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Person dead after fire at Kansas City apartment
Person dead after fire at Kansas City apartment

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Person dead after fire at Kansas City apartment

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — One person is dead after an apartment fire in Kansas City on Monday morning. According to the Kansas City Fire Department, a fire was reported around 9 a.m. on State Line Road near the University of Kansas Hospital at a two-story residential home that had been converted to apartments. Download WDAF+ for Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV KCFD said when responders arrived, smoke and fire were coming from the second floor. The department received reports of someone possibly inside the structure and searched the building. When searching the units, KCFD said they found a person who had died. The Kansas City Police Department's Bomb and Arson unit has been ordered to the scene due to the suspicious nature of the fire. The investigation is ongoing. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

These are the Kansas City area's most unsafe hospitals. See the ratings
These are the Kansas City area's most unsafe hospitals. See the ratings

Yahoo

time06-05-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

These are the Kansas City area's most unsafe hospitals. See the ratings

When going to the hospital for a surgery or illness, you trust that the medical staff will treat your condition well. But if your nurses and doctors don't wash their hands or give you the wrong medicine, your health could get worse, not better. But some Kansas City area hospitals are better at these patient safety steps than others. Falls, infections after surgery, miscommunications with staff and other preventable safety issues kill up to 250,000 people each year, according to health care watchdog nonprofit The Leapfrog Group. In 2022, Nurses at Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City care for a COVID-19 patient in ICU. A healthcare watchdog group gave Kansas City hospitals grades for patient safety. The organization, which has given hospitals letter grades on patient safety for over 20 years, released its spring 2025 Leapfrog Hospital Safety Grades on May 1. While grades range from A to F, the Kansas City area did not have any D or F facilities. Twice a year, hospitals are evaluated in 32 areas grouped in five categories: infections; problems with surgery; safety problems; practices to prevent errors; and staffing levels and education. For more information on your hospital's performance in other aspects, like patient satisfaction and treatment effectiveness, search the facility's name on the Medicare website's care to compare. In addition, U.S. News and World Report releases rankings based on hospitals' performance in a variety of medical specialties and common procedures. Here are the Kansas City area hospitals with the best and worst patient safety ratings for spring 2025, according to Leapfrog Group. Most unsafe hospitals in the Kansas City area (C grades) University Health Truman Medical Center, Kansas City University Health Truman Medical Center received below average grades in 10 of the 32 categories, including three safety problems. Since 2022, the Hospital Hill institution has scored a C in seven out of eight assessments. Overland Park Regional Medical Center Overland Park Regional Medical Center scored below average in nine sections, including the worst possible score in bedside care. The hospital received its first C grade in recent years in fall 2024 after four A's in 2023 and 2022. The University of Kansas Hospital, Kansas City, Kansas The University of Kansas Hospital received below average grades in nine of the 29 metrics. The hospital declined to give information on four measures to prevent errors. KU Med received C grades on the last three reports. Liberty Hospital Liberty Hospital received below average scores in seven areas, including three problems with surgery. The hospital dropped to a C after three consecutive B grades. Lee's Summit Medical Center Lee's Summit Medical Center had below average scores in five of the 32 metrics, including the worst possible score in bedside care and specially trained ICU doctors. The hospital received a C grade in fall 2024 after three A grades in a row. Safest hospitals in the Kansas City area (A grades) Providence Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas St. Joseph Medical Center, Kansas City Menorah Medical Center, Overland Park North Kansas City Hospital Olathe Medical Center Saint Luke's East Hospital, Lee's Summit Saint Luke's Hospital of Kansas City B grades AdventHealth Shawnee Mission Belton Regional Medical Center Centerpoint Medical Center, Independence Research Medical Center Main Campus, Kansas City Saint Luke's North Hospital - Barry Road, Kansas City Saint Luke's South Hospital, Overland Park St. Mary's Medical Center, Blue Springs University Health Lakewood Medical Center, Kansas City Do you have more questions about health in the Kansas City area? Ask the Service Journalism team at kcq@

Local stomach cancer survivor advocates for research funding
Local stomach cancer survivor advocates for research funding

Yahoo

time10-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Local stomach cancer survivor advocates for research funding

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A spark of curiosity about her family's history is what prompted Priscilla Brittine to search online for family members in Kansas City. However, in the process, she got a message that would set up a chain of events that would save her life. 'Mija, you might want to know about this genetic mutation that runs in our family,' she said. She went through testing at the University of Kansas Hospital and learned that she had a mutation called CDH1. That condition put her at an 80% chance of developing stomach cancer and a 60% chance of developing breast cancer. Sub-contractor hits a gas line in Lexington, MO, causing explosion 'This is my fate? This is what's going to happen to now me? No. I am putting a stop to this,' she explained. Despite diagnostic testing showing no signs of cancer, she decided to make a bog decision and have her stomach removed. She was only in her early-thirties at the time. 'Really, I think it's because of what I went through prior (to) being young,' she said. When she was just 14, Brittine lost her mother to stomach cancer. 'Nutrition was a main factor, she was always vomiting, throwing up, she was getting skinnier and I have three boys. It would kill me to know that they watched me go through what I did,' she said about her decision. After surgery, more in-depth testing was done on her stomach. The results captured something an initial biopsy couldn't. 'Thank god you did what you did when you did it because you had beginning stages of stomach cancer.' DACA recipient returns home to Kansas City metro after deportation to Mexico Through her recovery journey, she found support in nonprofits like Debbie's Dream Foundation and Hope For Stomach Cancer. She's traveled to DC to meet with legislators, advocating for more funding for research. 'It saved my life; genetics saved my life; research saved my life,' she said. Priscilla says that last year, she also had a double mastectomy and that genetic testing has saved other family members' lives. It's now her goal to get Union Station lit up in periwinkle in November. She's raising funds for other survivors in the metro to go to DC with her to advocate and share their stories. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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