I'm not really famous. And how did I get 50,000 followers?! I don't know exactly. Ober 6 years I posted almost every day and some people apparently liked my style. That's it. Have a great weekend! ;-) Randy G
Scientist Proposes New Technique to Collect Evidence of Forced Organ Harvesting June 06, 2017 | By a Falun Gong practitioner from the U.S.A.
(Minghui.org) A scientist from Missouri proposed a new technique for collecting evidence of forced organ harvesting in China. His ideas were presented and discussed at the 2017 American Transplant Congress annual meeting held in Chicago last month. [see Footnote]
Much indirect evidence collected during the past decade by independent investigators, has indicated that the Chinese government has been harvesting organs from prisoners of conscience, especially Falun Gong practitioners, for profit. What is still needed is direct evidence, which is difficult to obtain in the closely controlled society in China.
Dr. Mike He, an associate professor from the Washington University School of Medicine, proposed a new way to fill the gap in data.
Dr. He's clinical responsibility includes histopathologic followup of transplant patients. After organ transplant surgery, patients usually will be followed up, to see if the transplanted organs are working well, and if there is any rejection.
Quite often, a biopsy is used, which involves sampling the transplanted organ. By biopsy, one or a few tissue fragments or cores will be obtained for microscopic histopathological examination. These biopsied tissue samples are usually formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE).
The FFPE tissue can be stored for a long time. Dr. He, who has training and board certification in molecular & genetic pathology, pointed out that when international patients go to China to receive organs, if the organs come from Falun Gong practitioners, these international patients will carry these organs (from Falun Gong practitioners) back to their home countries.
Every individual's organ and tissue carries the individual's characteristics, esp., the molecular and genetic characteristics. This is the foundation of modern forensic molecular testing. Over the past a few decades, great progress has been made in forensic laboratory testing.
Most investigation work done in the past involves collecting fingerprints at the crime scene, then comparing them to the records of fingerprints in the database. If there is a match, it suggests that the fingerprints collected from the crime scene belong to the individual in the database.
You make everything look right and bright, even when there are grey clouds hovering around Google+ This is very lovely Stefanie Schächtel 😍
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ReplyDeleteStefanie Schächtel
ReplyDeleteQuery, how did you get 50,000 followers, are you famous?
welcome Stefanie
ReplyDeleteI'm not really famous. And how did I get 50,000 followers?! I don't know exactly. Ober 6 years I posted almost every day and some people apparently liked my style. That's it. Have a great weekend! ;-) Randy G
ReplyDeleteStefanie Schächtel
ReplyDeleteFYI...I could have 50k too!
...but im just not that interesting 😕
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ReplyDeleteScientist Proposes New Technique to Collect Evidence of Forced Organ Harvesting
ReplyDeleteJune 06, 2017 | By a Falun Gong practitioner from the U.S.A.
(Minghui.org) A scientist from Missouri proposed a new technique for collecting evidence of forced organ harvesting in China. His ideas were presented and discussed at the 2017 American Transplant Congress annual meeting held in Chicago last month. [see Footnote]
Much indirect evidence collected during the past decade by independent investigators, has indicated that the Chinese government has been harvesting organs from prisoners of conscience, especially Falun Gong practitioners, for profit. What is still needed is direct evidence, which is difficult to obtain in the closely controlled society in China.
Dr. Mike He, an associate professor from the Washington University School of Medicine, proposed a new way to fill the gap in data.
Dr. He's clinical responsibility includes histopathologic followup of transplant patients. After organ transplant surgery, patients usually will be followed up, to see if the transplanted organs are working well, and if there is any rejection.
Quite often, a biopsy is used, which involves sampling the transplanted organ. By biopsy, one or a few tissue fragments or cores will be obtained for microscopic histopathological examination. These biopsied tissue samples are usually formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded (FFPE).
The FFPE tissue can be stored for a long time. Dr. He, who has training and board certification in molecular & genetic pathology, pointed out that when international patients go to China to receive organs, if the organs come from Falun Gong practitioners, these international patients will carry these organs (from Falun Gong practitioners) back to their home countries.
Every individual's organ and tissue carries the individual's characteristics, esp., the molecular and genetic characteristics. This is the foundation of modern forensic molecular testing. Over the past a few decades, great progress has been made in forensic laboratory testing.
Most investigation work done in the past involves collecting fingerprints at the crime scene, then comparing them to the records of fingerprints in the database. If there is a match, it suggests that the fingerprints collected from the crime scene belong to the individual in the database.