Press Release – MidCentral District Health Board MidCentral DHB is reminding parents and whnau to exercise public health measures following a recent spike in the spread of respiratory illnesses in the MidCentral region. As is the case throughout New Zealand, MidCentral DHB is experiencing a significant …
MidCentral DHB is reminding parents and whānau to exercise public health measures following a recent spike in the spread of respiratory illnesses in the MidCentral region.
As is the case throughout New Zealand, MidCentral DHB is experiencing a significant increase in the number of babies and children presenting to our facilities with respiratory illnesses, which includes the Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV).
Wednesday, 7 July 2021, 4:18 pm
MidCentral DHB is reminding parents and whānau to
exercise public health measures following a recent spike in
the spread of respiratory illnesses in the MidCentral
region.
As is the case throughout New Zealand,
MidCentral DHB is experiencing a significant increase in the
number of babies and children presenting to our facilities
with respiratory illnesses, which includes the Respiratory
Syncytial Virus (RSV).
MidCentral DHB Healthy Women,
Children and Youth Clinical Executive and Paediatrician Dr
Jeff Brown said a number of these children were in high
dependency care and the Child Assessment Unit had been
repurposed with inpatient beds and cots to manage the
Bay Area Buyers Flock To Lake Tahoe As The Summer Season Kicks Off forbes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from forbes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
by Paul Edwards
In science and mathematics, problems based on faulty data or corrupt inputs yield worthless results. Sound outcomes depend on accurate foundational elements. With physical substances and numbers exactitude is possible. The means, that is, always justify the end. Or not… Garbage in; garbage out.
In social and political constructs and, in fact, in all relating to the tangled, confusing labyrinth of human affairs, absolute precision can never be attained. The best that can be said of them is that the sounder the foundation on which a social or political premise is based, the more likely it is that forecasts of its evolution and prediction of its future state may be possible.
By Matt Jones
06/28/21
The town of Mansfield, Conn., broke ground last week on the state’s first net-zero elementary school. Local politicians, town administrators, parents and students attended the ceremony on Thursday, June 25. The new school, which has yet to be named, will replace the town’s three existing elementary schools.
“Mansfield will go from three elementary schools and one middle school, to one elementary school and a middle school,” said Mansfield Town Manager Ryan Aylesworth.
The school’s construction was a decade in the making, according to Aylesworth, following needs assessments, studies, and discussions with administrators. Funding was approved through a referendum held in Nov. 2020, allocating up to $50.5 million for the project. In April 2021, the Mansfield School Building Project Committee approved a bid by Newfield Construction Group LLC in Hartford, Conn., of about $36.4 million. The school is scheduled to open in time for the fall 2022 semester.