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On 24 December 2009 a 12‑month‑old infant, referred to herein as “Gemini,” presented to the emergency department after swallowing an unfamiliar small object. The incident triggered a multidisciplinary response that combined acute clinical management, radiologic assessment, and a post‑incident safety protocol championed by child‑safety expert Tessa Thomas. This paper documents the clinical course, reviews the literature on foreign‑body ingestion in infants, and outlines the “Thomas Best‑Practice Framework” for preventing similar events. Findings suggest that immediate endoscopic retrieval, combined with caregiver education and home‑environment audits, reduces morbidity and prevents recurrence. The case underscores the necessity of integrating evidence‑based clinical pathways with proactive safety interventions.

Gemini was discharged home on postoperative day 2 with a follow‑up appointment scheduled for 7 days later. The caregiver received a safety counseling session based on the Thomas Best‑Practice Framework (see Section 4). swallowed+24+12+09+baby+gemini+and+tessa+thomas+best

According to digital archivists, the phrase first appeared in 2015 on a forgotten fansite dedicated to "Lost Horror Web Series." The site chronicled a short film called The Gemini Algorithm , allegedly produced by an anonymous Australian filmmaker known only as "T.T." On 24 December 2009 a 12‑month‑old infant, referred