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Page 27 - அப்ஸ்டேட் மருத்துவ பல்கலைக்கழகம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Officers who rescued man from burning motel detail incident, wife says they re heroes to her | Achievers

WATERTOWN — The four officers didn’t know there was a fire Monday morning until they unlocked the door and watched smoke pour into the hallway, instinctively leading them to hit the deck and crawl to the man inside. “For them to risk their lives to go in there and pull him out of that fire — there is no award or not enough thank yous or recognition that could be given for that,” said Tarra S. Murphy, the wife of the man inside. Mrs. Murphy thought Robert W. Murphy, her husband of 35 years, was dead as she sat in her bedroom Monday, being told he was locked inside a burning building.

Community rallies as 19-year-old Ogdensburg student suffers head trauma in ski crash

Researchers receive $2 1 million NIH grant to study causes of congenital heart defects

Researchers receive $2.1 million NIH grant to study causes of congenital heart defects Congenital heart defects are the most common type of birth defect, affecting nearly 1% of births in the United States each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Doctors have been unable to lower that number due to a lack of knowledge about their source. Thanks to a $2.1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, an interdisciplinary team of researchers will work to advance the understanding of causes of birth defects. The team includes principal investigator (PI) Lisa Manning, the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Physics and founding director of the BioInspired Institute at Syracuse University; co-PI Jeff Amack, Upstate Medical University; co-investigator Heidi Hehnly, assistant professor of biology; and Paula Sanematsu, postdoctoral research associate, physics. Manning, Amack and Hehnly are all members of the BioInspired Institute, an interdisciplinary team of faculty

I lost my miracle baby : 4-year-old Utica boy dies after fighting COVID-19 | Health Matters

UTICA — On Monday, Xavier Harris was his usual happy self. The 4-year-old couldn’t sit still, running around the house and teasing his older brothers. He was a flurry of motion, his mom said. But Xavier — who was called Xavy by his family — spiked a fever that day, said his mom, Chantel Brooks. Like any kid, he’d had fevers before and it wasn’t too high, so his mom gave him some Tylenol. On Tuesday, Brooks learned her mom had tested positive for COVID-19. Xavier had spent a night over the weekend at his grandmother’s. They had worn masks, but Brooks was still worried.

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