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Waylon Reid, 2, is comforted by his father, Zachary, at Sacred Heart Medical Center in Spokane. Waylon nearly drowned Friday in his grandparentsâ pond near Troy. He was transported to Spokane after the incident and was released from the hospital Monday in what caregivers consider a âMotherâs Day miracle.âCourtesy of the Reid family
Courtesy the Reid family 2-year-old makes rapid recovery after nearly drowning in pond near Troy
By Scott Jackson Daily News staff writer May 11, 2021
Providence Sacred Heart in Spokane experiencing spike in COVID-19 patients
There is less space available in Spokane County hospitals right now than there was at the beginning of the winter surge, according to SRHD. Author: Megan Carroll Updated: 11:42 AM PDT April 29, 2021
SPOKANE COUNTY, Wash. Coronavirus hospitalizations are climbing in Spokane County as the area experiences an uptick in COVID-19 cases.
Information on the status of the county s healthcare system from April 19-25 provided by the Spokane Regional Health District indicates that COVID-19 hospitalizations are back on the upswing and there is less space available in hospitals than there was at the beginning of the winter surge.
OSF HealthCare has 14 hospitals and numerous other facilities throughout Illinois and Michigan.
The cause of the outage is still under investigation, but it began about 3:45 a.m. Friday.
By Saturday afternoon, the system had been restored at these OSF locations: OSF Heart of Mary Medical Center in Champaign, OSF Saint Anthony s Health Center in Alton, OSF St. Mary Medical Center in Galesburg, OSF Saint James-John W. Albrecht Medical Center in Pontiac, OSF St. Joseph Medical Center in Bloomington, OSF Sacred Heart Medical Center in Danville, OSF Saint Paul Medical Center in Mendota, OSF Saint Luke Medical Center in Kewanee, OSF Holy Family Medical Center in Monmouth, OSF Saint Elizabeth Medical Center in Ottawa, and OSF St. Francis Hospital in Escanaba, Michigan.
(WEEK) - OSF Healthcare announced multiple hospitals are back online Saturday after network issue Friday that impacted IT systems.
The following hospitals are back online, and Media Relations Coordinator Libby Allison says they expect others to follow throughout the day:
OSF Saint James-John W. Albrecht Medical Center in Pontiac
OSF St. Joseph Medical Center in Bloomington
OSF Sacred Heart Medical Center in Danville
OSF Saint Paul Medical Center in Mendota
OSF Saint Luke Medical Center in Kewanee
OSF Holy Family Medical Center in Monmouth
OSF Saint Elizabeth Medical Center in Ottawa
OSF St. Francis Hospital in Escanaba, MI)
OSF says Home Care Services and OSF Hospice Home are also fully online.
Leopold Aspenleiter
Leo Aspenleiter passed away Friday, April 16, 2021 at Sacred Heart Medical Center in Spokane, WA after a lengthy but determined battle against various health issues. Leo was born in Speyer/Speier, Ukraine, South Russia (Soviet Union) on December 16, 1931 to Jakob and Emilie (nee Schanz) Aspenleiter.
Leo married Margaret (Marge) Ridl on August 30, 1956 at Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic Church in New Hradec, ND, and immediately moved to Spokane to begin 65 years of building their life together and raising their four kids.
Surviving the Holodomor (also known as the “Terror-Famine” or “Great Famine”) and the Bolshevik/Communist regime that killed his grandfather Valentin, father Jakob and numerous other family members, Leo and his mother, Emilie, narrowly escaped Ukraine by way of walking hundreds of kilometers and cattle train with bombs exploding all around them, they finally made it through Poland and into Germany in the middle of WWII.