ESCONDIDO
A 77-year-old driver was killed early Tuesday when he crashed into a tree and metal poles near a restaurant’s patio area in Escondido and the vehicle overturned, partially ejecting him, police said.
Pedro Trevino of Escondido was trapped in the vehicle after the rollover crash, which was reported shortly before 12:15 a.m. on East Valley Parkway, east of Rose Street, police said.
Investigators believe Trevino was driving west on Valley when his Mitsubishi Galant hit the curb multiple times, went up onto the sidewalk and slammed into a palm tree.
“The car seems to have rolled over as it struck two metal poles in the parking lot near the restaurant,” police Lt. Kevin Toth said in a statement.
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Monoclonal anti-body therapy has been used for more than 30 years to treat cancer and infectious diseases, and hospitals have been using it to treat COVID-19 patients with success since the FDA emergency authorization.
“Millions of years of evolution have taught us how to fight a virus, and we’re taking that technology, that ability, that the human body has, and we’re just duplicating it,” said Chief Medical Officer for Palomar Health, Omar Khawaja, MD, MBA.
Normally, when you get a virus your body has an immune response and creates antibodies, but that doesn t happen with COVID-19 as it is a new virus.
Escondido
Action is anticipated on several major residential development projects in Escondido in 2021, from construction of approved projects to consideration of proposed new developments by the city’s Planning Commission and City Council.
The two largest proposed housing developments Palomar Heights in central Escondido and Harvest Hills, near the San Diego Zoo Safari Park are both expected to come before the council in early to mid-2021, said Mike Strong, Escondido director of community development.
Palomar Heights, which is proposed to include 510 apartments and townhomes and about 10,000 square feet of commercial space, would be located on the site of the old Palomar Hospital campus in central Escondido.