1856: William Hackley recorded in his diary: Rose at 4 and walked on the beach, returned home and bathed. At 7:30 a.m. barometer 29.66, thermometer 85, wind northeast 2, clouds 4. Went to the dentist and had one tooth filled with gold. The filling he put in on Saturday (an amalgam of Kadnium) came out last night and he put a wedge between the teeth so as to open them up if possible to prevent further filing so that he could get at the place to put in a gold plug. When I went home I found cook (Black Matilda) was sick with some fever and pains in the head, back and limbs. Sent for Dr. S.F. Jones who said he thought that she might have a severe spell and that I had better have her moved so after dinner I went to Alexander Pattersonâs and borrowed his horse and carriage and taking Annie with me drove up to the Salt Ponds and told William Dennis that Matilda (Black) was sick and that I wished he would have her moved. He came down as soon after me as he could and had her moved to Old
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It came out on the morning before a House Oversight Committee hearing on the hospital downsizing plan that new Gov. Dan McKee inherited from former Gov. Gina Raimondo that appears to be underway without legislative approval - with closed-admissions and an aggressive campaign to discharge patients.
And it came to light soon after the Department of Health denied the public records request UNAP Local 5019 has been pressing since November.
McKee has not responded to repeated entreaties from state Rep. Jessica de la Cruz and Rep. David Place to intervene.
Shortly after 5 p.m., however, his spokewoman Andrea Palagi told The Journal: An engineering firm was sent to check and address the issues specified by the Fire Marshal – they expect a 24-hour fix. The Fire Marshal and the engineering firm both confirm that it is not necessary to move patients.
Cloe Poisson :: CTMirror.org
Mikaela Coady, a physician assistant with Priority Urgent Care of Ellington, fills a syringe with a dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic at St. Bernard Church in the Rockville section of Vernon.
Gov. Ned Lamont’s decision this week to brush aside federal and state recommendations on who should next receive the COVID-19 vaccine – prioritizing people by age, rather than by underlying medical conditions or job titles – caught many members of Connecticut’s immunization advisory panel off-guard and raised questions about the group’s role in the remainder of the vaccine rollout.
The move by the governor stunned some members of the panel’s allocation subcommittee, a group tasked with providing crucial advice on who should receive a coronavirus shot and when. Members had suggested that people 16 and older with underlying health conditions and “essential workers” such as grocery store employees and postal staff be next in line.