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Like their adult counterparts, U.S. children and adolescents had favorable blood pressure (BP) trends stalled or even reversed in the last decade, according to a large National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) analysis.
Children, ages 8 to 12 years, had age-adjusted mean BP fall from 102.4/57.2 mm Hg in 1999-2002 to 101.5/51.9 mm Hg in 2011-2014, and then increase to 102.5/53.2 mm Hg in 2015-2018. Prevalence of hypertension virtually stayed flat from 5.2% in 1999-2002 to 4.6% in 2015-2018.
Adolescents, ages 13 to 17 years, had mean BP decrease from 109.2/62.6 mm Hg in 1999-2002 to 108.4/59.6 mm Hg in 2011-2014, then change little to 108.4/60.8 mm Hg in 2015-2018, reported Shakia Hardy, PhD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and colleagues.
Joseph Flynn s Perspective March 17, 2021
Recently, hundreds of new voting regulations have been proposed in state legislatures across the country, once again reigniting an old fight steeped in prejudice and racism.
Despite the declarations of Article 1 and the 14th, 15th, and 19th Amendments to the Constitution, keeping those rights has been a fight since 1865. During the Jim Crow era nefarious means disenfranchised African Americans: poll taxes, literacy tests, incarceration for petty offenses, and terrorism suppressed Black voters. Today we are dealing with thinly veiled practices like voter ID, closing polling places in minority communities and opening more in White communities, withholding water in long lines, withholding requested resources to hire poll workers, requiring ex-felons to pay thousands of dollars in fees, and purging voter rolls without notification, among other practices.
Attorneys argue Crosby mayor’s defamation case in appeals court
Each attorney had a chance to argue their case and the Minnesota Court of Appeals has 90 days to make a decision on the lawsuit case filed by Crosby Mayor James Hunter, 4:00 am, Mar. 8, 2021 ×
The Minnesota Court of Appeals heard oral arguments Feb. 25 in the defamation case brought by Crosby Mayor James Hunter against Crosby city officials.
Hunter, who was elected mayor in the November 2020 election, appealed the Crow Wing County District Court’s Aug. 7 decision to dismiss his defamation case. Hunter filed the defamation case Sept. 9, 2019, stating he lost his reputation, his elected office and spent over two years of his life charged with serious crimes as a result of the actions of Crosby city officials.
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