Showing posts with label hospital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hospital. Show all posts

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Ali released from hospital

LOUISVILLE, USA (AFP) — Boxing legend Muhammad Ali has been released from hospital after being treated for a urinary tract infection, media reports said yesterday.

Ali, 72, was admitted more than two weeks ago with what was then thought to be pneumonia.

But doctors ultimately determined he had a severe urinary tract infection, and he was released Tuesday night, the Courier-Journal newspaper reported, quoting Ali spokesman Bob Gunnell.

Ali is a three-time world heavyweight champion and Olympic gold medallist. He has suffered from Parkinson’s disease since the 1980s.

“The boxing legend has fully recovered and is now at his home. Ali looks forward to celebrating his upcoming 73rd birthday on January 17 with his family and friends,” Gunnell said in a statement, according to allsports.com.

“The Ali family greatly appreciates the outpouring of support and continued well wishes. They also want to thank the team of doctors and nurses for their exceptional care.”


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Ali released from hospital

Monday, January 12, 2015

Man holding hostages at Texas hospital: sheriff"s office

Sunday, January 11, 2015 | 2:06 AM    

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) – A man believed to be the father of a patient has taken at least two people hostage at a Texas hospital Saturday, authorities said, though it was not immediately clear if he was armed.

The Harris County Sheriff’s office indicated around 8:00 pm (0100 GMT) that it had deployed its High Risk Operation Unit to Tomball Regional Medical Center outside Houston.

“At this time preliminary information is that a man is holding at least two people hostage inside the hospital,” the sheriff’s office said on its website.

“It is unknown at this time whether he is armed.”

Local NBC television affiliate KPRC-TV cited witnesses inside the medical center as saying the hospital had been shut down as authorities tried to defuse the crisis.

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Man holding hostages at Texas hospital: sheriff"s office

Monday, October 27, 2014

Hospital parent"s CEO apologizes for lapses in Ebola treatment, training

The CEO of the parent company of the Dallas hospital where two nurses have contracted Ebola from a patient who died there earlier this month has apologized for some aspects of the hospital’s response to the deadly virus. 

Texas Health Resources CEO Barclay Berdan issued the apology in the form of a full-page letter published in Sunday’s editions of The Dallas Morning News and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.  

In the letter, Berdan thanks the staff at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital for their “dedication, compassion, and tireless work” before acknowledging that “as an institution, we made mistakes in handling this very difficult challenge.” Among those mistakes are hospital staff not communicating that Ebola patient Thomas Eric Duncan had recently traveled to Texas from African when he made his initial visit to the hospital’s emergency room on the night of Sept. 25-26. Berdan also says that the hospital’s Ebola training and education programs had not been fully deployed at the time of Duncan’s visit. 

“In short, despite our best intentions and skilled medical teams, we did not live up to the high standards that are the heart of our hospital’s history, mission and commitment,” Berdan said.

Berdan’s letter comes one day after it was revealed that the hospital did not initially keep a watch list of workers who may have had contact with Duncan, and had asked nurses to take their own temperature and self-report symptoms of Ebola.  

According to the Associated Press, Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins only ordered the creation of a watch list on Oct. 12, the same day nurse Nina Pham tested positive for the disease, Hospital officials told potentially exposed hospital workers to stop seeing patients other than Pham.

But the next day, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention allowed another nurse who cared for Duncan, Amber Vinson, to get on a plane in Ohio and fly to Dallas with a mild fever. She was later diagnosed with Ebola, and CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden has conceded that she “should not have traveled on a commercial airline.”

The inconsistent response by health officials in monitoring and limiting the movement of health workers has been one of the critical blunders in the Ebola outbreak. Friends and family who had contact with Duncan before he was hospitalized were confined to homes under armed guard, but nurses who handled his contagious bodily fluids were allowed to treat other patients, take mass transit and get on airplanes.

“I don’t think the directions provided to people at first were as clear as they needed to be, and there have been changes in the instructions given to people over time,” said Rep. Michael Burgess, R-Texas, a doctor who did his residency in Dallas.

Local health authorities have said repeatedly throughout the response that their guidance and direction can change.

“Please keep in mind the contact list is fluid, meaning people may fall off the list or new people may be added to the list depending on new information that could arise at any time on any given day,” said Dallas County health department spokeswoman Erikka Neroes on Friday when asked how many people are even being monitored.

On Thursday, Jenkins announced stricter restrictions that require hospital staffers who had been potentially exposed to stay away from the public for 21 days and check their temperature twice a day, once in person with a public health worker. It was the first written order anyone being monitored has been asked to sign.

“They can walk their dog, but they can’t go to church; they can’t go to schools; they can’t go to shopping centers,” said Mayor Mike Rawlings.

Public health epidemiologists were notifying the health care workers of the directions Friday, said Texas Department of State Health Services spokeswoman Carrie Williams.

But even those medical agreements allow some wiggle room. For example, they say public transit isn’t outright banned but “should be discussed with the public health authority.”

Officials say 125 friends, family, doctors, nurses, technicians, ambulance drivers and others may have been exposed in the days before Duncan died. Since then, the two nurses have tested positive and at least 18 other people in Texas and Ohio have been identified as secondary contacts who also merit watching.

At first, the monitoring sounded relatively simple: track down the contacts, monitor them with least twice daily temperature records and test people who develop symptoms for Ebola. State officials would be in charge, working with the CDC and Dallas County authorities.

But for a time after Pham was diagnosed with Ebola, different hospital workers had different levels of monitoring, based in part on their exposure risk. Some self-reported their temperatures. Some continued to care for patients. Hospital spokesman Wendell Watson on Saturday referred all questions about the facility’s monitoring practices to county officials.

The county moved Duncan’s girlfriend, Louise Troh, her 13-year-old son, Duncan’s nephew, and a family friend from their apartment to a guarded house in an undisclosed location, where a health official comes by twice a day and takes their temperatures. The unusual confinement order was imposed after the family failed to comply with a request not to leave their apartment, Jenkins said.

Pham and Vinson have been taken to medical centers with isolation units in Maryland and Atlanta. There are four such centers in the U.S.

At the National Institutes of Health medical center in Bethesda, Maryland, spokeswoman Amanda Fine says staff involved in caring for people with Ebola are given thermometers and instructions and must measure and submit body temperatures twice daily.

Taylor Wilson, a spokesman for the Nebraska isolation unit, which has also been treating Ebola patients, said that every time health care workers go into the unit, they must stop and take their temperature and other vital signs and log the results. They are also advised to keep an eye out for any symptoms.

He said that there are no restrictions on the staff’s movements outside of work.

In Washington, President Barack Obama presided at a rare Saturday evening meeting of Cabinet officials and advisers on health and security to receive an update on domestic Ebola cases and the status of tracing, contacting and monitoring people who may have come into contact with Ebola patients in Dallas. The meeting included a discussion of broader steps to increase the preparedness of the nation’s health sector, the White House said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 


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Hospital parent"s CEO apologizes for lapses in Ebola treatment, training

Friday, September 19, 2014

Parents claim ... children sleeping on floor at hospital - Chik-V fear causes overcrowding

Chad Bryan/Diandra Grandison, STAR Reporters

The Bustamante Hospital for Children is experiencing an overcrowding issue as parents have been flooding the institution due to fears that their children are infected with the Chikungunya Virus.

On Sunday, THE STAR visited the island’s only children’s hospital and parents expressed that after their kids were admitted, there was no place available for them to lay their heads and they could not leave the hospital without being cleared by the administration.

One man, who had his daughter in his hand, said he was forced to construct a makeshift bed from plyboard and sheet with a mosquito net covering it. He said he came to the hospital on Saturday and by Sunday there was nowhere to put his daughter.

shortage of nurses

“I’ve been here from 10 a.m., Saturday,” he said, “Why not just let me take the child and leave? They say I can’t go through the gate without a release form.”

THE STAR was also informed yesterday by another parent that she has been at the hospital since Sunday, and she along with her child have been sleeping on the floor due to the lack of beds. She also revealed that there was a shortage of nurses at the hospital and parents were being forced to take over some of their duties.

Parents also told THE STAR that children at the hospital were exhibiting symptoms that appeared to be consistent with the Chikungunya Virus (Chik-V). However, one of the parents told THE STAR that the hospital was conducting blood tests in order to determine if it was actually the mosquito-transmitted virus.

When contacted, Public Relations Officer at the South East Regional Health Authority (SERHA), Taneisha Lewis, confirmed that the hospital has been experiencing overcrowding. However, she could not comment on whether the symptoms the children exhibited were due to the Chik-V.


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Parents claim ... children sleeping on floor at hospital - Chik-V fear causes overcrowding

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Doctors performing only emergency procedures at Barbados public hospital

QEH-cardivascular_services Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Barbados (File photo)

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Tuesday July 8, 2014, CMC - Doctors at Barbados’ main public medical facility, Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH), are from Tuesday performing only emergency medical procedures, owing to a shortage of supplies.

Vice President of the Barbados Association of Medical Practitioners (BAMP), Dr Vikash Chatrani, said the decision to adopt the new working schedule at an emergency meeting of BAMP members on Monday.

He said that representatives of the QEH’s administration were in attendance and confirmed that the hospital was experiencing critical shortages in basic and essential supplies.

“As a result of these critical shortages BAMP was informed that the QEH would only be performing urgent and emergency surgical procedures.”

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Earlier this year, pharmaceutical providers to QEH had withdrawn their services, protesting overdue payment for goods delivered, and resumed supplies only after government paid BDS$20 million (One BDS$ = 50 US cents) into the debt account.

“It cannot be business as usual. We believe that the short-term financial injections (or) supplements have failed to rectify the serious situation that exists at the QEH, and we urge the government to immediately restore adequate levels of funding in order to prevent harm to our patients,” Dr. Chatrani said.

The government has not yet responded to the lastest action of the doctors.


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Doctors performing only emergency procedures at Barbados public hospital

Monday, February 3, 2014

Antigua Attorney General ‘stable’ in hospital after collapse

Sunday, February 02, 2014 | 12:18 PM    


ST JOHN’S, Antigua (CMC) — Antigua and Barbuda’s Attorney General, Justin Simon QC, remained in hospital late Saturday in stable condition after collapsing at a restaurant, an official source has said.


Simon, said to be in his fifties, reportedly collapsed around 4.30 pm, while out with friends at Big Banana, a popular eatery in downtown St Johns.


He was rushed to the Mount St John’s Medical Centre, the main state hospital about a kilometre away.


A senior government official who said he was receiving regular updates on the attorney general’s health but asked not to be identified, told the Caribbean Media Corporation that Simon was conscious, alert and in stable condition.


Key figures in government could not be reached for details of Simon’s illness and condition.


The Dominica-born Simon was appointed as Minister of Legal Affairs and Attorney General in the original cabinet of Prime Minister Baldwin Spencer when his United Progressive Party (UPP) swept to power in March 2004, ending the 28-year rule of the Antigua Labour Party (ALP).


Simon, who had originally told Spencer he intended to serve one-term as the government’s principal legal adviser, has stayed on past the UPP’s election to a second term in office in 2009.


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Antigua Attorney General ‘stable’ in hospital after collapse

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Bustamante Hospital gets JN Group support

Latest News

Tuesday, December 31, 2013 | 5:02 PM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Jamaica National Building Society (JNBS) say it will donate US$1 to the Shaggy Foundation, for every remittance sent from January 2 to 15, 2014, through any JN Money Transfer (JNMT) branch in New York, Connecticut, Florida, or any JN MoneyShop in Jamaica. The Shaggy Foundation raises funds for the Bustamante Hospital for Children in St Andrew Jamaica through an annual charity concert.“This is the only full-service paediatric hospital in the English speaking Caribbean, and it serves a population of approximately 700,000 children,” said Leesa Kow, General Manager of and JN Money Services Ltd (JNMS). “Therefore all of us need to give the promotion our support.”In addition to the donation JNMS, a subsidiary of Jamaica National, will waive remittance fees on donations of JA$2,000 to $5,000 sent to the Shaggy Foundation, through any JN MoneyShop in Jamaica; or, on US$20 to US$100 sent to the Foundation at any JNMT branch in New York, Connecticut and Florida, Kow said. The Shaggy and Friends charity show is slated for January 4, 2014 and features recent winner of The Voice Tessanne Chin as well as finalist Matthew Schuler.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Bustamante Hospital gets JN Group support

Bustamante Hospital gets JN Group support

News

Tuesday, December 31, 2013 | 5:02 PM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Jamaica National Building Society (JNBS) say it will donate US$1 to the Shaggy Foundation, for every remittance sent from January 2 to 15, 2014, through any JN Money Transfer (JNMT) branch in New York, Connecticut, Florida, or any JN MoneyShop in Jamaica. The Shaggy Foundation raises funds for the Bustamante Hospital for Children in St Andrew Jamaica through an annual charity concert.“This is the only full-service paediatric hospital in the English speaking Caribbean, and it serves a population of approximately 700,000 children,” said Leesa Kow, General Manager of and JN Money Services Ltd (JNMS). “Therefore all of us need to give the promotion our support.”In addition to the donation JNMS, a subsidiary of Jamaica National, will waive remittance fees on donations of JA$2,000 to $5,000 sent to the Shaggy Foundation, through any JN MoneyShop in Jamaica; or, on US$20 to US$100 sent to the Foundation at any JNMT branch in New York, Connecticut and Florida, Kow said. The Shaggy and Friends charity show is slated for January 4, 2014 and features recent winner of The Voice Tessanne Chin as well as finalist Matthew Schuler.

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Bustamante Hospital gets JN Group support

Shaggy says staff at Bustamante Children"s Hospital are "miracle workers"

Latest News

Tuesday, December 31, 2013 | 2:46 PM

ST ANDREW, Jamaica — From having to use warm water to thaw frozen blood for use in operations, to eventually being able to purchase blood warmers, the Bustamante Hospital for children in St Andrew has been saving lives through mere resourcefulness.And Shaggy, the man behind the Shaggy Make a Difference Foundation that has been raising funds to assist the hospital through a charity concert since 2009, has lauded the medical practitioners there, labelling them “miracle workers”.“I am working with a really good group of professional doctors and nurses at the hospital,” said Shaggy. “Now they are not the most well-equipped, and they are not the most heavily staffed, but these people are miracle workers.”Shaggy was speaking at the Jamaica Observer’s Monday Exchange at the newspaper’s headquarters on Beechwood Avenue in St Andrew.The international recording artiste reflected on a visit to the health facility when he noticed them placing frozen blood in a pot of hot water to get it to the appropriate temperature for operation.“These are the things that they do, that are unconventional, but save lives,” Shaggy said.Dr Lambert Ennis, head of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care at the hospital, reiterated the resourcefulness of the doctors at the institution, saying the team at the institution are some of the best in the world.–Anika RichardsLike our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Shaggy says staff at Bustamante Children"s Hospital are "miracle workers"

Shaggy says staff at Bustamante Children"s Hospital are "miracle workers"

News

Tuesday, December 31, 2013 | 2:46 PM

ST ANDREW, Jamaica — From having to use warm water to thaw frozen blood for use in operations, to eventually being able to purchase blood warmers, the Bustamante Hospital for children in St Andrew has been saving lives through mere resourcefulness.And Shaggy, the man behind the Shaggy Make a Difference Foundation that has been raising funds to assist the hospital through a charity concert since 2009, has lauded the medical practitioners there, labelling them “miracle workers”.“I am working with a really good group of professional doctors and nurses at the hospital,” said Shaggy. “Now they are not the most well-equipped, and they are not the most heavily staffed, but these people are miracle workers.”Shaggy was speaking at the Jamaica Observer’s Monday Exchange at the newspaper’s headquarters on Beechwood Avenue in St Andrew.The international recording artiste reflected on a visit to the health facility when he noticed them placing frozen blood in a pot of hot water to get it to the appropriate temperature for operation.“These are the things that they do, that are unconventional, but save lives,” Shaggy said.Dr Lambert Ennis, head of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care at the hospital, reiterated the resourcefulness of the doctors at the institution, saying the team at the institution are some of the best in the world.–Anika Richards

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Shaggy says staff at Bustamante Children"s Hospital are "miracle workers"

Monday, December 30, 2013

Shaggy appeals to corporate entities to assist children"s hospital

Latest News

Monday, December 30, 2013 | 4:48 PM

ST ANDREW, Jamaica — International artiste Shaggy on Monday issued an appeal for corporate entities in Jamaica and the Diaspora to help in assisting the Bustamante Children’s Hospital and other such facilities in Jamaica.The Shaggy and Friends Make a Difference Charity concert, is geared towards raising funds to assist the Bustamante Hospital, and the artiste has been behind the venture for the past five years.Shaggy said that he had been making donations to the hospital before he created the Shaggy and Friends Foundation, but eventually went public because he needed help.He was speaking to journalists at the Jamaica Observer Monday Exchange forum held at the newspaper’s headquarters on Beechwood Avenue in St Andrew.More in tomorrow’s Jamaica Observer.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Shaggy appeals to corporate entities to assist children"s hospital

Shaggy appeals to corporate entities to assist children"s hospital

Entertainment

Monday, December 30, 2013 | 4:48 PM

ST ANDREW, Jamaica — International artiste Shaggy on Monday issued an appeal for corporate entities in Jamaica and the Diaspora to help in assisting the Bustamante Children’s Hospital and other such facilities in Jamaica.The Shaggy and Friends Make a Difference Charity concert, is geared towards raising funds to assist the Bustamante Hospital, and the artiste has been behind the venture for the past five years.Shaggy said that he had been making donations to the hospital before he created the Shaggy and Friends Foundation, but eventually went public because he needed help.He was speaking to journalists at the Jamaica Observer Monday Exchange forum held at the newspaper’s headquarters on Beechwood Avenue in St Andrew.More in tomorrow’s Jamaica Observer.

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4. Please do not write in block capitals since this makes your comment hard to read.


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Shaggy appeals to corporate entities to assist children"s hospital

Friday, September 6, 2013

Mandela discharged from hospital, still critical

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Nelson Mandela, 95, was discharged from hospital on Sunday while still in critical condition and was taken by ambulance to his Johannesburg home where he will receive intensive care, the office of South Africa’s president said.

On a sunny but cold morning, an ambulance took the anti-apartheid leader home from the hospital in the capital, Pretoria, about 31 miles away. Mandela had been hospitalized for nearly three months, after being admitted on June 8 for what the government described as a recurring lung infection.Mandela’s condition “is at times unstable,” said President Jacob Zuma’s statement Sunday.“His home has been reconfigured to allow him to receive intensive care there,” the statement said. “The health care personnel providing care at his home are the very same who provided care to him in hospital. If there are health conditions that warrant another admission to hospital in future, this will be done.”The statement Sunday from Zuma’s office said during his stay in hospital Mandela “vacillated between serious to critical and at times unstable” and that “despite the difficulties imposed by his various illnesses, he, as always, displays immense grace and fortitude.”Referring to Mandela by his clan name, the statement added: “Madiba has been treated by a large medical team from the military, academia, private sector and other public health spheres. We thank all the health professionals at the hospital for their dedication.”The government has released few details about Mandela’s condition, citing patient confidentiality and appealing for Mandela’s privacy and dignity to be respected. But rumours and unconfirmed reports about Mandela’s health have persisted on social media and other forums, fuelled in part by a feud within the Mandela family.In a court case stemming from a family dispute over burial sites, some members of Mandela’s extended family recently said in court documents that Mandela was being kept alive by a breathing machine and faces “impending death.” That account was disputed by Zuma’s office, which denied Mandela was “vegetative” but acknowledged his condition was grave.Mandela has been particularly vulnerable to respiratory problems since contracting tuberculosis during his 27-year imprisonment. The bulk of that period was spent on Robben Island, a prison off the coast of Cape Town where Mandela and other apartheid-era prisoners spent part of the time toiling in a limestone quarry.There has been an outpouring of concern in South Africa and around the world for the transformative figure who led the tense shift from apartheid’s white minority rule to democracy two decades ago in a spirit of reconciliation.Zuma urged South Africans to accept that Mandela had grown old and frail, saying all they could do was pray for him. During his hospitalization well-wishers delivered flowers and messages of support to the hospital where he was being treated, and prayer sessions were held around the country.Mandela, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, is feted around the world as a towering figure of reconciliation. Despite being jailed for his prominent role in opposing white racist rule, Mandela was seemingly free of rancour on his release in 1990, becoming the unifying leader who steered South Africa through a delicate transition to all-race elections that propelled him to the presidency four years later.The United Nations has recognized Mandela’s birthday, July 18, as an international day to honour themes of activism, democracy and responsibility embodied by the former leader.Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Mandela discharged from hospital, still critical

Mandela discharged from hospital, returns home

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Nelson Mandela, 95, was discharged from hospital on yesterday while still in critical condition and was taken by ambulance to his Johannesburg home where he will receive intensive care, the office of South Africa’s president said.

On a sunny but cold morning, an ambulance took the anti-apartheid leader home from the hospital in the capital, Pretoria, about 31 miles away. Mandela had been hospitalised for nearly three months, after being admitted on June 8 for what the government described as a recurring lung infection.Mandela’s condition “is at times unstable,” said President Jacob Zuma’s statement Sunday.“His home has been reconfigured to allow him to receive intensive care there,” the statement said. “The health care personnel providing care at his home are the very same who provided care to him in hospital. If there are health conditions that warrant another admission to hospital in future, this will be done.”The statement yesterday from Zuma’s office said during his stay in hospital Mandela “vacillated between serious to critical and at times unstable” and that “despite the difficulties imposed by his various illnesses, he, as always, displays immense grace and fortitude.”Referring to Mandela by his clan name, the statement added: “Madiba has been treated by a large medical team from the military, academia, private sector and other public health spheres. We thank all the health professionals at the hospital for their dedication.”The government has released few details about Mandela’s condition, citing patient confidentiality and appealing for Mandela’s privacy and dignity to be respected. But rumours and unconfirmed reports about Mandela’s health have persisted on social media and other forums, fuelled in part by a feud within the Mandela family.In a court case stemming from a family dispute over burial sites, some members of Mandela’s extended family recently said in court documents that Mandela was being kept alive by a breathing machine and faces “impending death.” That account was disputed by Zuma’s office, which denied Mandela was “vegetative” but acknowledged his condition was grave.Mandela has been particularly vulnerable to respiratory problems since contracting tuberculosis during his 27-year imprisonment. The bulk of that period was spent on Robben Island, a prison off the coast of Cape Town where Mandela and other apartheid-era prisoners spent part of the time toiling in a limestone quarry.There has been an outpouring of concern in South Africa and around the world for the transformative figure who led the tense shift from apartheid’s white minority rule to democracy two decades ago in a spirit of reconciliation.Zuma urged South Africans to accept that Mandela had grown old and frail, saying all they could do was pray for him. During his hospitalisation well-wishers delivered flowers and messages of support to the hospital where he was being treated, and prayer sessions were held around the country.Mandela, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, is feted around the world as a towering figure of reconciliation. Despite being jailed for his prominent role in opposing white racist rule, Mandela was seemingly free of rancour on his release in 1990, becoming the unifying leader who steered South Africa through a delicate transition to all-race elections that propelled him to the presidency four years later.The United Nations has recognised Mandela’s birthday, July 18, as an international day to honor themes of activism, democracy and responsibility embodied by the former leader.An ambulance transporting former South African president Nelson Mandela arrives at the home of the former statesman in Johannesburg, South Africa, yesterday. (PHOTO: AP)

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Mandela discharged from hospital, returns home

Saturday, August 24, 2013

3 of 7 injured KFC workers released from hospital

News

Friday, August 23, 2013

THREE of the seven KFC Old Harbour workers who were admitted to the Andrew’s Memorial Hospital following a fire on Wednesday are out of hospital.Restaurants of Jamaica, operator of the KFC franchise, said the three were released Wednesday night.“… Based on a report from the attending physicians at Andrew’s Memorial, the remaining four team members have been admitted for the standard 48-hour observation period for burn injuries and, hopefully, should be discharged tomorrow (today),” the company said in a statement yesterday.It said, however, that one of those four workers, who has burns to his forearm, may require further observation.“They were visited last night (Wednesday) by Mark Myers, managing director of Restaurants of Jamaica… and other members of the management team, to ensure they were comfortable and receiving the best possible care.“We wish to thank the KFC team members, the fire department, the police, and members of the Old Harbour community, including the local medical doctor on call to KFC, for their quick response and for their assistance in this unfortunate situation. We are also very thankful that no one was critically injured,” Myers said.In the meantime, the company said while investigations into the incident are being carried out, the KFC team would be doing an assessment to try and get the restaurant back in operation by today.The fire at the KFC restaurant started about 3:00 pm Wednesday, following an explosion in a kitchen at the back of the premises.The cause of the fire, however, has not been ascertained. Workers and members of the public stand outside the KFC Old Harbour restaurant following Wednesday’s fire. (PHOTO: GARFIELD ROBINSON)

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3 of 7 injured KFC workers released from hospital

Friday, August 9, 2013

Cornwall Regional Hospital dietary unit gets $20m refurbishing

Latest News

Sunday, August 04, 2013 | 2:34 PM

ST JAMES, Jamaica — The Dietary Unit at the Cornwall Regional Hospital in Montego Bay has been refurbished at a cost of $20 million provided by the National Health Fund.The unit was officially reopened on Friday, August 2 by Health Minister Dr Fenton Ferguson. The Health Minister said that the expansion of the dietary unit became important given the increase in patient load at the hospital.“Previously the kitchen was providing meals for 350 patients, now it has moved to 500. With this increase, there was a need to ensure that the output of the department was in keeping with patient demand,” Dr Ferguson said.Under the project the existing drainage system was modified and a new system also put in place to accommodate the new equipment, the kitchen was modified to improve food flow in the area and standard operating procedures were established. Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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Cornwall Regional Hospital dietary unit gets $20m refurbishing

Monday, August 5, 2013

$36m upgrade for Cornwall Regional Hospital dialysis unit

Latest News

Sunday, August 04, 2013 | 9:35 AM

ST JAMES, Jamaica — Thirty six million dollars is to be spent to expand the dialysis unit at the Cornwall Regional Hospital in St James. Minister of Health Dr Fenton Ferguson at the contract signing ceremony on Friday, August 2, 2013 said that he was excited about the project, especially since the area of dialysis has had limited capacity even with the high demand.“The Cornwall Regional Hospital has over the years been expanding the dialysis unit as the demand for services continued to increase. The unit moved from five work stations in 1998 to 12 and stands at 18 today,” Dr Ferguson said. “After this expansion and relocation to the ground floor of the hospital, it is expected that there will be an additional seven work stations bringing the total to 25 and increasing the usage from 220 to 325 dialysis episodes for patients each week,” he added. The project is being funded by the National Health Fund.Dr Ferguson said the expansion of the unit bears even greater significance given the prevalence of non-communicable diseases particularly diabetes which is a major risk factor for kidney failure. “Diabetes was ranked the leading cause of death among women and the third leading cause of death for men in 2009. In addition, non-communicable diseases account for upwards of 60 percent of deaths in Jamaica annually. In the process we spend in excess of US$170 million per annum in this area.”Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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$36m upgrade for Cornwall Regional Hospital dialysis unit

Friday, August 2, 2013

Travis out of hospital after stroke

1 August 2013 Last updated at 04:31 ET Randy Travis Travis was admitted to hospital with congestive heart failure US country singer Randy Travis has been discharged from hospital in Texas, three weeks after he suffered a stroke.


Travis’ publicist, Kirt Webster, said he had been moved to a physical therapy centre for further treatment.


The 54-year-old was initially admitted to Baylor Medical Centre on 7 July, suffering from a heart condition caused by a virus.


Three days later he suffered a stroke and underwent emergency surgery to relieve pressure on his brain.


Travis’ fiancée Mary Davis thanked fans and friends for their “prayers and support as Randy continues on the road to recovery”.


Travis is best known for his songs Forever and Ever, Amen, Diggin’ Up Bones and I Told You So.


He began his career in the mid-1980s and has won several Grammys and Country Music Association awards.


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Travis out of hospital after stroke

Sunday, June 30, 2013

"Lindy" in hospital, but said to be in good spirits

Sport

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Broadcaster and former English League star footballer Lindbergh ‘Lindy’ Delapenha is now in hospital.Reports are that Delapenha was admitted earlier this week after what is suspected to be a heart attack. He is said to be in good spirits.Delapenha who reports for Power 106 was head of sports at the now defunct JBC for a number of years.The eighty-six-year-old Delapenha is the first Jamaican footballer to play professionally in England and he also represented the island at golf.After a phenomenal performance as a schoolboy athlete, taking part in 16 events over a one-and-a-half day period, he served with the British armed forces in the Middle East following World War II. During his service, an English football scout saw him playing football for the British army.This gained him a trial with Arsenal, but he did not sign for the club, and in April 1948 he joined Portsmouth. Although it is claimed he was the first non-white player to appear in the English Football League First Division, he was actually predated by several other non-white players, including Arthur Wharton, who played a First Division match for Sheffield United as far back as 1894-95.He went on to win a league championship medal with Portsmouth in 1948. In April 1950, after a successful few years with Portsmouth, he transferred to Middlesbrough where his career took off. He played on the wing or inside-forward, and became Boro’s leading scorer in the 1951-52, 1953-54 and 1955-56 seasons. In total he scored 93 league and FA Cup goals in 270 appearances.He moved to Mansfield Town in June 1958, contributing 27 goals in 115 appearances over two years, before retiring from League football in 1960.After three years of non-league football, initially with Hereford United, he moved back to Jamaica.As a golfer, Delapenha first competed in the Hoerman Cup in Jamaica in 1965 when the event was open only to teams from Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad and Tobago. He has the distinction of having competed on eight winning teams for the Hoerman Cup (Men), Francis & Steele-Perkins Trophy (Senior Men) and the Higgs & Higgs Trophy (Super Senior Men).Delapenha, who first started playing golf at age 35 while in England, has also won a number of local titles, including the Jamaica Open (amateur division) and the Jamaica National Amateur Championships. He has also won the Jamaica Match Play Championships a total of seven times.

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"Lindy" in hospital, but said to be in good spirits

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Lindy Delapenha in hospital

Latest News

Saturday, June 29, 2013 | 12:09 PM

KINGSTON, Jamaica — Broadcaster and former national footballer Lindbergh ‘Lindy’ Delapenha is now in hospital.Reports are that Delapenha was admitted earlier this week after what is suspected to be a heart attack. He is said to be in good spirits.Delapenha who reports for Power 106 was head of sports at the now defunct JBC for a number of years.The eighty-six-year-old Delapenha is the first Jamaican footballer to play professionally in England; he also represented the island at golf. Like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/jamaicaobserverFollow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/JamaicaObserver

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1. We welcome reader comments on the top stories of the day. Some comments may be republished on the website or in the newspaper – email addresses will not be published.


2. Please understand that comments are moderated and it is not always possible to publish all that have been submitted. We will, however, try to publish comments that are representative of all received.


3. We ask that comments are civil and free of libellous or hateful material. Also please stick to the topic under discussion.


4. Please do not write in block capitals since this makes your comment hard to read.


5. Please don’t use the comments to advertise. However, our advertising department can be more than accommodating if emailed:mailto:advertising@jamaicaobserver.com.


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Lindy Delapenha in hospital