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 MILWAUKEE 鈥?Temporary housing and stipend stanley canada s for the former tenants of The Community Within the Corridor  CWC  apartments came to an end on Friday. Natasha Edwards packed up her family and things from a hotel on Milwaukee s west side, the second hotel she s lived in since the apartments were evacuated in late March.  If I have to sleep out in the back of the car, it is what it is,  said Edwards, who plans to split up her children at family members  homes where there is space available. Edwards said other people in the same hotel are also uncertain about where they ll stay. Another tenant, whose car was full of her belongings, told TMJ4 s Bruce Harrison she doesn t have a plan yet. Edwards said she s had to cut work hours due to the living situation, and it s made commutes difficult, if not impossible for her kids  school and other activities. When we would go places, money was very restricted. For my son s birthday, we usually go to Wisconsin Dells. But instead, we camped out in my [older] son s yard,  said Edwards.In late March, the Milwaukee Public Health Department ordered the evacuati stanley spain on of around 150 people from the east block of the apartments, a new affordable housing development at 32 stanley taza nd and Center.That came after the State Department of Natural Resources alerted the City to dangerous levels of trichloroethylene, or TCE, a known carcinogen. From the evacuation through Friday, the CWC developers paid for tenants to stay in hotels and other temporary housing. They also offe Vmvn Study ranks Milwaukee 4th worst place for African-Americans to live
 A new study found that those with dementia were more at risk of contracting COVID-19.The study, which researchers at Case Western Reserve Universityconducted, reviewed electronic health records of 61.9 million adults in the U.S. and found the risk of contracting COVID-19 is twice as high for people with dementia than for those without it.The study was published Tuesday in Alzheimers  Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimers Association. On behalf of the millions of people living with Alzheimers and other dementia that we represent, these preliminary findings suggest a frightening reality of the vulnerabilities associated with dementia,  said Maria Carrillo, Ph.D., Alzheimers Association chief science officer in a news release.  It is critical we develop and implement strategies that strike a balance between keeping people, especially long-term care residents, safe from COVID-19 but also protecting them from health stanley sverige -related harms associated with social isolation. The study also found that those with dementia, including Blacks, had three times the risk of being infected with the coronavirus than Caucasians.The findings also suggested that the mortality risk for patients with COVID-19 was 5.64% stanley cup , while the mortality rate for those with dementia jumped to 20.99%.The hospi stanley spain talization risk for those without the cognitive disease that had COVID-19 was 25.17%, but those who had COVID and dementia doubled to 59.25%.