https://www.afinalwarning.com/517816.html (Natural News) Everest Romney, a 17-year-old basketball player from Draper, Utah, near Salt Lake City, was admitted to the hospital the other day after suffering deadly blood clots following an injection for the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19).
Local news outlets reported that Romney started feeling sick almost immediately after the jab. He reported symptoms of neck swelling and severe headaches, which his pediatrician wrote off as a pulled neck muscle.
Romney’s mom told
ABC4 that her son proceeded to develop fevers in conjunction with the incessant headaches, prompting her to urge doctors to take the matter more seriously.
When JayBee played basketball for the University of New Mexico, he was not a fan of Utah or, more precisely, the Utes. After he left the sport as a career, he wanted to find something else he was passionate about. When he spoke at a treatment center, he found that passion: mental health and helping those in need.
In 2017, he went to work for University Neuropsychiatric Institute (UNI), now known as Huntsman Mental Health Institute, as a psychiatric technician providing care to those with mental health and substance abuse needs. After working with youth at UNI, he then joined the receiving center, which opened in 2012. It is an integral part of Salt Lake Valley s response to mental health crises. We are serving the homeless and individuals in crisis, JayBee says.
Read Time: 4 minutes
Today in
, researchers at Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah report critical new insights into how cells mount an attack against melanoma tumors.
Melanoma is an aggressive type of skin cancer that can arise from excess exposure to sun, frequent sunburns, genetics, and other environmental factors. Melanoma, like all cancers, begins within cells. Specially designed and refined over billions of years, cells are experts at working to root out and fix routine errors that arise. A tumor begins when a cell makes faulty copies of itself over and over again. If left unchecked, these faulty cell copies continue to grow into complex ecosystems that become tumors. Some tumors, like melanomas, can go on to develop mechanisms to sustain themselves with blood flow and oxygen. They can also send the cancerous cells through the body to proliferate in other organs, which ultimately causes death.
Published May 11, 2021 at 9:14 AM MDT Listen • 5:09
/
U.S. Department of Defense
Hill Air Force Base is home to high-tech aircraft and habitat for kestrels, hawks, owls and other raptors. That can lead to bird strikes on airplanes flying in and out of the airfield. This story and more in the Tuesday morning news brief.
Tuesday morning, May 11, 2021
State
Opting For Ranked Choice Voting
Utah cities and towns had until Monday to decide if they want to use ranked choice voting in this year’s local elections, and as of Monday afternoon, 23 of them have chosen to do so. Ranked choice voting lets voters choose candidates in order of preference. If no one gets a majority of votes, the person with the fewest is eliminated. The process continues until there’s a winner. Heber City is one of the municipalities that opted in this year, and Mayor Kelleen Potter said it would save the city money by eliminating a primary election and could help people feel
Credit: Huntsman Cancer Institute
SALT LAKE CITY - Today in
Nature Communications, researchers at Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah report critical new insights into how cells mount an attack against melanoma tumors.
Melanoma is an aggressive type of skin cancer that can arise from excess exposure to sun, frequent sunburns, genetics, and other environmental factors. Melanoma, like all cancers, begins within cells. Specially designed and refined over billions of years, cells are experts at working to root out and fix routine errors that arise. A tumor begins when a cell makes faulty copies of itself over and over again. If left unchecked, these faulty cell copies continue to grow into complex ecosystems that become tumors. Some tumors, like melanomas, can go on to develop mechanisms to sustain themselves with blood flow and oxygen. They can also send the cancerous cells through the body to proliferate in other organs, which ultimately causes death.