
I am also happy that I had not yet left the room when, ten minutes later, she gave two long pushes and her baby was born into my hands. To be fair to my labour ward colleagues of that time, she was coping extremely well with regular but relatively infrequent contractions and was happy to transfer to us. The first concerns the woman who was sent to the antenatal ward that I was working on because, when she arrived on an already busy labour ward, her cervix was found to be 2-3cm dilated and it was thus deemed that she was not in active labour. To illustrate this further, I’d like to offer a couple of brief stories from my own practice which I know are also not unique. There is always a chance that the result of any screening test whether positive or negative might be false, and the ever-increasing emphasis that is placed on the importance of quantitative measurements can mean that, by focusing on looking for a few specific signs, we can fall into the trap of missing aspects of the bigger picture which might help us to spot potential problems ahead of time. Many midwives have had to resuscitate babies who, until the moment of their birth, had textbook-perfect fetal heart tones, and have witnessed the birth generally by caesarean section of screaming people with perfect Apgars who, from the look of their pre-birth CTG readout (and possibly fetal blood gas readings) were going to require the expertise of every paediatrician and special care midwife within a ten mile radius. So many of the things that we do in everyday practice are like airport security checkpoints designed to screen for potential risks, yet no screening process is perfect. In fact, the relative frequency of such events is the very point of retelling this story, which I believe highlights a significant issue for midwifery practice. I’m sure that many people reading this have had similar experiences, and I’m also sure that many people have experienced the frustration of having seemingly random objects confiscated at these checkpoints. Somehow, perhaps partly because the security people were more focused on scrutinising wayward electrical items, this potential weapon had sneaked past the radar and was now flying along in the overhead compartment.Īs a story, this is not that unusual. She had already removed her laptop, coat and liquids, but the security staff insisted on taking her data projector from its case and subjecting it to intense scrutiny before allowing her through.Ībout half an hour after the plane had taken off, my colleague turned to me and said, “do you know, I’ve just realised that there’s a Stanley knife in my bag!” She often travels with this knife, which is useful for opening boxes that get shipped ahead to conference venues, but the speed of our departure from the hotel on this particular occasion meant that she forgot to switch it from her handbag into her checked baggage. While I managed to traverse the security check relatively speedily by removing almost everything from my bag and sending it through the x-ray machine in a plastic tray, my colleague was not so lucky.
#SARA IS MISSING 2 ANDROID#
Google Play Store: Simulacra 2 ($4.99) (For Android Devices).The Girl Who Loved/ (Instrumental Version).Who You Messin’ Wit (Rex)/ (Instrumental Version).Multicoloured Lies / (Instrumental Version).Priya Kulasagaran, Jeremy Ooi Thean Eu, Rebecca Hee, Chong Wei-Shern



The game starts out with the player's choice to be a skeptic detective, or a tabloid reporter whose frights are "their beat".Ĭhosen one of the two, a cutscene that changes depending on what you chosen, will show Murilo handing you the phone and asking you to speak to him when alone. Here The Player must work with Detective Murilo to uncover the mysterious death of a Kimera influencer, Maya Crane, which the police wrapped up without much work due to the fact they had to hit their monthly quota and, in the words of Det. Simulacra 2 is the sequel to the lost phone horror Simulacra.
