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South Florida moms receive life-changing surgeries through doctor's Mother's Day tribute

South Florida moms receive life-changing surgeries through doctor's Mother's Day tribute

CBS News12-05-2025
Three South Florida mothers got more than flowers this Mother's Day — they're receiving the gift of life-changing reconstructive surgery thanks to a heartfelt initiative by Aventura plastic surgeon Dr. Joshua Lampert.
The annual pro-bono event, called A.L.L. for Moms, is named in honor of Dr. Lampert's late mother, Adele Lynn Lampert, who died in 2020 after a 12-year battle with metastatic cancer. The surgeries, performed free of charge, are offered to mothers who otherwise could not afford them.
"It was hard, yeah," Lampert said of his mother's passing. "She didn't pass away from COVID. She fought this for 12 years, on and off. I wanted to honor her memory by giving moms the chance she gave me—life and support."
One of this year's recipients, Klaudia Malomsoki, has endured profound heartbreak. She lost two babies — a son at 27 weeks and a daughter during a subsequent pregnancy — before welcoming two daughters through IVF. But the joy of motherhood came with daily physical pain from 21-year-old breast implants that she said caused over 40 debilitating symptoms.
"The pain is unbearable," she said. "I can't take a deep breath, I can't move, I can't sleep."
Malomsoki first applied for A.L.L. for Moms in 2023 and was selected, but the surgery was delayed after doctors discovered a lump in her breast. She feared she had lost her only opportunity. That changed this year, when Dr. Lampert surprised her with the news that she'd been chosen again.
"I still have goosebumps," Malomsoki said through tears.
Dr. Lampert will now remove her old implants and perform a breast lift, giving Malomsoki what she calls another chance at life.
The surgeries, scheduled for next week, mark the start of a new chapter for these mothers — and a lasting tribute to the woman who inspired it all.
"It's more than just a surgery," Lampert said. "It's a way to keep her spirit alive."
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Sorry, but RFK Jr.'s beloved beef tallow fries won't save Steak 'n Shake
Sorry, but RFK Jr.'s beloved beef tallow fries won't save Steak 'n Shake

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Sorry, but RFK Jr.'s beloved beef tallow fries won't save Steak 'n Shake

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A stroke took a Brooksville man to the edge of death. He was 33.
A stroke took a Brooksville man to the edge of death. He was 33.

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A stroke took a Brooksville man to the edge of death. He was 33.

George Bishop's daughter was the one who found her father unresponsive on a couch. A severe headache had forced Bishop to lie down in an apartment his company provided close to his construction job in Bradenton. He hadn't returned to work two hours later. Kadance Bishop video-called her mom, Samantha Pankow. In the grainy video feed Pankow could make out vomit in hisbeard. She heard him groaning. 'Call 911,' she told her daughter. It was the start of a 12-day ordeal during which doctors at three different hospitals worked to save Bishop's life. On top of suffering a stroke, vomit clogged his lungs, leading to infection and then pneumonia. When more intensive care was needed, one hospital refused to admit him because he was too high risk. It was only Bishop's age — 33 — that persuaded doctors at HCA Florida Largo Regional to take the chance. Doctors there kept him alive on an advanced life-support system that functions as the heart and lungs for nearly two weeks. 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'Basically COVID-19 makes you clot more than your average person,' Lefler said. Few choices, little hope Bishop was intubated by the time he arrived at Manatee Memorial Hospital in Bradenton after his stroke last summer. A CT scan showed bleeding in his brain. His blood pressure was 250over180, the highest the neurosurgeon treating him had ever seen. Pankow, Bishop's partner, rushed from her Dade City jobto be with him. Bishop was placed in intensive care. The neurosurgeon told Pankow that when he drilled into Bishop's brain to relieve the pressure, blood shot out like a bullet. His lung infection was likely the result of him vomiting while intubated and sedated. It worsened over the next two days and his lungs stopped supplying oxygen to his body. Nurses had to flip him onto his stomach to improve his breathing but his oxygen levels were fluctuating dangerously low. His prognosis was so bleak that a palliative care doctor was called to speak with Bishop's family. 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Tandem, Insulet monitoring CMS payment proposal for diabetes tech
Tandem, Insulet monitoring CMS payment proposal for diabetes tech

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Tandem, Insulet monitoring CMS payment proposal for diabetes tech

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