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Chimera readability score 71 out of 100, Expert reading level.

Parents of Ching Ching, who needs new heart and lungs, ask families who recently lost loved ones to help her fulfil wish of returning home
The parents of a 13-year-old Hong Kong girl critically in need of a new heart and lungs have appealed to the public in hopes of a “miracle”, with the girl fearing she “won’t be able to go home”.
In a letter published on Friday, Ching Ching’s parents called on families who have recently lost loved ones to consider donating the needed organs to their daughter, who suffers from pulmonary hypertension and heart failure.
She is being kept alive at Hong Kong Children’s Hospital in Kowloon City with the support of an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine, commonly known as an artificial heart-lung machine.
Ching Ching underwent five operations within eight days, with two surgeries lasting for more than 12 hours.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text reads like direct, factual journalistic reporting emphasizing the gravity of the situation, showing low forensic indicators of synthetic origin.

Signals Detected
low severity: Natural, slightly fragmented rhythm; focused on emotional impact rather than uniform informational flow.
low severity: Possesses an idiosyncratic focus on a specific, emotionally charged event, lacking the detached, maximally balanced tone often seen in pure synthetic output.
low severity: Standard journalistic framing; no evidence of matching complex synthetic argument templates or vague attribution.
Human Indicators
The text handles highly sensitive, specific medical and emotional details with a directness that suggests real-world reporting priority.
The structure is efficient and focused, characteristic of wire copy or beat reporting rather than generalized LLM narrative generation.
‘I’m so scared’: parents of dying Hong Kong girl, 13, pray for organ ‘miracle’ — Arc Codex