ReportWire

Tag: southeast

  • Body of missing 3-year-old boy found in Rocky Ford canal

    Body of missing 3-year-old boy found in Rocky Ford canal

    [ad_1]

    The body of a 3-year-old boy with special needs who was reported missing Saturday morning from Rocky Ford was found in a canal, according to the Colorado Bureau of Investigation.

    Amari Galan was last seen around 4 a.m. Saturday. Officials believed he left his home near the 900 block of Washington Street on foot wearing only a diaper, according to a CBI endangered missing person alert posted around 3:30 p.m. Saturday.

    Officials searched the Catlin irrigation canal, which runs directly behind the child’s home, on foot. Amari’s body was found in the canal several miles downstream from his home around 5 p.m. Sunday, according to an update.

    Sign up to get more crime news sent straight to your inbox each day.

    [ad_2]

    Julianna O'Clair

    Source link

  • Colorado takes action to fight deadly spike of syphilis in newborns

    Colorado takes action to fight deadly spike of syphilis in newborns

    [ad_1]

    Colorado is experiencing an alarming spike in syphilis among newborns, leading the state to issue a public health order Thursday aimed at curbing the disease’s spread through wider testing.

    In 2023, 50 infants in Colorado were born with syphilis, up from only seven in 2018. So far this year, the state is halfway to last year’s total, with five infected babies who were stillborn and two who died in their first months of life, state epidemiologist Dr. Rachel Herlihy said.

    “We’ve already had 25 cases so far this year, putting us on track to have maybe 100 cases,” she said at a news conference, addressing what Gov. Jared Polis’s office called a “growing epidemic.” 

    Syphilis is a sexually transmitted infection that sometimes causes no symptoms in adults, though the bacteria can eventually damage the heart and brain if a person doesn’t receive treatment. But roughly two out of five babies born to infected mothers will be stillborn or die in infancy, and those who survive are at risk of intellectual disability, bone deformities and other lifelong health problems, Herlihy said.

    The new public health order from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment requires all health care providers to offer syphilis testing at least three times to pregnant patients: in the first trimester, in the third trimester and at birth.

    Nearly all insurance plans cover the testing, and people without insurance can receive it for free at public health clinics or by ordering a home test kit.

    “We hope to save many babies from death and suffering,” Polis said at the news conference.

    On Thursday, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists issued a recommendation that all pregnant patients receive testing three times. Previously, it only recommended more than one test if a patient had certain risk factors for getting infected while pregnant.

    “The cases of congenital syphilis are definitely climbing, and they’ve been climbing over the last 10 years. And it’s completely preventable… It’s unacceptable,” said Dr. Laura Riley, who chairs the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Weill Cornell Medicine and helped with the guidance. “We need to be able to do better diagnostics and treatment.”

    The Colorado order also requires offering tests to prisoners who are pregnant, and to people who have experienced a stillbirth after 20 weeks of pregnancy, when spontaneous miscarriages are rare. While it would be too late for that particular fetus after a stillbirth, antibiotic treatment would protect the mother, her sex partners and any future pregnancies.

    Patients and prisoners aren’t required to undergo testing if they don’t want to, but their providers have to give them the option, said Jill Hunsaker Ryan, executive director of the state health department. State law already required that providers offer everyone syphilis testing in the first trimester.

    Last year, 3,266 people in Colorado received a syphilis diagnosis, which was a 5% increase over the previous year and more than three times the number diagnosed in 2018. Most of the diagnoses are still in men, because the bacteria became entrenched in the community of gay and bisexual men. About one-third are in women, though, and diagnoses have risen faster among women than among men.

    Nationwide, syphilis diagnoses reached their highest rate since at least 1950 in 2022, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cases peaked in the 1940s, before antibiotics became widely available, and fell throughout the 20th century.

    People of color and those who lack access to reliable health care, such as the homeless population, have been hit disproportionately hard in the resurgence over the last few years.

    Earlier this year, the state health department asked for $8 million over four years to fund an opt-out syphilis screening program at two hospital emergency departments in Denver and Pueblo County, which both have a significant share of new infections.

    The department also proposed to distribute rapid tests to organizations that work with at-risk people; to fund delivering treatment to some people in their homes; and to build up a stockpile of the antibiotics used to treat syphilis. Most antibiotics are cheap, but the best option for syphilis, Bicillin, is relatively expensive and in short supply, so providers don’t always opt to stock it.

    The legislature appropriated about $1.9 million for the first year of the syphilis response, and will have to vote on additional money in subsequent years.

    The state and the Pueblo Department of Public Health and Environment already run a small pilot program to bring treatment to people in their homes. Jails in Pueblo, El Paso and Jefferson counties also have started screening female prisoners and offering treatment to anyone who tests positive.

    [ad_2]

    Meg Wingerter

    Source link

  • DC day care owner honored for evacuating 16 kids ahead of gas explosion – WTOP News

    DC day care owner honored for evacuating 16 kids ahead of gas explosion – WTOP News

    [ad_1]

    A Southeast D.C. day care operator was honored Saturday for helping save the lives of 16 children at the Baby Einstein Child Development Center in January.

    D.C. day care operator Regina Snead was honored Saturday for helping save the lives of 16 children at the Baby Einstein Child Development Center in January.
    (WTOP/Dick Uliano)

    WTOP/Dick Uliano

    D.C. day care operator Regina Snead was honored Saturday for helping save the lives of 16 children at the Baby Einstein Child Development Center in January.
    (WTOP/Dick Uliano)

    WTOP/Dick Uliano

    D.C. day care operator Regina Snead was honored Saturday for helping save the lives of 16 children at the Baby Einstein Child Development Center in January.
    (WTOP/Dick Uliano)

    WTOP/Dick Uliano

    D.C. day care operator Regina Snead was honored Saturday for helping save the lives of 16 children at the Baby Einstein Child Development Center in January.
    (WTOP/Dick Uliano)

    WTOP/Dick Uliano

    A Southeast D.C. day care operator was honored Saturday for helping save the lives of 16 children at the Baby Einstein Child Development Center in January.

    There were 16 children inside the center on Marion Barry Avenue, in the heart of Anacostia, when the day care center’s owner and director Regina Snead smelled the distinctive odor of natural gas.

    She promptly led the evacuation of the children and her staff — and about 30 minutes later, the gas leak touched off an explosion that demolished the convenience store next door and damaged the day care.

    A proclamation issued by D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser reads, in part: ” … to Ms. Regina Snead for her professionalism that saved the lives of 16 D.C. children … District residents owe you an enormous debt of gratitude for your courage and your extraordinary commitment to providing a stable, loving and nurturing child care.”

    At a festive gathering Saturday afternoon, a jazz trio played while friends and supporters of Snead congratulated her and took part in a silent auction aimed at raising money for a new home for the day care center.

    Snead has consistently credited her staff with the safe evacuation of the children.

    “I’m just grateful that everyone recognized that it took some very special people and some special skills to get the children out,” Snead said

    D.C. Fire Chief John Donnelly also issued a commendation to Snead and her staff in the form of a plaque, which reads: “Presented to the Baby Einstein Child Development Center, in recognition of your quick actions to evacuate the child day care center which saved the lives of children and staff on January 18, 2024.”

    Chief Donnelly later spoke to reporters about Snead’s heroic actions.

    “When someone reacts so appropriately and you see the results so clearly that people’s lives were saved, it’s very rewarding,” Donnelly said. “It’s remarkable and it’s something we should celebrate.”

    Snead’s day care center is in temporary quarters while she searches for suitable space to relocate.

    She is hoping to raise $250,000 via a GoFundMe campaign for the day care center.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    [ad_2]

    Dick Uliano

    Source link