University of Jeddah Wins 1st Place at Harvard Health Hackathon

This achievement reflects the University of Jeddah’s vision to support its students and showcase their talents on the global stage - SPA
This achievement reflects the University of Jeddah’s vision to support its students and showcase their talents on the global stage - SPA
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University of Jeddah Wins 1st Place at Harvard Health Hackathon

This achievement reflects the University of Jeddah’s vision to support its students and showcase their talents on the global stage - SPA
This achievement reflects the University of Jeddah’s vision to support its students and showcase their talents on the global stage - SPA

The University of Jeddah achieved a new global milestone after its talented student Ahmed Bawazeer from the College of Computer Science and Engineering, and a member of the university’s Gifted Talent Recruitment and Care Program, won first place in the Innovative Health Hackathon.

The event was organized by Harvard University and hosted by Prince Mohammed bin Salman College of Business and Entrepreneurship (MBSC) under the theme: “Building High-Value Health Systems: Harnessing Digital Health and Artificial Intelligence.”
The hackathon featured 160 innovative ideas, and Bawazeer stood out with an exceptional project based on AI technologies aimed at developing future solutions for health systems, SPA reported.
His achievement reflects the University of Jeddah’s vision to support its students and showcase their talents on the global stage, emphasizing the importance of investing in AI as a key element in advancing health systems and achieving societal progress.



Lion Attacks Woman in Australian Zoo, Severely Injuring her Arm

FILE PHOTO: A view of the city skyline of Brisbane, Australia, July 4, 2021. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A view of the city skyline of Brisbane, Australia, July 4, 2021. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy/File Photo
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Lion Attacks Woman in Australian Zoo, Severely Injuring her Arm

FILE PHOTO: A view of the city skyline of Brisbane, Australia, July 4, 2021. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A view of the city skyline of Brisbane, Australia, July 4, 2021. REUTERS/Jaimi Joy/File Photo

A woman has sustained severe injuries to an arm when she was attacked by a lion at an Australian zoo.

The Darling Downs Zoo in Queensland state said the 50-year-old woman was watching animal keepers working in the zoo’s carnivore precinct before opening hours Sunday morning when she was attacked.

She was flown by helicopter from the rural town of Pilton to the state capital Brisbane where she underwent surgery. Her condition was stable, the zoo said in a statement Sunday. Several news media reported the woman lost the injured arm.

The zoo said staff were working with government workplace safety investigators to determine how the incident happened. The state government confirmed an investigation was underway.

“Inexplicably, at this stage, one animal grabbed her by one arm and caused severe damage to it,” the zoo statement said.

“At no stage did this animal leave its enclosure and there was no risk at all to staff members or members of the public.”

The woman was not a staff member but a “much loved member” of the zoo’s “family,” the statement added, according to The Associated Press.

She had watched keepers at work many times over the past 20 years and was “well versed in safety protocols around potentially dangerous animals,” the zoo said.

Staff at the 48-hectare (119-acre) zoo declined media interviews on Monday.

The zoo planned to reopen Tuesday for the first time since the attack.

“The animal will definitely not be put down or punished in any way,” the statement said.

Five years ago, two lions mauled and critically injured a keeper inside their enclosure at the Shoalhaven Zoo in the state of New South Wales.