Link between depression and heart disease cuts both ways
Laura Williamson, American Heart Association News
May 25, 2021
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The day 23-year-old Jordan Chaffiotte was discharged from the hospital following her successful open-heart surgery should have been a happy one. A cause for celebration.
Instead, she found herself sobbing in the living room with her parents and sister, struggling with guilt and depression. Before I left the hospital, the doctor gave me a clear picture that it was normal after heart surgery to have feelings of depression, said Chaffiotte of Bridgewater, New Jersey. All of the doctors warned me I would feel this way, but you just don t expect it to happen to you.
The New York Stock Exchange IPO Guide, With AST Contribution, Now Available
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NEW YORK, May 13, 2021 /PRNewswire/ AST, a leading provider of ownership data management, analytics, and advisory services to corporate issuers in the U.S. and Canada and to mutual funds in the U.S., today announces its contribution to the newly released New York Stock Exchange IPO Guide. The guide, which was previously released in 2013, serves as a roadmap and manual for private companies with aspirations of launching an initial public offering (IPO).
AST contributed several articles included in this latest edition of the guide. The topics included:
Black arrest rate in Capital Region remains high; progress sought, no easy solution seen | The Daily Gazette
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CAPITAL REGION Any sense of progress in increasing racial equity in the criminal justice system is tempered by the fact that there’s a very long way to go to reach this goal.
Across New York state as a whole and in the Capital Region, Black people are arrested at a far greater rate than white people relative to their percentage of the population, Hispanic people at a somewhat greater rate and Asians at a much lower rate.
Black adults are arrested in New York significantly more often than white adults (136,219 vs. 118,952 times in 2019), despite white New Yorkers outnumbering black New Yorkers by nearly 4 to 1.
Pattersonville woman sentenced in $147K veterinarian business theft; Owner speaks of ‘incalculable’ impact | The Daily Gazette
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PATTERSONVILLE – A Pattersonville woman was sentenced this week to up to six years in state prison after admitting to taking $147,000 from the veterinary clinic where she worked. Sentencing took place after the veterinarian she stole from spoke of the “incalculable” impact from the theft, Schenectady County district attorney’s officials said.
Jennifer Dolezsar, 49, of Pattersonville, pleaded guilty earlier to one count of second-degree grand larceny, a felony.
Judge Matthew Sypniewski sentenced Dolezsar Tuesday to two to six years in state prison, in accordance with her plea agreement, prosecutors said. The judge also ordered her to pay full restitution to the victim.