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1. No survivors after Germanwings crash in French Alps.
There has been another airline tragedy overnight with an Airbus A320, travelling from Barcelona to Düsseldorf crashing over French Alps.
The Foreign Minister Julie Bishop has confirmed that two Australians were on board the flight believed to be a mother and her adult son from Victoria.
The plane was a part of Lufthansa’s low-cost arm – Germanwings. The plane carrying 150 people disappeared off the radar before crashing near Digne-les-Bains.
The plane plunged for eight minutes before crashing into a remote part of the Alps.
Among the 150 passengers were sixteen schoolchildren and two teachers from a high school in the German town of Haltern. The students had been on an exchange in Spain. The majority of the students were young girls.
The Airbus A320 plane was 25 years old. Experts have said the aircraft would have been nearing the end of its commercial life after more than 24 years of service.
For more read this post here.
2. Newborn baby mistakenly given to the wrong mother.
A terrible mix-up in a Melbourne hospital has seen a mother given the wrong newborn for close to an hour.
Samantha and Nick Stuhlener had their baby boy Levi at St Vincent’s Private Hospital in January. It was more than 45 minutes before staff realised there had been a mistake and they and been given the wrong baby.
Top Comments
There is no safe level of alcohol intake when pregnant. Plenty of women do drink when pregnant of course and plenty of doctors go the 'harm minimisation' route and tell women light drinking is OK but if you do some reading there is no safe level. Alcohol crosses the placenta barrier and is a teratogen. Bold bar owner though! People around me when I was pregnant were practically insisting I drink wine and getting miffed when I didn't want to.
One drink does not cause foetal alcohol sydrome, on that the research is clear.
Of course regular or heavy drinking when pregnant has adverse consequences on the baby, but ultimately when it comes to having the occasional glass of wine the simple fact is that researchers don't know - there are hundreds of conflicting studies on the matter, with some insisting it will affect development and others confirming it has no impact. While I'm sure you can provide references to studies citing there is no safe level of alcohol while pregnant, I could provide just as many saying up to 2 units of alcohol a week have no negative consequences. At the end of the day it is up to the expectant mother to decide what research she is going to believe, and up to everyone else to respect that decision.
Unless you are my chosen doctor or obstetrician, you have absolutely no damn right to dictate to me what I should or should not be doing when pregnant. If we are to allow bars to refuse service to pregnant women on the basis of a health reason, then surely that means Macca's should be able to refuse service to overweight people and supermarkets can refuse cigarettes anyone they like. Unless you have relevant medical qualifications and an intimate knowledge of the customers circumstances (in which case you probably wouldn't be working in a service industry but in the health industry) service industry staff have no right to get on their moral high horses and decide what is and isn't appropriate for customers health.