History Taking

Cloudy with a Chance

8 min · 29. huhti 2026
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On the morning of March 3rd, 1876, Mrs. Allen Crouch was making soap in her Kentucky yard when chunks of flesh — some as big as her hand — began falling from a cloudless sky. Her grandson thought it was snow. The shower lasted minutes and covered a 100 by 50 yard strip of ground. The New York Times put it on the front page. Theories piled up fast: gelatinous bacteria, dried frog spawn, even cosmic meat from an exploding planet. A small group of physicians armed with microscopes set out to do something new — solve a public mystery with histology. What were the pieces made of, and what could possibly explain a meat shower from a clear blue sky?

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Skin to Skin

In 1995, a NICU nurse in Massachusetts broke hospital policy to save a dying newborn. Brielle Jackson, born at 27 weeks alongside her identical twin Kyrie, was crashing — oxygen dropping, heart rate plummeting, nothing working. Nurse Gail Kasparian had read about a European practice called co-bedding and, with the parents' permission, placed Brielle next to her sister. Within minutes, Kyrie's arm wrapped around Brielle, and her vitals began to stabilize. A photographer captured the moment, and the image spread worldwide. But the science behind that famous photo is more complicated — and more important — than the story most people know. The real breakthrough wasn't twin bonding. It was skin to skin contact, and it's now one of the most cost-effective interventions in neonatal medicine.

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