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Tag: Health

  • More possible measles exposures identified in the Triangle, health officials say

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    The Orange County Health Department is warning of a possible measles exposure in Chapel Hill, officials announced Thursday.


    What You Need To Know

    •  Orange County health officials say a person infected with measles visited a Goodwill in Chapel Hill on Feb. 6
    •  Anyone also there during that time could have been exposed and should contact 919-245-2400 to speak to a communicable disease nurse to assess measles risk if unvaccinated
    •  Johnston County on Wednesday reported its first confirmed measles infection since 2018 
    •  Durham and Wake counties also identified several possible exposure areas in their counties earlier this week


    “A person infected with measles visited a public place in Orange County while contagious,” a statement from the county’s health department said.

    Officials say the person visited the Goodwill Store at 1115 Weaver Dairy Road in Chapel Hill on Friday, Feb. 6 between 9 a.m. and noon.

    Anyone who was in the store during that time could have been exposed to measles, officials say. If you have never received the measles vaccine (MMR vaccine), county health officials say to contact 919-245-2400 to speak to a communicable disease nurse and assess your measles risk.

    The news comes a day after officials in Johnston County reported their first confirmed measles infection since 2018.

    Earlier this week, officials in Durham and Wake counties also reported possible measles exposures involving several locations throughout those areas where an infected person is reported to have visited.

    Health officials say measles is highly contagious and can live for up to two hours in the air where an infected person was present. “Vaccination and isolation are key to limiting disease spread,” officials said.

    The following symptoms of measles usually start 7-14 days after exposure, health officials say, but can appear up to 21 days after exposure.

    • High fever (may spike to more than 104 degrees)
    • Cough
    • Runny nose
    • Red, watery eyes (conjunctivitis)
    • Tiny white spots on the inner cheeks, gums and roof of the mouth (Koplik Spots), appearing two to three days after symptoms begin
    • A rash that is red, raised, blotchy; usually starts on face, spreads to trunk, arms and legs three to five days after symptoms begin
    • Measles can also cause complications including diarrhea, pneumonia, encephalitis (swelling of the brain), and suppression of the immune system

    As of Feb. 10, the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services reports 18 confirmed measles cases since December. That total does not include the case confirmed in Johnston County this week.

    Only one case since December, the department says, has required hospitalization.

    In South Carolina, there have been 933 confirmed cases of measles in an outbreak. That outbreak is centered around Spartanburg County, which sits on the border with North Carolina west of Charlotte.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Justin Pryor

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  • Colorado sues to block Trump administration from cutting public health grants

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    Colorado filed a lawsuit Wednesday to prevent the Trump administration from canceling more than $20 million in grants for public health.

    On Monday, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services notified Congress it wouldn’t pay $600 million worth of grants already awarded in Colorado, California, Illinois and Minnesota — all states led by Democratic governors.

    The four states asked a federal court in Illinois’ Northern District to issue an order preventing the federal government from withholding the funds while their lawsuit plays out.

    Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser’s office said the existing grants totaled about $22 million, and the cuts would reduce Colorado’s public health funding in the future by an estimated $4 million.

    The funding comes through the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and goes toward developing the public health infrastructure and workforce, as well as finding and preventing sexually transmitted infections.

    One of the recipients in Colorado that will lose funding is using it to increase HIV testing around Denver and Colorado Springs, with a focus on gay and bisexual men of color.

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    Meg Wingerter

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  • Mount Sinai Nurses Approve New Contract Ending Strike at Its NYC Hospitals

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Mount Sinai nurses have approved a new contract, ending a monthlong walkout at its hospitals in New York City.

    The hospital system said Wednesday that an overwhelming majority of its unionized nurses on strike voted to ratify new three-year pacts.

    Brendan Carr, CEO of Mount Sinai, said its nurses will begin reporting back to work Saturday.

    He urged hospital staff to come together with empathy and respect and a “shared culture” as its unionized nurses return to work starting with the morning shift Saturday.

    “The past several weeks have been challenging, emotional, frustrating, and exhausting in different ways for all of us,” Carr said in a letter to staff. “I want to remind us all that health care is built on compassion, and that compassion must extend not only to our patients, but also to one another.”

    The union and spokespersons for Montefiore and NewYork Presbyterian — the other two systems where nurses are on strike — didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

    The union has said tentative deals reached with those hospital systems call for pay raises of more than 12% over three years.

    They also maintain nurses’ health benefits with no additional out-of-pocket costs and include new protections against workplace violence, including specific protections for transgender and immigrant nurses and patients, the union said.

    The pacts even include new safeguards against artificial intelligence in hospitals for the first time, according to the union.

    Nurses walked off the job Jan. 12 and have been picketing in front of some of the largest and most prestigious privately-run hospitals in the city, just as the region endured some of the most frigid temperatures seen in years.

    Nurses said staffing and safety were among their top issues in contract talks.

    They complained their patient loads are unmanageable and sought better security measures in hospitals, particularly after two recentviolent incidents.

    The new contracts would address those concerns by increasing staffing levels and providing new protections against workplace violence, the union said.

    They brought on thousands of temporary nurses to fill in staffing gaps, and canceled scheduled surgeries, transferred some patients and discharged others in the days ahead of the strike.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Feb. 2026

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    Associated Press

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  • Douglas County woman billed Medicaid for patient who already died, federal officials allege

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    Federal officials unveiled a slew of charges Tuesday against two Coloradans accused of ripping off a program that provides free rides to Medicaid patients, the first criminal charges filed in response to a sprawling fraud bonanza identified by state officials more than two years ago.

    The indictments allege that Ashley Marie Stevens and Wesam Yassin separately participated in the transportation program and fraudulently collected seven-figure payouts — more than $3.3 million for Yassin alone, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Colorado. The two drivers, who ran separate companies, allegedly fabricated rides for appointments that didn’t exist. Stevens is accused of billing for rides for her husband while he was incarcerated, and Yassin allegedly billed $165,000 for driving a patient who was dead.

    Both Stevens, of Mesa County, and Yassin, of Douglas County, were charged with multiple counts of wire fraud, money laundering and health care fraud for their participation in the driving service.

    The program pays drivers to ferry Medicaid patients to and from doctor’s appointments, but it became a haven for fraud in 2022 and 2023, after state officials increased the service’s reimbursement rates. State officials told The Denver Post last month that an estimated $25 million was lost in the broader fraud.

    Yassin’s indictment was still sealed Tuesday evening. In a statement, federal officials alleged that Yassin billed Medicaid for hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of rides that never occurred between March 2022 and October 2023. She raked in $283,000 from rides for just one patient, most of which was paid to Yassin after the patient had already died.

    Yassin allegedly used the proceeds to buy a home and furnishings, along with luxury vehicles, jewelry and cosmetic surgery. She was released on bond earlier this week, according to court records.

    Stevens billed the state for more than $1 million between July 2022 and February 2023, according to the indictment. More than $400,000 came from rides she provided to herself or to her family members, for which there were “very few” actual medical appointments, federal authorities allege.

    The trips included rides for her husband, who was incarcerated during some of the time when Stevens claimed she was driving him to the doctor. Another $150,000 was billed for rides that either never took place or were for trips that didn’t involve Medicaid services.

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  • Bay area schools weigh adding 2% and whole milk as options

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    TAMPA, Fla. — When President Donald Trump signed the Whole Milk for Healthy Kids Act in January, it paved the way for 2% and whole milk to return to schools after a nearly 15-year absence.


    What You Need To Know

    • School districts have the option to bring back 2% and whole milk as options
    • No Bay area school district has committed to having these milks as options but are considering them
    • M&B Products said it will work with schools on what they need 


    The Obama administration originally removed those milks in an effort to fight childhood obesity.

    Now, school districts will once again have the option to provide a wider range of milk options. 

    Dale McClellan, the President of M&B Products, a Bay area dairy company, has been working with schools since 2004. 

    The majority of the milk they supply is low fat, but now school districts have more options.

    So far, the response has been limited. 

    “There’s been a little bit of a handful of phone calls from systems wanting to know, do we plan on doing a bigger variety of butterfat percentages? And we’ve told them we would entertain anything that makes sense,” he said.

    Christie Roberts, the Director of Patient Nutrition Services at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital, said more options may encourage children to drink more milk.

    “If you’re a child that doesn’t like skim milk and then you have the option of a 2% or whole, then it’s going to increase your consumption of milk,” she said. 

    No matter the type of milk, Roberts said children should have between two and three servings of milk a day.

    “Younger children, we do recommend the more full or fat options for their growth and development,” she said. “But as they get older and they’re trying to work towards a healthy, lean physique and health, then the lower-fat options might be good.” 

    Spectrum News reached out to local school districts to find out if they are considering adding 2% and whole milk as options. 

    No districts have committed to adding the products, but are considering it.  

    Most provided statements that were similar to this from Hillsborough County Schools:

    “We are exploring how we might add whole milk and 2% milk to our offerings, as these products are not part of our current contracts with our dairy vendor.”

    Sarasota County Schools provided this statement:

    “If it is ultimately determined that Sarasota County Schools will move forward with offering 2% and whole milk as part of the National School Lunch Program, the earliest anticipated implementation would be the 2026–2027 school year.”

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    Matt Lackritz

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  • USDA food safety tips ahead of the Super Bowl

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    Is it really the big game without the chicken wings, the pizza and the chips and dip?

    If you’re hosting or attending a Super Bowl party tonight to watch the Seahawks and the Patriots duke it out, chances are you’ll have an assortment of snacks nearby.

    Ahead of the big game, The United States Department of Agriculture has guidance on keeping that food safe for consumption.

    During a multi-hour football game, according to the USDA, food is often left out unheated and uncooled, which can lead to issues with the formation of bacteria.

    “Each year millions of Americans get sick from foodborne illness – commonly called food poisoning,” the release reads. “These illnesses result in roughly 128,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.”

    The USDA offers five quick tips to keep food safe:

    • Be safe with takeout food
    • Follow the two-hour rule
    • Wash hands effectively
    • Use a food thermometer
    • Store leftovers properly

    The release directs food safety questions to the USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline, reachable at 1-888-674-6854. You can also ask questions at ask.usda.gov or by emailing MPHotline@usda.gov.

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    Cody Thompson

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  • Hims & Hers drops plan for knockoff of Novo Nordisk’s new Wegovy weight loss pill

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    Telehealth company Hims & Hers dropped its plan to offer a knockoff version of the weight-loss pill Wegovy on Saturday — two days after it announced the new drug and one day after the Food and Drug Administration threatened to restrict access to the ingredients needed to copy popular weight-loss medications.

    Hims had said Thursday that it would offer a compounded version of the new Wegovy pill that drugmaker Novo Nordisk just began selling last month. Novo immediately threatened to sue Hims, and then the FDA said Friday that it plans to take decisive steps to limit access to the active ingredients in popular GLP-1 drugs like Wegovy, Ozempic and Zepbound.

    Hims’ own website still touted the new semaglutide pill offering Saturday afternoon — hours after it announced on X that it will no longer sell the medicine. Semaglutide is the chemical name for Wegovy.

    “Since launching the compounded semaglutide pill on our platform, we’ve had constructive conversations with stakeholders across the industry. As a result, we have decided to stop offering access to this treatment,” Hims said in its statement. “We remain committed to the millions of Americans who depend on us for access to safe, affordable, and personalized care.”

    Hims didn’t say Saturday whether it will make any changes to the compounded versions of injectable weight-loss medications it has been selling as a result of the FDA action.

    The San Francisco-based company had planned to significantly undercut Novo’s price of $149 per month for the Wegovy pill by selling its version at $49 for the first month and $99 per month thereafter. Hims and other similar companies got started several years ago by offering cheap generic versions of drugs for hair loss, erectile dysfunction and other health issues before branching out into the multibillion market for obesity medications.

    Novo plans to tout its new FDA-approved Wegovy pill in a celebrity-filled Super Bowl ad on Sunday. The Danish pharmaceutical giant didn’t immediately comment Saturday on Hims’ decision to drop the knockoff. Rival drugmaker Eli Lilly has said that it expects the FDA to approve an oral version of its orforglipron weight loss medication later this spring. But Wegovy is the first pill to hit the market.

    The compounded medicine that Hims had planned to sell wasn’t approved and had not gone through trials to demonstrate that it would be effective.

    The FDA permits specialty pharmacies and other companies to make compounded versions of brand name drugs when they are in short supply. And the booming demand for GLP-1 drugs in recent years prompted companies like Hims to jump into the multibillion-dollar market for the drugs, with many patients willing to pay cash.

    In 2024, the FDA said that GLP-1 drugs were no longer in a shortage, which was expected to put an end to the compounding. But companies like Hims relied on an exception to keep selling their versions of the medications because the practice is still permitted when a prescription is customized for the patient.

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  • Bacterial meningitis case turned into a New Year’s nightmare for Washington family

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    When Keilly Rose Byrd-Purtell’s family realized how sick she was, it may have been too late.

    Keilly, a fun-loving and headstrong Bellingham High sophomore in Washington state, complained of a sore throat in late December, just as the holiday break from classes was beginning. She’d been having some personal challenges and was looking forward to time off from school and hanging out with her boyfriend, friends and family, her relatives told The Bellingham Herald in emails and an interview at their Columbia neighborhood home.

    On New Year’s Day, Keilly (pronounced KEE-lee) was found unconscious, having seizures and running a temperature of at least 103 degrees. An ambulance took her to St. Joseph Medical Center, where she was airlifted to Children’s Hospital in Seattle.

    Hours later, in the early morning of Jan. 2, she was dead from a combination of meningitis and sepsis that had rapidly overwhelmed her. Officially, her cause of death was iGAS — invasive group A streptococcal disease — along with meningitis, sepsis and streptococcal toxic shock syndrome.

    “All three stacked on top of each other. She had no fighting chance and the doctors could not catch up to the progression of what was happening,” her sister, Aleasheia LeBlanc, told The Herald. “We still don’t know how she got it — possibly by sharing vapes. You can just get a very common illness, and it can take your life.”

    16-year-old Keilly Rose Byrd-Purtell of Bellingham passed away on Jan. 2 from bacterial meningitis and sepsis. This flower-bordered image of Byrd-Purtell with angel wings was displayed at her memorial service.
    16-year-old Keilly Rose Byrd-Purtell of Bellingham passed away on Jan. 2 from bacterial meningitis and sepsis. This flower-bordered image of Byrd-Purtell with angel wings was displayed at her memorial service. Rachel Showalter The Bellingham Herald

    It started with a typical strep infection, family members were told.

    At 16, Keilly was feeling her independence and went to stay with her boyfriend’s family a few days before Christmas. On Dec. 30, she went with her boyfriend to see a doctor, who prescribed antibiotics and wanted to take a blood sample that could have helped with a diagnosis. But Keilly, who was terrified of needles, refused the blood draw. Her family isn’t sure if she ever took the antibiotics. Their first inkling that the situation was serious came when the pharmacy called about Keilly’s prescription.

    “’I said, ‘What prescription?’ her mother, Gloria Byrd, said. “Kids want to advocate for themselves. If I would have known the doctor wanted her to give a blood sample, I would have taken her.”

    In Washington youth ages 13 and older can make their own medical decisions, and in most cases medical staff aren’t required to seek parental consent for treatment.

    Was it contagious?

    Because some forms of meningitis can be extremely contagious, word of Keilly’s death was a “hot topic” on social media, and a top Whatcom County health official took the unusual step of discussing it in the January meeting of the Public Health Advisory Board.

    “It’s been, you know, projected to many different sources, particularly around moms’ groups, social media, other parents’ groups, school groups, and to the local media, and so I’ve prepared a little bit on that in case people have any questions, or have been hearing that buzz,” Dr. Meghan Lelonek told the panel, which advises the Whatcom County Council on health-related matters.

    “If you have ever seen meningococcal disease in a teenager, you will never forget it,” Lelonek told the board.

    A graphic from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows the common symptoms of meningitis.
    A graphic from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows the common symptoms of meningitis. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Courtesy to The Bellingham Herald

    Lelonek couldn’t discuss Keilly’s case directly due to medical privacy laws. She talked in general terms about meningitis and its symptoms to PHAB and in a Zoom interview with The Herald.

    “What I want to say is that we have not received any reports of meningococcal disease, which is a notifiable condition. So, if there was invasive meningococcal disease, it needs to be reported to us, ASAP, 24-7,” Lelonek told the board.

    Symptoms

    Strep throat is a common and contagious bacterial infection, with a fairly sudden onset of scratchy throat pain, low-grade fever and headache, according to the Mayo Clinic. Treatment includes antibiotics.

    It usually goes away quickly, but it can worsen into iGAS, which is rapidly progressing and possibly dangerous infection that can cause dizziness and confusion, nausea, diarrhea and high fever.

    Some of those symptoms are shared with meningitis, which is an inflammation of the brain tissue, according to Ottawa (Canada) Public Health. A stiff neck — when it’s painful to even turn your head — is a sign to call a doctor. Maybe even 911.

    When she was healthy, Keilly was only 4 feet, 11 inches tall and weighed just 85 pounds. At the hospital in her final hours, her heart stopped three times, she was intubated, and an earlobe and a finger were showing gangrene. Those are classic signs of severe iGAS, according to the UK Health Security Agency.

    “Two of the most severe, but rare, forms of iGAS disease are necrotizing fasciitis and streptococcal toxic shock syndrome. Necrotising fasciitis destroys muscles, fat and skin tissue. Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome causes blood pressure to drop rapidly and organs to fail,” the agency states at its website.

    A collage made by friends and family features photos of Keilly Rose Byrd-Purtel’s childhood.
    A collage made by friends and family features photos of Keilly Rose Byrd-Purtel’s childhood. Rachel Showalter The Bellingham Herald

    Keilly’s legacy

    From a very young age, Keilly was a “force of nature,” Gloria said. “(She loved) games, playing — she liked anything that made her little legs move. She loved being outside.”

    Surrounded by photos of Keilly and family mementos, Gloria explained how she adopted Keilly and Keilly’s now-17-year-old biological sister as infants after the last of Gloria’s biological children left home. Keilly also leaves two sisters and a brother, Gloria’s biological children. Theirs was a large extended family, with cousins who got along famously and sometimes ran circles around the grown-ups, Aleasheia said.

    “Keilly was five kids all at once,” like a combination of all her children.

    “She was the last of them. That’s what hurts so bad,” Gloria said.

    More than 150 of Keilly’s classmates, friends and relatives attended her funeral, Gloria said.

    Keilly Rose Byrd-Purtell’s family described her as fun-loving, outgoing and the life of the party.
    Keilly Rose Byrd-Purtell’s family described her as fun-loving, outgoing and the life of the party. Rachel Showalter The Bellingham Herald

    A discontinued fundraiser paid for her funeral, and there was now-ended *Spotfund campaign for a memorial. The Keilly Rose Love, Legacy & Awareness page has been established as a registered Washington nonprofit foundation.

    “What began as a mission to share Keilly’s story has grown into a formal organization focused on education, prevention and support for families who are impacted by sudden and life-threatening infections like iGAS,” Aleasheia said. “We have also launched our official Facebook page and online donation platform to support awareness materials, community outreach, memorial events, and future family support efforts in Keilly’s honor.”

    They know that meningitis is rare, and that Keilly’s illness couldn’t have been prevented, but they hope that knowledge gained from her death might help save someone’s life.

    “Most of all, I want her death to open the eyes of parents about vaccinations and significant illnesses,” Gloria said.

    Related Stories from Raleigh News & Observer

    Robert Mittendorf

    The Bellingham Herald

    Robert Mittendorf covers civic issues, weather, traffic and how people are coping with the high cost of housing for The Bellingham Herald. A journalist since 1984, he also served 22 years as a volunteer firefighter for South Whatcom Fire Authority before retiring in 2025.

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  • EKG to be required for Florida high school athletes starting in July

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A medical test will soon be required for all Florida high school student-athletes, thanks to new state legislation called the ‘Second Chance Act‘. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Evan Ernst, the Co-founder of the non-profit Who We Play For, said they can detect 95% of the conditions that can cause cardiac arrest with the procedure 
    • An electrocardiogram, also known as an ECG or EKG, is a non-invasive test that records the heart’s electrical activity
    • The legislation officially goes into effect for the 2026 school year on July 1


    An electrocardiogram, also known as an ECG or EKG, is a non-invasive test that records the heart’s electrical activity

    The test aims to prevent kids from going into cardiac arrest. 

    Evan Ernst, the co-founder of the non-profit Who We Play For, said they can detect 95% of the conditions that can cause cardiac arrest with the procedure.

    “There’s 23,000 out-of-hospital cardiac arrests every single year in America,” he said. “For the kids who have underlying heart conditions, this will catch most.” 

    Thanks to the non-profit, more than 70 students between the ages of 10 and 25  got an ECG at the Galen College of Nursing in St. Petersburg on Saturday.

    This includes 16-year-old Hadley Stenberg. 

    She attends school in Tampa, and while she’s never gotten this test before, she wasn’t worried and wants others to feel comfortable. 

    “It’s cool to see what your heart is doing,” said Stenberg. “No pain at all. It was quick and easy, maybe took two minutes for them to do everything.” 

    The procedure tests for multiple conditions that 1-300 kids may have. 

    Evan lost one of his childhood friends on the soccer field because of cardiac arrest.

    With the Florida legislature passing the act in 2025, he said this will prevent other kids from having to go through the same thing. 

    “This becoming the standard of care for Florida kids is absolutely massive,” he said. “It’s one of the biggest accomplishments in children’s health care in this country in decades.” 

    The legislation officially goes into effect for the 2026 school year on July 1. 

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    Matt Lackritz

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  • How Lindsey Vonn can compete with a ruptured ACL

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    Lindsey Vonn wiped out in a downhill race on Jan. 30. She got up limping, then was airlifted from the course. The diagnosis: a ruptured ACL — a season-ending injury for most.But the three-time Olympic medalist announced on Tuesday she would go on to compete in her fifth Games.On Friday, she completed her downhill training run without issue at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre ahead of Sunday’s medal event in Cortina d’Ampezzo.Video above: U.S. Skiers talk about Lindsey Vonn competing in Italy Olympics despite torn ACLFor anyone who’s hobbled off the field, it’s hard not to ask: How?“It is a big deal to tear your ACL,” said Lindsey Lepley, an associate professor of athletic training at the University of Michigan. “And doing anything while being ACL-deficient is a big deal.”Vonn, 41, who is set to be the oldest Alpine skier to race at a Winter Olympics, has an extensive history of knee injuries and surgeries, including two prior ACL injuries. Dr. Martin Roche, a surgeon at the Hospital for Special Surgery, says Vonn’s first injuries date back to the beginning of her professional career in the 2000s.She’s had problems with both knees, but her left was the “stronger” one, according to Roche, who performed a partial knee replacement on the Olympian’s right knee in 2024. After Friday’s crash, her left knee is now injured — a new turn in Vonn’s long injury saga.What is the ACL and why is it important?The ACL — also known as the anterior cruciate ligament — is a ligament that connects the bones of the knee, stabilizing the joint and preventing one bone from sliding in front of the other.“The knee is not a joint that is completely stable,” Dr. Anthony Petrosini, an orthopedic surgeon at Hackensack Meridian Health, said. “The ligaments play a great role in keeping the knee in position.”Petrosini, who has torn his own ACL, says the structure is easily injured because it has a hefty responsibility in controlling the knee’s rotational stability. It’s the most common knee injury, affecting more than 200,000 people per year in the United States.Weight-bearing and high-speed activities, particularly those involving sudden twists and stops, place the greatest burden on the ACL.And skiing fits that bill. It’s among the highest-risk sports for ACL injuries. Vonn’s sex and prior injuries further increase that risk.When injured, the ACL can be partially torn, also known as a tear, or fully separated, referred to as a rupture. The terms are frequently used interchangeably, as Vonn did on Tuesday.What happens when the ACL is injured?A jolt of pain is felt when the ACL is first injured. Some people also feel a pop or instability in the knee. Fluid then accumulates in the joint, causing swelling and stiffness. The inflammatory response can also cause a locking sensation and reduced range of motion.For many, that means trouble standing on the injured knee and continued pain.The structures above the knee also feel the pain. Lepley studies how muscles of the upper leg shut down after a knee injury — a process called muscle inhibition.“It’s sort of this unique forgetfulness that happens between the brain and the muscle,” Lepley said.The injury also travels up to the brain, triggering a fear response. “People are going to have fear of re‑injury,” Lepley explained, noting the psychological component can cause someone to change movement patterns.That’s why, Lepley says, Vonn was likely performing box jumps after the injury. “They’re sort of testing that fear,” Lepley said, noting the exercises can also help fight off muscle inhibition. “If you can’t jump and stabilize yourself on solid ground, that’s a good indication that somebody has too much hesitation.”In a video posted on Instagram on Thursday, a day before her completed training run, Vonn squats with weights, lunges from side to side and does fast kicks against a ball.How to treat an injured ACLOnce the ACL is torn, it doesn’t regenerate in the same way that bone does. “Unfortunately, we’re not like lizards,” Lepley said.Most people undergo surgery to reconstruct the ligament, and nearly all athletes get the procedure after the injury, according to Roche.While a surgical approach doesn’t speed up recovery time, it can stabilize the knee, reduce the risk of further injury and allow for return to high-demanding activities like skiing. Some data suggests surgery can also reduce the risk of osteoarthritis — a common long-term concern after ACL injury — though the evidence is conflicting.Regardless of whether someone has surgery, months of rehab are standard. Those who don’t opt for surgery stick to pain control and rehab, learning to live without a functioning ACL.Vonn said on Tuesday that surgery “hasn’t been discussed.”“It’s not really on my radar screen right now. The Olympics are the only thing that I’m thinking about,” she said. “We’re doing everything to make sure I am making smart and safe decisions.”Has anyone ever skied on an injured ACL?Yes, some of Vonn’s teammates said they’ve done it. Other skiers, like Slovakian Veronika Velez-Zuzulová have done it, too. And Vonn says she’s done it before.“It’s possible,” Roche said. But other parts of the leg need to compensate.“When that ligament is gone, your muscles have to step up to help stabilize the joint,” Lepley said.All the experts CNN spoke with emphasized that an immediate return to competition is far from the norm — and not recommended. Far more often, athletes do the opposite. Hitting the slopes would expose Vonn to substantial risk of further injury.Plus, there was more to her injury. She also reported bone bruising and meniscal damage, both common companions to ACL injuries. These additional injuries raise the risk further, making her return to racing even more dangerous. The good news, though, is that Vonn didn’t report any significant bone fractures, Roche said.Roche, who knows Vonn’s medical history well, says it comes down to the athlete.“She knows her body better than anyone,” Roche said. “She’ll be able to determine if she can overcome any injury to her knee quickly or if it’s going to set her back.”What to watch for when Vonn returns for fresh powderVonn is set to begin racing on Sunday.“I don’t think she’s going to be able to perform at 100%,” Lepley said. “But I think she’s going to be able to make the best of a bad situation.”Parts of the course that put more stress on one knee could be especially risky. Lepley says the Olympian might lack symmetry as she compensates.The biggest concern is Vonn’s meniscus, which acts as a shock absorber and helps the knee move smoothly. Without a functioning ACL, the structure is more vulnerable and, if injured, it’s notoriously difficult to heal.At the finish line, three things will matter most, Lepley says: a medical exam to check for any additional damage, close monitoring of pain and swelling and a renewed focus on restoring normal motion and walking. And if her knees are on her side, a medal.“She’s in good hands,” Petrosini said. “To be able to pull off what she’s attempting is really remarkable.”

    Lindsey Vonn wiped out in a downhill race on Jan. 30. She got up limping, then was airlifted from the course. The diagnosis: a ruptured ACL — a season-ending injury for most.

    But the three-time Olympic medalist announced on Tuesday she would go on to compete in her fifth Games.

    On Friday, she completed her downhill training run without issue at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre ahead of Sunday’s medal event in Cortina d’Ampezzo.

    Video above: U.S. Skiers talk about Lindsey Vonn competing in Italy Olympics despite torn ACL

    For anyone who’s hobbled off the field, it’s hard not to ask: How?

    “It is a big deal to tear your ACL,” said Lindsey Lepley, an associate professor of athletic training at the University of Michigan. “And doing anything while being ACL-deficient is a big deal.”

    Vonn, 41, who is set to be the oldest Alpine skier to race at a Winter Olympics, has an extensive history of knee injuries and surgeries, including two prior ACL injuries. Dr. Martin Roche, a surgeon at the Hospital for Special Surgery, says Vonn’s first injuries date back to the beginning of her professional career in the 2000s.

    She’s had problems with both knees, but her left was the “stronger” one, according to Roche, who performed a partial knee replacement on the Olympian’s right knee in 2024. After Friday’s crash, her left knee is now injured — a new turn in Vonn’s long injury saga.

    What is the ACL and why is it important?

    The ACL — also known as the anterior cruciate ligament — is a ligament that connects the bones of the knee, stabilizing the joint and preventing one bone from sliding in front of the other.

    “The knee is not a joint that is completely stable,” Dr. Anthony Petrosini, an orthopedic surgeon at Hackensack Meridian Health, said. “The ligaments play a great role in keeping the knee in position.”

    Petrosini, who has torn his own ACL, says the structure is easily injured because it has a hefty responsibility in controlling the knee’s rotational stability. It’s the most common knee injury, affecting more than 200,000 people per year in the United States.

    Weight-bearing and high-speed activities, particularly those involving sudden twists and stops, place the greatest burden on the ACL.

    And skiing fits that bill. It’s among the highest-risk sports for ACL injuries. Vonn’s sex and prior injuries further increase that risk.

    When injured, the ACL can be partially torn, also known as a tear, or fully separated, referred to as a rupture. The terms are frequently used interchangeably, as Vonn did on Tuesday.

    What happens when the ACL is injured?

    A jolt of pain is felt when the ACL is first injured. Some people also feel a pop or instability in the knee. Fluid then accumulates in the joint, causing swelling and stiffness. The inflammatory response can also cause a locking sensation and reduced range of motion.

    For many, that means trouble standing on the injured knee and continued pain.

    The structures above the knee also feel the pain. Lepley studies how muscles of the upper leg shut down after a knee injury — a process called muscle inhibition.

    “It’s sort of this unique forgetfulness that happens between the brain and the muscle,” Lepley said.

    The injury also travels up to the brain, triggering a fear response. “People are going to have fear of re‑injury,” Lepley explained, noting the psychological component can cause someone to change movement patterns.

    That’s why, Lepley says, Vonn was likely performing box jumps after the injury. “They’re sort of testing that fear,” Lepley said, noting the exercises can also help fight off muscle inhibition. “If you can’t jump and stabilize yourself on solid ground, that’s a good indication that somebody has too much hesitation.”

    In a video posted on Instagram on Thursday, a day before her completed training run, Vonn squats with weights, lunges from side to side and does fast kicks against a ball.

    How to treat an injured ACL

    Once the ACL is torn, it doesn’t regenerate in the same way that bone does. “Unfortunately, we’re not like lizards,” Lepley said.

    Most people undergo surgery to reconstruct the ligament, and nearly all athletes get the procedure after the injury, according to Roche.

    While a surgical approach doesn’t speed up recovery time, it can stabilize the knee, reduce the risk of further injury and allow for return to high-demanding activities like skiing. Some data suggests surgery can also reduce the risk of osteoarthritis — a common long-term concern after ACL injury — though the evidence is conflicting.

    Regardless of whether someone has surgery, months of rehab are standard. Those who don’t opt for surgery stick to pain control and rehab, learning to live without a functioning ACL.

    Vonn said on Tuesday that surgery “hasn’t been discussed.”

    “It’s not really on my radar screen right now. The Olympics are the only thing that I’m thinking about,” she said. “We’re doing everything to make sure I am making smart and safe decisions.”

    Has anyone ever skied on an injured ACL?

    Yes, some of Vonn’s teammates said they’ve done it. Other skiers, like Slovakian Veronika Velez-Zuzulová have done it, too. And Vonn says she’s done it before.

    “It’s possible,” Roche said. But other parts of the leg need to compensate.

    “When that ligament is gone, your muscles have to step up to help stabilize the joint,” Lepley said.

    All the experts CNN spoke with emphasized that an immediate return to competition is far from the norm — and not recommended. Far more often, athletes do the opposite. Hitting the slopes would expose Vonn to substantial risk of further injury.

    Plus, there was more to her injury. She also reported bone bruising and meniscal damage, both common companions to ACL injuries. These additional injuries raise the risk further, making her return to racing even more dangerous. The good news, though, is that Vonn didn’t report any significant bone fractures, Roche said.

    Roche, who knows Vonn’s medical history well, says it comes down to the athlete.

    “She knows her body better than anyone,” Roche said. “She’ll be able to determine if she can overcome any injury to her knee quickly or if it’s going to set her back.”

    What to watch for when Vonn returns for fresh powder

    Vonn is set to begin racing on Sunday.

    “I don’t think she’s going to be able to perform at 100%,” Lepley said. “But I think she’s going to be able to make the best of a bad situation.”

    Parts of the course that put more stress on one knee could be especially risky. Lepley says the Olympian might lack symmetry as she compensates.

    The biggest concern is Vonn’s meniscus, which acts as a shock absorber and helps the knee move smoothly. Without a functioning ACL, the structure is more vulnerable and, if injured, it’s notoriously difficult to heal.

    At the finish line, three things will matter most, Lepley says: a medical exam to check for any additional damage, close monitoring of pain and swelling and a renewed focus on restoring normal motion and walking. And if her knees are on her side, a medal.

    “She’s in good hands,” Petrosini said. “To be able to pull off what she’s attempting is really remarkable.”

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  • Measles outbreak poses risk of ‘irreversible’ brain damage, health officials warn

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    South Carolina health officials are warning of “irreversible” neurological damage in children as measles-related hospitalizations climb in the state.

    Of the 876 confirmed cases in the state’s upstate outbreak, at least 19 patients have been admitted with serious complications.

    “Some of these complications include measles encephalitis, or inflammation of the brain, in children, and pneumonia,” state epidemiologist Linda Bell said in a Feb. 4 briefing.

    MEASLES EXPOSURE RISK IDENTIFIED AT MAJOR AIRPORT AND THEME PARK, HEALTH OFFICIALS WARN

    Bell emphasized that the complication is particularly dangerous for young patients.

    “Any time you have inflammation of the brain … there can be long-term consequences, things like developmental delays and impacts on the neurologic system that can be irreversible,” the expert warned.

    Some of the more serious measles-related complications include measles encephalitis, or inflammation of the brain, in children, as well as pneumonia. (iStock)

    While the state does not systematically track every medical complication, pneumonia is the leading cause of measles-related death among young children, affecting approximately one in every 20 infected minors, according to CDC data.

    A total of 147 students are currently quarantined across 10 K-12 schools, Bell noted.

    VACCINE DEBATE HEATS UP AS OFFICIALS WEIGH SPLITTING COMBINED MMR INTO SINGLE DOSES

    The outbreak also poses a risk to expectant mothers. Because the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine cannot be administered during pregnancy, several exposed women recently required emergency treatment with immune globulin to provide “passive immunity.”

    TEST YOURSELF WITH OUR LATEST LIFESTYLE QUIZ

    Bell noted that this is critical to “protect them against the high risk of complications during pregnancy and to protect their newborn babies.”

    The measles virus is notoriously contagious, capable of lingering in the air for up to two hours after an infected person has left a room, experts say.

    mother and daughter holding hands in hospital

    Pneumonia is the leading cause of death from measles in young children, affecting approximately one in every 20 infected minors. (iStock)

    South Carolina saw a historic surge in vaccinations in January. In particular, Spartanburg County saw a 162% increase in MMR vaccinations compared to the previous year.

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    “I’m hoping that what we can attribute [the vaccine surge] to is a wider recognition of the threat of this disease circulating in our communities and the desire for people to be protected against the complications,” Bell said in the briefing.

    Doctors in hospital

    A new case in the Pee Dee region suggests the virus may be spreading beyond the initial upstate clusters through “unrecognized community transmission.” (Paul Bersebach/MediaNews Group/Orange County Register via Getty Images)

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    Health officials continue to urge the public to seek vaccinations, especially as a new case in the Pee Dee region suggests the virus may be spreading beyond the initial upstate clusters through “unrecognized community transmission.”

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    As far as the encephalitis and pneumonia fears, “these are complications we hope to prevent,” Bell added.

    “Increasing vaccination coverage protects those who cannot be vaccinated, like young infants, pregnant women and those with weakened immune systems.”

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  • Dee Snider quits Twisted Sister over health issues, forcing band to cancel anniversary shows

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    Twisted Sister has canceled all upcoming shows.

    In a recent Instagram post, the band announced that all performances that were planned in celebration of the band’s 50th anniversary were canceled, following lead singer Dee Snider’s resignation.

    “Due to the sudden and unexpected resignation of Twisted Sister’s lead singer Dee Snider brought on by a series of health challenges, the band has been forced to cancel all shows scheduled, beginning April 25th in Sao Paolo Brazil and continuing through the summer,” the band’s statement said.

    The statement continued by addressing the future of the band, stating that it “will be determined in the next several weeks,” and encouraged fans to “stay tuned for updates.”

    Twisted Sister has canceled the band’s 50th anniversary performances due to Dee Snider’s health. (Mark Weiss/Getty Images)

    THREE DOG NIGHT’S CHUCK NEGRON, VOICE BEHIND ‘JOY TO THE WORLD,’ DEAD AT 83

    Fans of the iconic band took to the comment section to show their love for the musicians, with one writing, “Heartbreaking news. Endless respect for a man who gave everything to rock ‘n’ roll. We stand with you, Dee.”

    Another wrote, “The legend of TS lives on forever. We don’t need any come back or anniversary shows. The albums, photos, videos and memories remain forever, for all to see and hear.”

    APP USERS CLICK HERE TO VIEW POST

    A separate statement shared on the band’s website on Feb. 5 read that “a lifetime of legendarily aggressive performing has taken its toll on Dee Snider’s body and soul.” It revealed that Snider has been suffering from degenerative arthritis, and that he’s had multiple surgeries in order to perform.

    “Adding insult to injury, Dee has recently found out the level of intensity he has dedicated to his life’s work has taken its toll on his heart as well,” the statement continued. “He can no longer push the boundaries of rock ‘n’ roll fury like he has done for decades. Says Snider, ‘I don’t know of any other way to rock. The idea of slowing down is unacceptable to me. I’d rather walk away than be a shadow of my former self.’”

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    Dee Snider performing on stage in New Jersey in August 2024.

    Snider has been dealing with health issues for many years. (Bobby Bank/Getty Images)

    The statement concluded: “In the immortal words of Dirty Harry, ‘A man’s got to know his limitations.’ Sadly, Dee Snider now knows his.”

    Twisted Sister first formed in the early 1970s, with Snider joining in 1976, bringing his talents as a vocalist and as a songwriter. Their first album with a major record company was released in 1983, but it was their 1984 album, “Stay Hungry” that made them a household name.

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    After years of success, the band disbanded in 1988, but reunited in 1997. Although they didn’t release new music, they performed together often.

    When speaking with Fox News Digital in June 2024, Snider discussed the hard times that came after the band broke up, saying he “lost everything.”

    Twisted Sister posing in denim in 1983.

    Their 1984 album “Stay Hungry” made Twisted Sister a household name. (Chris Walter/WireImage)

    “Double bankruptcy, my career collapsed,” he said. “I was riding a bicycle to a desk job, answering phones. I was married, had three kids. You know, things just went incredibly south.”

    WATCH: DEE SNIDER SHARES HARD TIMES HE FACED AFTER TWISTED SISTER BREAKUP

    He added, “People need to hear those stories and know they’re not alone.”

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  • San Bernardino County reports first measles case

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    Public health officials in San Bernardino County reported the first confirmed case of measles Friday.

    The case involves an unvaccinated minor who was visiting California from another state, the San Bernardino County Department of Public Health said. It did not clarify which state the juvenile is from.

    The unvaccinated minor was at Walmart Supercenter on Mountain Avenue in Ontario on Jan. 29 between noon and 3 p.m., the public health department said.

    Those who were at the location may be at risk of developing measles if they are unvaccinated, immunocompromised or pregnant.

    This is the first case in San Bernardino County since 2023, officials said.

    The case is unrelated to the recent measles case involving a child who visited Disneyland last week.

    Symptoms, which typically develop in seven to 21 days after exposure, include fever, cough, runny nose and red eyes.

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  • Newly obtained emails undermine RFK Jr.’s testimony about 2019 Samoa trip before measles outbreak

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    Over two days of questioning during his Senate confirmation hearings last year, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. repeated the same answer.

    He said the closely scrutinized 2019 trip he took to Samoa, which came before a devastating measles outbreak, had “nothing to do with vaccines.”

    Documents obtained by The Guardian and The Associated Press undermine that testimony. Emails sent by staffers at the U.S. Embassy and the United Nations provide, for the first time, an inside look at how Kennedy’s trip came about and include contemporaneous accounts suggesting his concerns about vaccine safety motivated the visit.

    The documents have prompted concerns from at least one U.S. senator that the lawyer and activist now leading America’s health policy lied to Congress over the visit. Samoan officials later said Kennedy’s trip bolstered the credibility of anti-vaccine activists ahead of the measles outbreak, which sickened thousands of people and killed 83, mostly children under age 5.

    The revelations, which come as measles outbreaks erupt across the U.S., build on previous criticism that Kennedy’s anti-vaccine record makes him unfit to serve as health secretary, a role in which he has worked to radically reshape immunization policy and public perceptions of vaccines.

    The newly disclosed documents also reveal previously unknown details of the trip, including that a U.S. Embassy employee helped Kennedy’s team connect with Samoan officials. Kennedy, then running his anti-vaccine group Children’s Health Defense, did not publicly discuss the trip at the time, but he has since said his “purpose” for going there was not related to vaccines and “I ended up having conversations with people, some of whom I never intended to meet.” Besides meeting with anti-vaccine activists, Kennedy met with Samoan officials, including the health minister at the time, who told NBC News that Kennedy shared his view that vaccines were not safe. Kennedy has said he went there to introduce a medical data system.

    The U.S. State Department turned over the emails — many of which are heavily redacted — as a result of an open records lawsuit brought with the assistance of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

    These disclosures come at a time when Kennedy, as President Donald Trump’s health secretary, has used his power and enormous public influence to overhaul federal immunization guidance and raise suspicion about the safety and importance of vaccines, including the measles vaccine. Meanwhile, measles outbreaks in multiple U.S. states have rolled back decades of success in eliminating the highly contagious disease, putting the country on the verge of losing its elimination status. The latest figures show more than 875 people in South Carolina have been infected.

    Kennedy addressed questions about his trip to Samoa during two Senate confirmation hearings for his appointment as health secretary.

    “My purpose in going down there had nothing to do with vaccines,” he said under questioning by Democratic Sen. Edward Markey of Massachusetts in his Jan. 30, 2025, hearing.

    “Did the trip have nothing to do with vaccines as you told my colleagues in Senate Finance yesterday?” Markey asked later.

    “Nothing to do with vaccines,” Kennedy replied.

    One of the senators who questioned Kennedy about Samoa during his confirmation hearings, Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, responded to the records by saying, “Kennedy’s anti-vaccine agenda is directly responsible for the deaths of innocent children.”

    “Lying to Congress about his role in the deadly measles outbreak in Samoa only underscores the danger he now poses to families across America,” Wyden said in an email. “He and his allies will be held responsible.”

    Taylor Harvey, a spokesman for Wyden and other Democrats on the Senate Finance Committee, said it is a crime to make a false statement to Congress and “casual, false denials to Congress will not be swept under the rug.”

    A spokesman for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to questions sent by email and text message.

    Kennedy has said his visit did not influence people’s decisions on whether to get themselves or their children immunized.

    “I had nothing to do with people not vaccinating in Samoa. I never told anybody not to vaccinate,” he told the 2023 documentary “Shot in the Arm.” “I didn’t, you know, go there for any reason to do with that.”

    Anti-vaccine activists in the United States became interested in Samoa in July 2018, when two babies died after being injected with a tainted measles, mumps and rubella, or MMR, vaccine that had been improperly prepared. The government halted the vaccine program for 10 months, until the following April. Vaccination rates plummeted.

    The records show that during the time when no vaccines were being administered, Kennedy’s group, Children’s Health Defense, was trying to connect Kennedy with Samoa’s prime minister. A January 2019 email from the group’s then-president, Lyn Redwood, to Samoan activist Edwin Tamasese asked him to “please share this letter with the Honorable Prime Minister Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi for Robert Kennedy, Jr.”

    About two months later, Tamasese wrote back to Redwood, with a cc: to Kennedy and others.

    “Hope all is well, organizing logistics with the PMs office and wanted to confirm how many people are coming? Also just wanted to confirm costs etc for the visit and how this will be handled,” he wrote.

    Tamasese immediately forwarded the chain of messages to the personal and government email accounts of Benjamin Harding, at the time an employee of the U.S. Embassy in Apia, Samoa.

    “just sent this. expecting an answer tomorrow as I think it is Sunday there. your letter looks good,” Tamasese told Harding.

    While the U.S. Embassy in the past has acknowledged that an unnamed staffer attended an event with Kennedy and anti-vaccine activists while he was in Samoa, the records show that Harding wasn’t a passive attendee: He helped arrange Kennedy’s visit and connected Kennedy’s delegation with Samoan government officials.

    In a May 23, 2019, email to Harding’s personal email address, a staffer for the Samoan Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade wrote: “Hi Benj, Currently awaiting the official bio-notes for Mr Kennedy and Dr Graven to convey to the Hon. Prime Minister and Hon. Minister of Health for their reference. Please note, that this needs to be sent with our official letter when requesting an appointment.”

    Harding forwarded the ministry’s request to Dr. Michael Graven, then the chief information officer at Children’s Health Defense.

    Harding did not respond to messages seeking comment sent to several listed email addresses, social media accounts, a phone number listed to his parents and a general mailbox at a company he lists as a current workplace on his LinkedIn profile.

    Embassy staffers got a tip about Harding’s involvement in the trip from Sheldon Yett, then the representative for Pacific island countries at UNICEF, the United Nations Children’s Fund.

    “We now understand that the Prime Minister has invited Robert Kennedy and his team to come to Samoa to investigate the safety of the vaccine,” Yett wrote in a May 22, 2019, email to an embassy staffer based in New Zealand. “The staff member in question seems to have had a role in facilitating this.”

    Two days later, a top embassy staff member in Apia wrote to Scott Brown, then the Republican U.S. president’s ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa, alerting him to Kennedy’s trip and Harding’s involvement.

    “The real reason Kennedy is coming is to raise awareness about vaccinations, more specifically some of the health concerns associated with vaccinating (from his point of view),” the embassy official, Antone Greubel, wrote. “It turns out our very own Benjamin Harding played some role in a personal capacity to bring him here.” Greubel wrote that he told Harding to “cease and desist from any further involvement with this travel,” though the rest of the sentence is redacted.

    Yett did not respond to questions, though he said in an email, “that was a very grim time in Samoa.”

    Brown, who is running for the U.S. Senate in New Hampshire, declined to comment. Greubel referred questions to a press office at the State Department. A State Department spokesperson would not answer questions about the records, saying that as a general practice they do not comment on personnel matters.

    Harding left the embassy in July 2020, though he remains in Samoa, according to his LinkedIn account.

    Kennedy ultimately visited in June 2019. While there, he and his wife, actor Cheryl Hines, were photographed greeting the prime minister during an Independence Day celebration. He also met with government health officials as well as a group of figures who have cast doubt on vaccines, including Tamasese.

    The Guardian and the AP could find no record of Kennedy publicly discussing the purpose of his trip until after measles struck. In 2021, he wrote that he went there to discuss “the introduction of a medical informatics system” to track drug safety. He said Samoan officials “were curious to measure health outcomes following the ‘natural experiment’ created by the national respite from vaccines.”

    Since then, he has said his reason for going to Samoa was not related to vaccines.

    Redwood, the former Children’s Health Defense president who made early outreach to Samoa, is now an employee at HHS, reportedly working on vaccine safety.

    During the measles outbreak, Kennedy wrote a four-page letter to Samoa’s prime minister suggesting without evidence that the measles infections were due to a defective vaccine and floating other unfounded theories.

    ___

    This story was jointly reported and published by The Guardian and The Associated Press.

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  • Fear among Minnesota’s Somali community compounds a public health woe: Low measles vaccination rates

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    MINNEAPOLIS — Public health officials and community leaders say that even before federal immigration authorities launched a crackdown in Minneapolis, a crisis was brewing.

    Measles vaccination rates among the state’s large Somali community had plummeted, with the myth that the shot causes autism spreading. Not even four measles outbreaks since 2011 made a dent in the trend. But recently, immunization advocates noted small victories, including mobile clinics and a vaccine confidence task force.

    Now, with the U.S. on the verge of losing its measles elimination status, those on the front lines of the battle against vaccine misinformation say much progress has been lost. Many residents fear leaving home at all, let alone seeking medical advice or visiting a doctor’s office.

    “People are worried about survival,” said nurse practitioner Munira Maalimisaq, CEO of the Inspire Change Clinic, near a Minneapolis neighborhood where many Somalis live. “Vaccines are the last thing on people’s minds. But it is a big issue.”

    A discussion group for Somali mothers at Inspire Change has shifted online indefinitely. In community WhatsApp groups and other channels, parents have more pressing priorities: Who will care for kids when they can’t go to school? How can we safely get groceries and prescriptions?

    In 2006, 92% of Somali 2-year-olds were up-to-date on the measles vaccine, according to the Minnesota Department of Health. Today’s rate is closer to 24%, according to state data. A 95% rate is needed to prevent outbreaks of measles, an extremely contagious disease.

    Community vaccination efforts go through cycles, Maalimisaq said, with initiatives starting and stopping.

    Imam Yusuf Abdulle said immigration enforcement has put everything on hold.

    “People are stuck in their homes, cannot go to work,” he said. “It is madness. And the last thing to think about is talking about autism, talking about childhood vaccination. Adults cannot get out of the house, forget about kids.”

    Estimated autism rates in Somali 4-year-olds are 3.5 times higher than those of white 4-year-olds in Minnesota, according to University of Minnesota data. Researchers say they don’t know why. And in this vacuum of scientific certainty, inaccurate beliefs thrive.

    Many blame the measles, mumps and rubella shot — a single injection proven to safely protect against the three viruses, with the first dose recommended when children are 12 to 15 months old.

    In November, at one of Maalimisaq’s last Motherhood Circle gatherings, Somali mothers and grandmothers volleyed questions at facilitators. Won’t a shot for three viruses overwhelm a baby? Why does autism seem more prevalent here than back home?

    Vaccines are tested for safety, Maalimisaq and her panel explained. Delaying a shot is risky, they warned, because of what measles — which is seeing its highest spread in the country in more than three decades — can do.

    Local health officials have long followed best practices: enlisting community members to champion vaccines, hosting mobile clinics and uplifting the work of Somali health providers like Maalimisaq.

    But initiatives have been start-and-stop. Federal funding cuts affected efforts, and public health officials admit their outreach could be more consistent and comprehensive.

    Most parents here vaccinate their children eventually. Many Somali families prefer to wait until a child is 5, despite a lack of evidence that doing so cuts autism rates. Measles is endemic in Somalia, where war and international aid cuts have crippled the medical system, and elsewhere in East Africa where residents here often travel.

    “Measles is just a plane ride away, and measles is going to find the unvaccinated,” said Carly Edson, the state health department’s immunization outreach coordinator. “We are always at risk.”

    About 84,000 Somalis live in the Twin Cities area, of 260,000 nationwide. The community is the country’s largest, and most are U.S. citizens. Before the immigration crackdown, mosques and malls buzzed, with people gathering during evenings to sip chai or have henna drawn on their hands.

    Now, many in the community want to lie low. People are afraid to seek routine medical care. Without those touchpoints, trust quickly erodes, Maalimisaq said.

    Among the last cohort of Somali moms at the clinic, 83% had vaccinated their kids by the end of the 12-month program, she said. Some were making 10-second videos explaining why they vaccinated. But efforts have paused.

    Parents here have long dealt with racism and isolation, though they’ve built a strong community. They want answers for the autism rates, but science has no simple answers for what causes the lifelong neurological condition, said Mahdi Warsama, the Somali Parents Autism Network’s CEO.

    Warsama said Trump’s unproven claims last fall that taking Tylenol during pregnancy could cause autism sparked fears and questions here. The idea that the MMR shot should be split into three vaccines — one backed, with no scientific basis, by acting Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Jim O’Neill, though no standalone shots are available in the U.S. — has spread, too.

    Warsama traces the issue back more than a decade, when discredited researcher Andrew Wakefield published his study — since retracted — claiming a link between autism and the MMR vaccine. Wakefield visited with Twin Cities Somalis in 2011.

    “The misinformers will always fill the void,” Warsama said.

    Parents want to be heard, not debated — that’s why short doctor appointments don’t work, said Fatuma Sharif-Mohamed, a Somali community health educator.

    “That 15 minutes will not change the mind of a parent,” she said.

    Some doctors are pushing beyond the exam room — work they describe as slow and taxing. Changing one family’s mind can take multiple visits, even years.

    Dr. Bryan Fate, leader of a Children’s Minnesota vaccine confidence committee, said new strategies are underway, including social media videos from doctors and possibly a prenatal classes for expectant parents.

    “I’m going to call you in five days,” Fate said he tells hesitant parents, “and there’ll be no changes to this speech.”

    Overall, Minnesota’s kindergarten MMR vaccination rate has dropped more than 6 percentage points in the past five years, compared with a 2-point drop nationwide.

    State data suggests the effort to catch kids up may be effective: While less than 1 in 4 Somali kids in Minnesota is vaccinated against measles by age 2, 86% get at least one dose by age 6 — just short of the statewide rate, 89%.

    Doctors worry in particular about unprotected young children, for whom severe complications — pneumonia, brain swelling and blindness — are more common.

    Imam Abdulle said when parents ask him about the vaccine, he tells his own story. He wasn’t opposed to it but decided to err on the side of waiting. His son was diagnosed with autism at age 3, Abdulle said, and later was vaccinated.

    Correlation, he reminds parents, is not causation.

    The community doesn’t want to be painted as a source of disease, Abdulle said. But after outbreaks in 2011, 2017, 2022 and 2024, there’s also open acknowledgment that measles isn’t going away.

    “Our kids are the ones who are getting sick,” Abdulle said. “Our community is suffering.”

    Last year, Minnesota logged 26 measles cases. The state health department said the cases were across several different communities with pockets of unvaccinated people.

    In Maalimisaq’s Motherhood Circles, the most effective words often come not from doctors but fellow parents, such as Mirad Farah. Farah’s daughter was born premature. She worried the MMR shot would be too much and delayed vaccination. Her daughter still developed autism.

    “So what did that tell me?” she asked the room. “It confirmed that autism is not from the MMR.”

    ___

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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  • Measles case reported at St. Petersburg Catholic High School

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Measles cases are spiking nationwide according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The latest case identified in Tampa Bay is a student at St. Petersburg Catholic High School. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The Diocese of St. Petersburg confirms a student at St. Petersburg Catholic High School has measles
    • The student hasn’t been in the building since Jan. 27
    • The diocese says while students can get immunization exemptions, 99.2% of students at the school are vaccinated against measles
    • Classes and activities will continue as usual


    “We were just made aware that one of our sophomore students has a confirmed case of measles,” the letter provided to Spectrum News by the diocese reads. “The student in question has not been present at school since January 27th and we are unaware of any additional cases at this time.”

    In addition to this case, information from the Florida Department of Health shows Hillsborough and Manatee Counties reported one case each in January.

    “Unfortunately, it was only a matter of time,” said Dr. Patrick Mularoni, a pediatric emergency medicine physician at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital. “We’re seeing a lot more vaccine hesitancy, and measles spreads very easily. So, those that are unvaccinated were bound to get it and spread it.”

    Mularoni said it doesn’t start with that telltale rash. He said the earliest symptoms of measles can be a cough, runny nose, fever, and red eyes, and it can take seven to 10 days before a patient starts to fell sick. That gives the virus plenty of time to spread.

    “Measles is very contagious. It’s more contagious than the common cold, and some sources say 10 out of ten people in a room with somebody with measles, if they’re not vaccinated, they’ll get it,” said Mularoni.

    According to the CDC, when more than 95% of people in a community are vaccinated, herd immunity is achieved. Its data shows 88.8% of Florida kindergarteners were vaccinated in the 2024-25 school year. Nationwide, measles vaccination coverage has dropped from 95.2% in the 2019-2020 school year to 92.5% last school year. The CDC said that put 286,000 U.S. kindergarteners at risk. 

    Meanwhile, cases have jumped in the past year. While just one or two weekly cases were reported in early 2025, that increased to a high of 279 cases reported for the week of January 11 of this year.

    The diocese said in its letter to parents, “While diocesan immunization policy allows for medical exemptions from a licensed physician, 99.2% of our student body is vaccinated against measles. Given the school’s high vaccination rate, we plan to continue all classes and activities as normal.”

    Mularoni said the reemergence of measles may not just mean a learning curve for parents.

    “The one thing about measles is it has very subtle symptoms, and most providers haven’t seen it. You know, we’ve been vaccinating for so long, and it’s been relatively well-contained in the United States. Many providers might not know it if they see it,” he said.

    The diocese letter urged anyone with symptoms to stay home and see a doctor. Mularoni encouraged parents to call ahead before they do so. He said babies are usually vaccinated when they’re 12-15 months old, and it would be easy for unvaccinated babies to catch measles.

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    Sarah Blazonis

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  • Fear Among Minnesota’s Somali Community Compounds a Public Health Woe: Low Measles Vaccination Rates

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    MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Public health officials and community leaders say that even before federal immigration authorities launched a crackdown in Minneapolis, a crisis was brewing.

    Measles vaccination rates among the state’s large Somali community had plummeted, with the myth that the shot causes autism spreading. Not even four measles outbreaks since 2011 made a dent in the trend. But recently, immunization advocates noted small victories, including mobile clinics and a vaccine confidence task force.

    “People are worried about survival,” said nurse practitioner Munira Maalimisaq, CEO of the Inspire Change Clinic, near a Minneapolis neighborhood where many Somalis live. “Vaccines are the last thing on people’s minds. But it is a big issue.”

    A discussion group for Somali mothers at Inspire Change has shifted online indefinitely. In community WhatsApp groups and other channels, parents have more pressing priorities: Who will care for kids when they can’t go to school? How can we safely get groceries and prescriptions?

    In 2006, 92% of Somali 2-year-olds were up-to-date on the measles vaccine, according to the Minnesota Department of Health. Today’s rate is closer to 24%, according to state data. A 95% rate is needed to prevent outbreaks of measles, an extremely contagious disease.

    Community vaccination efforts go through cycles, Maalimisaq said, with initiatives starting and stopping.

    Imam Yusuf Abdulle said immigration enforcement has put everything on hold.

    “People are stuck in their homes, cannot go to work,” he said. “It is madness. And the last thing to think about is talking about autism, talking about childhood vaccination. Adults cannot get out of the house, forget about kids.”


    Vaccine misinformation has long thrived in Minnesota’s Somali community

    Estimated autism rates in Somali 4-year-olds are 3.5 times higher than those of white 4-year-olds in Minnesota, according to University of Minnesota data. Researchers say they don’t know why. And in this vacuum of scientific certainty, inaccurate beliefs thrive.

    Many blame the measles, mumps and rubella shot — a single injection proven to safely protect against the three viruses, with the first dose recommended when children are 12 to 15 months old.

    In November, at one of Maalimisaq’s last Motherhood Circle gatherings, Somali mothers and grandmothers volleyed questions at facilitators. Won’t a shot for three viruses overwhelm a baby? Why does autism seem more prevalent here than back home?

    Vaccines are tested for safety, Maalimisaq and her panel explained. Delaying a shot is risky, they warned, because of what measles — which is seeing its highest spread in the country in more than three decades — can do.

    Local health officials have long followed best practices: enlisting community members to champion vaccines, hosting mobile clinics and uplifting the work of Somali health providers like Maalimisaq.

    But initiatives have been start-and-stop. Federal funding cuts affected efforts, and public health officials admit their outreach could be more consistent and comprehensive.

    Most parents here vaccinate their children eventually. Many Somali families prefer to wait until a child is 5, despite a lack of evidence that doing so cuts autism rates. Measles is endemic in Somalia, where war and international aid cuts have crippled the medical system, and elsewhere in East Africa where residents here often travel.

    “Measles is just a plane ride away, and measles is going to find the unvaccinated,” said Carly Edson, the state health department’s immunization outreach coordinator. “We are always at risk.”


    Trust with patients and parents has eroded

    About 84,000 Somalis live in the Twin Cities area, of 260,000 nationwide. The community is the country’s largest, and most are U.S. citizens. Before the immigration crackdown, mosques and malls buzzed, with people gathering during evenings to sip chai or have henna drawn on their hands.

    Now, many in the community want to lie low. People are afraid to seek routine medical care. Without those touchpoints, trust quickly erodes, Maalimisaq said.

    Among the last cohort of Somali moms at the clinic, 83% had vaccinated their kids by the end of the 12-month program, she said. Some were making 10-second videos explaining why they vaccinated. But efforts have paused.

    Parents here have long dealt with racism and isolation, though they’ve built a strong community. They want answers for the autism rates, but science has no simple answers for what causes the lifelong neurological condition, said Mahdi Warsama, the Somali Parents Autism Network’s CEO.

    Warsama said Trump’s unproven claims last fall that taking Tylenol during pregnancy could cause autism sparked fears and questions here. The idea that the MMR shot should be split into three vaccines — one backed, with no scientific basis, by acting Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Jim O’Neill, though no standalone shots are available in the U.S. — has spread, too.

    “The misinformers will always fill the void,” Warsama said.


    Doctors try new strategies to reach parents

    Parents want to be heard, not debated — that’s why short doctor appointments don’t work, said Fatuma Sharif-Mohamed, a Somali community health educator.

    “That 15 minutes will not change the mind of a parent,” she said.

    Some doctors are pushing beyond the exam room — work they describe as slow and taxing. Changing one family’s mind can take multiple visits, even years.

    Dr. Bryan Fate, leader of a Children’s Minnesota vaccine confidence committee, said new strategies are underway, including social media videos from doctors and possibly a prenatal classes for expectant parents.

    “I’m going to call you in five days,” Fate said he tells hesitant parents, “and there’ll be no changes to this speech.”

    Overall, Minnesota’s kindergarten MMR vaccination rate has dropped more than 6 percentage points in the past five years, compared with a 2-point drop nationwide.

    State data suggests the effort to catch kids up may be effective: While less than 1 in 4 Somali kids in Minnesota is vaccinated against measles by age 2, 86% get at least one dose by age 6 — just short of the statewide rate, 89%.

    Doctors worry in particular about unprotected young children, for whom severe complications — pneumonia, brain swelling and blindness — are more common.


    ‘Our community is suffering’

    Imam Abdulle said when parents ask him about the vaccine, he tells his own story. He wasn’t opposed to it but decided to err on the side of waiting. His son was diagnosed with autism at age 3, Abdulle said, and later was vaccinated.

    Correlation, he reminds parents, is not causation.

    The community doesn’t want to be painted as a source of disease, Abdulle said. But after outbreaks in 2011, 2017, 2022 and 2024, there’s also open acknowledgment that measles isn’t going away.

    “Our kids are the ones who are getting sick,” Abdulle said. “Our community is suffering.”

    Last year, Minnesota logged 26 measles cases. The state health department said the cases were across several different communities with pockets of unvaccinated people.

    In Maalimisaq’s Motherhood Circles, the most effective words often come not from doctors but fellow parents, such as Mirad Farah. Farah’s daughter was born premature. She worried the MMR shot would be too much and delayed vaccination. Her daughter still developed autism.

    “So what did that tell me?” she asked the room. “It confirmed that autism is not from the MMR.”

    The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

    Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – January 2026

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  • Trump says California is full of fraud. Bonta says the claims are ‘reckless’

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    With the Trump administration reportedly in talks to create an anti-fraud task force for California, state Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta on Thursday vehemently denounced what he described as the administration’s “reckless” and “false” rhetoric about fraud plaguing the state.

    At a news conference at the Ronald Reagan State Building in downtown Los Angeles, Bonta said the Trump administration’s claims that state programs are overrun by fraud and that its government was itself perpetrating or facilitating this fraud was “outrageous and ridiculous and without basis.”

    Bonta said most states struggle with some fraud from outside actors, saying that “anywhere there’s money flowing there’s a risk” and that the state’s Department of Justice has thrown immense resources into cracking down on illicit activities and recovering funds for taxpayers.

    As a politicized national fight over waste, fraud and abuse led by Republicans have targeted California and its Democratic leadership, Bonta and other state officials have moved swiftly to combat the claims.

    In California, Bonta said, authorities have recovered nearly $2.7 billion through criminal and civil prosecutions since 2016, including some $740 million through Medi-Cal fraud related prosecutions, about $2 billion under the state’s False Claims Act, and an additional $108 million from a task force focused on rooting out tax fraud in the underground economy.

    State authorities have frequently partnered with the federal government in the past on such investigations and welcome a good-faith partnership in the future, Bonta said.

    CBS News reported on the creation of a California-focused fraud task force earlier this week, citing multiple unnamed sources familiar with the plans. The outlet, whose new editor in chief, Bari Weiss, has been aligned with Trump and spearheaded a major overhaul of the news organization, reported that the president plans to soon sign an executive order naming Vice President JD Vance as head of a group that would also include the head of the Federal Trade Commission as vice chairman.

    Trump’s rhetoric fueled doubts about California programs and Gov. Gavin Newsom’s leadership at the start of the year, when he declared that “the fraud investigation of California [had] begun.”

    On the president’s social media platform, in formal letters and in recent news conferences, officials in the Trump administration have alleged fraud in child care, hospice funding and unemployment benefits.

    Last week, the topic took center stage again when Mehmet Oz, the administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, posted a video accusing Armenian crime groups of carrying out widespread hospice fraud in Los Angeles.

    That viral video received more than 4.5 million views on X.

    Oz’s video received fierce backlash from California politicians and the local Armenian community, who collectively alleged that it contained baseless and racially charged attacks on Armenians.

    The video shows Oz being driven around a section of Van Nuys where he says that about $3.5-billion worth of medicare fraud has been perpetrated by hospice and home-care businesses, claiming that “it’s run, quite a bit of it, by the Russian Armenian mafia.”

    He also points to Armenian language signs, incorrectly referring to them as written in a cerulean script, and saying “you notice that the lettering and language behind me is of that dialect and it also highlights the fact that this is an organized crime mafia deal.”

    Newsom filed a civil rights complaint against Oz on Jan. 29, asking the Department of Health and Human Services to investigate the “racially charged and false public statements” made in the video.

    On Monday, California Sen. Adam Schiff followed suit, demanding an independent review of Oz’s alleged targeting of Armenian American communities.

    “To suggest markers of Armenian culture, language, and identity are indicative of criminality underscores a discriminatory motive that could taint any investigation into fraud and incite the further demonization of the community,” Schiff said in a statement.

    Glendale City Councilmember Ardy Kassakhian said in an interview that Oz’s statements feed into the Trump administration’s playbook of using allegations of fraud to sow racial divisions.

    “This time the focus just happens to be the Armenians,” he said. “In places like Minnesota, it’s the Somali community.”

    California has been investigating healthcare fraud since a 2020 Los Angeles Times investigation uncovered widespread Medicare fraud in the state’s booming but loosely regulated hospice industry.

    From 2010 to 2020, the county’s hospices multiplied sixfold, accounting for more than half of the state’s roughly 1,200 Medicare-certified providers, according to a Times analysis of federal healthcare data.

    Scores of providers sprang up along a corridor stretching west from the San Gabriel Valley through the San Fernando Valley, which now has the highest concentration of hospices in the nation.

    The state Department of Justice has charged more than 100 people with hospice-related fraud since 2021 and shuttered around 280 hospices in the last two years, according to data from the California Department of Public Health.

    But those shuttered hospices barely represent a dent in the massive hospice home healthcare industry. There are 468 hospice facilities in the Van Nuys area alone, according to the state database of medical facilities.

    There are 197 licensed medical practices, including 89 licensed hospices, in a single two-story building located at 14545 Friar St. in Van Nuys — suggesting a concentration of fraudulent businesses.

    When asked why the number of licensed medical practices in Van Nuys and at that address are so high, a spokesperson for the California Department of Public Health said that the department is committed to fighting fraud and unable to comment on pending investigation.

    Recent turmoil in Minnesota has demonstrated the potential ripple effects of allegations levied by the Trump administration.

    Ahead of sending in thousands of immigration enforcement agents into the Midwest state, Trump had repeatedly cited a fraud case involving funds for a child nutrition program involving COVID-19 pandemic relief funds.

    He used the case, which involved a nonprofit where several Somali Americans worked, to vilify the immigrant community, even though the organization was run by a white woman. After the state became a lightning rod, Gov. Tim Walz dropped his reelection plans.

    At Thursday’s news conference, Bonta described major cases in other states, such as $11.4 million healthcare fraud and wire fraud conspiracy involving a nursing assistant in Florida and a $88.3 million Medicaid fraud case in in Ohio involving over billing by a pharmacy benefit manager — to show abuse of state programs is not unique to California — or to blue states.

    “We know Vance hails from Ohio, so maybe he should take a look in his own backyard before leading an unnecessary political stunt focused on California,” Bonta said. “We thought we should set the record straight.”

    Times staff writers Melody Gutierrez and Dakota Smith contributed to this report.

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    Suhauna Hussain, Clara Harter

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  • After 80 years, Minute Maid’s frozen canned juices are getting put on ice

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    Minute Maid helped make orange juice a year-round morning staple in 1946, when it started shipping cans of frozen juice around the U.S. But 80 years later, the brand’s parent company is halting sales of frozen juice concentrates in the U.S. and Canada,…

    Minute Maid helped make orange juice a year-round morning staple in 1946, when it started shipping cans of frozen juice around the U.S.

    But 80 years later, the brand’s parent company is halting sales of frozen juice concentrates in the U.S. and Canada, saying it wants to focus on the fresh juices that customers now prefer.

    “We are discontinuing our frozen products and exiting the frozen can category in response to shifting consumer preferences,” The Coca-Cola Co., which owns Minute Maid, said Wednesday in a statement.

    Minute Maid’s frozen juices – including several varieties of orange juice, lemonade and limeade – will be discontinued by April, with inventory available while supplies last, Coca-Cola said.

    For generations, Americans who wanted orange juice without the work of squeezing fresh fruit cracked open a can and watched a cylinder of frozen juice go ker-plunk into a pitcher. The concentrated juice was mixed with water to make it ready for drinking.

    In 1946, Vacuum Foods Corp. became the first U.S. company to ship frozen orange juice across the country, according to Coca-Cola. It named the product Minute Maid; Vacuum Foods eventually changed its name to Minute Maid as well. Rival Tropicana, which still sells frozen canned juice, was founded in 1947.

    Coca-Cola acquired Minute Maid in 1960, and 13 years later, Minute Maid introduced ready-to-drink orange juice, which was sold in the refrigerated case instead of the freezer and let consumers skip the step of mixing it up. Minute Maid added lemonade and fruit punch to its lineup in 1980.

    In recent years, orange juice has struggled as other options, like energy drinks and protein smoothies, have flooded the market. Skyrocketing prices due to poor weather conditions in Brazil and Florida haven’t helped; a 12-ounce can of frozen orange juice cost an average of $4.82 in December, up 13% from the prior year, according to U.S. government data.

    Consumers also increasingly questioned the added sugar in juices. Minute Maid launched Zero Sugar versions of its fresh juices in 2020. But its frozen juices have languished along with the broader frozen juice category.

    U.S. sales of frozen beverages fell nearly 8% in the 52 weeks ending Jan. 24, according to the market research firm NielsenIQ.

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  • All Children’s shares latest on $7.5 million pediatric cancer research grant

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — To Mia Morrison, 5, the rooms on the seventh floor of Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital have become almost a second bedroom. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The Cancer Connect Collaborative Research Incubator was created in 2025 by the Florida Legislature as part of the Casey DeSantis Cancer Research Program
    • The state initiative was designed to advance pediatric cancer research and care in Florida
    • For five years, the hospital and three others will receive $7.5 million a year
    • Mia Morrison is 5 and was diagnosed with acute lymphoblastic leukemia


    She is comfortable here, even though this is where she gets ongoing cancer treatments. 

    “Mia is actually on a clinical trial right now for an immunotherapy drug that she received. It has already done incredible things for the outcome of children with B-cell ALL. And so we are always very excited to hear about new trials, participate in new trials,” said Callie Morrison, Mia’s mother.

    New and expanded trials are a big part of the Florida Cancer Connect Collaborative Research Incubator grant, giving this hospital and three others in Florida $7.5 million a year for the next five years. 

    “We are trying to attract and grow the research in Florida so people do not have to leave Florida to go get that care,” said Dr. Cassandra Josephson, director of the Cancer and Blood Disorders Institute at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital.

    Mia has acute lymphoblastic leukemia and this grant will help her and others in five main ways. 

    First, it expands current clinical trials, it also will develop a statewide clinical trial database, create a network to move research discoveries into the trial-phases faster, implement more immune system studies, and will create more testing for the next generation of gene and cellular therapies. 

    “Getting more kids to be on study and to be enrolled in studies is part of this grant. And that will lead to bigger cures and bigger survival rates in different places,” said Josephson. 

    It also will help more complex cases, like Mia. 

    She is non-verbal living with autism. Callie said that being neurodivergent sometimes creates barriers with being included in long-term trials. 

    “So the fact that we have this grant, this renewable grant that we have access to for the next five years, I can’t wait to see what the opportunities are for kids like Mia,” said Morrison. 

    Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital was one of four specialty hospitals in the state for this five-year grant. 

    Nicklaus Children’s in Miami, Nemours Children’s in Orlando, and Wolfson Children’s in Jacksonville were also awarded this funding.

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    Erin Murray

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