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A costly mistake by a Veterans Affairs hospital has le
stanley cup ft a Vietnam veteran dead and a widow worried her husband wont be the only one.Sixty-
stanley termosas seven-year-old veteran Michael Hansen of Nebraska died of late-stage lung cancer, but he once had a chance at a longer life.He and his wife Lisa Hansen are blaming the Omaha Veterans Affairs Medical Center for failing to follow up about his potential cancer, and allowing it to spread, according toNebraska Public Media.This all began in July 2019, when a r
stanley mug adiologist at the center flagged a growth for a possible malignancy 鈥?but they did not follow up. It is typical for the VA to do these post-surgery scans routinely for vets like Hansen, who helped to replace damaged equipment during the Vietnam War.More than a year later, Hansen returned to the VA hospital struggling to breathe.Thats when it was confirmed that the tumor, which had originally been the size of a postage stamp, nearly quadrupled in size 鈥?and another had sprouted.Gary Gorby, the hospitals chief of medicine, and Laura Whale, a risk manager, admitted their mistake, according to Nebraska Public Media.As Hansen had gone about his life as normal since his first visit, he went from a sta Jrdz Kansas City 911 Memorial Stair Climb continues despite COVID-19
A new study suggests that increa
stanley drink bottle sing the number of people eligible to get the COVID-19 vaccine could make it harder for people to get a shot.The study, fromSurgo Ventures in Washington DC, compared each state s percentage of people eligible with the number of doses they administered for every 100,000 people. What we generally saw was that states that had a more narrow focus on their vaccination efforts generally had a more success at rolling out the vaccine to more people, says Senio
stanley cup becher r Research Scientist Nicholas Stewart.Among the states with the lowest percentage of the population eligible, Connecticut, Hawaii, and New Mexico led the way in administering doses. New Mexico gave out 51,686 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine for every 100,000 people.Conversely, states like Florida, Georgia, and Mississippi all had 70% or more of their population eligible but only distributed around 35,000 doses or less.Stewart says the numbers show that states had logistical problems k
stanley tumbler eeping up with demand when they increased eligibility. When you expand eligibility to people all across your entire state, the supply chain logistics get extremely complicated, he says.High eligibility rates didn t always m