February 22, 2021
A 41-year-old resident of Burlington is in critical condition after crashing into another vehicle on Route 1 in West Windsor on Sunday evening.
Police were dispatched to Route 1 south just south of Carnegie Boulevard at 7:13 p.m. Sunday due to a serious motor vehicle crash involving two vehicles. The initial investigation by police revealed that the Burlington resident, who was driving a 2017 Lincoln MKZ, was traveling south on Route 1 in the left lane, and then changed lanes just south of Carnegie Center Boulevard. When he changed lanes to the right, he struck the back of a 2020 Acura SUV being driven by a Cranbury resident. The Acura spun in the roadway, police said. The Lincoln MKZ then went off of the roadway to the right, struck a tree and a utility pole guide wire, and destroyed a hotel sign before coming to rest about 30 feet from the roadway in the snow.
The Attorney General’s Office released video footage on Jan. 29 that captured events surrounding a single-vehicle accident in which a man was injured when he sped away from a police officer after a traffic stop in October.
Keron Roundtree, 23, of Trenton, succumbed to those injuries on Nov. 17, at which time the investigation transferred from the Burlington County Prosecutor’s Office to the Attorney General’s (AG) Office, according to information provided by the AG on Jan. 29.
Video recordings from Bordentown Township Police Officer Keith Alexander’s body-worn camera and vehicular mobile video recorder from the accident on Oct. 27 are being released pursuant to policies established by the Attorney General’s Office in 2019 that are designed to promote the fair, impartial and transparent investigation of fatal police encounters, according to the statement.
Hossein Sadrzadeh is an Iranian-American medical doctor from
Boston, Massachusetts, United States. He made headlines during the new coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic after receiving a vaccine from
Moderna, a biotechnology company based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Sadrzadeh is married. Here are 13 more things about him:
He was born in Iran in 1980.
In 2006, he graduated from the
Mazandran University of Medical Sciences in Sari, Iran.
After graduating from the Mazandran University of Medical Sciences, he worked as a principal and director of education at
Tehran Institute of Technology in Tehran, Iran.
Massachusetts General Hospital and at the
Harvard Medical School.
In 2012, he was a recipient of the
Basketball player Keyontae Johnson, of the University of Florida Gators, was hospitalized after collapsing on court on Saturday during a game against Florida State, reported CBS Sports. Johnson, 21, was placed in a medically induced coma following his collapse and is now awake and in stable condition, according to a statement from Johnson s parents on Tuesday.
Johnson, along with several of his Gators teammates, was diagnosed with COVID-19 in November. The reason for Johnson s collapse has not yet been disclosed, and it s not known if his collapse had anything to do with his COVID diagnosis. What is a medically induced coma?
Here are N.J.’s safest hospitals. See how yours fared in new national report.
Updated Dec 15, 2020;
Posted Dec 15, 2020
St. Barnabas Medical Center, Livingston, N.J. is the only hospital in the state to receive straight-A s in the Leapfrog safety report card since the surveys began in 2012.
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New Jersey hospitals rank 17th best in the nation for safety, a drop from eighth place a year ago and a potentially troubling sign as the pandemic continues to make unrelenting demands on healthcare professionals, according to the latest Leapfrog Hospital Safety report card.
Six hospitals went up a grade while 15 hospitals went down a grade, according to an analysis by the New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute, a consumer, research nonprofit that jointly releases the report with Leapfrog.