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Tag: Medicine

  • Suicide Prevention Resources

    Suicide Prevention Resources

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    If you or someone you know is thinking of suicide, call the Samaritans crisis helpline at 877-870-4673 or the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255). Those in need of mental health support or substance use crisis care in New Hampshire can call or text the NH Rapid Response Access Point at 1-833-710-6477 or visit NH988.com. Anyone needing assistance outside either state can call or text the national Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988.

    Here are more resources:

    Safe Place Support Group: Meets in North Andover on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month from 7 to 8:30 p.m. at St. Michael Parish, at 196 Main St.

    Attempt Survivor Support Group: Offered three to four times annually by Samaritans of Merrimack Valley, 978-327-6671.

    Family and Community Resource Center: Samaritans of Merrimack Valley, at 1 Union St. in Lawrence, 978-327-6607; 866-912-4673, www.stop-suicide.org

    Crisis Text Line: A texting service for emotional crisis support. To speak with a trained listener, text HELLO to 741741. Free, available 24/7, and confidential.

    Lahey Health Behavioral Services: Lowell Area, 800-830-5177; Haverhill area, 800-281-3223; Lawrence area: 877-255-1261; Salem area, 866-523-1216

    Eliot Community Human Services Community Behavioral Health Center in the North Shore: at 10 Harbor St., Danvers, 888-769-5201

    Massachusetts Behavioral Health Help Line: open 24/7, 833-773-2445

    Care Dimensions: Formerly Hospice of North Shore, 978-620-1250

    Compassionate Friends: assists families throughout grief following a death 1-877-969-0010

    International Association of Chiefs of Police and the National Consortium on Preventing Law Enforcement Suicide: surveymonkey.com/r/ZKZ7KHG

    National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: lifelineforattemptsurvivors.org

    Mass. Coalition for Suicide Prevention: masspreventssuicide.org

    Waking Up Alive: wakingupalive.org

    Suicide Survivors: suicidesurvivor.org

    Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention: actionallianceforsuicideprevention.org

    National Alliance on Mental Illness: namimass.org

    Mass 211: staffed by United Way and connects callers to information about critical health and human services programs, mass211.org

    The Merrimack Valley Prevention and Substance Abuse Project: mvpasap.com

    Call2Talk: national suicide prevention lifeline crisis center, 508-532-2255

    The Children’s Room: largest independent non-profit in Massachusetts dedicated to supporting grieving children, teens and families, 781-641-4741

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

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    msager@eagletribune.com

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  • Plan to expand child care subsidies advances

    Plan to expand child care subsidies advances

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    BOSTON — State lawmakers are making another push to approve a plan expanding access to child care options for parents while attracting and retaining new workers to ease chronic staffing shortages in the industry.

    The proposal, approved by the Legislature’s Education Committee last week, would expand financial assistance for families seeking child care, establish new funding for child care providers, and boost pay and benefits for early educators.

    Senate President Karen Spilka, who has made early education and care a top priority for her two-year term as the chamber’s leader, said passage of the bill would expand access to affordable child care for parents across the state “by supporting families, providers and educators.”

    “Our state’s families face child care bills that are higher than the cost of in-state college tuition, and that are often so high that they force one parent to drop out of the workforce,” the Ashland Democrat said in a statement. “If we are serious about solving our labor shortage, supporting families, and getting new parents back into the workforce, we must act to lower the cost of child care.”

    A key plank of the proposal calls for expanding eligibility for subsidized child care by raising the income level to qualify for state-backed programs.

    The current threshold is 50% of state median income for a family of four – which is about $55,000 annually for a family of four. The plan calls for “gradually” increasing that level to 85% of state median income, or $93,662 for a four-member family.

    The Common Start coalition, which includes labor unions, business and advocacy groups, praised the bill’s progress and said its final passage would make the state “significantly more affordable, greatly improve our economic competitiveness, and dramatically increase racial and gender equity.”

    “This comprehensive early education and child care legislation would provide the specific structure that is needed to deliver affordable care options for families; significantly better pay and benefits for early educators; a permanent, stable source of funding for providers; high-quality programs and services for children; and substantial relief for businesses and our economy,” the group said in a statement.

    Many child care centers are financially strained and advocates say low compensation and the rising costs of caring for children are putting some providers out of business.

    Meanwhile, care providers are struggling to retain workers in an industry where the pay is traditionally low and the risk of becoming sick is now elevated as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, advocates say.

    The lack of child care options in Massachusetts is costing families, some of whom are spending 20% to 40% of their annual income on programs.

    The average cost of child care is more than $20,000 a year in Massachusetts, the most expensive state in the nation, only behind Washington, D.C., and well above the national average of $15,888, according to a recent report from the Massachusetts Taxpayers Foundation.

    Working families are losing an estimated $1.7 million a year in lost wages from not being able to show up for work because they cannot find or afford child care services, the report noted.

    Meanwhile, employers are losing an estimated $812 million a year in productivity and worker turnover because of the shortage of child care options, according to the report, while the state government is missing out on $188 million a year in tax revenue.

    Compounding the lack of options are changes in the workforce and other factors that have seen fewer people looking to work in the child care industry.

    Gov. Maura Healey has made expanding child care options for parents a key plank of her agenda in her first term, tying the issue to a broader effort to make the state more affordable.

    Healey’s preliminary budget for the next fiscal year calls for $93 million in new child care spending, as well as an additional $475 million in state grants to continue supporting early education providers

    The state Board of Early Education and Care recently approved a plan to tap into $65 million from this year’s budget to reimburse child care providers that serve families receiving financial assistance, including a 5.5% cost-of-living adjustment for providers to help offset increased operating costs.

    Christian M. Wade covers the Massachusetts Statehouse for North of Boston Media Group’s newspapers and websites. Email him at cwade@cnhinews.com

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    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

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  • A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier

    A half century of hands-on learning at Whittier

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    HAVERHILL — It’s 7:45 a.m. A Tuesday in this the 50th anniversary of Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School.

    Principal Chris Laganas’ booming voice reaches through the intercom to 1,275 students in their homerooms this morning two days before Thanksgiving; and two months before voters would defeat a plan to build a new $446 million school.

    The students are from the 11 towns and cities in which 73% of special election voters would reject the new school proposal, deeming it too costly, and almost three months before the Whittier Tech School Committee voted this week to withdraw the proposal.

    The students are enrolled in any of 23 vocational-technical shops. From culinary arts to computer-aided design, HVAC to hospitality and marketing to masonry.

    The principal’s underlying message this morning in late November is the same as it will be in late May. The same as on a Monday or Friday.

    Since Whittier opened in the 1973-74 school year, its students have gone on to be machinists, mechanics, electricians, chefs, carpenters, plumbers, nurses, and teachers and researchers and business people and to work in all fields.

    In the coming weeks, freshmen will select the shop program they want to pursue and juniors will become eligible for the Whittier cooperative education program in which students alternate school work with paid employment in their chosen technical field.

    Invariably, Whittier grads become handy people.

    The message Principal Laganas relays this morning, and the words from his predecessors, is this:

    Take the opportunity in hand and work it.

    Make it and shape it in these classrooms and shops, and out in the field on coop placements working for employers, says Laganas, also the assistant superintendent, and a former professional hockey player who skated in hundreds of minor league games.

    The Whittier Way is active, a learning-by-doing approach that has driven the Whittier Tech engine for 50 years.

    Mixing things up

    In a kitchen the size of a basketball court, overhead lighting glints off stainless steel counters, mixers and dishwashing machines.

    Voices roll up against rattling dishes and chiming silverware. Pots tumble into a deep sink, thumping like a kick drum.

    Two dozen culinary arts students in aprons and instructors in chef coats and hats transition from breakfast to lunch.

    A chef calls out a reminder for students to stay on schedule with their tasks. This is crucial when shifting from one meal to the next.

    In the baking section, a youth pours chocolate chips into a mixer filled with cookie dough.

    Behind him, a student pulls a baking sheet of fresh cookies from the oven and slides it on a rack to cool.

    The smell of warm chocolate chip cookies registers bliss.

    The difference at Whittier is students get to make, bake, serve and — yes — eat the cookies.

    Culinary student Jeramiahes Vega, a junior who lives in Haverhill, pushes a cart to the baking station.

    Cooking gives him pleasure, satisfies.

    “I like the people’s reactions after they eat the food I make,” he says. “I like that. I like seeing how they change after having good food.”

    Nearby, Lillian Lefcourt, a Haverhill senior clad in kitchen whites, scrapes her grill clean. She pokes a brush into a small stainless container with melted butter. She works with purpose. No wasted movement.

    She and a classmate have been making grab-and-go breakfast sandwiches — egg and bacon or sausage and cheese — for the teachers.

    Lefcourt came to Whittier to learn a trade, to earn a living.

    “I really like baking cookies and brownies,” she says, brushing butter on the grill.

    Students cut, measure and clean.

    Chefs supervise, calling out orders as needed.

    “Guiding the students,” chef Tjitse Boringa says. “The students are doing all the work.”

    Boringa, originally from the Netherlands, has been teaching here for 23 years.

    He is one of six culinary arts instructors.

    The hallmark here and in the school’s 22 other programs is active learning.

    Beginning with the basics and building skills, not the least of which are being punctual, being attentive and finding the pleasure we humans get from learning.

    More students are continuing their education these days, Boringa says.

    A lot of them go to Johnson & Wales University or the Culinary Institute of America or Northern Essex Community College, he says.

    Mouths and manes

    In the dental shop, Skyy Skinner, a sophomore from Haverhill, practices passing instruments to her partner. Precision in simple tasks are important.

    Skinner holds an explorer, a thin stainless steel object for probing. She is poised above a set of teeth. No face or head. Just teeth on a thin post.

    She is also learning about disease control, making sure she is gloved and surfaces are clean, that the objects are sterilized and the space disinfected.

    Good dental hygiene promotes good health, she says.

    “It is important for a lot of things you wouldn’t expect,” Skinner says.

    She and the seven or eight other dental assistant students in the room all say they want to work in the dentistry field.

    This program was added in 2018. There is a demand for dental hygienists and assistants. The same is true for the budding carpenters, electricians and other tradespeople here.

    Some students arrive to Whittier with a program in mind; others find theirs through the freshmen exploratory. For three-quarters of their first year, they cycle through the different shops learning about the skills and technologies before selecting one to pursue in depth over their remaining time at the school.

    The cosmetology program has 19 students. Once they are licensed, they are placed in a salon outside the school for their co-op assignment, instructor Nancy Calverley says.

    Here in the cosmetology salon, students are coloring and styling hair and applying gel polish to nails.

    Shaylee Twombly, a senior from Amesbury, is first bleaching her client’s hair tips and front pieces so she can apply a red color and give it a halo look.

    “As you can see, it is kind of lifting down here,” she says of the color, as it shifts from a natural brown color to a lighter blond.

    “I was just bored with my hair,” says the client, a fellow student, Julianna Bucknill, of Newbury.

    The students are an energetic group and interested in beauty and fashion.

    “We are all bubbly with each other,” says Twombly, who plans to go to a two-year college and someday open her own salon.

    Shaping and selling

    A majority of Whittier graduates continue their education. Some will start their own businesses.

    A number of the teachers here are former Whittier students.

    In the wood shop is instructor Mike Sandlin, who grew up in Haverhill. He graduated from Whittier in 1997, studying carpentry, and graduated from Westfield State University with a degree in regional planning.

    He then joined the carpenters union and worked in the carpentry field for 18 years before returning to teach at his old school.

    Sometimes it takes students a few years to figure what they want to do, but many of them “are crushing it,” Sandlin says.

    A former student came in the other day and told him how she had started out with a company on the bottom rung.

    She was pushing a broom around a shop.

    “And now has worked her way up and is drawing her own kitchens and coming up with her own cabinet plans,” Sandlin says.

    The wood shop is filled with lumber and tools and machines, including shapers, routers, sanders, planers, joiners, saws and lathes.

    Meanwhile, elsewhere in the building, students decorate the school store, called J. Greenleaf, draping garlands behind the checkout counter.

    Sophomore Lia Landan, a marketing student from Haverhill, adjusts a garland according to directions from fellow marketing student Michael Wells, a junior from Haverhill, who eyes the placement from the entrance.

    Next, they string lights around the greenery and play Christmas music.

    “We have a little tree over there,” Landan says.

    “We have a star up there,” another student says, pointing to a yellow star topping the garland.

    The right fit

    Across the hall from the store is the Poet’s Inn, a cozy eatery open to the public.

    Seated at a table are senior class president Owen Brannelly, from Amesbury, and hospitality program teacher Nikolas Kedian, who graduated from Whittier Tech in 2016.

    “I realized the second I stepped into the culinary shop, it was the place where I best fit in,” Kedian says. “You start eating the food, meeting the people.”

    It felt like home. His family has worked in restaurants, he says.

    Footsteps, lots of them, approach in the hallway.

    More than 250 JG Whittier Middle School students are visiting Whittier Tech this day.

    Every Tuesday in November and a little of December, middle school students from the 11 sending communities visit the vocational school.

    Brannelly says it feels like it was only last year that he was an Amesbury Middle School student visiting Whittier. He was excited and nervous, and imagines that is what these middle schoolers are feeling.

    He had not planned on going the vocational route but decided that he wanted to try something new and different.

    He has been the class president for three years.

    He and classmates have organized school dances, including the first homecoming dance in the last 20 years.

    The dances have drawn lots of students, almost 800 of them to the last dance.

    He is interning at ARCH Medical Solutions, a manufacturing company in Seabrook, New Hampshire.

    Last year, he worked for an accounting firm as a receptionist.

    He is also earning college credits, taking classes, including English composition, at Whittier through Northern Essex Community College.

    He wants to study marketing in college and has been accepted by Big Ten schools: the University of Minnesota, Michigan State University and Ohio State University.

    He is bound for a much larger world, and ready for his next new and different adventure, well prepared for it by the Whittier Way.

    Whittier by the numbers

    Opened: 1973

    Address: 115 Amesbury Line Road, Haverhill

    Enrollment: 1,277 students

    Student-teacher ratio: 10-1

    Mascot: Wildcat

    Colors: Maroon and gold

    Sending cities and towns: Haverhill, Amesbury, Newburyport, Georgetown, Groveland, Ipswich, Merrimac, Newbury, Rowley, Salisbury and West Newbury.

    Programs: 23 in six core areas, arts and communication, construction, manufacturing, service, technology, and transportation

    Sports: 10 boys teams and nine girls teams

    2023 grads to college: 56%

    2023 grads to work: 37%

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    By Terry Date | tdate@eagletribune.com

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  • SENIOR LOOKOUT: Consumer Directed Care puts control in elder’s hands

    SENIOR LOOKOUT: Consumer Directed Care puts control in elder’s hands

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    I have an older friend, Fran, who needs assistance in order to continue living in her home. She broke her hip a few years ago and now has difficulty with bathing, housework, and grocery shopping, to name a few of the tasks that we all need to do on a daily basis. Fran’s situation was reviewed by SeniorCare and it was determined that she was eligible for assistive services. Due to the ongoing worker shortage, Fran was put on a waiting list for some of the services for which she was eligible.

    Knowing that Fran needed assistance now, Fran’s care manager at SeniorCare suggested the “Consumer Directed Care” program. Using Consumer Directed Care, Fran chose and hired her own helper — a friend of the family, who was immediately able to start providing Fran with the assistance she needed. In addition, Fran immediately began receiving Meals on Wheels home-delivered meals, received a medical alert device and a care coach virtual companion device, which helps in a myriad of ways, not the least of which is helping Fran feel less isolated from the world. (Learn more about care.coach at www.seniorcareinc.org/care-coach.)

    Consumer Directed Care is available to people who have been assessed and found eligible for a state-funded home care service. The consumer becomes the employer, is allowed to choose his or her home care worker (or workers), set the worker’s schedule, and assign tasks that fit specific needs that may not be allowed with a traditional home care agency, such as assisting with pets, certain cleaning tasks, and assistance with unique medical care as the consumer trains the worker him- or herself in carrying out these tasks.

    A “Fiscal Intermediary” (FI) agency takes care of the payroll, tax withholding, and other accounting tasks that are required of a legal employer. The FI agency is contracted and paid by SeniorCare. The rate of pay for the worker, who submits a weekly timesheet, is determined by state mandates. The consumer is responsible for the hiring, training, scheduling, and — if needed —the termination of the home care worker.

    Consumer Directed Care can be used to cover a portion of or all of the services for which a person is eligible.

    The consumer chooses the own worker, but must follow some basic rules. The worker may be a family member, but may not be the consumer’s spouse. The worker must be:

    Legally authorized to work in the United States and have a social security number.

    Able to pass a CORI screening.

    Able to understand and carry out directions from the consumer.

    Willing to receive training and supervision for all designated tasks.

    Consumer Directed Care is an excellent option for elders wishing to take more control of their care. If the consumer needs assistance with managing the responsibilities of being an employer, a surrogate may be brought into the picture. A surrogate may manage the entire program for the consumer or may assist with specific tasks. The surrogate can be a spouse, friend, neighbor, or family member. The surrogate cannot be the worker.

    For more information about Consumer Directed Care, please call SeniorCare at 978-281-1750 and ask to speak with an Information & Referral Specialist or with your Care Manager if you are already a SeniorCare consumer.

    Tracy Arabian is the communications officer at SeniorCare Inc., a local agency on aging that serves Gloucester, Beverly, Essex, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Rockport, Topsfield and Wenham.

    Tracy Arabian is the communications officer at SeniorCare Inc., a local agency on aging that serves Gloucester, Beverly, Essex, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester-by-the-Sea, Rockport, Topsfield and Wenham.

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    Senior Lookout | Tracy Arabian

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  • Trahan pushing to protect nonprofit hospitals

    Trahan pushing to protect nonprofit hospitals

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    METHUEN — In the wake of ongoing issues with Steward Health Care System, the U.S. House of Representatives is looking to pass a bill to provide additional funding to “fill the gaps” for struggling community health systems, according to Rep. Lori Trahan, D-Westford.

    Trahan. D-Westford, introduced the Reinforcing Essential Health Systems for Communities Act with Rep. David Valadao, R-California, to provide more federal funding and support to the safety net hospitals.

    “Essential health systems serve the most vulnerable families in cities and towns across the nation, and these facilities deserve the funding and support necessary to maintain and expand their lifesaving services,” Trahan said.

    Trahan recently called out potentially “dangerous” outcomes with Steward Health Care’s system “private equity playbook,” which could affect her own delegation. She was also a signature with other reps to Steward Health Care System about possible closures, violations of Medicare rules and reports of missing payments.

    While Steward Health Care System announced it would not be closing Massachusetts hospitals, the effects could still be detrimental to patients.

    “Steward-owned hospitals would not be eligible for federal assistance through this designation because of their for-profit, private equity model,” Trahan said.

    “However, if Holy Family Hospital was sold to a nonprofit health system as part of the agreement that Steward recently announced but has provided no details on, the facility could then be eligible to receive additional federal funding and resources under this legislation to better support the patient population in the Merrimack Valley.”

    The act targets over 1,000 hospitals throughout the nation. Trahan said this would designate about 18 hospitals in Massachusetts as “essential health systems,” including Lowell General Hospital and Lawrence General Hospital.

    “Creating an essential health system designation acknowledges the vital role these systems play in improving the health, well-being of vulnerable populations that rely on them, and potentially reducing the disparities in their financial underpinnings,” said Abha Agrawal, president and CEO of Lawrence General Hospital.

    Lawrence General’s Dr. Eduardo Haddad shared staff concerns with Gov. Maura Healey and the Public Health Council on Wednesday about the news surrounding Steward Health Care System’s Holy Family Hospitals in Methuen and Haverhill, while stressing his hospital’s commitment to support patients in need.

    With the Essential Health Systems legislation, Trahan continues to work to support Merrimack Valley health care.

    “Private equity hospitals like Steward put profits over patients, and communities like Haverhill and Methuen are the ones who are forced to pay the price,” Trahan said.

    “This legislation is designed to deliver additional funding to nonprofit safety-net hospitals that are often forced to fill the gaps left when corporations like Steward move on.”

    Essential health systems often serve disproportionately higher numbers of Medicaid, low-income Medicare and uninsured patients.

    The hospitals often provide five times more uncompensated care compared to other hospitals, according to Trahan. Yet, they are historically underfunded and often limited in their ability to maintain and expand the critical health services they offer to patients, she added.

    “We must ensure hospitals in our rural and underserved communities have the resources they need to provide high-quality care,” said Valadao. “The Reinforcing Essential Health Systems for Communities Act will clearly identify the hospitals that serve our most vulnerable communities, allowing critical federal resources to be more easily directed toward them.”

    Hospitals qualify as “essential health systems” if they have a disproportionate patient percentage of Medicaid and low-income Medicare patients. The hospital could also serve a high percentage of Medicaid and low-income patients, or it could help capture the costs of care delivered to uninsured individuals.

    “Safety-net providers are vital to improving the health of our community and addressing the health needs of at-risk and medically underserved populations,” said Amy Hoey, president of Lowell General Hospital.

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

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    By Monica Sager | msager@eagletribune.com

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  • Lawrence man found guilty of rape again

    Lawrence man found guilty of rape again

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    LAWRENCE — A Lawrence man convicted of rape four years ago was found guilty again of rape, extortion and photographing an unsuspecting nude person.

    Angel Mateo, 27, previously of 76 Phillips St., was already serving 7 to 9 years in state prison on the previous rape conviction.

    On Wednesday, Superior Court Judge Sal Tabit sentenced Mateo to another 12 to 14 years in state prison after a jury found him guilty of five rape and related charges after a trial in Lawrence Superior Court, according to court records.

    The court docket indicated jurors deliberated for 90 minutes before handing down guilty verdicts against Mateo for two counts of rape, two counts of extortion and photographing a nude person without consent, according to court records.

    Tabit also sentenced Mateo to 2 1/2 years in the county jail. That sentence is to be served concurrently with the state prison sentence, court records indicated.

    Mateo was also ordered to three years on probation following his prison release, and he must register as a sex offender with the state, undergo special programs for sex offenders and have no contact with any witnesses, according to court documents.

    The case centered around Mateo threatening an ex-girlfriend, saying if she did not perform a sex act that he would post a sex video of her online and “ruin her image,” according to police.

    In February 2020, Mateo was convicted by a Salem Superior Court jury of on statutory rape, indecent assault and battery on a child and assault and battery charges. The crimes involved four female victims, including a 13-year-old girl. Two of them testified during that trial.

    In October, 2023, Mateo was found not guilty in a third case involving allegations of breaking and entering and strangulation.

    During the break-ins, Mateo was accused of removing a small child from her bed and attempting to take her out of the house and in the other break, the victim woke up and found a man standing over her.

    The jury found Mateo not guilty of two counts of breaking and entering into a building in the nighttime to commit a felony, attempting to commit a crime, two counts of assault and battery and strangulation or suffocation.

    Mateo’s defense attorney Jeffrey Sweeney could not be reached for comment for this article.

    The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Jessica Strasnick.

    Follow staff reporter Jill Harmacinski on Twitter/X @EagleTribJill.

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    By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

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  • State to determine if Diaper Spa operated unlawfully

    State to determine if Diaper Spa operated unlawfully

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    ATKINSON — The state is taking action against Diaper Spa owner Colleen Ann Murphy over the possible unlawful and unlicensed medical practice of her business.

    Murphy will face three public disciplinary hearings to determine if she illegally operated Diaper Spa without medical certification in psychology, general medicine and mental health practices.

    The New Hampshire Office of Professional Licensure and Certification, Division of Enforcement issued the hearing notices after holding an emergency meeting on the issue, according to documents obtained.

    Two hearings are scheduled for March 1, before the Board of Psychologists and the Board of Mental Health Practice, and will take place at the Licensure Office, 7 Eagle Square, Concord. She will go before the Board of Medicine on March 6, the Licensure Office announced on Friday. 

    The boards will decide if she engaged in the unlawful and unlicensed practices of psychology and mental health, in addition to the unlawful practice of medicine.

    The Board of Medicine hearing was previously scheduled for an earlier date. 

    The Diaper Spa, at 23 Pope Road, caters to adults aged 21 and older, serving “all diaper-wearing individuals who seek acceptance, respite, and care” in a nursery-like atmosphere.

    Public concern over the nature of the business arose on Jan. 24 as the business, which operated out of Murphy’s home, advertised services and public activities which raised eyebrows — like play dates at the local park and the “Little Friends Play Date” service.

    Both of those have since been removed from Diaper Spa’s website, along with most of the site’s first iteration.

    Murphy was denied a special exemption permit to operate a home business from Atkinson’s Zoning Board of Adjustment on Wednesday night as her business application failed to meet certain zoning requirements.

    During the public hearing, Murphy told the board that the Diaper Spa was a nonmedical practice where she does not prescribe medication or make any medical diagnoses.

    She labeled her business as a “safe place” and “nonjudgmental environment” for adult regression. Murphy said it was also a place for decompression and relaxation for those who suffered past trauma.

    The board asked her if she was a mental health counselor.

    “Counselor is not a protected term in New Hampshire or the United States,” Murphy said.

    However, she stated she performs mental health coaching through telehealth and not in-person.

    Her submitted application requested an appeal of the zoning board for a home-occupation permit for “mental health counseling.”

    Murphy told the board she is not a licensed professional counselor, but added she is an ordained minister who can perform counseling under those services.

    She said she has worked in the medical community for more than 20 years and in nursing homes and hospitals. Murphy said she has helped nurses as a nurse’s aide and the diaper changing at the Diaper Spa mimics a hospital manner.

    “It’s done in a clinical manner just as it would be done in a nursing home,” Murphy said.

    She said there would be no genital contact with adults receiving her service. ZBA Vice Chair Bob Connors told Murphy that she stated to the board she would be changing the adult diapers and there would be no sexual contact.

    “Changing an adult’s diaper and coming in contact with adults in New Hampshire law for a fee, that’s illegal,” Connors said.

    It is unclear if Murphy has or had a registered medical license in New Hampshire.

    According to the New Hampshire Online Licensing website, there is no listing for a medical license for the name Colleen Ann Murphy.

    Murphy has a medical license through the state of New York which is valid through October 2025.

    In Maine, she was licensed as a medical doctor from February 2016 to Nov. 30, 2023.

    A business application with New Hampshire was rejected in December 2023 for the Diaper Spa.

    According to her statements to the Zoning Board of Adjustment, Murphy operated the Diaper Spa for four to six weeks before the building inspector visited her home and she stopped her services.

    Murphy’s Maine medical license lapsed from December 2023 to this past Jan. 27. On Jan. 28, a new medical license was issued and lists Atkinson as her residence.

    According to her Maine license, she does not have certification in internal medicine or psychiatry.

    Editor’s note: This story was updated on Friday to reflect changes to the dates of public disciplinary hearings with the state. 

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    By Angelina Berube | aberube@eagletribune.com

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  • No bail for Lawrence cold case murder suspect awaiting retrial

    No bail for Lawrence cold case murder suspect awaiting retrial

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    LAWRENCE — Following a mistrial in December, a judge on Wednesday denied bail to Lawrence cold case murder suspect Marvin “Skip” McClendon Jr., 76, who is from Bremen, Alabama.

    McClendon is charged with killing Melissa Ann Tremblay, 11, of Salem, N.H., in Lawrence on Sept. 11, 1988.

    The case was cold for more than three decades until prosecutors in April 2022 said DNA found under Tremblay’s fingernails linked McClendon to the girl’s murder.

    Defense attorney Henry Fasoldt sought his client’s release on $50,000 bail with court imposed conditions while McClendon awaits a retrial this fall.

    He said McClendon was a veteran who did not pose a flight risk or danger to the community and that the state’s murder case against him was “weak” and “circumstantial.”

    Fasoldt has said McClendon has not been convicted of a crime and expressed concern his client would be behind bars for 2½ years before he goes on trial again.

    But Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Karp, who presided over the murder trial in December, denied the bail request. He said McClendon could not be properly supervised if he returned to Alabama and that he had didn’t have ties to Massachusetts.

    Fasoldt noted McClendon, a retired Massachusetts Department of Corrections officer, lived in Massachusetts in the past, however.

    But Karp, referring to the trial in December, noted that McClendon has a brother who lives in Athol, Mass., who testified against him as a prosecution witness.

    “There is too much at stake,” Karp said during a hearing Wednesday in Newburyport Superior Court.

    McClendon will remain held at Middleton Jail as a result Karp’s ruling.

    He has a home in Alabama down the road from his sister, Rebecca Greenwood, who is his primary social support, Fasoldt said previously. Greenwood attended the trial in December.

    McClendon suffers from a number of chronic health conditions and requires daily medication including blood thinners, medication for gout, and diuretics. He used a walker in court during the trial.

    His retrial is scheduled for Sept. 30 with jury empanelment first and then testimony to start in mid-October.

    Tremblay was murdered in South Lawrence near the LaSalle Social Club on Andover Street.

    On Sept. 11, 1988, Tremblay’s stabbed and beaten body was found in a South Lawrence railroad yard.

    The girl was known to play in the neighborhood while her mother and her mother’s boyfriend frequented the social club. She was last seen alive by a railroad employee and a pizza delivery driver, authorities said.

    Tremblay’s mother has since died.

    After more than a week of testimony from detectives, crime lab workers, relatives and others, the prosecution rested its case on Friday, Dec. 15.

    Among the prosecution witnesses were retired State Trooper Kenneth Kelleher and Lawrence Police Detective Thomas Murphy, the original murder case detectives from 1988.

    State Police Lt. Peter Sherber, who most recently investigated and went to Alabama to question McClendon and his relatives, also testified.

    Daniel Hatch, who was a 13-year-old homeless boy in 1988, also testified he saw Tremblay sitting on the front steps of the LaSalle Club that day with an area man named Michael Therrien. He said the two later walked across Broadway to the State Street area where they met up with another man.

    On Monday, Dec. 18, Fasoldt called three defense witnesses, all doctors with backgrounds in DNA or forensics.

    McClendon did not testify in his own defense.

    Jurors deliberated for 29 hours but remained deadlocked. A mistrial was declared by Judge Karp on Dec. 27.

    Follow staff reporter Jill Harmacinski on Twitter/X @EagleTribJill.

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    By Jill Harmacinski jharmacinski@eagletribune.com

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  • Peabody cancer survivor rides for fellow patients

    Peabody cancer survivor rides for fellow patients

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    PEABODY — It’s been 13 years since Peabody resident Robin Bernstein was diagnosed with cancer. Now cancer free, she’s riding in the Pan-Mass Challenge’s Winter Cycle for the sixth time to fight the terrible disease.

    “I want to let people know what I went through and that there’s hope,” said Bernstein, a 61-year-old legal assistant. “That’s the biggest thing: There’s hope. You’ve got to believe.”

    It was May 2012 when Bernstein became concerned by how much more frequently she was using the bathroom each day and noticed that her stomach was fully distended. The Tuesday after Memorial Day, a doctor’s visit turned into a sudden trip to the hospital for testing on a mass in her body.

    At 9:40 p.m. that night, her doctor shared news that she never expected: She had ovarian cancer.

    “I don’t know how I got home that night, but I did…” Bernstein said. “You can have all the money in the world, but if you don’t have your health, you have absolutely nothing.”

    Bernstein underwent surgery for a hysterectomy and to remove her appendix and the cancerous mass that June. When she woke up in little pain and without a colostomy bag following the surgery, she had a feeling everything was going to be OK.

    She was right. On July 3, 2012, Bernstein’s oncologist called her to let her know the cancer was Stage 1 and Grade 1A, meaning she wouldn’t need chemotherapy or radiation.

    “I walked outside of Starbucks, I sat on the ground and I bawled my eyes out. I thought I was going to have a heart attack,” Bernstein said. “Health is wealth.”

    Bernstein takes part in the Pan-Mass Challenge to support those who are still fighting their cancer and raise money for a cure.

    She’s participating in the organization’s PMC Winter Cycle on March 9 at Fenway Park. Along with hundreds of others, she’ll be riding a stationary bike and raising funds for Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

    Participants have to raise a minimum of $400. Bernstein’s already raised about $2,100 from friends, colleagues and even current cancer patients.

    “One woman that lives on the North Shore, she’s got pancreatic cancer. She doesn’t have more than six months to live, and she’s one of the people that donated to my ride,” Bernstein said. “That’s pretty special.”

    As jarring as her diagnosis was, Bernstein counts herself as one of the lucky ones.

    “I just think how lucky am I to be sitting on a bike pedaling, listening to music? How lucky am I to be 12-and-a-half years cancer free?” she said.

    “There is hope. You’ve got to believe that eventually, there’s going to be a cure.”

    For more information on the Pan-Mass Challenge, visit www.pmc.org/. To donate to Bernstein’s ride, go to http://tinyurl.com/robinsridepmc.

    Contact Caroline Enos at CEnos@northofboston.com.

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    By Caroline Enos | Staff Writer

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  • Lawrence General Hospital doctor worries about Holy Family closures

    Lawrence General Hospital doctor worries about Holy Family closures

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    BOSTON — Lawrence General Hospital doctors say they are worried about what will happen to patients if Holy Family Hospitals in Methuen or Haverhill close, but vowed to help as much as possible if needed.

    Lawrence General’s Dr. Eduardo Haddad shared staff concerns with Gov. Maura Healey and the Public Health Council on Wednesday about the news surrounding Steward Health Care System’s Holy Family Hospitals in Methuen and Haverhill, while stressing his hospital’s commitment to support patients in need.

    “We are indeed very worried about it,” said Haddad, who practices at Riverside Nephrology. “We at Lawrence General Hospital feel the pain of the community.”

    Haddad said Lawrence General Hospital will do its best to support additional patients and increase its staff serving the Methuen and Haverhill Holy Family Hospitals patients.

    “These folks would be left without a place to go if they were to close,” Haddad said. “There’s no lack of will on our part to take care of these patients.”

    Healey and the Public Health Council addressed the Steward crisis Wednesday morning as part of the council’s regular monthly meeting.

    “I know this is a situation of deep concern for all of us,” Healey said. “It is an urgent priority for me.”

    Steward Health Care System owns nine facilities in the state, including the Holy Family Hospitals in the Merrimack Valley. Local, state and federal officials have raised concerns around possible closures, violations of Medicare rules and financial distress.

    The for-profit hospital network announced on Feb. 2 it has no plans to close any of its Massachusetts hospitals.

    Healey said she and her administration are focused on the health and safety of patients, job retention for nurses and staff as well as the “safety net” the hospitals create for the local communities.

    “Many of these patients are among the most vulnerable in our state,” Healey said. “We are actively monitoring the quality of the care.”

    The state has placed “monitors” at St. Elizabeth Hospital in Brighton, Good Samaritan Medical Center in Brockton and both of the Holy Family Hospital campuses, according to Robert Goldstein, the Massachusetts public health commissioner.

    They are monitoring staffing, services, supplies and equipment to ensure communities are properly served, Goldstein said. This week, inspectors have been added to Carney Hospital in Dorchester and Morton Hospital in Taunton.

    Goldstein said inspectors will be at all Steward Health Care System hospitals by next week.

    “This is a situation that is enormously challenging and unsustainable,” Goldstein said.

    Even still, Goldstein said the state has no interest in bailing out the private, for-profit group.

    “Steward itself must address its significant financial challenges,” Goldstein said. “Right now we don’t know what Steward will do.”

    Goldstein said the Department of Public Health is prepared for “many scenarios.” He noted Steward is “likely” to need to restructure or close some of its hospitals.

    “The bottom line is at this time, we don’t know the future of Steward Health Care,” Goldstein said.

    The state is in communication with the health care group as well as federal and local administrations. Goldstein said the main goals now are to protect patients and preserve the jobs of the “heroes” in the hospitals’ communities.

    “This work is hard, but it is important,” Goldstein said. “We must do it right, and we must do it well.”

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

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    By Monica Sager | msager@eagletribune.com

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  • Love for 70 years, couple looks back on time together

    Love for 70 years, couple looks back on time together

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    NORTH ANDOVER — When Fey’s best friend and Fred’s brother set the two up, it was destiny in the making.

    “When he opened the door, I said that’s my guy,” Fey Kaplan said, now 70 years later.

    Fred agreed that it was “wonderful.”

    The couple dated for about two years, and in a week they will be celebrating their 68th wedding anniversary on Feb. 21.

    As Valentine’s Day comes up, the love the Kaplans share for each other is evident. Nurses and caregivers at Andover Forest, which was formerly known as Sutton Hill, say the two stare lovingly into each others’ eyes every time Fey comes to visit Fred, which happens “as often as possible,” Fey said.

    As Fey, 92, called Fred her “cutie pie” and Fred, 93, returned the compliment in turn, the two held hands, kissed and hugged, proving love has the ability to last a lifetime.

    “We’ve had a wonderful marriage,” Fey said. “I know him inside and out, and he knows me inside and out.”

    The Kaplans have been inseparable since they met 70 years ago. They even worked together, opening a fitness center and handing out samples at the supermarket because “everything we did, we did together.”

    “I never got bored of her,” Fred said.

    Before they joined forces, Fred worked at a bakery and had a coffee truck he’d take around the South Shore. He also had two hair salons, one of which was in Peabody.

    Fey worked for Clinique and was a teller for sometime as well.

    Throughout the years they would go dancing, bowling and travel together. Fey was very excited about their memories of “all of the islands” as well as Hawaii. They also traveled to France, Italy and China, she said.

    “We did it all,” Fred said. “Every memory I have is with her.”

    The Kaplans, in fact, were always together, only apart for about three months during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic when Fred initially went to live at Andover Forest and Fey continued to live in their apartment in Andover at the Atria Marland Place. Fred moved to the North Andover home in December, and Fey could not see him again until February.

    “That was the worst day when we were separated,” Fey said. “It was lonely not having lunch together.”

    Fey now visits Fred several times a week. She said each visit she can’t wait to see him. Fred often wonders why she can’t stay, she said.

    The couple has four children, six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Everyone lives nearby, with the farthest child living in Connecticut, according to Randy Welch, the Kaplan’s third child.

    “They’ve shown us the importance of family,” Welch said. “We’re all very close thanks to them.”

    The extended Kaplan family is so close that for Fred’s 93rd birthday on Feb. 5 everyone visited him at the senior care center. They even brought Chinese food. Fred laughed and smiled thinking about it, as he still had balloons tied to his wheelchair.

    “We love each other very much,” Fey said. “We look forward to seeing each other all the time.”

    The family also surprised Fey and Fred in Florida, when everyone flew down for the couple’s 60th wedding anniversary eight years ago.

    Every holiday was also spent as a family, Fey said. The children and grandchildren would all come over and Fey would bake for Thanksgiving and Hanukkah celebrations.

    Now, as Valentine’s Day nears and their next wedding anniversary is around the corner, the couple is just looking forward to being together.

    “I love him, and he loves me,” Fey said. “We love each other like the first day we met.”

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

    Follow Monica on Twitter at @MonicaSager3

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    By Monica Sager | msager@eagletribune.com

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  • Small book, big comfort: Woman shares her faith by handing out ‘Keep Calm and Trust God’

    Small book, big comfort: Woman shares her faith by handing out ‘Keep Calm and Trust God’

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    HAVERHILL — Elaine Barker never leaves home without several copies of her favorite faith-based book stuffed into her pocketbook.

    It’s a very small book that has attracted a big following, mostly due to Barker, who after discovering the little red book she began handing out copies to people she encounters and are willing to share their burdens and worries.

    A devout Catholic whose life is immersed in spirituality and has an unshakable faith in God, Barker says the 70-page “Keep Calm and Trust God” has not only become her daily reader, but it has also brought comfort to those she’s given it to.

    Since 2015, she’s handed out more than 500 copies and just received another shipment of 25. She uses the book as a vehicle for sharing her faith.

    “Every morning before I leave my bedroom I kneel down and I open the book to a random page and read it,” said Barker, 87, a long-time All Saints Parish member. “It seems there is something there that I’ve read before and gets me through the day. It’s like a spiritual daily vitamin.”

    Written by Jake Provance and his father Keith Provance, “Keep Calm and Trust God” contains just 12 short chapters, each offering spiritual guidance for those struggling with concerns such as anxiety, depression, regret, stress and fear of the future. The authors don’t bog down the reader with wordy responses, but instead ask the reader to turn to prayer while citing biblical passages that relate to each area of worry and emphasizing to the reader to “Trust God.”

    Barker shares her faith in many ways, but never to the point where she sounds like she’s preaching or forcing her faith onto anyone. Chances are if you bump into her, she always has a kind word or two and will always end a conversation with “God bless you” along with a hug.

    “A few months ago they passed one million in sales,” she said. “And last month they sold 40,000 copies. The authors just can’t believe the way their book has sold.”

    Back in 2015, Barker was shopping at the CVS in Lafayette Square and was perusing the book rack when she spotted the little red book.

    “I bought a copy and when I got home I glanced at it then set it aside with my other Christian books,” she said. “When the pandemic hit, I needed something to bring me comfort so I went to my stack of books and sitting at the top was this book. I picked it up and read a few chapters that talked about stress and worry.”

    The words inside carried such meaning that Barker returned to the CVS but the copies were all sold out.

    “I contacted the distributor and ordered five copies,” she said. “I was so touched by the effect it had on my life that I gave out the copies to people I ran into and who talked about COVID and its effect on their lives. I told them I have a book that could take some stress out of their lives. So I ordered 25 more copies and gave them out over the next few months.

    “I can be anywhere, such as a store, a Chamber event, a celebration or a cemetery and since I’m a good listener, I focus on what people are saying as people love to talk about their problems. Sometimes people just need someone to talk to.”

    She has encountered mostly positive reactions from people she hands copies to. The opportunities are everywhere as she attends so many local events, including Chamber of Commerce events, awards and recognition programs, festivals, church gatherings and more. As a member of the Haverhill Exchange Club, you’ll find her at their weekly luncheon meetings. If there’s something happening around the city, Barker is usually there bringing her own style of light and happiness into a room.

    “When someone has a problem, or there’s a sickness, or they have a family member they are worried about, I just listen,” she said. “And when the opportunity arises, I’ll tell them you seem very stressed and worried and that I have this wonderful booklet I’m sure can help you. I only give them out to people who talk about having a problem and I feel the book can help.”

    While attending a bridal conference in North Carolina in 2022 as part of her work with her company Paper Pot Pourri, a custom maker of stationary, she was in a cafe at her hotel and noticed an elderly man who appeared to be alone and lonely.

    “I saw that he had a pile of books and that one had the word Jesus on the cover,” she said. “I struck up a conversation and he told me about a problem with a family member who had attempted suicide. I told him I have a wonderful little book and will you accept it? Since then I continue to receive text messages from the man.”

    She said she carries several copies in her pocketbook, just in case.

    “It’s not that I go looking for people to hand them to, it just happens,” she said. “This book helps me to accept the trials and tribulations in life.”

    Barker’s faith in God has brought her on many pilgrimages, including to a village called Medjugorje, in Bosnia-Herzegovina, which she visited in 2022.

    “I prayed a lot and climbed Apparition Hill while hobbling with a cane due to foot surgery the year before, and which has since healed,” she said. “I also submitted prayer petitions from people I know and who requested certain prayers.”

    She’s been to the Holy Land twice to visit the place of Jesus’ birth and crucifixion and other holy sites, and last year she visited religious sites in Italy.

    Barker said she initially purchased the books for the retail price of $4.99, but for the past four years she obtains them at a discount from Keith Provance, who lives in Oklahoma.

    “I often write to him to tell him about situations that led to my handing out a copy,” she said. “During one phone conversation I reminded him that he’d included a poem by John Greenleaf Whittier, who was born in Haverhill, and over time he’s learned a lot about Haverhill’s history, which I’m happy to talk to him about.”

    “This little book speaks to common things people struggle with and is written in such a simple way that it doesn’t overwhelm the reader,” she said.

    “It’s very easy to understand. I also like the sayings from well known people. I have other books but I’m not addicted to them as I am to this book and the message it brings to me. It doesn’t solve all problems, but it helps understand and accept things. Instead of feeling sorry for ourselves, we must accept, and of course God is always here to help us.”

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    By Mike LaBella | Staff Writer

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  • 6 Women Reveal Why They’re Stocking Up on the Abortion Pill – POPSUGAR Australia

    6 Women Reveal Why They’re Stocking Up on the Abortion Pill – POPSUGAR Australia

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    Courtney, 27, learned about advance provision – a practice that involves ordering abortion pills as a precautionary measure – during a TikTok scroll. Once she found there were telehealth organizations safely shipping abortion pills to states with abortion bans, she sought her own supply. Living in Arkansas, where abortion is completely banned, paired with recently learning that she’d been taking a medication that had made her birth control ineffective, Courtney requested advance-provision pills through Aid Access, a nonprofit providing access to medication abortion by mail.

    “If I ever was in the position of being pregnant and wanting to terminate, I would have the option to decide that for myself in the comfort of my home.”

    “If I ever was in the position of being pregnant and wanting to terminate, I would have the option to decide that for myself in the comfort of my home,” says Courtney, who, like other people in this story, is being identified by her first name to protect her privacy.

    Courtney is one of tens of thousands of women who weren’t pregnant, but obtained abortion pills out of fear of the future of abortion access, following the overturning of Roe v. Wade. Since then, experts have said abortion pills are the future of abortion access, though the Supreme Court this year will weigh in on whether the Biden administration can protect access to the pill. As that decision hangs in the balance, more women are stockpiling their own as a means for security.

    To be clear, both abortion pills and ordering the medication online is “remarkably safe,” says Jennifer Lincoln, MD, an ob-gyn and executive director of Mayday Health, a nonprofit that spreads awareness around accessing safe abortion pills in any state. “As a physician, I would feel as comfortable telling somebody that they can get abortion pills ahead of time, as I would telling somebody to have ibuprofen in their cabinet before they have a headache or menstrual cramps.” In fact, Dr. Lincoln says she has her own supply of abortion pills in her medicine cabinet.

    Earlier in January, JAMA Internal Medicine published a study that revealed an influx of advance provision requests after the Supreme Court decision was leaked in May 2022, and into 2023. It looked specifically at Aid Access, which received over 42,000 advance provision requests following the landmark ruling. That was a massive increase compared to the estimated 6,000 requests received from September 2021 to May 2022. Request rates were high in states with abortion bans, and even higher in those where abortion access is threatened.

    Aid Access is one of several trusted organizations that distribute pills from overseas. Once a request for advance provision is sent in, a provider based in the US will write a prescription for 1 mifepristone and 12 misoprostol tablets, which are taken in conjunction to end a pregnancy. The prescription is then shipped to the recipient by a partner organization within a few weeks. In Aid Access’s case, the service costs $150, but anyone unable to pay it is asked to donate what they can.

    We spoke to several folks who ordered abortion pills for potential future use on what made them turn to advance provision and how they felt about having the medication on hand.

    Related: My Partner and I Disagree About Abortion Access. Is That a Dealbreaker?

    Preparing For the Worst in States With Abortion Bans

    Despite continued attempts by states to ban medication abortion, it’s currently legal to dispense abortion pills by mail. However, that could change as the Supreme Court will soon hear its cases over broad access to the pill.

    For Courtney, if not for advance provision, she knew her only option to safely access abortion would be to travel to the nearest clinic providing abortions, which is more than 300 miles away in Kansas. “When Roe v. Wade was overturned, I became very nervous about the future of my reproductive health care and my right to choose,” she says. “Growing up and living in the South, it also made me incredibly nervous and scared to even go to a hospital because of hearing about women who were arrested or went to jail because of a miscarriage or something they had no hand in causing [pre-Roe].”

    Katie, 32, who resides in North Carolina – which has enacted a 12-week abortion ban – felt compelled to order advance-provision pills after reading about women in total ban states who were forced to carry high-risk pregnancies. One of the medications she takes for her chronic illnesses can cause serious birth defects, and while she has a birth control implant, she worries about potential accidents. “Who’s to say that the state government would recognize that if I got pregnant while those teratogenic effects were likely?” she says.

    After talking to her boyfriend, they thought it made sense to get the medication just in case. “The unpredictability of the past few years only promises more unpredictability,” she says. “I don’t want to have to take them, and I support choice, but that doesn’t mean that deciding to keep or abort a pregnancy would be something I’d take lightly.”

    Mary*, 35, lives in Indiana, which has already enforced a total ban on abortion. She thought she would order abortion pills while she could, concerned that continued restrictions and the threat of a nationwide abortion ban could prevent her from accessing them in the future. “I’m really not very confident in the way things are going politically so it was a ‘just in case’ measure,” she says.

    Related: What It’s Like to Be Denied an Abortion in Your State

    Unpredictability in States With Abortion Access

    “When the anti-abortion movement is motivated, they move quickly to box people in and cut off resources to healthcare.”

    Although Claire*, 38, lives in Kansas, where abortion is currently legal, she “didn’t know if or how the law would change in the future.” She ordered advance-provision pills the night the Supreme Court draft was leaked. “I didn’t want to wait because when the anti-abortion movement is motivated, they move quickly to box people in and cut off resources to healthcare,” she says. “I know this because I grew up going to Catholic school and received anti-abortion messages on a regular basis.”

    She continues: “Kansas has reaffirmed its preference for abortion rights, but I still worried about going through an unwanted pregnancy, and the idea of going to a clinic with protesters shouting in my face was scary and unappealing.”

    Living in New York City, where abortion is also legal, Sarah*, 30, made the decision to stock up on abortion medication for extra security. “I hope not to get pregnant, but if I were to, I want to be able to handle it quickly and eliminate the stress of locating abortion services,” she tells PS. “My access to abortion is not threatened, but having the pills on hand made me feel more secure in my decision to remain off birth control,” she says, explaining that she went off birth control after experiencing a severe spike in migraines.

    Taking Precautions After Previous Abortions

    Two women we spoke to had previously had abortions, and their past experiences only reaffirmed their desire to request advance-provision pills post-Roe.

    About three years ago, Kim*, a 38-year-old living in Missouri, terminated a pregnancy at Planned Parenthood with a medical abortion. Looking back, she remembers she had to wait “weeks” after making the decision to get into the clinic to take the pills.

    “Having an unwanted pregnancy is difficult enough and no woman wants to have to wait to take action,” she says. “Having to go to a clinic is a long, invasive, and traumatic experience in itself. Being able to make such a choice in the comfort of your home, as soon as possible, is a blessing. Hopefully I won’t need these [advance-provision] pills, but if I do, I won’t have to go through the stress and the panic of ‘figuring it out.’”

    In her early 20s, Mary*, the 35-year-old living in Indiana, had a surgical abortion. At the time, she wasn’t presented with the option of medication abortion. Having experienced that in the past, now, she wanted to order abortion pills for peace of mind. (Indiana is a complete-ban state.) “It makes me feel relieved that if I do get pregnant when I’m not intending to, I have something right in my medicine cabinet that I can use safely,” she says.

    Related: Why Are Abortions So Expensive?

    Stocking Up, Despite Feeling “Greedy”

    While some expressed concerns over taking away pills from those who might need them immediately, Dr. Lincoln assures there is currently no shortage of these medications. She adds that if there ever was, suppliers like Aid Access prioritize time-sensitive requests. “Get what you need and don’t feel guilty about it,” she says. “Don’t go overboard, but know that if there’s ever a time where a concern comes up about a shortage, we’ll get it out there and we’ll let you know. But for right now, we have far more pills than we can get into the hands of people.”

    “I wish I didn’t have to have a secret pharmacy in my house.”

    Katie, 32, still has her pills stored in a safe space at home in North Carolina, but she’s considered ordering another supply in case friends need to use them. “It makes me feel kind of greedy, but that’s a function of the pressures that politics is putting on our healthcare, not me,” she says. “I wish I didn’t have to have a secret pharmacy in my house.”

    As Dr. Lincoln puts it: “We are in a war against people being able to do what we need to do with our bodies. And in wartime medicine, we have to adjust our standards. The reality is this is where we’re at.”

    *Names have been changed



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  • KSP: Mother charged after marijuana detected in 2-year-old son’s urine | News – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    KSP: Mother charged after marijuana detected in 2-year-old son’s urine | News – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    A Johnson County woman was cited on a child endangerment charge after marijuana was detected in her 2-year-old son’s urine.

    Autumn Leigh Spencer, 24, of Ky. 1750, East Point, was cited with endangering the welfare of a minor on Jan. 17.

    Kentucky State Police Trooper Mark Spencer wrote in court documents he was dispatched to a child neglect complaint at Highlands ARH in Prestonsburg, where Autumn Spencer had taken her two-year-old son with possible injuries.

    Autumn Spencer told the trooper that her son and three-year-old daughter had been playing at her parents’ house and that when she went to check on them, the girl had fallen across the boy.

    “She then stated when she went to pick up her son, he appeared to be addled or incoherent,” the trooper said in his citation. “Autumn then advised she brought him to Highlands ARH because he wasn’t acting right.”

    Trooper Spencer wrote that he made contact with the hospital floor nurse, who said the boy showed positive signs of marijuana in his urine and also tested positive for COVID-19. 

    “She further advised they were awaiting MedFlight to take him to Cabell Huntington’s children’s hospital,” the trooper said.

    Trooper Spencer wrote he also contacted a social worker, who said they were working on a plan to possibly place all of Autumn Spencer’s children.

    A Jan. 22 court date was…

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    MMP News Author

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  • Robitussin Cough Syrup Is Recalled Due to Contamination

    Robitussin Cough Syrup Is Recalled Due to Contamination

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    WASHINGTON — The maker of Robitussin cough syrup is recalling several lots of products containing honey due to contamination that could pose a serious risk to people with weakened immune systems.

    Haleon’s recall covers eight lots of Robitussin Honey CF Max Day Adult and Robitussin Honey CF Max Nighttime Adult, which were distributed to stores and pharmacy suppliers. The Food and Drug Administration posted the company’s announcement to its website Wednesday.

    The products have the potential to cause “severe or life-threatening adverse events,” if taken by people with weakened immune systems, such as organ transplant recipients or those with HIV. Several million people in the U.S. have conditions that impair the immune system’s ability to fight off infections. For most healthy individuals, any infections resulting from the products are unlikely to be serious, the company said.

    Haleon did not disclose the nature of the contamination but said use of the products could result in severe fungal infections. The company did not immediately respond to requests for additional details Thursday morning.

    New Jersey-based Haleon said it has not received any reports of injury or infection linked to the products.

    The affected products have expiration dates ranging from October 2025 to June 2026.

    People who have used the product should contact a health provider if they think they’re experiencing any problem related to the recall. They can also report the problem to the FDA’s online system.

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    Matthew Perrone/AP

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  • Capital City Sunday: GOP medical marijuana proposal, Wisconsinites’ tax burden still near historic low | News – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Capital City Sunday: GOP medical marijuana proposal, Wisconsinites’ tax burden still near historic low | News – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    MADISON (WKOW) — Wisconsin Repubicans have unveiled a new proposal to establish a medical marijuana program in the state.

    The bill would limit the drug to only those who are severely ill with chronic diseases like cancer. Smokeable marijuana would not be allowed.

    The proposal also regulates medical cannabis growers, processors, and testing laboratories, and requires the state to establish five state-owned dispensaries to grow and sell medical cannabis products.

    Cannabis lawyer Jason Tarasek worked closely with lawmakers in Minnesota to hone the state’s adult-use cannabis bill that legalized recreational marijuana in the state. He said this week that he sees similarities between Wisconsin’s proposal and Minnesota’s initial medical marijuana program that was established in 2014. Assembly Speaker Robin Vos has indicated this proposal is based on Minnesota’s program.

    Tarasek said that their initial program was similarly restrictive, but has loosened in recent years to include other conditions such as autism, intractable pain, and sleep apnea. 

    “Like everything with marijuana, it is very controversial when it’s first introduced, the stigma is real around marijuana,” he said. “I think it’s interesting to watch these states come online, and I’m certain that if the medical marijuana program is introduced in Wisconsin, as intended, society will see this…

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  • Survey: Majority of Sports Medicine Doctors Have Favorable Attitudes About MJ Use | High Times

    Survey: Majority of Sports Medicine Doctors Have Favorable Attitudes About MJ Use | High Times

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    Looking at recent cases like that of Sha’Carri Richardson, who was barred from competing in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics over a failed THC test, it’s clear that cannabis use among athletes is still a somewhat taboo topic. Still, looking at the slowly changing regulations in institutions like the NBA and NFL, the sports world is steadily embracing the potential benefits that cannabis has to offer athletes in regard to recovery and chipping away at the penalties for cannabis use of years past.

    And it’s evident when we look beyond these large stages that the status quo is beginning to shift. Namely, a new anonymous survey of physicians from the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) looking to assess opinions on the use of CBD and cannabis found that these doctors generally have favorable attitudes toward the substances, though there are still varying views.

    The study, which appears in the journal Translational Sports Medicine, also found that most sports medicine physicians from the survey showed support for legal medical and recreational cannabis use.

    Exploring Sports Physicians Views on Cannabis Reform, in Sports and Beyond

    The study begins noting the “growing evidence regarding cannabinoid use in sports medicine and performance,” highlighting CBD as a particular point of interest. Authors note that cannabis and cannabinoid use has been studied through other areas of medicine, though data in regard to sports medicine is sparse. 

    To analyze sports physicians’ views on cannabis, physician members of the AMSSM received a survey via email on two separate occasions, with a total of 333 completed responses. 

    According to the results, 72% of the respondents supported the 2018 removal of CBD from the World Anti-Doping Agency’s banned substance list, while 66% supported its removal from the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s (NCAA) banned substance list. Fewer, 59%, supported removing cannabis as a whole from the WADA banned substances list, though 81% said that sports physicians should have formal training on cannabis and cannabinoids and an overwhelming 93% majority were interested in continued medical education for cannabinoids.

    A majority of respondents also showed support for medical cannabis legalization, 77%, and recreational legalization, 57%.

    Cannabis and CBD Relating to Sports Performance

    As many conversations around cannabis use in sports, including those surrounding Richardson back in 2021, revolve around its potential as a performance-enhancing substance, the survey also recorded physicians’ opinions on that topic. 

    A majority of respondents said that CBD and THC are not performance enhancing (approximately 76% and 66%, respectively). Most physicians also agreed that CBD was not detrimental to athletic performance (approximately 61%), though the opinion shifted when it came to THC, at approximately 37% saying it was not detrimental to athletic performance.

    The survey also examined demographic information, finding that women, older doctors and rural respondents were less likely to favor legal adult-use cannabis. Authors note that these factors were also associated with a higher likelihood of disagreeing with the WADA removing cannabis from the prohibited substances list and the NCAA allowing college athletes to use cannabis.

    Men and younger physicians were also less likely to identify cannabis as performance enhancing.

    An Invitation For Further Research on an Understudied Topic

    The study concludes noting that a number of sports doctors are already recommending CBD and cannabis products, noting that they are often used for chronic musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain. Authors also claimed that this was the first study to reveal that providers are recommending these products for sports-related concussions and performance anxiety.

    “This advancing cultural shift motivates ongoing research and education for sports medicine providers to better answer questions posed by athletes about the safety, dosing, and potential effects of CBD and cannabis in sports,” researchers wrote.

    When looking at data from the survey showing that more doctors would recommend CBD (40.8%) instead of cannabis (24.8%), authors said that the reasons “are not entirely clear.” Though, “given the overall safety profile of CBD, its lack of ‘intoxicating’ effects, and the general infiltration of CBD into mainstream consumer products, providers may see CBD as a safer option for patients compared to Cannabis and THC-containing products.”

    Similarly, authors said that the reason more doctors believe that cannabis is detrimental to performance than CBD is unclear but that these perceptions could influence how sports medicine providers counsel athletes using these products.

    “It is important to note that the ergogenic versus ergolytic effects of CBD compared to cannabis are still largely unknown,” the authors said. “Therefore, these perceptual differences can largely, if not exclusively, be attributed to marketing and advertising. In addition, one must recognize the seemingly ubiquitous addition of CBD to countless consumer products, which may also contribute to this evolving distinction.”

    Authors also acknowledged the small sample size, accounting for only about 7% of the membership in the AMSSM, and due to the data coming from a single point in time, the study also can’t describe changing opinions. 

    “Lastly, although the survey was anonymous, this is still considered a fringe topic by many in sports medicine and medicine in general, which may limit the divulgence of actual behaviors and attitudes of respondents,” authors conclude.

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  • Lawmakers may revisit issue of drivers smelling of marijuana | Police Fire Court – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Lawmakers may revisit issue of drivers smelling of marijuana | Police Fire Court – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    When leaving a meeting at Prince George’s Community College on the night of Dec. 12, the Rev. Robert L. Screen and his wife were shocked when a car drove past them smelling so strongly of marijuana that they both noticed it even with their windows rolled up.

    The couple had just left the MD Route 210 Traffic Safety Committee, an organization that Screen founded, when the car drove past. Screen carefully put some distance between him and the other car, as it sped off down the road.


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  • Alzheimer’s disease “game changer” as progression slowed with immunotherapy

    Alzheimer’s disease “game changer” as progression slowed with immunotherapy

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    Hope is on the horizon for millions of Alzheimer’s disease patients as scientists develop a new target for Alzheimer’s treatment: the immune system.

    Alzheimer’s affects roughly 5.8 million Americans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The progressive disease is the most common form of dementia and is associated with memory loss and cognitive decline in regions of the brain involved in thought, memory and language.

    Scientists believe that Alzheimer’s is caused by the abnormal buildup of proteins in and around the brain cells, but exactly what triggers this is still unclear.

    Today, there is no known cure for Alzheimer’s. However, new medications may offer relief to patients and slow the disease’s progression. And our body’s immune system can help with this.

    “There are many approaches that are in various stages of development that target the immune system, which is now known to play a key role in Alzheimer’s disease,” Todd Golde, a professor of pharmacology, chemical biology and neurology at Emory University, told Newsweek.

    One particularly exciting approach involves the use of antibodies that can target and bind to the abnormal protein clumps that form in the brain. “This results in clearance or reduction of [the protein clumps],” Golde said.

    Golde and colleague Allan Levey have summarized this approach in a recently published perspective in the journal Science.

    Precisely what mediates this interaction is still unknown, but Golde said that the brain’s private squad of immune cells may play an important role. These cells, called microglia, are found exclusively in the brain and central nervous system and can engulf problematic proteins and infectious particles like bacteria. Therefore, researchers believe that the antibodies may act as little molecular flags to signal to the microglial cells that a mess needs cleaning up—a mess in the form of an Alzheimer ‘s-associated protein clump.

    Based on clinical trials, these antibodies offer a very promising avenue for future treatments.

    “These treatments slow decline in the very earliest symptomatic stages of Alzheimer’s disease on average by about 25 to 30 percent over 18 months of treatment,” Golde said. “Notably, the antibodies show quite remarkable impacts on amyloid deposits [aka the protein clumps] themselves.”

    Unlike previous therapies designed to ease symptoms and boost cognitive function, Golde said that these antibodies represent the first therapies capable of altering the course of the disease.

    “Having a disease-modifying therapy (like this) is in some ways a game changer for Alzheimer’s disease, as it says that we can alter the course of this devastating disease and slow it down,” Golde said. “This is just a start, and that either improved versions of these therapies, other types of disease-modifying therapies, or combination therapies will likely in the future lead to treatments with bigger impacts, halting or preventing disease.”

    Artist’s impression of a nerve cell surrounded by antibodies. Antibody treatments may be the future of Alzheimer’s therapy.
    peterschreiber.media/Getty

    Two of the antibodies used in these trials have already been FDA approved; the third is expected to be approved in 2024. However, care still needs to be taken over their use.

    “Because of potential for side effects, the need to treat patients early in the symptomatic phase of the disease in individuals [and] the fact that they are currently given through multiple IV infusions and require careful monitoring, there are some barriers to widespread use [of these antibodies],” Golde said. “Indeed, there is appropriate caution among most clinicians to ensure that the right patients most likely to benefit from these therapies are treated.”

    Golde stresses that, while these results are fascinating, we are still a long way from effectively treating Alzheimer’s.

    “Though this represents an initial success, huge unmet medical need remains,” he said. “We need continuing investment in the public and private sectors to ensure that we can meet that need and build off this initial, but limited, success.”

    Is there a health issue that’s worrying you? Do you have a question about Alzheimer’s? Let us know via health@newsweek.com. We can ask experts for advice, and your story could be featured on Newsweek.