vendredi 3 février 2017
Home »
Health
» 'No one is going to come to your funeral': Police investigate social media messages to suicidal youth
'No one is going to come to your funeral': Police investigate social media messages to suicidal youth
A grief-stricken mother from a northern Ontario First Nation is sharing the hate-filled social media messages her 12-year-old daughter received on the day of her death by suicide, in hopes of saving the lives of other girls in her community.
Related Posts:
'Spoon bending' workshop for doctors withdrawn at University of Alberta A controversial spoon bending workshop at the University of Alberta has been withdrawn. … Read More
Outdated restrictions 'barrier' to fixing B.C.s overdose crisis, report says A new report blames B.C.'s College of Physicians and Surgeons for not lifting "barriers" to Suboxone, a prescription drug that could dramatically reduce overdose deaths amid a public health emergency. … Read More
Outdated restrictions 'barrier' to fixing B.C.s overdose crisis, report says A new report blames B.C.'s College of Physicians and Surgeons for not lifting "barriers" to Suboxone, a prescription drug that could dramatically reduce overdose deaths amid a public health emergency. … Read More
'Spoon bending' workshop for doctors withdrawn at University of Alberta A controversial spoon bending workshop at the University of Alberta has been withdrawn. … Read More
Listeria concern prompts recall of certain Spitz, Quaker and CLIF Bar products The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has issued recall warnings for Quaker Harvest brand quinoa granola bars, Spitz brand sunflower kernels and Sierra Trail Mix CLIF energy bars due to possible Listeria contamination. … Read More
0 comments:
Enregistrer un commentaire