logo
Norcross transferred out of intensive care unit

Norcross transferred out of intensive care unit

Yahoo23-04-2025

Rep. Donald Norcross (D-N.J.) has been transferred out of an intensive care unit (ICU), according to a Tuesday press release from his office.
In the press release, the New Jersey Democrat's office said his 'health has continued to improve and he was transferred out of the Intensive Care Unit' at the end of last week. The statement also said he had gone through an antibiotic course and that an infection he faced was 'successfully treated.'
'The Congressman is on his way to making a full recovery,' his office said in the statement.
Last week, Norcross's office said in a press release that he had previously been admitted to an ICU at a New Jersey hospital and was said to be dealing with 'an extended recovery that could require physical rehabilitation.'
Norcross was transferred to Cooper University Health Care on April 7 'following a medical incident that necessitated his hospitalization' in Raleigh, N.C., Eric Kupersmith, Cooper University Health Care chief physician executive, said in the press release from last week.
'Upon his arrival at Cooper, he was diagnosed with a gallbladder infection known as cholangitis that had progressed to sepsis,' Kupersmith wrote.
Kupersmith said a gallstone was removed from Norcross, with the doctor adding later that the 66-year-old was 'responding well to treatment, but faces an extended recovery that could require physical rehabilitation.'
Earlier this month, Norcross's office said he had been hospitalized but was stable in the wake of an 'emergency medical event.'
'Congressman Donald Norcross was traveling over the weekend and suffered an emergency medical event likely related to his gallbladder,' the office said in an April 7 statement. 'He was admitted to UNC Rex Hospital in North Carolina on Sunday and is in stable condition, where he is receiving exceptional medical treatment.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tennessee has highest maternal mortality rate in country, CDC data says
Tennessee has highest maternal mortality rate in country, CDC data says

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Tennessee has highest maternal mortality rate in country, CDC data says

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — New data from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) ranks Tennessee number one for its maternal mortality rate from 2018 to 2022. According to the report, there were 166 pregnancy-related deaths in TN during the five year span, making the state's maternal mortality rate 41.1 per 100,000 births. Sen. London Lamar (D-Memphis) told News 2 she sadly isn't surprised by the statistic. 'If we don't invest on the front end and give women access to services they need, we can only expect negative outcomes,' Sen. Lamar said. 📧 Have breaking news come to you: → According to TN's Maternal Mortality Review Board, from 2020 to 2022, the leading causes of pregnancy-related deaths in the state were mental health conditions, including substance use disorders, cardiovascular conditions, and infections. The committee also found in 2022, 76% of pregnancy-related deaths were preventable. Sen. Lamar blames, in part, the state's near-total abortion ban and lack of access to quality care for TN's high maternal mortality rate. 'We need to make great policy decisions and put our money where our mouth is if we're going to be a pro-life state to ensure women have the healthcare services that they need,' Sen. Lamar said. The Democrat believes that includes building more hospitals and healthcare centers, reimbursing doctors, and implementing TennCare coverage for doula services. Although the state currently has a pilot program requiring TennCare to reimburse for doula services, Sen. Lamar told News 2 making it permanent would improve outcomes for mothers and babies. 'Doulas reduce the rate of maternal and infant mortality and morbidity, period, because when someone has the education and support that they need, or someone has the training to identify things that could potentially be going wrong with the pregnancy, we can act faster, we can put you on the path to success, we can create a plan that can help you make it throughout the pregnancy process and afterwards in postpartum,' Sen. Lamar said. Tennessee has taken steps aimed at reducing its maternal mortality rate over the years, including providing grant money for community organizations to increase the number of postpartum and substance use disorder screenings and efforts to improve access to support services. ⏩ However, Sen. Lamar told News 2 she plans to continue to push for more. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

‘Come and help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools
‘Come and help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘Come and help us': Milwaukee parents fire back at Trump administration for denying federal aid amid lead crisis in schools

The library at Starms Discovery Learning Center has cheerful peach and blue walls, and squat wooden shelves filled with books wrapped in thick plastic jackets to protect them from the touches and smudges of many small hands. On Monday, the library became a place to exchange other stories, too – darker stories. These were stories of stressed mothers and anxious kids, of graduating fifth-graders missing out on end-of-year celebrations. The stories were about families with a dangerous toxin – lead – in their homes and now in their public schools. Those families shared stories about brain damage and learning disabilities, and about a federal government that has denied them help. 'I am here to elevate your stories,' said Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat from Madison who is the junior senator from Wisconsin. Baldwin, flanked by officials from the city's health department and school district, had come to Starms to meet with families and community activists and to hear more about their lives since the discovery that a child had been poisoned by peeling lead paint in one of the city's aging and poorly maintained school buildings. The city's health department ordered the school district to remediate the hazard, but the scope of the problem turned out to be much larger than a single building. So far, the district has closed six schools for cleaning and repainting, displacing roughly 1,800 students. Over the summer, the district's efforts will kick into high gear. It has a goal of visually inspecting all school buildings by September 1. The district, which is the largest in Wisconsin, has 144 buildings. All but 11 were built before 1978, when it was still legal to use lead in paint. The average age of an MPS school is 82 years. A few blocks away, Starms Early Childhood Center, the sister campus to the elementary school, is one of four that remains closed. It was built in 1893 and its preschool and kindergarten students and their teachers were moved into the elementary school. Though the city has cleared the building to reopen, many families said they'd prefer to remain where they were through the end of the school year to minimize further disruptions. Friday is district's last day before summer break. Several students in the district have been found to have elevated levels of lead in their blood. One case has been definitively linked to deteriorating paint in the basement of a school building, Golda Meir elementary. Two other cases involved students at Trowbridge and Kagel schools. Investigations determined that the source of the lead was most likely a combination of exposures from home and school. Other cases have been investigated and the schools were cleared as the source, said Caroline Reinwald, a spokesperson for the Milwaukee Health Department. Since the crisis started, Reinwald said, about 550 children have been screened for lead at clinics run by the health department and Novir, a company hired by the city to assist with screening. That doesn't include kids who might have been tested through their primary care doctors. 'We need to test many more kids for lead,' Milwaukee Health Commissioner Dr. Michael Totoraitis said on Monday. The City of Milwaukee Health Department had been working with experts in the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Branch when the entire team was laid off in the federal government's Reduction in Force cuts in April. The city had requested that the CDC dispatch disease detectives to help mount a wide-scale blood testing campaign of kids in city schools. That request was also denied, citing the agency's loss of its lead experts. Families who attended the meeting with Baldwin said they were outraged by the Trump administration's apparent lack of support or interest. 'We need our children to be protected right now,' said Tikiya Frazier, who has nieces and nephews at two of the closed schools. 'We need them to understand that and come and help us. This is a state of emergency for us.' On Monday, Baldwin issued an open invitation to US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to visit Milwaukee to see and hear the issues for himself. She has twice before pressed Kennedy about the denial of federal aid. Both times he gave mollifying answers. 'Do you mean to eliminate this branch at the CDC?' Baldwin asked him in a hearing in May. 'No, we do not,' Kennedy responded. But he has yet to reinstate the fired experts or reopen the lead program under his planned Administration for a Healthy America. He's also given no timeline for when federal lead poisoning prevention activities might continue. When Baldwin asked Kennedy about Milwaukee's situation in a budget hearing a week later, he responded that 'We have a team in Milwaukee.' The team was a lab technician who had briefly come to help calibrate a machine in the city's public health lab. Although the city had requested and needed that help for years, officials said it was not the work they had recently asked the CDC to tackle: helping get more kids' blood tested for lead exposure. 'Either he was lying, or he didn't know what was happening in his own agency. Either one is unacceptable,' Baldwin said after Monday's meeting. Kennedy has also failed to respond to a letter that Baldwin and US Rep. Gwen Moore sent in April, urging him to reinstate the CDC's lead team. On Tuesday, Baldwin and her colleague, Democratic Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island, sent Kennedy another letter with detailed questions about the fate of the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program. They gave him until June 16 to respond. 'We've got to hold the Trump administration accountable,' Baldwin said. 'They could make the situation better today by rehiring these experts.' CNN reached out to HHS and the White House with questions about their plans for the Lead Poisoning Prevention Program and to get the administration's response to Milwaukee parents. HHS did not respond by CNN's deadline. 'I'm angry because Wisconsin is always there for other states,' said Koa Branch, who has four children in Milwaukee's public schools. When the tap water in Flint, Michigan, tested positive for high levels of lead a decade ago, Branch said, she remembers community members packing up food and supplies and going for support. But now, 'where's our help? Where's help for us?' Branch had two sons at Westside Academy when it closed in early May. She was notified via a newsletter sent home with her children and later a phone call. 'My anxiety hit the roof,' she said. The school district relocated classes to Andrew Douglas Middle School, about 3 miles away, or gave students the option to take classes online. Branch says her easygoing 5-year-old, Jonas, took things in stride, but her sensitive fourth-grader Jerell, 10, couldn't handle the change. 'I had to make a choice. I had to separate the two,' Branch said. Jonas moved with his class and teacher to the new campus, while Jarrell took classes online after Branch got home from work at night. 'I can't speak for everybody else, but it stressed my household,' she said. Branch said her kids have a vigilant pediatrician who has tested them for lead at each yearly wellness visit. So far, their test results have been normal. Still, she planned to take her youngest to a free clinic at a local church to get tested again. Santana Wells said she had a son and a niece attending fifth grade at Brown Street Academy, which closed May 12, about a month before school ended. Being at a different school caused her son to miss out on a lot of activities Brown Street had planned for its departing fifth-graders, she said. 'Brown Street used to do a carnival every year. They do a picnic. They have a long list of what they were doing for their graduates,' Wells said. Now, she said, it was a pared-down field trip, which felt unfair. Wells said she 'runs a tight schedule' at home to make it to work by 3 p.m. each day. With the change in schools, her son was arriving home later, which made her late to work, on top of everything else. Several parents said their kids had questions about the lead and felt anxious about going back to school in the fall, even though the city has tested their schools and deemed them safe to reoccupy. The stories told on Monday weren't just for the ears of the federal government. Totoraitis said the questions from children were a light-bulb moment for him, too. The health department's workers took great care to explain the lead situation to parents, but they hadn't done as much to try to answer kids' questions about what was happening. He said the department would work on that. He also hopes to temporarily hire at least one of the laid-off CDC lead experts for a few weeks to come review the city's efforts and make sure they are on track. Baldwin hopes the federal government will rehire them, too. 'These were the renowned experts on childhood lead mitigation and remediation, and the federal government needs to have that staff capacity to help, just as they did in Flint, Michigan,' she said. 'That's needed here, right now, in Milwaukee.' The US Environmental Protection Agency lifted its emergency order on drinking water in Flint last month — nine years after it was put into place.

RFK Jr reveals his plan for vaccine committee after he fired entire panel sparking ‘anti-vaxxers' concern
RFK Jr reveals his plan for vaccine committee after he fired entire panel sparking ‘anti-vaxxers' concern

Yahoo

time18 hours ago

  • Yahoo

RFK Jr reveals his plan for vaccine committee after he fired entire panel sparking ‘anti-vaxxers' concern

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has revealed that he doesn't plan on placing 'anti-vaxxers' on a federal vaccine policy advisory committee after removing all its previous members, sparking concerns about who he may appoint next. 'None of these individuals will be ideological anti-vaxxers,' Kennedy wrote in a long post on X. 'They will be highly credentialed physicians and scientists who will make extremely consequential public health determinations by applying evidence-based decision-making with objectivity and common sense.' The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) makes recommendations on the use of vaccines to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Kennedy said he would announce the new members of the panel in the coming days and that they will be in place before the committee's next meeting, set for June 25. The X post came about a day after he removed all 17 members of the committee, signaling a dramatic change in American vaccine policy. Kennedy, who ran as a Democrat and then as an independent in the 2024 presidential election before dropping out and endorsing Trump, has become known as an anti-vaccine activist. He has made a number of false claims about the damage vaccines can do, such as the measles shot being connected to autism. The secretary claimed that removing all members of the panel was necessary to restore trust in vaccines as well as the CDC. Kennedy attempted to argue on Tuesday night that there had been 'historical corruption' at the committee. 'The most outrageous example of ACIP's malevolent malpractice has been its stubborn unwillingness to demand adequate safety trials before recommending new vaccines for our children,' Kennedy claimed. The secretary tried to connect childhood vaccines that 'modify the immune system' to an 'epidemic of autoimmune diseases' and suggested that vaccine makers don't test their vaccines for safety because they're not part of placebo-controlled trials. 'No one can scientifically ascertain whether these products are averting more problems than they are causing,' said Kennedy. Former CDC Director Dr. Tomas Frieden told PBS News, 'We're already seeing a decreased immunization rate.' 'When Secretary Kennedy says he wants to restore trust, the fact is that his activities over many years have been one of the main reasons there are questions about vaccines,' he added. Frieden argued that lower vaccination rates will lead to struggles to control measles, which he noted was eliminated in the U.S. in 2000. 'We're now having more cases and more deaths than we have had in many years, and whooping cough, which is increasing,' he said. The former CDC director told PBS News that Kennedy is 'undermining and stopping a process that has been transparent, effective, and fact-based, and replacing it with we don't know what, but based on untrue statements, misinformation, and, frankly, fringe beliefs.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store