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Blood tests of a construction worker who collapsed Wednesday outside a building owned by Yale University led emergency crews to uncover potentially lethal levels of carbon monoxide inside. Another 13 people were hospitalized, but the discovery may have prevented a much larger catastrophe, officials said. There was a disaster averted here, said Rick Fontana, New Havens emergency operations director. You could have had a lot more sick or a lot more death had this gone on for a longer period of time. Emergency crews initially thought they were responding to a regu
stanley cup lar medical call Wednesday morning when they brought the collapsed unconscious man to the hospital, Fontana said. H
stanley tumbler owever, an hour-and-a-half later, the hospital informed them that the worker had extremely high levels of carbon monoxide in his bloodstream.Crews then returned to the location and found 13 people at the building with elevated carbon monoxide levels and complaining of headaches. It was later determined that the construction workers had been using a propane-fueled saw to cut concrete inside the structure. Even though they were venting it, Fontana said the fumes were not exiting
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Amy Daeschel is a woman in long-term recovery. What that means to me is I havent found it necessary to use a drink or a drug since August 23, 2017, Daeschel said.Daeschel had a successful life until sh
stanley quencher e had multiple foot surgeries at the age of 37. She was prescribed oxycontin for pain. Five of them, 30 milligrams a day, and this went on for a year and a half, Daeschel said. And I had built a strong dependency upon this medication. It turned into an addiction when I started trea
stanley termosmugg ting emotional trauma. My mother h
stanley thermos ad committed suicide, I was going through a divorce, had domestic violence, I mean everything just hit me at once. Once the doctor found out about her addiction, she was cut off. So, she turned to the streets. That first $10 bag of heroin came and it was over. Within two months, I had lost everything. She says it wasnt until she hit rock bottom that she was able to turn her life around. A state-run addiction operation offered her treatment. Shes been sober since. Unfortunately, that hasn t the case for a lot of others across the country. Julie Burns is the CEO of Rize Massachusetts Foundation 鈥?a statewide independent nonprofit focused on ending the opioid overdose crisis