LI mom delivers baby in dramatic fashion — with assist from 2 Suffolk cops newsday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
EAST PATCHOUGE, Long Island (WABC) There was a special reunion Friday as a new mother met with the Suffolk County police officers who delivered her baby daughter on the side of a Long Island road.
Officers Danielle Congedo and Daniel Rosado responded to a 911 call reporting a woman in labor in a vehicle in front of 166 Hospital Road in East Patchogue at approximately 7:20 a.m. Wednesday.
When they arrived, they found Nicole Gonzalez in labor in the front passenger seat of the vehicle.
Officer Congedo, with the assistance of Officer Rosado, delivered a baby girl. She said, I have to push, I have to push, Congedo said. My partner went and got a blanket, and she pushed about two times, and the baby came. I had the baby in my arms, and I looked at the baby, and maybe three or five seconds went, and I was just hoping that she was going to cry out, and she did.
FDNY firefighter, 38, who lost both legs in crash which killed a teacher, 44, leaves court in a wheelchair after posting $100,000 bail for driving the wrong way down Long Island highway while drunk
Firefighter Joseph Norris was pictured leaving the Suffolk County Supreme Court in a wheelchair with his pregnant wife
Prosecutors said Norris had a blood alcohol content of .29 before causing the Sunken Meadow State Parkway crash
Anthony Mariano, 44, was picking up pizza for his fiance when he was killed last year after his car was allegedly hit by Norris
Norris pleaded not guilty to vehicular homicide, for which he faces up to 25 years in prison, and eight other counts
By Ernie Mundell and Robert Preidt
HealthDay Reporter THURSDAY, March 11, 2021 (HealthDay News) The trauma and loss of stroke can often leave survivors with long-term depression, and women appear to be at special risk, new research shows. We did not expect that the cumulative risk of depression would remain so persistently elevated, said study author Dr. Laura Stein, an assistant professor of neurology at the Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai, in New York City.
She said that, all too often, post-stroke depression is not simply a transient consequence of difficulties adjusting to life after stroke.
In the study, Stein s team analyzed data from Medicare patients aged 65 and older who were hospitalized for either ischemic stroke (more than 174,000) or heart attack (more than 193,000) from July 2016 to Dec. 31, 2017. An ischemic stroke is the most common form of stroke and is caused by blocked blood flow to the brain.
Study: Depression often follows stroke, women at higher risk
By (0)
Research shows that depression is somewhat common after a stroke, and that women are at much greater risk. Photo by cocoparisienne/Pixabay
The trauma and loss of stroke can often leave survivors with long-term depression, and women appear to be at special risk, new research shows. We did not expect that the cumulative risk of depression would remain so persistently elevated, said study author Dr. Laura Stein, an assistant professor of neurology at the Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai, in New York City.
Advertisement
She said that, all too often, post-stroke depression is not simply a transient consequence of difficulties adjusting to life after stroke.