Page 11 - திருத்தம் ஆரோக்கியம் பராமரிப்பு News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Special Report-As more women fill America s jails, medical tragedies mount | WTAQ News Talk | 97 5 FM · 1360 AM
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Special Report-As more women fill America s jails, medical tragedies mount | 104 1 WIKY
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By Peter Eisler, Linda So, Jason Szep and Grant Smith
Dec 16 (Reuters) - By the time anyone at the Milwaukee County Jail noticed Shade Swayzer had given birth alone in a filthy cell, her baby was dead.
Swayzer had arrived a week earlier, on July 6, 2016, picked up after a dispute with a hotel clerk and charged with disorderly conduct and a parole violation from an old burglary conviction. She was clearly pregnant, just a few weeks from her due date, and police had her evaluated at a hospital before bringing her to jail. The fetus was deemed active and healthy, and Swayzer cleared for detention.
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During the worst of his 10-day stay in San Diego’s Central Jail, Richard Lantz was sure he would die.
The Spring Valley resident was arrested for the first time in his life Halloween night after a tussle with a neighbor in his condominium complex.
By then the novel coronavirus was already sweeping through San Diego County jails.
Lantz, 51, has underlying health conditions, including diabetes. He said in an interview this week that jail quarantine protocols the sheriff’s department has implemented to protect inmates from COVID-19 turned out to be less rigorous in practice than they are on paper.