Cardiologist Swaiman Singh came from the US to volunteer for medical aid at the farmers’ protest right when it began. Nothing had prepared him for the scaremongering and police highhandedness he experienced while treating patients, including policemen, during the tractor rally on Republic Day.
He doesn’t understand why he and his team of medical personnel got beaten up by the police ironically, they spent several hours treating injured cops why he saw no government ambulances despite the size of the event, or why some people spread rumours of violence and confusion about the routes through the day, aggravating matters.
NJHA Installs Douglas Struyk as 2021 Board Chair
CEO of Christian Health Care Center is 1st Post-Acute Leader to Serve the Role
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PRINCETON, N.J., Jan. 29, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Douglas A. Struyk, President and CEO of Christian Health Care Center in Wyckoff, today was installed as chair of the Board of the New Jersey Hospital Association. In addition to hospitals, NJHA s nearly 400 members span the continuum of healthcare providers; Struyk, whose organization provides senior life, short-term rehab and mental health services, is the first chair in NJHA s history from the post-acute/long-term care and behavioral health communities.
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Rutgers researchers have been awarded $1.6 million from the National Institutes of Health in support of the creation of a national collaborative network seeking to identify risk and protective factors that may allow clinicians or public health professionals to predict which children are at greatest risk for serious illness from SARS-CoV-2 infection, the virus that causes COVID-19.
While children are less likely than adults to become severely ill, some develop severe acute respiratory illness; they also are susceptible to multisystem inflammatory syndrome of children (MIS-C), a critical illness that can occur several weeks after infection.
The two-year grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) of the NIH will support the development of a national network of networks, thus building an infrastructure that ensures that children from around the country can be a part of the study. The project is designed to incorpor
Manchester Police say driver fatigue may have been a contributing factor to a fatal single-vehicle crash involving a Jeep Wrangler on Route 70 around 2:00 am Saturday morning.
Officers found the Jeep overturned in the wooded area near mile marker 35.5 along the left lane and shoulder of the highway.
Margaret Palilonis, 22, of Woolwich Township was heading west on Route 70, police said, when she veered off road and onto the shoulder where she drove along a grassy area, was able to get back on the road and re-entered the roadway but as she did the vehicle overturned multiple times before coming to rest on the other side of the road.
Tue January 19, 2021 - Northeast Edition
MyCentralJersey.com
A rendering of the proposed $750 million Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey Cancer Pavillion, which would be built on the site of Lincoln Annex School. (DEVCO rendering)
The New Brunswick, N.J., city planning board has approved the construction of the state s first free-standing cancer hospital, a focal point of a $750 million project.
The application submitted by Cancer Pavilion Redevelopment Associates LLC, an affiliate of New Brunswick Development Corporation, or DEVCO, to construct the 11-story, 519,000-sq.-ft. Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey Pavilion passed by a unanimous vote the week of Jan. 11.