St. Louis County offering lead poison testing after cinnamon applesauce pouch recall

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

St. Louis County offering lead poison testing after cinnamon applesauce pouch recall ST. LOUIS COUNTY, Mo. - Following the recent recall of certain cinnamon applesauce pouches linked to lead poisoning cases, the St. Louis County Department of Public Health is taking proactive measures to ensure the safety and health of residents.The recalled cinnamon applesauce products include Wanabana apple cinnamon fruit puree pouches, Schnucks-brand cinnamon-flavored applesauce pouches, and Weis-brand cinnamon applesauce pouches. Missouri expecting two rounds of winter weather All three county health centers are available for walk-in lead screenings. Testing will be billed to insurance and for those who are uninsured, screenings will cost 29 dollars.

Woman arrested for cutting man during fight, goes to laundromat for help

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

Woman arrested for cutting man during fight, goes to laundromat for help ST. LOUIS - A woman was arrested Thursday morning after police say she cut a man's hand during a fight at a home.It happened around 1:30 on Goodfellow Boulevard near Lena Avenue in the Walnut Park West neighborhood. Police search for man missing from closed nursing home The woman was still carrying a knife covered in blood when she showed up at a nearby laundromat, asking people to call 911. She went back to the home, where police arrested her.

Denver begins cleanup of Zuni Street encampment, transports migrants to shelters and housing

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

Denver begins cleanup of Zuni Street encampment, transports migrants to shelters and housing A fence enclosed the hundreds of tents lining the blocks around Zuni Street and Speer Boulevard on Wednesday morning as Denver police guarded the area and outreach workers helped the migrants who have been living there get ready to leave.The city of Denver on Wednesday began the process of shutting down the makeshift campsite that first popped up in October, busing the Venezuelan migrants who had subsisting on the streets to large shelter spaces or apartment units.People packed their belongings into big yellow trash bags, some taking their tents with them, others leaving them behind. Workers called it “organized chaos” as they figured out where to send everyone — though a tent that caught fire early Wednesday morning briefly paused that work.In October, the number of asylum seekers who came to Denver rose significantly, reaching a peak at the time of 3,000. But the numbers haven’t slowed, and as of Wednesday afternoon, 4,394 migrants were staying in city shel...

United submits first plans for 113 acres purchased near DIA

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

United submits first plans for 113 acres purchased near DIA United Airlines wants to have the first facility on a 113-acre site it purchased near Denver International Airport up and running by fall 2027, according to plans submitted to the city.The company and ZGF Architects said in a “large development review” document submitted to Denver in late December that “an immediate need exists to establish a new simulator building, supporting approximately 12 full flight simulators” on the site northwest of Tower Road and 64th Avenue.It’s that building that the company hopes to have operational three-and-a-half years from now.United announced in August that it had paid $33 million to buy the undeveloped land from Denver-based L.C. Fulenwider Inc.United already trains pilots in Denver. Its existing flight training center is located on about 22 acres along Quebec Street in Central Park, near where Denver’s Stapleton Airport used to be. That campus is “the primary pilot training facility for United’s global operations” and trains 16,500 pilots annuall...

Colorado’s quiet killer: Alcohol ends more lives than overdoses, but there’s been no intervention

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

Colorado’s quiet killer: Alcohol ends more lives than overdoses, but there’s been no intervention Colorado consistently has one of the worst rates of drinking-related death in the country, but alcohol hasn’t gotten nearly the attention devoted to other drugs. In this four-part series, The Denver Post investigated why so many Coloradans are dying from drinking, and what the state could do in an effort to reduce the number of people lost.By the most conservative measures, alcohol kills nearly as many Coloradans as drug overdoses. When counting deaths from chronic conditions caused and worsened by alcohol, drinking’s toll far exceeds that of illicit drugs.Deaths from drinking shot up since 2018, but during that time, Colorado didn’t take steps designed to change that trajectory, like raising alcohol taxes. The only major changes in liquor laws during that time expanded where residents could buy alcohol.The months-long investigation included interviews with dozens of experts, families that lost loved ones, people in recovery from alcohol addiction and groups trying...

Colorado alcohol deaths surged 60% in 4 years, but there’s been no public outcry or push to save lives

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

Colorado alcohol deaths surged 60% in 4 years, but there’s been no public outcry or push to save lives Fatal drug overdoses had been slowly rising for a decade, but when the number of Coloradans killed by fentanyl soared during the first two years of the pandemic, state leaders, law enforcement officials, public health managers — even ordinary people — called for drastic action.Hoping to stem the loss of life, lawmakers took the controversial step in 2022 of making it a felony to possess even a small amount of fentanyl, the synthetic opioid responsible for most of the state’s fatal overdoses.Schools and colleges began stocking the overdose-reversal medication naloxone. Families and friends of people killed by fentanyl rallied for more treatment resources. Nonprofits conducted educational campaigns about the dangers of counterfeit medications, advising “one pill can kill.”Colorado’s quiet killerAlcohol-related deaths in Colorado spiked during the pandemic, and the state ranks as one of the worst for deaths due to drinking. In this four-part series, ...

Turning skiers into soldiers: New exhibit tells the singular story of Colorado’s 10th Mountain Division

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

Turning skiers into soldiers: New exhibit tells the singular story of Colorado’s 10th Mountain Division The saga of the 10th Mountain Division “ski troops” who trained for mountain warfare at Camp Hale near Leadville during World War II, and their subsequent combat heroism in northern Italy, has been told many times through movies and books.The Colorado Snowsports Museum in Vail has helped keep their memories alive for five decades with artifacts, dioramas, photos and films, in part because 10th Mountain veterans helped found dozens of U.S. ski areas after the war including Arapahoe Basin, Aspen and Vail. In fact, Camp Hale is only 10 miles south of Vail. Last year President Biden visited the site when he formally designated it the Camp Hale-Continental Divide National Monument.But there is still more to tell, and it is on display in a new 5,000-square-foot exhibition, which opened in November on Veterans Day, at the History Colorado Center in downtown Denver. “Winter Warriors: The 10th Mountain Division in World War II” is the first exhibit set in History Colo...

Alcohol addiction treatment is available in Colorado, but people struggle to get the help they need

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

Alcohol addiction treatment is available in Colorado, but people struggle to get the help they need Warren Musselman credits his post-alcohol life to two things: finally finding a program that offered counseling he could connect with, and deciding he just couldn’t suffer through withdrawal again.He’d already cycled through detox centers 27 times.“For me, what finally took is that I got sick to death of going through detox,” Musselman said.Withdrawal from alcohol is an uncomfortable process at best and can be dangerous without the right medications. Musselman, of Estes Park, said it was only during his last stay that he received help to understand why he drank, and learned how to cope when he went home. Before that, he had only encountered 12-step programs, which he found overly rigid.“You’ve spent years not having any other tool (than alcohol) to deal with that depression or anxiety, so you use that tool even though it makes things worse,” he said, adding that he learned other options in counseling. “Stopping drinking doesn’t f...

Am I drinking too much? Here are two ways to find out

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

Am I drinking too much? Here are two ways to find out If you’re wondering whether you’re drinking too much, the answer might depend on whether you’re thinking about your long-term risk of disease, or about whether your relationship with alcohol is becoming unhealthy right now.The U.S. Dietary Guidelines are based on reducing the risk of long-term health problems, like an increased risk of multiple cancers, diabetes and liver disease. They offer you a relatively simple answer, with a daily maximum allowance for cisgender men and women. (The guidelines don’t specify what transgender people should do.)The question of whether alcohol is playing an unhealthy role in your life isn’t as straightforward, though, and is based on how well you’re functioning, rather than a drink threshold.One rule of thumb is that alcohol is a problem if a person has injured themselves or someone else while drinking, or if family or friends have expressed concern about the person’s alcohol use, said Dr. Joseph Schacht, wh...

It was almost curtains for a Boulder theater company, but new leadership has changed that

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 08:48:54 GMT

It was almost curtains for a Boulder theater company, but new leadership has changed that When Jessica Robblee and Mark Ragan sat down in the airy lobby of Boulder’s Dairy Arts Center last month to discuss their first season as the Boulder Ensemble Theatre Company’s producing artistic director and managing director respectively, it had been nearly a year since co-founders Stephen Weitz and Rebecca Remaly announced their departure.The arrival of new artistic director Jessica Robblee (left) and managing director Mark Ragan is the kind of kismet worth applauding. (Michael Ensminger, provided by BETC)In December 2022, the fate of one of the area’s finest theater companies was in question. The notion that BETC (or “Betsy,” to its patrons) would be no more was dismaying. Not only were BETC’s productions crisply crafted, they also were cast with some of the area’s best actors.After 17 years, and post-pandemic, Remaly and Weitz, the parents of a young son, were worn out. As theater artists, they also wanted to explore their creativity in fresh ways.Their BETC work remained exper...