Elijah McClain’s death puts focus on ketamine injections during police calls

As state and federal inquiries widen into the case of Elijah McClain, a young Black man who died last summer after Colorado police placed him in a chokehold, the decision by paramedics to inject him with a powerful sedative while he was handcuffed has raised questions about its use during police calls and whether such medical treatment violates a person’s rights.

Fire and emergency medical services officials in the Denver suburb of Aurora have said a preliminary review found that medics’ actions on the night police detained McClain, 23, were “consistent and aligned with our established protocols.” But some medical and legal experts worry that ketamine — or any form of an anesthetic — raises too many unknowns and that it should not be used to subdue someone in a police action.

“Why anyone would be giving ketamine in that circumstance is beyond me,” said neuroscientist Carl Hart, chair of Columbia University’s psychology department. “The major problem here is we should never be ordering any medication, and no one should be taking or given it against their will.”

McClain’s death has drawn new attention amid high-profile fatal encounters involving law enforcement against Black Americans, leading to protests. Colorado Gov. Jared Polis has appointed a special prosecutor to re-evaluate the case.

Just after 10:30 p.m. on Aug. 24, McClain, a massage therapist, was buying iced tea from a corner store, his family said. They said he wore ski masks because he had a blood condition that made him feel cold.

Three Aurora police officers were called to the area on a report of a suspicious person wearing a mask and waving his arms.

Bodycam video showed officers ordering McClain to stop. He responded that he was an introvert and to “please respect the boundaries that I am speaking.”

After questioning him, the officers grabbed McClain. Then one of them said he believed McClain had reached for one of their holstered guns, and McClain was brought to the ground. Police said in a statement that he “resisted contact, a struggle ensued, and he was taken into custody.”

The officers took McClain to the ground using a carotid control hold, a type of chokehold meant to restrict blood to the brain to render a person unconscious. Aurora police banned carotid control holds last month, and chokeholds have been prohibited by police departments across the country in the wake of the death in May of George Floyd, a Black man pinned by his neck while in Minneapolis police custody.

McClain “briefly went unconscious,” according to a report the local district attorney, Dave Young, completed last fall. McClain could also be heard in the police video telling the officers, “I can’t breathe, please,” and he vomited while he was on the ground.

A medic told officers that “when the ambulance gets here, we’re going to go ahead and give him some ketamine.”

The officers responded, “Sounds good,” and they told the medic that McClain appeared to be “on” something and that he had “incredible strength.”

An Aurora Fire Rescue medic injected McClain with 500 milligrams of ketamine, according to the district attorney’s report.

The coroner found that McClain’s death was due to “undetermined causes,” and according to Young’s report, the “evidence does not support the prosecution of a homicide.” McClain had marijuana in his system along with the ketamine, which the coroner suggested was a “therapeutic level.”

But the coroner did not rule out that the chokehold, in addition to the ketamine, might have contributed to his death.

“Although there is no evidence to support ketamine overdose,” according to Young’s report, the coroner “could not exclude the possibility that Mr. McClain suffered from an unexpected reaction to the drug.”

The medic at the scene estimated that McClain weighed 220 pounds, Young’s report said. But the coroner said he was 5 feet, 6 inches tall and weighed 140 pounds.

According to documents shared by Aurora Fire Rescue, the standard dose of ketamine is 5 milligrams per each kilogram of a person’s weight. That would mean that instead of 500 milligrams of ketamine, McClain should have received about 320 milligrams.

The ketamine was given via syringe into his right shoulder, according to Young’s report.

“After approximately two to three minutes, Mr. McClain calmed down,” the report said. “He was placed on a gurney, his handcuffs were removed, and he was placed into soft restraints … and loaded into the ambulance.”

About seven minutes after he received the ketamine, McClain had no pulse in the ambulance and went into cardiac arrest, the report said. Medics were able to revive him, but he was later declared brain dead, and he was taken off life support less than a week later.

Young declined to press charges.

“Under the circumstances of this investigation, it is improbable for the prosecution to prove cause of death beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury,” Young wrote in a letter to Aurora’s police chief.

Download the NBC News app for breaking news and alerts

Mari Newman, an attorney for McClain’s family, said that the ketamine was unnecessary and that she wants a thorough investigation.

“The Aurora medics had no right to inject Elijah with ketamine at all,” she said. “He was handcuffed, crushed against the ground by officers much larger then he was, and he was not fighting. He was begging for his life, vomiting and trying to breathe. And they certainly had no right to involuntary inject him with a dose intended for someone over twice his size.”

City officials in Aurora on Thursday announced an independent review of the McClain case, and it is expected to include “a team of experts who will thoroughly examine the actions of Aurora police, firefighters and paramedics in the case.”

According to a news release, Mayor Mike Coffman said “it is imperative that the city moves forward quickly and urgently with this investigation to provide answers to the community.”

What does ketamine do?

Ketamine, if administered properly, can be safe, said Jason Varin, an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota College of Pharmacy.

In lower doses, it can be used to treat acute pain, Varin said, while at higher doses, it becomes a dissociative anesthetic, which means that not only does it help physically, but that a person’s reality — feelings, thoughts and understanding of what is occurring — is also “disconnected” and he or she may have limited memory of what is happening.

Ketamine is known as the street drug “Special K” because of how it induces a trancelike state, which is often referred to as a “K-hole.” Variations of ketamine have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat depression.

“It is, like many drugs, quite mysterious as to how it works in some cases,” Varin said.

Ketamine may be dangerous to people who suffer liver failure, he added, and it can affect blood pressure, cause rapid heart rate or an irregular heartbeat, prompt seizures or muscle twitching, and induce extreme anxiety or hallucinations as a person comes out of it.

Ketamine is most commonly used by veterinarians on animals and as an anesthetic in some surgical procedures on people. During police-related calls, however, medics may not have the full scope of a person’s medical history to anticipate how they will react to it.

“Since it is highly unlikely they can tell the state of health of the individual or if they have non-prescribed drugs, alcohol or prescription medications … these combination of risks could cause any number of problems, including respiratory depression and cardiac arrest,” Varin said.

The department began using the medication in January 2019, KDVR-TV of Denver reported in October.

Sherri Jo Stowell, a spokeswoman for Aurora Fire Rescue, told NBC News on Friday that ketamine had been used 18 times in 2019 and at least twice in 2020. She said the use of any medication is reviewed by trained professionals.

“Aurora Fire Rescue is sympathetic to the pain that members of Aurora’s community, especially Elijah’s loved ones, are experiencing,” the department said in a statement last month. “For the sake of progress and healing, our department welcomes the attention the incident is receiving including the forthcoming independent investigation.”

In Colorado, EMS providers are permitted to use ketamine for pain management and to treat a syndrome known as “excited delirium,” but they must first obtain a waiver from the state health department.

It is not uncommon for medics to use ketamine outside hospital settings to treat patients who appear agitated and may harm themselves or others, according to the state.

Statewide, 427 people were given ketamine for agitation from August 2017 to July 2018, and about 20 percent of patients had to be intubated at a hospital, The Denver Post reported.

In the same month McClain was provided ketamine, a 25-year-old man in another Denver suburb was given a 750-milligram, two-dose injection of the drug during a police encounter, KDVR reported. The state health department said last week that it is investigating the case.

Aurora police spokeswoman Faith Goodrich said officers are not involved in ordering or administering ketamine, which is left to the discretion of a medic.

Hart, the neuroscientist, said that given the amount of ketamine McClain is known to have received, “I am certain that he thought he was losing his mind.”

Ketamine use for excited delirium

McClain’s “sudden collapse after an intense struggle” with police is referred to in the coroner’s report as an example of excited delirium.

The medic who authorized the use of ketamine had told investigators that he could not gather information from McClain about his medical history because he was acting combative and “appeared to be” exhibiting signs of the syndrome, which may be triggered by drug use or stimulants and is broadly considered to be a state of agitation or aggression.

State health department guidelines note that the use of ketamine for excited delirium “is an emerging treatment” and that “across the country, many physicians question the existence of an excited delirium syndrome.”

While it can be controversial to diagnose someone with excited delirium, because many medical professional associations do not recognize it, Dr. Deborah Mash, a professor of neurology at the University of Miami, told NPR that the phenomenon is “definitely real.”

“And while we don’t know precisely what causes this, we do know it is the result of a neural chemical imbalance in the brain,” she said.

Excited delirium has been mentioned in connection with dozens of cases of excessive force and police-involved deaths, including cases in which police eventually used stun guns to shock people into submission, according to Amnesty International.

One of the four Minneapolis officers charged in the death of Floyd had said, “I am worried about excited delirium or whatever,” according to the charging document.

Ketamine has also been linked to other excited delirium cases. In 2018, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported that Minneapolis police officers asked medical responders to use ketamine on people — at times over the objection of those being drugged and, in some cases, when no crime appeared to have occurred — more than 60 times in 2017, up from three in 2012.

Hospital officials had argued that ketamine helped manage people with excited delirium. The uptick, however, led Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo to prohibit officers from recommending medical treatment to EMTs.

Kenneth Udoibok, a Minneapolis lawyer who specializes in civil rights and police misconduct cases, filed a federal lawsuit in 2017 on behalf of a man who said police mistook him for a suicidal man in the parking lot of a hospital. The man was handcuffed and then eventually injected with ketamine by a paramedic against his will, according to the lawsuit. Officials described the man as exhibiting “erratic” behavior, but he said he was agitated because police detained him on the ground in the rain for an hour.

The lawsuit’s case against the police was dismissed before trial, and the case against the hospital was resolved out of court.

Udoibok said sedation lawsuits are hard to win, because without video recording, it is difficult to prove that an officer coerced a paramedic to sedate a person.

“It’s a complete violation of an individual’s rights,” Udoibok said. “And it’s the perfect crime. You can never prosecute it.”

Carl Takei, a senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union who focuses on police practices, said ascribing a person’s actions to excited delirium can create a shield for officers who use excessive force.

Then to “stick a needle into somebody” who is considered physically threatening only makes an already fraught situation involving police that much more dangerous, Takei said.

“Any time that an EMT is administering a medication against a person’s will, that raises medical ethics issues, as well, that are not resolved simply because a police officer wanted them to do it,” he said. “That goes into the underlying question: Was this invasion of a person’s body justified?”

Source link

Mercedes’ DAS ruled legal as Red Bull protest rejected at Austrian GP

0

Austrian GP stewards rule Mercedes’ innovation is a part of the steering system and not a suspension device; Rival teams now free to develop and introduce same idea on their cars in 2020

Last Updated: 04/07/20 1:37am


Mercedes’ Dual-Axis Steering system has been declared legal by Austrian GP stewards after a protest by Red Bull was rejected.

In a verdict delivered early on Saturday morning in Austria by the FIA, stewards at F1’s season-opening race ruled that “DAS is part of the steering system, albeit not a conventional one”.

Red Bull had alleged that the system was part of the suspension and contravened two of F1’s technical regulations.

In a detailed explanation of their findings after analysis of the system on Mercedes’ W11 car, stewards concluded that the “DAS system is not part of the suspension, nor can it be considered to illegitimately adjust the suspension.

‘Therefore the Stewards consider DAS to be a legitimate part of the steering system and hence to satisfy the relevant regulations regarding suspension or aerodynamic influence.”

1:55
What exactly is Dual-Axis Steering and how does it work on the Mercedes? Sky F1’s Karun Chandhok explains with footage from Austrian practice.

What exactly is Dual-Axis Steering and how does it work on the Mercedes? Sky F1’s Karun Chandhok explains with footage from Austrian practice.

Mercedes had been confident the innovative system – which allows Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas to move the W11’s steering wheel forward and backwards to alter the toe angle of the front wheels – was legal after holding discussions with the FIA during development of the concept.

Red Bull had planned a protest the device at the Australian GP in March before the event was cancelled and, speaking to Sky F1 as the sport’s season finally began in Austria on Friday, team boss Christian Horner said they still wanted to seek clarification on its legality through the formal channels.

The FIA’s decision means Red Bull and other rival teams now must decide whether to pursue the development themselves for this season.

0:56
Lewis Hamilton drove his Mercedes with its new black livery for the first time during practice for the Austrian Grand Prix.

Lewis Hamilton drove his Mercedes with its new black livery for the first time during practice for the Austrian Grand Prix.

Horner hinted in his Sky interview that Red Bull could do so on their RB16.

“It depends what it actually does and achieves,” said Horner during Practice One. “Everything has to earn its place on the car. Obviously it’s a clever system, it’s an ingenious system but obviously these rules are so complex. It’s just understanding what part of the regulations it fits.”

DAS is already outlawed in the regulations from 2021, so any development path would be just for this season.

The Formula 1 season begins on Friday on Sky Sports F1 with the Austrian GP. Sunday’s race starts at 2.10pm. Find out more & subscribe.



Source link

Sushant Singh Rajput case: Sooraj Pancholi breaks silence on his alleged involvement

Sushant Singh Rajput case: Sooraj Pancholi breaks silence on his alleged involvement

Sushant Singh Rajput was found dead at his Bandra apartment in Mumbai on June 14. 

Ever since his apparent suicide, multiple conspiracy theories have been circulating around, one of which claims Sooraj Pancholi was involved in the case. 

Rubbishing these reports, Pancholi  said in an interview to Bombay Times, “What scuffle with Sushant? I never had any argument with him, which I have clarified before as well. And, why will Salman Khan get involved in my life? Does he not have other things to do? I don’t even know who Disha is, I have never met her in my life. I found out about her after Sushant’s death, and I feel bad for the families involved. Someone has written this rubbish on their personal Facebook page, made it into a movie script and put it out there.”

He added, “It feels like it’s me against the world. First of all, it’s painful that Sushant is no more. People using his name for whatever reasons is wrong. The situation is such that anyone writes anything and it goes viral in a few minutes. People who don’t know the truth, actually believe what’s been written. I have also been getting supportive messages saying, ‘Be strong and cope with it, these are hard times and jobless people are spreading these rumours’. But, at the end of the day, I am human, too.” 

He was then asked, “Are you saying that there was no hostility between Sushant and you whatsoever?”

To which Pancholi replied, “None at all. He was senior to me and way more successful. I was not in his league to even compete with him. I was nowhere a threat to him. He treated me like a younger brother. Whenever we met, we either spoke about films or my fitness training. When the article about our ‘tiff’ came out in 2017, it was Sushant who had reached out to me. He told me, ‘Bro, yeh koi faltu article aaya hai saying Salman bhai is angry with me. Can you please give a statement to clarify this?’ He thought it would be better if I stated the facts, as the story claimed that he misbehaved with me. I clarified the reports. We met for dinner at a friend’s place after that in Bandra, clicked that funny picture where we posed like we are fighting and that’s it. We had each other’s numbers. He called me for movie screenings, and I even went for Raabta screening. We must have met around four-five times.”

The Hero actor said in the end, “I am very numb and hurt right now. This is affecting me a lot. I don’t know what to say. It’s been eight years and my case (Jiah) hasn’t even taken off and it’s only because Rabiya Khan (Jiah’s mother) doesn’t show up in court. I had to face the CBI since I was 21-22. I have cooperated with the police. I have done everything possible, haven’t missed a single date in court even when I was down with fever. But if the complainant (Rabiya) isn’t showing up in court, what are they looking for? Do they really seek justice or do they just want to harass me?”

Source link

Rakhine Villagers Take Refuge in State Capital Amid New Offensive

0

Myanmar’s military is conducting offensives against the Arakan Army in Rakhine state’s Rathedaung township, according to villagers who have taken refuge in the state capital Sittwe as talk of a gathering army campaign drove 20,000 from their homes over the past week.

Among some 300 displaced Rakhine villagers from the Mu-sae Kan area of southern Rathedaung who made it to Sittwe, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) south of the conflict zone, were men and women who said they heard gunfire as they fled their communities and feared possible arrest and torture by government troops.

They were part of a mass flight of an estimated 40,000 internal refugees that began during the last week of June when the military told the state government that it would conduct “clearance operations” to ferret out AA soldiers said to be near the Kyauktan village tract of northern Rathedaung township.

Rathedaung and other townships in Rakhine have been at the center of the fighting in a 19-month-old conflict between government forces and the AA that has killed about 260 civilians and now displaced nearly 200,000 others in the state.

Refugees from several villages in southern Rathedaung township said government troops were firing around settlements as they fled.

“As we were on our way here, we heard gunfire coming from nearby Kanpyin village, [and] we had to hide beside the road,” a woman from the Mu-sae Kan area told RFA on Wednesday. She said her family made their way village by village to Sittwe, encountering abandoned communities on the way.

Aye Ma Sein, who left her home in Shwe Long Tin village, said the soldiers were firing guns near the community as she left for Sittwe.

“They fired guns in the river for no reason, so we cannot go fishing,” she said. “It causes hardships for our villagers [because] we earn our livings as fishermen.”

RFA could not reach Myanmar military spokesman Brigadier General Zaw Min or Rakhine state’s municipal affairs minister and spokesman Win Myint to confirm the accounts of the displaced villagers.

The latest fighting came after the military ordered Kyauktan village tract emptied for “clearance operations” — prompting an initial 10,000 villagers to leave the area before military operations had begun.

On June 26, however, the border affairs minister revoked the June 21 order to empty Kyauktan village tract — saying that the term “clearance operation” exaggerated the scope of the mission.

“Clearance operation” strikes fear in Myanmar civilians as the term the military uses to describe the scorched-earth expulsion of more than 740,000 Muslim Rohingya to Bangladesh in 2017.

Word of the withdrawn order did not reach villagers in time, and those living in nearby communities also fled, raising the number to around 20,000.

Fearful villagers

As of Thursday, about 20,000 of roughly 30,000 ethnic Rakhines living in 24 villages in the Mu-sae Kan area of southern Rathedaung had fled following the arrival of Myanmar troops since Monday, including the 300 now in Sittwe, local lawmakers said.

Khin Maung Latt, a Rakhine lawmaker in Myanmar’s upper house of parliament, told RFA that more than 1,000 villagers took ferries from the Mu-sae Kan jetty to the Parda jetty in Sittwe township.

Residents of the Mu-sae Kan area who are now in Sittwe have been temporarily housed at Buddhist monasteries.

In Sittwe, Zaw Win Naing from Mu-Sae Kan told RFA that Myanmar soldiers have arrested and interrogated young locals they suspect of collaborating with the AA.

“They always look at young men with suspicious eyes and interrogate them,” he said. “They then torture them during interrogations … by hitting them with rifle butts.”  
Nan Soe, who also fled the Mu-Sae Kan area and went to Sittwe, said that locals are afraid of the soldiers and what they might do to them.

“I heard that people were killed by their gunfire,” she said.

Though Nan Soe acknowledged that she had never witnessed any brutality by soldiers, she said that she and others decided to flee to avoid any chance of abuses happening to them.

Because of a government-ordered yearlong internet service ban in northern Rakhine state, including Rathedaung township, refugees said they do not know which information to trust as rumors swirl amid the conflict.

Reported by RFA’s Myanmar Service. Translated by Ye Kaung Myint Maung. Written in English by Roseanne Gerin.



Source link

Aishwarya Rai remembers Saroj Khan in heartfelt tribute: ‘You will truly be missed’

Aishwarya Rai remembers Saroj Khan in heartfelt tribute: ‘You will truly be missed’ 

Aishwarya Rai Bachchan came forth penning a heartfelt tribute for veteran Bollywood choreographer, Saroj Khan, who passed away on Friday due to cardiac arrest aged 71.

Rai posted a picture from her famous movie Taal wherein she can be seen standing besides the late dance guru.

She captioned the picture, “ALL my Love Always too, Saroj ji. May your Soul Rest in Peace. Much respected, admired and adored as our Dance Guru in our Film Industry…truly a Legend…Such a privilege to have had so many memorable experiences dancing under your guidance…THANK YOU for All your Duas and Blessings always… and so much LOVE.You will truly be missed. Prayers and much Strength to all your family.”

Check out the post here 

Khan mentored a plethora of actresses and produced iconic Bollywood numbers. She was lovingly called ‘Masterji’ by her industry fellows.

The late choroegrapher was admitted to a hospital on 20th June due to breathing issues.

The last song Khan choreographed was Madhuri Dixit’s Tabah Hogaye from 2019 movie Kalank.

Source link

Protesters: Firing not enough in police death

An attorney for the family of a 23-year-old man killed in a police chokehold last year says they may seek federal civil rights penalties. One of the officers was fired after photos surfaced of officers joking about Elijah McClain’s death. (July 3)

       

Source link

Coronavirus updates: Surgeon General cautions that ‘deaths lag at least two weeks’ as cases rise in 40 states; 31 MLB players test positive

CLOSE

The Florida Department of Health added a record 10,109 cases of COVID-19, making it the ninth consecutive day that at least 5,000 new cases.

USA TODAY

The U.S. Surgeon General on Friday encouraged Americans to social distance and wear face masks over the Fourth of July weekend to slow the spread of COVID-19.

The U.S. on Thursday saw another day of record cases that surpassed 50,000. Dr. Jerome Adams said while the death rate has remained flat amid the surge in infections, “deaths lag at least two weeks and can lag even more.”

“In the beginning, nursing homes were hit really hard, and the majority of our deaths were occurring on people who were 60, 65 and older,” he said Friday on “Fox & Friends”. “Now the majority of cases are in people who have an average age of 35, and so those folks are going to have less comorbidities, they’re going to be less likely to end up in the hospital and to die.” 

He urged young people to protect their grandparents by social distancing and wearing face masks. 

Here are some recent developments:

  • Many in New Jersey are flocking to the Jersey Shore. Boardwalks, outdoor dining, fireworks displays, water parks, amusement rides and casinos will also be open at some capacity this weekend.
  • That won’t be the case across some areas of Southern California, where Los Angeles and Ventura counties have closed beaches, and in Florida, where several counties including Broward and Palm Beach have done the same.
  • Starting noon Friday, face masks will be required in public in Texas counties with at least 20 confirmed coronavirus cases. 

📈Today’s stats: The U.S. recorded 52,291 new cases of the coronavirus Thursday, surpassing Wednesday’s record of 50,655, according to a tally kept by Johns Hopkins University. The U.S. has seen more than 2.7 million cases and more than 129,000 deaths. Globally, there have been more than 10.9 million cases and over 523,000 deaths.

📰 What we’re reading: More and more states are making face masks in public mandatory. We’re keeping track of where they’re required and what stores can require.

Our live blog will be updated throughout the day. For first-in-the-morning updates, sign up for The Daily Briefing.

Seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson tests positive 

Seven-time NASCAR champion Jimmie Johnson has tested positive for COVID-19 and will miss this weekend’s race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

The 44-year-old Johnson is the first driver in any NASCAR series to test positive and the news Friday evening cast a shadow over the historic NASCAR-IndyCar doubleheader races Saturday and Sunday. There was no indication any races would be affected.

Hendrick Motorsports said Johnson will not return until he is cleared by a physician. He was tested earlier Friday after his wife, Chani, tested positive after experiencing allergy-like symptoms.

Johnson is asymptomatic.

As MLB spring training resumes, 31 players test positive for COVID-19

Major League Baseball, resuming spring training Friday, announced that 31 players and seven staff members tested positive for COVID-19 as part of intake screening. The 38 positives were 1.2% of the 3,185 total samples collected and tested, according to the league.

Teams are not permitted to identify the players who tested positive for COVID-19, but two players, Delino DeShields Jr. of the Cleveland Indians and Brett Martin of the Texas Rangers each revealed their positive tests. Any player who tests positive for COVID-19 must test negative twice at least 24 hours apart from one another, with no fever for 72 hours, before he can rejoin a team.

— Bob Nightengale

MIKE TROUT: Angels’ MVP isn’t sure he’ll play this season

Doctors in hardest-hit states face insurers scaling back telehealth appointments

As Texas shuts back down amid soaring COVID-19 cases, doctors across the now-hardest-hit states face insurers that are starting to back away from the widely embraced telehealth approach to doctor appointments. 

Insurers are scaling back telehealth to pre-COVID levels, which were limited, resuming out-of-pocket payments and using time-consuming prior authorizations that can deter doctors. Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas initially planned to end telehealth expansion May 31 but has moved the date three times. It’s now Aug. 31.

Most other insurers plan to reduce coverage of the visits in September even though Medicare and Medicaid is expected to cover them far more generously through the end of the year. Some of the expanded telehealth coverage was planned until the end of the “public health emergency,” which is ill-defined with no end in sight, said Dr. James Weber, CEO of Texas Digestive Disease Consultants. 

New study claims hydroxychloroquine may boost survivors; other researchers doubtful

Although the U.S. Food and Drug Administration withdrew its emergency use authorization for hydroxychloroquine for trials as a treatment for COVID-19, the controversial anti-malarial drug once touted by President Donald Trump is not leaving the stage quietly.

A team at Henry Ford Health System in Southeast Michigan said Thursday its study of 2,541 hospitalized patients found that patients who took the drug were much less likely to die. A report on the findings was published in the International Journal of Infectious Diseases.

The drug got widespread attention after Trump said he had taken it. But after the FDA action, trials sponsored by the World Health Organization and the National Institutes of Health were halted.

Dr. Steven Kalkanis, CEO of the Henry Ford Medical Group, acknowledged to reporters that the group’s results differed from other studies but said it “potentially could be a lifesaver for patients” if used before they begin to suffer some of the severe immune reactions associated with COVID-19.

Researchers not involved with the study noted that the team did not randomly treat patients but selected them for various treatments based on certain criteria, according to CNN.

Over 100 students in fraternity houses test positive in Washington, group says

At least 105 students at the University of Washington who live in fraternity houses have self-reported testing positive for COVID-19, according to the university’s Interfraternity Council, the student-led governing board for UW fraternities. 

While the university is working to confirm the 105 cases, it has confirmed at least 62 fraternity house residents have tested positive. There are about 1,000 students living in 25 fraternity houses, the university says. To date, the university has reported 115 student cases as well as 42 staff members who were confirmed positive. 

The Washington State Department of Health reports 9% of people ages 0-19 and 36% of people ages 20-39, the state’s largest percentage, have tested positive for the coronavirus.

– Khrysgiana Pineda 

Florida daily cases again top 9,000

Florida reported 9,488 new cases of the coronavirus in the state Friday, just shy of a record 10,109 new cases posted the previous day as the deadly virus shows no sign of retreating.

The Florida Department of Health also reported 67 new deaths, raising the total of COVID-19-related fatalities in the state to 3,684. 

The latest figures boost the total number of Florida cases to 178,594. It is the 10th consecutive day that at least 5,000 new cases have been counted, according to health department data.

The state total has nearly tripled since the Phase 2 reopening began June 5. Bars were closed for the second time during the pandemic June 26.

Cases are rising in 40 states over last 2 weeks 

Four U.S. states — Arizona, California, Florida and Texas — reported a combined 25,000 new confirmed coronavirus cases Thursday as the infection curve rose in 40 of the 50 states heading into the July Fourth holiday weekend.

With the number of daily confirmed coronavirus cases nationwide climbing past 50,000, an alarming 36 states saw an increase in the percentage of tests coming back positive for the virus.

“What we’ve seen is a very disturbing week,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious-disease expert, said in a livestream with the American Medical Association.

All but 10 states are showing an upswing in newly reported cases over the past 14 days, according to data compiled by the volunteer COVID Tracking Project. The outbreaks are most severe in Arizona, Texas and Florida, which together with California have reclosed or otherwise clamped back down on bars, restaurants and movie theaters over the past week or so.

Nebraska and South Dakota were the only states outside the Northeast with a downward trend in cases.

– Associated Press

Texas GOP to go ahead with state convention in virus hotspot Houston

Over opposition from doctors and some local party activists, the Texas GOP is moving ahead with a three-day convention starting July 16 in Houston, one of the nation’s coronavirus hotspots,

Party leaders voted Thursday night to stick with an in-person gathering that is typically one of the largest political conventions in America, drawing thousands of attendees. Some supporters suggested that changing plans is not what President Donald Trump would want.

The vote came hours after Republican Gov. Greg Abbott issued a statewide mask order as COVID-19 hospitalizations in Texas set another high Thursday. Hospitals in Houston have warned they are becoming stretched and the Texas Medical Association has called for cancelling the convention, saying now is not the time to pack thousands of people indoors. 

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, a Democrat, has left the decisions about the convention up to the GOP. 

India nears third worst-hit country after another record high of daily cases

India reported another single-day record high of new coronavirus cases Friday while its monuments, including the Taj Mahal, are set to reopen for tourists next week.

The 20,903 new cases took the national total to 625,544. The Health Ministry also reported another 379 deaths in the past 24 hours, bringing fatalities to 18,213.

With the current rate of infections, India is expected to surpass Russia’s 666,000 cases in the coming days and become the third worst-hit country after the United States and Brazil. It has the eighth-most fatalities in the world, according to a Johns Hopkins University tally.

After a strict two-month lockdown, India has eased restrictions across most of the country — except for the highest-risk areas. The Culture Ministry decided to reopen all monuments Monday with a cap on the number of visitors and mandatory masks.

Dallas plans to distribute $500K to immigrant families affected by COVID-19

As coronavirus cases spike in Texas, the city of Dallas will distribute $500,000 in funding to nonprofit organizations that support immigrant families. The city’s Office of Welcoming Communities and Immigrant Affairs teamed with the Open Society Foundations to establish a fund.

Officials will work with local non-profits who help immigrant communities to distribute the funds. Families who are ineligible for federal COVID-19 relief programs will be prioritized.

“Immigrants have played a key role in driving Dallas’ economic growth. And they haven’t stopped working throughout the COVID crisis,” Open Society Foundations President Patrick Gaspard said in a news release. “They are this city’s essential workers.”

The non-profits will also collect non-identifying information to “inform future emergency response for Dallas’ immigrant residents,” according to the release. City officials say they hope this program attracts additional funding from private individuals and foundations.

New York county issued subpoenas to partygoers for coronavirus contact tracing

Health officials in one New York County issued subpoenas to eight people after they refused to cooperate in the contact tracing of the coronavirus cluster tied to a party.

It worked: All eight partygoers responded to the subpoenas, avoiding possible fines of $2,000 per day from Rockland County, the first known county in the state to resort to legal action amid this public health emergency.

The party in mid-June was hosted by someone who was sick with coronavirus at the time, Rockland County Executive Ed Day told USA TODAY on Thursday. The host was symptomatic but held the party anyway, which included 50 to 100 young adults, Day said.

– Autumn Schoolman

Oregon trooper on leave after flouting state’s mask mandate at coffee shop

An Oregon State Police trooper is on leave and the state police superintendent has publicly apologized after the uniformed officer allegedly refused to wear a face mask inside a coffee shop Wednesday morning. 

After a video of four troopers not wearing masks was made public Thursday and employees alleged one trooper said the mask mandate violated his “civil liberties,” OSP Superintendent Travis Hampton called the troopers’ behavior “embarrassing and indefensible.”

Officials said Thursday the trooper who refused to wear a mask has been placed on leave and the incident is under investigation. None of the troopers have been identified by the OSP.

– Whitney Woodworth, Salem (Ore.) Statesman Journal

What we’re reading

More Apple stores now closed as COVID-19 cases rise across US

With more spikes in the cases of coronavirus, Apple has now reclosed about 28% of its U.S. stores.

As of Thursday, 77 stores that had reopened are now temporarily closed again, Apple confirmed to USA TODAY. Other stores throughout the country are only open for pickup of online orders and by appointment for “in-store Genius Support.”

Last week, Apple closed 32 stores in five states but as of Thursday, added 45 more closings in 11 states. The new temporary closures include 15 in California, another 10 in Texas, five of Georgia’s six locations, four of Nevada’s five stores and two more in Florida.

Some of the new closures are open for appointments through either Thursday or Friday, according to individual store pages. Apple has 271 stores in the United States. 

– Kelly Tyko

Woman spits on 7-Eleven counter in Texas after being asked to wear mask

A woman was recorded spitting on a 7-Eleven counter on Monday after the cashier refused to ring up her purchase because she was not wearing a mask. The unidentified woman spit on the counter after yelling at the cashier that she has “a right” to not wear a face mask.

“I’m spreading more germs standing here,” she is heard saying. The recording shows the woman at a Fort Worth, Texas, 7-Eleven saying, “We have a right in America not to wear a (expletive) mask.” The cashier can be heard telling the woman, “I’m just telling you to get a mask on.”

CBS Dallas reports an employee said there was a sign on the store door stating that customers must wear a mask. “It’s disheartening to see a 7-Eleven team member be treated with the disrespect shown in this video. 7-Eleven, Inc. complies with all federal, state and local laws, which includes local mandates that require face coverings in public,” 7-Eleven said in a statement to USA TODAY. “We respectfully ask that customers do the same.”

– Josh Rivera

More on the coronavirus from USA TODAY

Coronavirus Watch: Sign up for our daily coronavirus newsletter here. And come together and share the latest information about coronavirus, coping with lifestyle changes and more by joining our Facebook group.

Where are states on reopening? Some are taking preemptive measures to postpone further phases of their reopening, while others have rolled back their phases to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. See the list.

Contributing: The Associated Press

Autoplay

Show Thumbnails

Show Captions

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2020/07/03/coronavirus-updates-record-daily-cases-texas-face-masks/5370486002/

Source link

Coronavirus updates LIVE: Global COVID-19 cases surpass 11 million as Australian death toll at 104

Global case numbers have passed 11 million people while Victoria battles to bring down a new outbreak of the virus.

Source by [author_name]

Photos show police reenacting chokehold on McClain

One of the three white officers who stopped Elijah McClain has been fired over photos showing colleagues reenacting the chokehold used before the Black man died last year, according to documents from prosecutors. (July 3)

       

Source link

Coronavirus live news: US states hit fresh highs as England prepares to reopen pubs

0

North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Alaska all saw new daily highs in confirmed cases of COVID-19, the illness caused by the novel coronavirus, while Florida’s caseload came in just below the prior day’s record high.

The recent surge in cases, most pronounced in southern and western states, has alarmed public health officials, who urged caution ahead of a July 4th holiday weekend that in normal times would feature big gatherings of families and friends.

North Carolina reported 951 hospitalizations and 2,099 cases, marking a new record for the first time in three weeks.

“Highest new case count, highest hospitalizations, highest percent positive since end of April. Please be cautious this holiday weekend,” Betsy Tilson, North Carolina state health director, wrote on Twitter about Friday’s figures.

Despite the jump in infections, the daily death rate in the United States has remained relatively flat, a reflection of the growing proportion of positive tests among younger people who tend to be healthier and less prone to severe outcomes.

However, U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams warned that the impact on fatalities from the recent surge, which started in mid-June, had yet to be seen. “Deaths lag at least two weeks and can lag even more,” he told “Fox & Friends” on Friday.

Source link