The St. Luke’s Hospital Emergency Department, Trauma team, and area first responders, along with medical professionals across the country, recently took part in Stop the Bleed Day during National Trauma Awareness Month to emphasize the importance of using tourniquets and other bleeding-control methods in emergency situations to stop life-threatening bleeds …
Read More »Massachusetts Public Health Officials Award $2.3 Million for Recovery-Based Reentry Services for Black and Latino Men
The Executive Office of Health and Human Services (EOHHS) and the Department of Public Health (DPH) today announced $2.3 million in grants awarded to provide recovery-based services for Black and Latino men who are at risk of fatal overdoses upon release from incarceration. The pilot program will serve Black and …
Read More »Healey Will Require Some AG Employees to Be Vaccinated
By Chris Lisinski State House News Service Attorney General Maura Healey on Wednesday defended her call for mandating COVID-19 vaccines among public employees as a “matter of common sense,” urged state and federal lawmakers to pursue a “systemic” overhaul of child care, and criticized President Joe Biden’s campaign goal of …
Read More »U.S. surpasses two-thirds of 65+ fully vaccinated
Chris Lisinski State House News Service More than four out of five Americans aged 65 and older have received at least one shot against COVID-19 so far, and as of Friday, a full two-thirds of that older population is fully vaccinated against the highly infectious coronavirus, federal health officials announced. …
Read More »Massachusetts study suggests link between high cancer rates of childhood cancer with contaminated public water supply
The Massachusetts Department of Public Health’s Bureau of Environmental Health (DPH) has completed a long-running epidemiological study evaluating potential environmental contributors to elevated rates of childhood cancer observed in the town of Wilmington during the 1990s. Results of the study suggest an association between maternal (i.e. prenatal) exposure to carcinogenic …
Read More »Massachusetts Teachers Now Eligible For Vaccines on March 11
By Colin A. Young State House News Service Starting March 11, teachers, early educators and school staff members will be able to try to sign up for COVID-19 vaccine appointments through any of the state’s 170 vaccination sites and mass vaccination sites plan to block off certain days to vaccinate …
Read More »Massachusetts COVID Vaccination Totals Catch Up With Infections
By Colin A. Young State House News Service As Massachusetts enters the second month of March to be shaded by the coronavirus pandemic, the number of people here who have been fully vaccinated is roughly equal to the number of people who have been infected with COVID-19 over the last …
Read More »Governor Baker Awards $4.9 Million for High School Substance Use and Mental Health Response Teams
The Baker-Polito Administration today announced $4.9 million in grants awarded to six agencies, including hospitals and treatment and behavioral health centers, for the creation of evidence-based and data-driven co-occurring substance use disorder/mental health response teams embedded in high schools in ten communities to offer intervention and treatment services, and provide …
Read More »“Pissed Off” Baker Promises Vaccination Site Improvements
By Colin A. Young State House News Service Following the Thursday morning failure of the state’s vaccine appointment website as 1 million more people became eligible to get themselves protected against the deadly coronavirus, Gov. Charlie Baker took to the airwaves to pledge that the issue would be fixed. “My …
Read More »Governor Baker: People Who Have Had COVID-19 Should Get Vaccinated
By Chris Lisinski State House News Service With the state’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout still early in its second phase, Gov. Charlie Baker on Thursday urged residents to seek the immunization when it is their turn even if they previously contracted the virus. Baker, who faced sharp criticism Thursday from Cape …
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