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Dentist tool broke off in patient's mouth

Written By Unknown on Senin, 24 Maret 2014 | 23.48

A NEW Zealand teen suffered pain when a dentist tool broke off during root canal treatment, but he only found out about the mistake from another dentist.

The instrument broke off in the patient's root canal, but the dentist never told the teen and didn't write it down in clinical records, an NZ Health and Disability Commission report found.

The boy, aged 16-17, began to feel pain and the dentist treated him three further times, attempting to remove the instrument.

But the dentist never told the boy the reason for the treatment, the options available, or the risks involved - even when the boy and his parents asked directly about the reason for the re-treatment.

The boy found out about the mistake only when he went to another dentist for a second opinion.

The report found the dentist breached the health code by failing to let the boy know about the mistake, failing to keep him informed and failing to keep proper records.

The dentist has now been referred to the Director of Proceedings who'll decide whether further action should be taken.


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Aust, Indon police 'must work on trust'

AUSTRALIAN police feel the bilateral hiatus with Indonesia has created hesitation in a once remarkable relationship forged by the Bali bombings, according to a report.

The Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) interviewed Australian Federal Police (AFP) and Indonesian National Police (POLRI) officers for a special report on the partnership.

The rift between Jakarta and Canberra following last year's spy scandal led Indonesia to suspend police cooperation in some areas, including people smuggling and cybercrime.

Both nations' foreign ministers are set to resume talks this week on a plan to restore bilateral ties - something unlikely to take effect until after Indonesia's presidential elections later this year.

ASPI says the police relationship can't resume as if nothing happened.

Both forces should therefore use this time to think about what they want their cooperation to deliver in the future.

Following the spy revelations, the report says, POLRI officers had to check their communications equipment to ensure it hadn't been compromised by other nations, including Australia.

ASPI believes a close and productive relationship will return, provided there's an effort made to close any trust deficit that has emerged.

"All the AFP and POLRI officers interviewed for this project think the current tension has not damaged (people-to-people relationships)," it says.

"Although some note that the ambiguous situation has made some Indonesian officials hesitant to engage their Australian counterparts."

The report suggests workshops for future AFP and POLRI leaders, and inviting POLRI officers to support the AFP during November's G20 meeting.

In the past, the AFP-POLRI relationship has brought significant benefits to both countries, most notably in terrorism.

After the 2002 Bali bombings, officers lived together, shared information openly, and convicted more than 30 terrorists.

Australia posted its first police liaison officer to Jakarta in 1977. Today there are around 30 AFP officers working in Indonesia.


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Commuter train derails in Chicago

AN eight-car Chicago commuter train has ploughed across a platform and scaled an escalator at an underground station at O'Hare airport, injuring 32 people.

No one suffered life-threatening injuries in the Blue Line derailment, Chicago Fire Commissioner Jose Santiago said during a Monday morning briefing.

Chicago Transit Authority investigators along with the city fire department and police were reviewing security footage and interviewing the driver and other CTA workers to pin down the cause of the accident.

Steele said crews were working to remove the train and fix the escalator and aren't sure when the station will reopen.

The train appeared to have been going too fast as it approached the end-of-line station and didn't stop at a bumping post - a metal shock absorber at the end of the tracks.

"The train actually climbed over the last stop, jumped up on the footpath and then went up the stairs and escalator," Santiago said.

"Apparently (it) was travelling at a rate of speed that clearly was higher than a normal train would be," Steele said.

It wasn't clear how many people were on board at the time but the accident happened during what is "typically among our lowest ridership time," Steele said.


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Malaysia says missing jet crashed at sea

MALAYSIA says the passenger jet that went missing more than two weeks ago crashed in the Indian Ocean, but it's shed no light on the mystery of why it veered from its intended course.

Prime Minister Najib Razak said new satellite analysis of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH370's path placed its last position in remote waters off Australia's west coast, and far from any landing sites.

The sombre announcement on the fate of the plane ended 17 days of agonising uncertainty for relatives of those on board - two thirds of them Chinese.

"It is therefore with deep sadness and regret that I must inform you that, according to this new data, flight MH370 ended in the southern Indian Ocean," Najib said on Monday night.

He said the flag carrier had already spoken to the families of the passengers and crew aboard the jet which disappeared on March 8 on an overnight flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

"For them, the past few weeks have been heartbreaking; I know this news must be harder still."

Najib said he had been briefed by representatives from Britain's Air Accidents Investigation Branch, which relayed further analysis of satellite data by British company Inmarsat.

The airline, in a statement sent to families, said "we have to assume" the plane was lost.

"Our prayers go out to all the loved ones of the 226 passengers and of our 13 friends and colleagues at this enormously painful time," it said.

"We know there are no words that we or anyone else can say which can ease your pain."

The airline said the multinational search, which is scouring a stretch of the forbidding Indian Ocean to find any debris, would continue "as we seek answers to the questions which remain".

Malaysia believes the plane was deliberately diverted by someone on board. But the absence of firm evidence has fuelled intense speculation and conspiracy theories, and tormented the families of the missing.

Leading theories include a hijacking, pilot sabotage, or a sudden mid-air crisis that incapacitated the flight crew and left the plane to fly on auto-pilot until it ran out of fuel.

MH370 last made contact over the South China Sea halfway between Malaysia and Vietnam. For reasons unknown, it backtracked over the Malaysian peninsula and then flew on for hours.

The search swung deep into the Indian Ocean last week after initial satellite images depicted large floating objects there.

Hopes of a resolution to the mystery rose after a weekend in which an Australian aircraft spotted a wooden pallet, strapping and other debris, and French and Chinese satellite information indicated more floating objects.

An Australian-led multinational air and sea search has been scouring the vast ocean and there have been two separate sightings of possible debris from the plane.

Crew members of an Australian P-3 Orion plane reported seeing two objects, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott told parliament on Monday.

Australian officials said they were different to pieces seen by a Chinese plane earlier in the day.

The Australian naval ship HMAS Success, equipped with a crane, is in the area, about 2500km southwest of Perth, and will attempt to recover the objects.


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New Crowe film Noah banned in Indonesia

AUSTRALIAN actor Russell Crowe's portrayal of religious figure Noah won't be seen in Indonesian cinemas, with the film rejected by the censors.

The big-budget Hollywood epic, which opens in Australia on Thursday, has been blocked by censors in Qatar, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates because it could offend Muslim viewers by depicting a prophet.

Indonesia followed on Monday with a unanimous decision by the Indonesian Censorship Board.

Board member Zainut Tauhid Sa'adi told news website detik that anyone who shows the film would be punished.

He said the board was responding to the values of a society "which highly respects religion and the value of unity".

"We're not following or tailing other countries," he said.

Catherine Keng, corporate secretary of Indonesia's largest cinema chain Cinema 21, said it would comply.

The move disappointed some Indonesian film critics.

Mumu Aloha, managing editor of detik's entertainment website detikHot, branded the censorship board's reasoning as "stupid".

"This great nation is being 'protected' by a bunch of dwarf people sitting in an institution which has the tendency to censor anything," he wrote to his Facebook followers.

"Pity us all!"

Crowe has said the reaction of some countries was expected.

Early US reviews of Noah, made by acclaimed filmmaker Darren Aronofsky with a $130 million budget, have been mixed.

The story of Noah's ark is told in the Bible and the Koran.

In Islam, depictions of prophets are taboo to avoid worship of a person rather than God.


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Thomson to learn fate over misusing funds

SINCE using union members' money to pay for prostitutes Craig Thomson has lost his reputation, his Labor Party membership and his seat in federal parliament.

On Tuesday he will learn whether it will cost him his freedom when he appears before the Melbourne Magistrates Court for sentencing.

The 49-year-old faces up to five years in prison for misusing $24,538, including more than $5500 on escorts, while he was national secretary of the Health Services Union and a Labor MP.

Prosecutors have called for him to be jailed, saying his behaviour was arrogant in the extreme. His lawyers say he should be spared jail because he can never again enter public life.


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