ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. —
Last year, hospitals across New Mexico became overwhelmed by respiratory syncytial virus. Now, the Food and Drug Administration has approved a new drug to combat hospitalizations and keep kids healthy.
"The younger you are, the more affected you can be from this virus," Advertisement
Hospitals in New Mexico could not believe the cases flooding through their doors, but this year, experts hope it's different.
"It is absolutely exciting I think for every pediatrician out there who has dealt with this seasonal RSV," Dr. Anna Duran with the University of New Mexico Hospital said.
This new drug, Beyfortus, will not only help lift some of the stress doctors deal with, but also keep hospitalizations down. It would be given to babies that come through hospitals, and would reduce hospitalizations by 75 percent.
"This is going to be a game changer for the number of children who require hospitalization, due to RSV or respiratory syncytial virus," Duran said.
The season for RSV starts around October and dies down around March. Newborns up to one of age or born during RSV season are eligible for this drug.
Jerkface
I was just exploring this project a couple weeks ago. It's primarily English for now. It was originally a project to put all the point-and-click adventure games in one place but continued to grow from there. I wouldn't be surprised if they eventually began to actively include non-English games as well, but the scope of that goal is rather large and they will likely need a lot more help than they currently have.
Between the lines of "I don't want to" reads "I have to", which is easily disputed if said out loud.
It's like... 2001 shareware shitpost flavored.
experts say crooks created fake businesses or lied about their numbers of employees to get access to more free cash
If you were creative and unscrupulous, you probably could have come up with something. Forged documents or the like.
Finley faces up to 30 years in prison, and paying more than $3.2 million in restitution, plus a $1.25 million fine.
But then there's that.
As someone who didn't have disposable income until I was in my thirties, I had a lot of catching up to do and the people there helped me out a lot.
Take 'im away, toys.
Might be right but in my experience a lack of skill in conversing with AI is a much greater factor in determining it's usefulness. It's almost always going to defer to the user. It's like when someone is dealing with tech support and they tell them to try turning it off and on again. If that really is the solution, and the user insists that it is not, CGPT is going to make something up just to appease the user's request.
Users have to know that CGPT isn't magic. How they behave affects how it behaves. Kind of like talking to actual people, which is what it's essentially trying to simulate.
Ethern't.