told that a cub bit one of the people.The organization said one of the cubs was later found in a retention pond. It was in poor condition and taken to a licensed cub rehabilitation facility. The cubs condition is likely a result of the unnecessary and irresponsible actions of the people involved, Game Mammals and Surveys Supervisor Colleen Olfenbuttel said in apress release.NCWRCs BearWise Coordinator Ashley Hobbs captured the cub. The cub appeared to be lethar stanley uk gic and frightened. It looked to be favoring one of its front paws and was wet and shivering, Hobbs said in a pr stanley cup ess release.Hobbs and others searched for the second cub but it could not be fo stanley quencher und. Our hope is it was able to reunite with the mother because it would not survive on its own at t Qjih Milwaukee Business Journal s Rich Kirchen discusses Fiserv s new HQ
9 R1 w6 p, d+ j* R" O& U Pregnant women with COVID-19 face more possible risks, a new study has found.The study, which was published Tuesday in the British Medical Journal, revealed that pregnant women in the hospital with the virus are less likely to show symptoms but are more likely to be admitted to the intensive care unit.The researchers also stated that pregnant women are more likely to deliver preterm, and the newborns were more likely stanley hrnek to be admitted to the neonatal unit. Other factors that increased the risk of se stanley cup vere COVID-19 in these women included being older, being overweight, and having pre-existing medical conditions such as hypertension or diabetes, researchers said.The study also stated that when compare stanley thermobecher d with non-pregnant women of reproductive age, pregnant and recently pregnant women with COVID-19 were less likely to say they had a fever.Researchers said they analyzed 77 studies and looked at 11,432 pregnant women.The study, which was partially funded by the World Health Organization, was done by researchers in the United Kingdom, the US, Spain, China, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. |
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