It is a real-time e-news that points to the issue overnight through real-time search queries.

Nice Group is on the list. Yesterday, vice chairman of the Nice Group, Young-young Choi, allegedly raised suspicion of her son's service to the emperor, expressed his appreciation yesterday.

Vice Chairman Choi explained the reason for the resignation that e-mails to employees had not yet revealed all the suspicions, but that it should not have damaged the reputation and status of the group as it was caused by his own suspicion.

Vice Chairman Choi's son, serving as a soldier at the Air Force Forces in Geumcheon-gu, Seoul, is suspected of having been given preferential treatment, such as washing clothes and running errands to the same unit's vice-governor and using his own dormitory.

Suspicions have been raised as to whether or not there was a preferential request, and the Air Force Headquarters launched an investigation on the 15th and is conducting investigations of the soldiers and Vice President Choi.

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Dexamethasone, a steroid drug used to treat inflammation, also ranks.

A team at Oxford University in the UK used a small amount of dexamethasone as a treatment for 2,000 inpatients in Corona19 and compared it to 4,000 untreated patients.

It was analyzed that the risk of death for patients relying on the oxygen respirator was reduced by 28 to 40%, and the risk of death for patients receiving other oxygen therapy was reduced by 20 to 25%.

However, it did not help much for patients with mild symptoms.

Researchers estimate that if dexamethasone had been used as a cure since the early onset of Corona19, it could have saved up to 5,000 deaths in the UK, especially because it is readily available and affordable, making it widely available in poor countries.