
St. Mary's School closed until Monday
GREENSBURG – Decatur County Department of Health officials, in cooperation with the Indiana Department of Health and the Indiana Department of Education, have ordered all students to be dismissed from St. Mary's School in Greensburg. This order was necessary due to a high absentee rate resulting from influenza-like illnesses. Indiana guidelines require schools to close when absenteeism reaches 20% or more students.
The student dismissals began Wednesday, Feb. 12, and extend through Friday, Feb. 14, to reduce contact among children and stop the spread of the flu. This will also allow staff to extensively clean and disinfect throughout the building.
'We know that many students and their families are very sick,' Decatur County Department of Health Executive Director Sean Durbin said. 'We know this is a hard time for our community and our hearts go out to those who are ill.'
Because the influenza virus is easily spread from person to person, it is not safe for large groups of people to gather. During this time, both children and adults should stay away from other people and groups as much as possible. They should not gather in other locations such as shopping malls, movie theaters or community centers.
Durbin offered these tips for helping family members who are sick with the flu:
• Have them drink a lot of liquid (juice, water) or eat ice chips.
• Keep the sick person as comfortable as possible. Rest is important.
• For fever, sore throat and muscle aches, use ibuprofen (Motrin) or acetaminophen (Tylenol). Contact your pharmacy for correct dosage based on sick person's weight. Do not use aspirin with children or teenagers; it can cause Reye's syndrome, a life-threatening illness.
• Keep tissues and a trash bag within reach of the sick person.
• Be sure everyone in your home washes their hands frequently.
• Keep the people who are sick with the flu away from the people who are not sick.
For more information, contact your health care provider or visit the Decatur County Health Department web site at https://www.in.gov/localhealth/decaturcounty.
'We are working closely with school administrators and will provide any updates if they occur,' Durbin said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 hours ago
- Yahoo
Bill banning AI therapy bots in Illinois awaits signature
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WCIA) — Illinois could soon require humans to be in charge of all therapy sessions. The Illinois Legislature passed a bill to the governor's desk that would ban the use of therapy offered by Artificial Intelligence. Mental health professionals would also only be able to use AI transcriptions of sessions if the patient consents to it. Illinois bill ending scam gym membership tactic heads to governor's desk The National Association for Social Workers said while artificial intelligence could be a promising tool in the future, right now it is not bound by ethics. 'These AI chat bots, even though you can try to program as best as you can, they're not human,' said Kyle Hillman, the legislative director for NASW-IL. 'They don't have that interaction they don't have that kind of response. And so, they're influenced by what kind of data comes into those products and that influence is changing the biases towards, I think, dangerous conservations.' Durbin pushes to pass DACA bill ahead of 13th anniversary The bill's House sponsor said guardrails need to be set in stone before technology advances too far. 'Our behavioral healthcare system cannot afford to be replaced by unqualified chatbots with no malpractice liability,' Rep. Bob Morgan (D-Deerfield) said in a news release. 'By explicitly laying out what AI technology can and cannot be used for, patients are better protected, providers can continue delivering critical access to care, and treatment plans remain transparent between the client and professional.' If signed into law, Illinois would be the first state to ban these chatbots. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Marbles in the rear ends of cats': WGN fact checks Hegseth's claim
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's testimony before the Senate Ways and Means Committee on Wednesday took an unexpected twist when he mentioned cats, marbles, and medical research. Hegseth was facing questions from Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Illinois) about cuts to the Defense Department's medical research budget when he made a startling claim: 'We're talking about some stuff I shouldn't, shouldn't say in public, you know, marbles in the rear ends of cats, tens of millions of dollars,' Hegseth told Illinois' senior U.S. senator. Hegseth referred to the research as a 'boondoggle.' WGN Investigates: Investigating public corruption, crime & fraud Durbin immediately fired back, asking whether Hegseth's claim was similar to unproven tales told by President Donald Trump and his DOGE team about people hundreds of years old still receiving Social Security checks in their name. The research Hegseth appears to be referencing was money awarded in 2020, during President Trump's first term, to reimburse the University of Pittsburgh $10M for research to 'develop revolutionary new treatment approaches for spinal cord injuries.' The contract award is available on the Department of Defense website. Hegseth's claim about marbles being inserted into the rear ends of cats is correct, but lacks all context. Soldiers – or anyone else – who suffer severe spinal cord injuries can lose control of their bowels. The study used anesthetized cats as test subjects to study the impact of a new procedure to restore functionality in the sphincter and rectum. The marbles were meant to simulate defecation and determine whether a procedure restored control in test subjects. The results were encouraging, according to the American Journal of Physiology. '[The] study indicates the possibility to develop a novel…device to restore defecation function after spinal cord injury using a minimally invasive surgical approach.' Read more: Latest Chicago news and headlines Durbin said Hegseth's proposed budget cuts two-thirds of funding for the Defense Department's medical research. Hegseth countered that his team was targeting 'waste, fraud, and abuse' and would not cut funding for programs that benefit members of the military. He previously announced $5 billion in cuts across the entire Department of Defense. 'The Defense Department has been a place where organizations, entities, and companies know they can get money almost unchecked, whether or not it actually applies to things that happen on the battlefield,' Hegseth told Durbin. 'That's just that's what we worked very hard to find in ways that other secretaries have not.' After the hearing, a spokesperson for Sen. Durbin told WGN: 'While Secretary Hegseth attempted to distract from the larger issue with his comment about marbles and cats, here are just a few examples of DoD research contracts that have been canceled or frozen under this Administration: new breast cancer and prostate cancer therapies, which would help afflicted service members; improved protective gear to defend soldiers against projectiles and chemical threats; advanced materials for more durable and lightweight aircraft parts—and the list goes on. Do these sound like 'boondoggles' to you?' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
IN Department of Health celebrates decrease in infant mortality rate
HENDERSON, Ky. (WEHT) – Officials say data from the Indiana Department of Health (IDOH) indicate there are fewer babies dying. IDOH says according to provisional data, the 2024 infant mortality rate (IMR) in Indiana is 6.3 deaths per 1,000 live births, which is a decrease from 6.6 in 2023. Officials say if this IMR remains the same when finalized, it would be the lowest rate of infant deaths in Indiana since 1900. The previous lowest rate for infant mortality was 6.5 deaths per 1,000 births in 2019. 'With Indiana's infant mortality rate at its lowest in over a century, we see the real impact of everyone who is focused on protecting our most vulnerable Hoosiers,' said Gov. Mike Braun. 'We are committed to ensuring that even more babies have a healthy start and a strong future.' Rep. Tim O'Brien announces law keeping biological males out of female sports IDOH says infant mortality is the death of a child before his or her first birthday and is measured by the number of infant deaths per 1,000 live births. Several factors contribute to infant mortality, many of which are directly tied to the health of the mother. Conditions such as maternal stress, obesity, smoking during pregnancy and delayed prenatal care can increase the risk of poor health outcomes. 'We are ecstatic that more Hoosier babies are celebrating their first birthdays,' said State Health Commissioner Lindsay Weaver, MD, FACEP. 'Seeing these efforts pay off is something to celebrate, and we are grateful to clinicians, healthcare centers and affiliates, local health departments and all our other partners for their collective efforts.' The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP) has set the Healthy People 2030 goal of a nationwide infant mortality rate of 5.0 deaths per 1,000 births. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the most current rate of infant mortality in the United States was 5.6 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2023. 'The critical work to further reduce infant mortality continues,' Dr. Weaver said. 'The Indiana Department of Health is committed to our role to decrease the number of infant deaths in Indiana and give the next generation of Hoosiers the best possible start.' Eggs sold at Walmart, other grocers in 9 states recalled amid salmonella outbreak IDOH says it has multiple initiatives focused on improving infant mortality including: Reviewing data to ensure that moms and babies have the opportunities to receive care at the best facility to meet their risk factors prior to delivery Checking hospital discharge data to identify specific 'opportunities for improvement' in maternal and neonatal care practices Working with a number of community-based programs through Health First Indiana Supporting services, including home visiting, breastfeeding programs and infant safe sleep education Conducting comprehensive reviews of fetal and infant deaths to identify opportunities for interventions Partnering with birthing facilities to be prepared for potentially challenging health outcomes through Levels of Care People can find more information about programs and resources available to families here. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.