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Elementary school closes as illness sickens 2 dozen a week after student dies – msnNOW

  1. Elementary school closes as illness sickens 2 dozen a week after student dies msnNOW
  2. Following unexplained death of kindergartner, Detroit elementary school reopens amid cluster of “mystery” illnesses WSWS
  3. Detroit school reopening after influenza outbreak killed 1 student, infected others Click On Detroit | Local 4 | WDIV
  4. Detroit Health Department says 4 other students tested positive for Haemophilus influenzae WXYZ 7 Action News Detroit
  5. Mystery illness killed kindergartner, should parents worry? WWJ
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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CNN Exclusive: A single Iranian attack drone found to contain parts from more than a dozen US companies


Washington
CNN
 — 

Parts made by more than a dozen US and Western companies were found inside a single Iranian drone downed in Ukraine last fall, according to a Ukrainian intelligence assessment obtained exclusively by CNN.

The assessment, which was shared with US government officials late last year, illustrates the extent of the problem facing the Biden administration, which has vowed to shut down Iran’s production of drones that Russia is launching by the hundreds into Ukraine.

CNN reported last month that the White House has created an administration-wide task force to investigate how US and Western-made technology – ranging from smaller equipment like semiconductors and GPS modules to larger parts like engines – has ended up in Iranian drones.

Of the 52 components Ukrainians removed from the Iranian Shahed-136 drone, 40 appear to have been manufactured by 13 different American companies, according to the assessment.

The remaining 12 components were manufactured by companies in Canada, Switzerland, Japan, Taiwan, and China, according to the assessment.

The options for combating the issue are limited. The US has for years imposed tough export control restrictions and sanctions to prevent Iran from obtaining high-end materials. Now US officials are looking at enhanced enforcement of those sanctions, encouraging companies to better monitor their own supply chains and, perhaps most importantly, trying to identify the third-party distributors taking these products and re-selling them to bad actors.

NSC spokesperson Adrienne Watson told CNN in a statement that “We are looking at ways to target Iranian UAV production through sanctions, export controls, and talking to private companies whose parts have been used in the production. We are assessing further steps we can take in terms of export controls to restrict Iran’s access to technologies used in drones.”

There is no evidence suggesting that any of those companies are running afoul of US sanctions laws and knowingly exporting their technology to be used in the drones. Even with many companies promising increased monitoring, controlling where these highly ubiquitous parts end up in the global market is often very difficult for manufacturers, experts told CNN. Companies may also not know what they are looking for if the US government has not caught up with and sanctioned the actors buying and selling the products for illicit purposes.

And the Ukrainian intelligence assessment is further proof that despite sanctions, Iran is still finding an abundance of commercially available technology. For example, the company that built the downed drone, Iran Aircraft Manufacturing Industries Corporation (HESA), has been under US sanctions since 2008.

One major issue is that it is far easier for Russian and Iranian officials to set up shell companies to use to purchase the equipment and evade sanctions than it is for Western governments to uncover those front companies, which can sometimes take years, experts said.

“This is a game of Whack-a-Mole. And the United States government needs to get incredibly good at Whack-a- Mole, period,” said former Pentagon official Gregory Allen, who now serves as Director of the Artificial Intelligence Governance Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “This is a core competency of the US national security establishment – or it had better become one.”

Allen, who recently co-authored an investigation into the efficacy of US export controls, said ultimately, “there is no substitute for robust, in-house capabilities in the US government.”

He cautioned that it is not an easy job. The microelectronics industry relies heavily on third party distributors and resellers that are difficult to track, and the microchips and other small devices ending up in so many of the Iranian and Russian drones are not only inexpensive and widely available, they are also easily hidden.

“Why do smugglers like diamonds?” Allen said. “Because they’re small, lightweight, and worth a ton of money. And unfortunately, computer chips have similar properties.” Success won’t necessarily be measured in stopping 100% of transactions, he added, but rather in making it more difficult and expensive for bad actors to get what they need.

The rush to stop Iran from manufacturing the drones is growing more urgent as Russia continues to deploy them across Ukraine with relentless ferocity, targeting both civilian areas and key infrastructure. Russia is also preparing to establish its own factory to produce them with Iran’s help, according to US officials. On Monday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Ukrainian forces had shot down more than 80 Iranian drones in just two days.

Zelensky also said that Ukraine had intelligence that Russia “is planning a prolonged attack with Shaheds,” betting that it will lead to the “exhaustion of our people, our air defense, our energy sector.”

A separate probe of Iranian drones downed in Ukraine, conducted by the UK-based investigative firm Conflict Armament Research, found that 82% of the components had been manufactured by companies based in the US. 

Damien Spleeters, the Deputy Director of Operations at Conflict Armament Research, told CNN that sanctions will only be effective if governments continue to monitor what parts are being used and how they got there.

“Iran and Russia are going to try to go around those sanctions and will try to change their acquisition channels,” Spleeters said. “And that’s precisely what we want to focus on: getting in the field and opening up those systems, tracing the components, and monitoring for changes.”

Experts also told CNN that if the US government wants to beef up enforcement of the sanctions, it will need to devote more resources and hire more employees who can be on the ground to track the vendors and resellers of these products.

“Nobody has really thought about investing more in agencies like the Bureau of Industry Security, which were really sleepy parts of the DC national security establishment for a few decades,” Allen, of CSIS, said, referring to a branch of the Commerce Department that deals primarily with export controls enforcement. “And now, suddenly, they’re at the forefront of national security technology competition, and they’re not being resourced remotely in that vein.”

According to the Ukrainian assessment, among the US-made components found in the drone were nearly two dozen parts built by Texas Instruments, including microcontrollers, voltage regulators, and digital signal controllers; a GPS module by Hemisphere GNSS; a microprocessor by NXP USA Inc.; and circuit board components by Analog Devices and Onsemi. Also discovered were components built by International Rectifier – now owned by the German company Infineon – and the Swiss company U-Blox.

CNN sent emailed requests for comment last month to all the companies identified by the Ukrainians. The six that responded emphasized that they condemn any unauthorized use of their products, while noting that combating the diversion and misuse of their semiconductors and other microelectronics is an industry-wide challenge that they are working to confront.

“TI is not selling any products into Russia, Belarus or Iran,” Texas Instruments said in a statement. ” TI complies with applicable laws and regulations in the countries where we operate, and partners with law enforcement organizations as necessary and appropriate. Additionally, we do not support or condone the use of our products in applications they weren’t designed for.”

Gregor Rodehuser, a spokesperson for the German semiconductor manufacturer Infineon, told CNN that “our position is very clear: Infineon condemns the Russian aggression against Ukraine. It is a blatant violation of international law and an attack on the values of humanity.” He added that “apart from the direct business it proves difficult to control consecutive sales throughout the entire lifetime of a product. Nevertheless, we instruct our customers including distributors to only conduct consecutive sales in line with applicable rules.”

Analog Devices, a semiconductor company headquartered in Massachusetts, said in a statement that they are intensifying efforts “to identify and counter this activity, including implementing enhanced monitoring and audit processes, and taking enforcement action where appropriate…to help to reduce unauthorized resale, diversion, and unintended misuse of our products.”

Jacey Zuniga, director of corporate communications for the Austin, Texas-based semiconductor company NXP USA, said that the company “complies with all applicable export control restrictions and sanctions imposed by the countries in which we operate. Military applications are not a focus area for NXP. As a company, we are vehemently opposed to our products being used for human rights violations.”

Phoenix, Arizona-based semiconductor manufacturing company Onsemi also said it complies with “applicable export control and economic sanctions laws and regulations and does not sell directly or indirectly to Russia, Belarus or Iran nor to any foreign military organizations. We cooperate with law enforcement and government agencies as necessary and appropriate to demonstrate how Onsemi conducts business in accordance with all legal requirements and that we hold ourselves to the highest standards of ethical conduct.”

Swiss semiconductor manufacturer U-Blox also said in a statement that its products are for commercial use only, and that the use of its products for Russian military equipment “is in clear breach of u-blox’s conditions of sale applicable to customers and distributors alike.”

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CDC confirms investigation in Strep A Outbreak that has killed more than a dozen children in the UK

Leading US health officials have finally acknowledged that pandemic restrictions they supported may have fueled a boom in respiratory bugs currently overwhelming hospitals.

Healthcare systems across the country have been pushed to the brink after an unseasonably high number of flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) cases with some pediatric units forced to erect inflatable tents to treat patients in parking lots.

There are signs that both viruses may have already peaked, but last week the country was dealt a further blow when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said it was investigating a rise in severe Strep A infections – a normally harmless bacterial infection that has killed more than a dozen children in the UK and is rising across Europe.

In a statement to DailyMail.com, the CDC said it was ‘hearing from some doctors and state health departments about an apparent increase in iGAS infections among children in parts of the United States, and is investigating this increase.’

In a noticeable shift in rhetoric, the agency added: ‘Like many infections during the COVID-19 pandemic, iGAS infections declined substantially. 

‘Mitigation measures (e.g., school and workplace closures, masking) used during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic helped to reduce the spread of many viruses and bacteria.’

This map shows where an uptick in Strep A infections is being reported in the US so far. The children’s hospital in Texas, the largest in the country, says it is seeing four times more child patients with Strep A than at this time last year. The CDC has only confirmed ‘anecdotal reports’ of rising infections in the US 

The CDC does say however that it is not clear if there are more infections this year than in those previous, or if the wave is just striking America earlier than usual. 

Immune naivety contributed to the eruption of a ‘tripledemic’ in the US this year, with RSV and the flu both erupting this winter alongside Covid.

Bacterial infections like Strep A often strike after viral illnesses do, as a person’s immune system has been worn down and can not fight off the bacteria as effectively.

Alarms were raised that Strep A infections this year could be more deadly than those previous after a spate of severe cases in the UK caused 19 deaths, an unseasonably high number.

It is generally a mild illness that is most dangerous to the elderly. The CDC say around 14,000 to 25,000 Americans get infected annually and 1,500 to 2,300 die.

At least two children have died from Strep A in Colorado in recent weeks, raising fears the US could suffer a similar pediatric outbreak to what is happening in the UK.

In a further worrying sign, doctors in Arizona, Colorado, Texas, Washington and West Virginia are also reporting an increase in severe Strep A infections this year.

The CDC does not track the infection the same way it does viral illnesses like Covid, the flu and RSV, though, making national infection and death figures unclear.

Strep A symptoms include rashes and sores around the body, flushed cheeks, a sore throat, muscle aches and fever. It is a relatively mild illness that does not cause many pediatric deaths each year

America’s tripledemic has peaked already: Flu cases fall 30% in a week 

America’s dreaded ‘tripledemic’ looks set to be short-lived, with weekly flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) figures already on the decline.

Today’s weekly flu report shows there were just over 30,000 confirmed flu infections nationwide during the week ending on December 10.

While this is preliminary data, it is a 30 percent drop from the previous week and the first time cases have fallen since the start of flu season.

Meanwhile, Dr Ashish Jha said at a White House press briefing Thursday that RSV infections had already peaked with numbers starting to come down ‘pretty quickly’.

Fears about a so-called ‘tripledemic’ first emerged over summer when Australia and New Zealand – whose winter is during America’s summer – suffered devastating flu seasons.

Experts have pointed to lockdowns, mask mandates and other pandemic orders over the past two years as reason why this year’s flu season has been more brutal than those past.

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Dr Kathryn Moffet, a pediatric infectious disease expert at West Virginia University Medicine, in Morgantown, told DailyMail.com that her hospital was seeing more cases than usual.

Her hospital, the biggest in the state, was seeing more children than usual present Step symptoms in early December than the usual year.

She blamed the abnormal flu patterns in previous years – where viruses like the flu and RSV barely circulated.

‘We disrupted our virus transmission. We did not have the normal [circulation] where you would expect RSV and pneumonia [in young children],’ she told DailyMail.com.

‘A lot of what we did with social distancing and masks [caused this].’

At Texas Children’s Hospital, the state’s largest pediatric hospital in Houston, doctors are reporting a four-fold increase in Strep infections this year compared to pre-Covid levels.

Doctors at Phoenix Children’s Hospital reported an uptick in cases to NBC last week.

At Children’s Hospital Colorado, officials reported that more children aged 10 months to six years old were being hospitalized than usual for Strep A complications.

The situation is being exacerbated by a shortage of amoxicillin currently striking the country.

The antibiotic is often used by young children sick with illnesses like the flu and RSV to prevent bacterial infections from emerging soon after.

Supply chain issues and a surge in demand caused by an unusually brutal flu season have left the drug in short supply across the US.

There is hope that America’s brutal flu season, dubbed the worst since the 2009 Swine Flu Pandemic, by some experts, could soon wind down.

The CDC reported 31,287 confirmed flu infections during the week ending on December 10 – a 30 percent drop from the previous week.

Cases of RSV continued their sharp decline too, with the 4,391 cases logged being a 63 percent drop from the previous week – and the lowest total since late-September.

Covid is starting to rise once again as the annual nuisances fall. The US recorded 65,550 daily infections last week, a 26 percent jump over the past two weeks.

Deaths have also increased 63 percent over the past two weeks to 408 per day. 

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CDC confirms investigation in Strep A Outbreak that has killed more than a dozen children in the UK

Leading US health officials have finally acknowledged that pandemic restrictions they supported may have fueled a boom in respiratory bugs currently overwhelming hospitals.

Healthcare systems across the country have been pushed to the brink after an unseasonably high number of flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) cases with some pediatric units forced to erect inflatable tents to treat patients in parking lots.

There are signs that both viruses may have already peaked, but last week the country was dealt a further blow when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said it was investigating a rise in severe Strep A infections – a normally harmless bacterial infection that has killed more than a dozen children in the UK and is rising across Europe.

In a statement to DailyMail.com, the CDC said it was ‘hearing from some doctors and state health departments about an apparent increase in iGAS infections among children in parts of the United States, and is investigating this increase.’

In a noticeable shift in rhetoric, the agency added: ‘Like many infections during the COVID-19 pandemic, iGAS infections declined substantially. 

‘Mitigation measures (e.g., school and workplace closures, masking) used during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic helped to reduce the spread of many viruses and bacteria.’

This map shows where an uptick in Strep A infections is being reported in the US so far. The children’s hospital in Texas, the largest in the country, says it is seeing four times more child patients with Strep A than at this time last year. The CDC has only confirmed ‘anecdotal reports’ of rising infections in the US 

The CDC does say however that it is not clear if there are more infections this year than in those previous, or if the wave is just striking America earlier than usual. 

Immune naivety contributed to the eruption of a ‘tripledemic’ in the US this year, with RSV and the flu both erupting this winter alongside Covid.

Bacterial infections like Strep A often strike after viral illnesses do, as a person’s immune system has been worn down and can not fight off the bacteria as effectively.

Alarms were raised that Strep A infections this year could be more deadly than those previous after a spate of severe cases in the UK caused 19 deaths, an unseasonably high number.

It is generally a mild illness that is most dangerous to the elderly. The CDC say around 14,000 to 25,000 Americans get infected annually and 1,500 to 2,300 die.

At least two children have died from Strep A in Colorado in recent weeks, raising fears the US could suffer a similar pediatric outbreak to what is happening in the UK.

In a further worrying sign, doctors in Arizona, Colorado, Texas, Washington and West Virginia are also reporting an increase in severe Strep A infections this year.

The CDC does not track the infection the same way it does viral illnesses like Covid, the flu and RSV, though, making national infection and death figures unclear.

Strep A symptoms include rashes and sores around the body, flushed cheeks, a sore throat, muscle aches and fever. It is a relatively mild illness that does not cause many pediatric deaths each year

America’s tripledemic has peaked already: Flu cases fall 30% in a week 

America’s dreaded ‘tripledemic’ looks set to be short-lived, with weekly flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) figures already on the decline.

Today’s weekly flu report shows there were just over 30,000 confirmed flu infections nationwide during the week ending on December 10.

While this is preliminary data, it is a 30 percent drop from the previous week and the first time cases have fallen since the start of flu season.

Meanwhile, Dr Ashish Jha said at a White House press briefing Thursday that RSV infections had already peaked with numbers starting to come down ‘pretty quickly’.

Fears about a so-called ‘tripledemic’ first emerged over summer when Australia and New Zealand – whose winter is during America’s summer – suffered devastating flu seasons.

Experts have pointed to lockdowns, mask mandates and other pandemic orders over the past two years as reason why this year’s flu season has been more brutal than those past.

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Dr Kathryn Moffet, a pediatric infectious disease expert at West Virginia University Medicine, in Morgantown, told DailyMail.com that her hospital was seeing more cases than usual.

Her hospital, the biggest in the state, was seeing more children than usual present Step symptoms in early December than the usual year.

She blamed the abnormal flu patterns in previous years – where viruses like the flu and RSV barely circulated.

‘We disrupted our virus transmission. We did not have the normal [circulation] where you would expect RSV and pneumonia [in young children],’ she told DailyMail.com.

‘A lot of what we did with social distancing and masks [caused this].’

At Texas Children’s Hospital, the state’s largest pediatric hospital in Houston, doctors are reporting a four-fold increase in Strep infections this year compared to pre-Covid levels.

Doctors at Phoenix Children’s Hospital reported an uptick in cases to NBC last week.

At Children’s Hospital Colorado, officials reported that more children aged 10 months to six years old were being hospitalized than usual for Strep A complications.

The situation is being exacerbated by a shortage of amoxicillin currently striking the country.

The antibiotic is often used by young children sick with illnesses like the flu and RSV to prevent bacterial infections from emerging soon after.

Supply chain issues and a surge in demand caused by an unusually brutal flu season have left the drug in short supply across the US.

There is hope that America’s brutal flu season, dubbed the worst since the 2009 Swine Flu Pandemic, by some experts, could soon wind down.

The CDC reported 31,287 confirmed flu infections during the week ending on December 10 – a 30 percent drop from the previous week.

Cases of RSV continued their sharp decline too, with the 4,391 cases logged being a 63 percent drop from the previous week – and the lowest total since late-September.

Covid is starting to rise once again as the annual nuisances fall. The US recorded 65,550 daily infections last week, a 26 percent jump over the past two weeks.

Deaths have also increased 63 percent over the past two weeks to 408 per day. 

Read original article here

Landslide kills 1, leaves up to a dozen missing on Italy’s resort island of Ischia

Rescuers walk past damaged vehicles after heavy rainfall triggered landslides that collapsed buildings and left at least one person dead and as many as 12 missing, in Casamicciola, on the southern Italian island of Ischia, November 26, 2022.

Salvatore Laporta/AP


Milan — Heavy rainfall triggered a massive landslide early Saturday on the southern Italian resort island of Ischia that destroyed buildings and swept parked cars into the sea, leaving at least one person dead and up to 12 missing. The body of a woman was pulled from the mud, the Naples prefect Claudio Palomba, told a news conference.
 
With raining continuing to fall, rescuers were working gingerly with small bulldozers to pick through mud and detritus seven yards deep in some places in the search for possible victims. Reinforcements arrived by ferry, including teams of sniffer dogs to help the search efforts.
 
The force of the mud sliding down the mountainside just before dawn was strong enough to send cars and buses onto beaches and into the sea at the port of Casamicciola, on the north end of the island, which lies off Naples.
 
The island received nearly five inches of rain in six hours, the heaviest rainfall in 20 years, according to officials.

Streets were impassable and mayors on the island urged people to stay home. At least 100 people were reported stranded without electricity and water, and about 70 were housed in a community gymnasium.
 
There was early confusion over the death toll. Vice Premier Matteo Salvini initially said that eight people had been confirmed dead, followed by the interior minister saying that no deaths had yet been confirmed, while 10 to 12 were missing.
 
“The situation is very complicated and very serious because probably some of those people are under the mud,” Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi told RAI state TV from an emergency command center in Rome.

A small bulldozer clears mud after heavy rainfall triggered landslides that collapsed buildings in Casamicciola, on the southern Italian island of Ischia, November 26, 2022.

Salvatore Laporta/AP


Italian news agency ANSA reported that at least 10 buildings had collapsed. One family with a newborn that was previously reported missing was located and was receiving medical care, according to the Naples prefect.
 
Video from the island showed small bulldozers clearing roads, while residents used hoses to try to get mud out of their homes. One man, identified as Benjamin Iacono, told Sky TG24 that mud overwhelmed three adjacent shops that he owns, completely wiping out his inventory. He estimated damage at 100,000 euros to 150,000 euros ($104,000 to $156,000).

A view of houses damaged by landslides that collapsed buildings and left at least one person dead in Casamicciola, on the southern Italian island of Ischia, November 26, 2022.

Salvatore Laporta/AP


Firefighters and the Coast Guard were conducting search and rescues, initially hampered by strong winds that prevented helicopters and boats from reaching the island.

The densely populated mountainous island is a popular tourist destination for both its beaches and spas. A 4.0-magnitude quake on the island in 2017 killed two people, causing significant damage to the towns of Casamicciola and neighboring Lacco Ameno.  

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Tornadoes: At least 1 dead, multiple people missing in Oklahoma after more than a dozen tornadoes hit 3 states, officials say



CNN
 — 

At least one person was killed and multiple people are missing after tornadoes hit Oklahoma, Texas and Arkansas late Friday, damaging homes and knocking out power for thousands as officials launch search and rescue efforts.

The person who died was in McCurtain County in southeastern Oklahoma, which suffered significant storm damage after a possible tornado hit the city of Idabel, county emergency manager Cody McDaniel said.

Late Friday, authorities were trying to determine the extent of damages and injuries, McDaniel said, adding, “It’s not good.”

In Texas near the state’s border with Oklahoma, at least 50 homes were damaged or destroyed in Lamar County as of Friday evening, the sheriff’s office said.

Multiple tornado warnings were in effect in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Missouri Friday night, meaning tornadoes were reported to be on the ground or indicated by weather radar. The weather service recommends residents in warning areas to move to a safe like a basement or interior room.

A preliminary accounting Friday evening from the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center shows nine tornadoes formed in Texas, four in Arkansas and one in Oklahoma.

Overnight tornadoes can be particularly dangerous because they can be hard to see as they move quickly through an area, and it’s also more challenging to ensure residents are warned during those hours.

Plus, more than 90,000 homes and businesses were without power across Arkansas, Louisiana, southeastern Oklahoma and eastern Texas as of early Saturday, according to Poweroutage.us.

Most of the Texas tornadoes reported occurred along the Red River border with Oklahoma, with widespread damage reported in two counties.

The National Weather Service confirmed late Friday that a tornado moving 45 mph was detected over the city of Wrightsville in Pulaski County, Arkansas, just south of Little Rock.

The number of tornadoes recorded will likely increase Saturday, and the intensity of each one will not be known until local National Weather Service offices conduct damage surveys, which may take several days.

Tornado and severe thunderstorm watches for the region lasted until early Saturday morning.

Lamar County officials declared a disaster after at least 10 people were injured when a tornado tore through the area, according to a news release from the county’s sheriff’s office. No deaths have been reported.

Two of those injured suffered critical injuries, the sheriff’s office said. Earlier Friday, a first responder was injured during the storms in the county and underwent surgery, County Constable Steven Hill told CNN.

“There has been quite a bit of damage and some injuries,” Lamar County Constable Travis Rhodes told CNN Friday night.

In nearby Hopkins County, at least four houses were damaged Friday, according to the county’s sheriff’s office.

A woman in Choctaw County, Oklahoma, was injured by a falling tree as she was trying to get to a storm shelter, Lewis Collins, a volunteer at the Choctaw Office of Emergency Management, told CNN. It’s unclear whether a tornado had occurred in that area.

Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt said he’s praying for those impacted by the tornadoes.

“Search & rescue teams and generators forwarded to the Idabel area,” he sad. “Storms hit in Bryan, Choctaw, and Le Flore counties, among others. Additional flash flooding in some areas.”

The Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management and Homeland Security is urging residents to report storm damage online to help coordinate their response.



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Listeria outbreak leads to recall of cheeses sold at more than a dozen retailers



CNN
 — 

Old Europe Cheese, Inc., based in Benton Harbor, Michigan, is issuing a voluntary recall of its Brie and Camembert cheeses because of a possible outbreak of listeria, according to the US Food and Drug Administration.

Affected cheeses were sold at about a dozen major retailers in the US and Mexico, the FDA said.

Recalled products contain a best-buy date through December 14, 2022, and were distributed between August 1 and September 28, 2022.

Retailers who likely sold the recalled cheeses include Albertsons, Safeway, Meijer, Harding’s, Shaw’s, Price Chopper, Market Basket, Raley’s, Save Mart, Giant Foods, Stop & Shop, Fresh Thyme, Lidl, Sprouts, Athenian Foods and Whole Foods, the company said.

However, other retailers may have received the recalled products as well, and not all stores on the list may have actually received the cheeses in question.

Additionally, the FDA press release said that some recalled products may have been repackaged into smaller containers by retailers and sold with different labeling and product information.

Listeria monocytogenes is an organism “which can cause serious and sometimes fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people and others with weakened immune systems,” the FDA said. It can cause high fever, headaches, stiffness, nausea and diarrhea. In pregnant woman, it can cause miscarriages and stillbirths.

The FDA has linked six cases of listeria from 2017 to 2022 to a strain found in samples taken at Old Europe Cheese’s Michigan facility, though the company’s products were not previously linked to the cases.

Cases were found in California, Georgia, Texas, Michigan, New Jersey and Massachusetts. Five of the six resulted in hospitalization; there have been no deaths reported, according to an investigation between the FDA, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and local and state health officials.

The FDA is advising consumers who may have purchased any of the products to discard them, as well as use extra vigilance in cleaning and sanitizing any surfaces that may have come into contact with the products. FDA also noted that listeria can survive in refrigerated environments.

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California’s electric car mandate could spread to over a dozen states

More than a dozen states are debating whether to adopt California’s plan to ban new gas cars by the year 2035.

Several of the 17 states are likely to move forward with the plan, including Washington, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon and Vermont. California’s restrictions are the strictest in the country, mandating that all new vehicles run on either electricity or hydrogen by 2035.

The mandate is facing fierce pushback in states like Minnesota, where the Minnesota Auto Dealers Association argues the weather prohibits the use of solely electric vehicles.

“The technology is such that the vehicles just don’t perform that well in cold weather,” Scott Lambert, the trade group’s president, told the Associated Press. “We don’t all live in southern California.”

WASHINGTON AND MASSACHUSETTS TO FOLLOW CALIFORNIA’S GAS CAR SALES BAN

California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a COVID-19 recovery package, Senate Bill 314, that will allow restaurants and bars to keep parklets and give them a one-year grace period to apply for permanent expansion. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

A car is parked at an electric charging station in San Francisco, Thursday, Aug. 25, 2022. California moved Thursday to require 100% of new cars, trucks and SUVs sold in the state to be powered by electricity or hydrogen by 2035. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu) (AP / AP Newsroom)

HERE’S WHAT THE ELECTRIC F-150 LOOKS LIKE

Colorado is also among the states where the measure faces firm opposition. 

“While the governor shares the goal of rapidly moving towards electric vehicles, he is skeptical about requiring 100% of cars sold to be electric by a certain date as technology is rapidly changing,” the Colorado Energy Office told the AP.

Meanwhile, Republicans in Virginia are attempting to cut themselves off from California’s standards. The state passed legislation subjecting itself to California’s standards in 2021, when Democrats controlled the legislature and the governor’s office.

Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin called the legislation “ridiculous” last week, and has bent his administration toward cutting the ties.

“In an effort to turn Virginia into California, liberal politicians who previously ran our government sold Virginia out by subjecting Virginia drivers to California vehicle laws,” Youngkin wrote in a statement on Twitter. “Now, under that pact, Virginians will be forced to adopt the California law that prohibits the sale of gas and diesel-fueled vehicles.”

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“I am already at work to prevent this ridiculous edict from being forced on Virginians. California’s out of touch laws have no place in our Commonwealth,” he continued.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Ukrainian military says it repelled more than dozen attacks

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — The Ukrainian military said Monday that it had repelled more than a dozen Russian attacks in the country’s east and north, including attempts to advance on key cities in the eastern industrial heartland known as the Donbas.

In its regular Facebook update, the military’s general staff said Russian troops had attempted to push towards Kramatorsk, one of two major cities in the eastern Donetsk province that remain under Ukrainian control, but “they failed completely and chaotically retreated to their previous positions.”

In the same post, the military said Russian forces had staged an unsuccessful assault on Bakhmut, a strategic town in the Donetsk region whose capture would pave the way for Russia to take Kramatorsk and the de facto Ukrainian administrative capital, Sloviansk.

The Donetsk region is one of two provinces that make up the Donbas, where the fighting has largely been focused in recent months, since Kremlin forces retreated from around the capital, Kyiv.

Russian officials announced the full capture of the Luhansk region, the second of the two, early last month, though its Ukrainian governor has repeatedly claimed that Kyiv’s forces are holding out in a small area near the regional boundary.

In the same update, the military claimed that Russia had tried and failed to break through Ukrainian defense lines in the northern Kharkiv region, home to Ukraine’s second-largest city, but were “met harshly and thrown back.”

Meanwhile, the Russian FSB, the KGB’s main successor agency, said that it had thwarted a “sabotage and terrorist attack” on an oil pipeline in Russia’s southern Volgograd region, which it blamed on two Russian citizens colluding with Ukrainian security forces.

The claims could not be immediately verified.

Elsewhere, Russian and Ukrainian officials traded more accusations Monday about renewed shelling of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, with each side alleging that the other was responsible for the attacks that have raised fears of a catastrophe.

The press office of the Kremlin-backed administration in Enerhodar, the Russian-controlled city where the plant is located, told the Interfax agency that Ukrainian forces were carrying out “massive shelling” of the facility, as well as Enerhodar’s residential and industrial areas.

According to the statement, the shelling came from nearby Nikopol, a Ukrainian-held city which faces the plant across the Dnieper River.

The mayor of Nikopol later said that Russians were shelling Enerhodar themselves.

Mayor Yevhen Yevtushenko and other municipal authorities in Nikopol have repeatedly accused Russian troops stationed at the plant of shelling the city, knowing that Ukrainian forces there were unlikely to fire back.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy renewed his call for fresh sanctions against Moscow and its nuclear industry in response to the situation. He described Russian forces’ actions there as “nuclear blackmail” that may embolden malign actors worldwide.

As Russian forces kept up their artillery barrages around Ukraine, at least three Ukrainian civilians were killed and 20 others wounded, Ukrainian officials said.

The deaths and 13 of the wounded were blamed on Russian shelling that hit towns and villages in the Donetsk region, regional officials said.

In the country’s second-largest city of Kharkiv, seven civilians were wounded by Russian shelling that hit residential buildings and an area near a bus stop. Kharkiv Gov. Oleh Synyehubov said the wounded included a 80-year-old woman.

Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Lt. Gen. Igor Konashenkov said Monday that Russian warplanes have struck Ukrainian army positions in the southern Kherson region and in the Donetsk region. He added that the Russian air force also hit a facility in the Kharkiv region, killing at least 100 and wounding 50 “mercenaries” from Poland and Germany. His claims could not be independently verified.

Speaking at the opening of an arms show outside Moscow, Russian President Vladimir Putin hailed the military, which he said was “liberating the Donbas step by step.”

He also vowed to expand arms sales to Russian allies, whom he praised for continuing to offer firm support to Moscow in the face of Western pressure.

For its part, the Ukrainian military claimed to have destroyed more than 10 Russian warehouses with ammunition and military equipment in the past week.

In other developments Monday:

— Lawyers for American basketball star Brittney Griner filed an appeal against her nine-year Russian prison sentence for drug possession, Russian news agencies reported. Griner, a center for the Phoenix Mercury and a two-time Olympic gold medalist, was convicted on Aug. 4. She was arrested in February at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport after vape canisters containing cannabis oil were found in her luggage.

— The Ukrainian parliament extended martial law and the country’s general mobilization for another 90 days.

— Zelenskyy dismissed the heads of three regional branches of Ukraine’s top security agency, SBU, in the Kyiv, Lviv and Tarnopil regions. Zelenskyy’s office didn’t elaborate on the reasons behind the move. Last month, he dismissed SBU chief Ivan Bakanov and a chief prosecutor, saying their departments had too many people who faced accusations of collaborating with the Russians.

— The trial of five European men captured in eastern Ukraine got underway in a court administered by Kremlin-backed separatists, Russian media reported.

Three of the five — a Swede, a Croat and a Briton — could face the death penalty over charges of serving as mercenaries and “undergoing training in order to seize power” under the laws of the self-proclaimed, unrecognized Donetsk People’s Republic, Russian state media reported.

The remaining two, both British, face prison terms.

— A British military reconnaissance plane violated Russia’s airspace, the Russian defense ministry said.

The ministry said in a statement that Russian air defense forces in Russia’s Arctic northwest had spotted the plane heading towards the border from the direction of the Barents Sea. A Russian fighter identified the aircraft as a British Air Force RC-135 and forced it out of Russian territory, the ministry said.

— German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Berlin would not back several fellow European countries that have called for an EU-wide move to stop issuing tourist visas to Russian citizens.

The nations backing such a ban say that Russians should not be able to take vacations in Europe while Moscow wages war in Ukraine. Finland and Denmark want an EU decision and some EU countries bordering Russia already no longer issue visas to Russians.

“This is not the war of the Russian people. It is (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s war and we have to be very clear on that topic,” Scholz said.

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Follow the AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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Doctors fish out more than a dozen tiny maggots from man’s eye

Enlarge / Illustration of a Oestrus ovis, sheep botfly

On Wednesday, doctors in France reported a rare case of tiny sheep bot fly larvae—aka maggots—infesting the outer surface of a man’s eyeball.

The small, spiky larvae were seen slithering around the man’s peeper, which explained the redness and itchiness he was experiencing. Doctors counted more than a dozen of the disturbing grub-like critters outside the eyeball and surrounding tissue. Doctors had no choice but to pluck the bloodsuckers out, one by one, using forceps. The doctors also prescribed topical antibiotic treatments in case they missed any bugs.

Sheep bot flies, or Oestrus ovis, are found worldwide in areas with sheep. They typically deliver their squirmy offspring to the nostrils of sheep and goats. The larvae mature in their nasal nurseries, then fall to the ground and pupate in the environment before transforming into parasitic pests. But, on rare occasions, adult female flies become bleary-eyed and lay festering broods in a human eyeball, causing a disease called ophthalmomyiasis. This is typically a dead end for the flies; the larvae generally don’t survive to adulthood in the human eye. But if you think the unfortunate infestation is nothing to wince at, you’d be incorrect.

Eye-opening

Oestrus ovis larvae have bands of thick spikes around the outside of their bodies and piercing hooks in their mouth. The spikes can cause irritation and abrasions on the outer membrane of the eye as they wriggle around. This can lead to redness, itchiness, swelling, watering, and a feeling of a foreign body in the eye.

In rare cases, the larvae can also burrow their way inside the eyeball. Once inside, they can cause more severe damage, including to vision. Symptoms can manifest as floaters in vision, flashes of light, lines through vision, and eye pain. Even if the maggots die inside the eyeball—whether by laser treatments or natural causes—the lingering larval corpses can cause serious inflammation, which can further imperil vision. Overall, the outcomes of ophthalmomyiasis, which can be caused by a variety of flies, can range from mild, short-lived discomfort to blindness.

Oestrus ovis larvae (right).”>
Enlarge / External ophthalmomyiasis (left, showing larvae present in eye) due to Oestrus ovis larvae (right).

Regarding the case in France, published Wednesday in The New England Journal of Medicine, the man was lucky. The infestation was only external ophthalmomyiasis, meaning the larvae didn’t get inside his eyeball. The 53-year-old man went to an emergency department after dealing with itchiness in his right eye for several hours. He told doctors he was gardening earlier in the day near a sheep farm and felt something get into his right eye, though he didn’t know what it was.

Doctors noted that the man had 20/20 vision in both eyes, but his right eye was red and irritated. A closer look revealed the squirmy interlopers. After the maggots were manually removed, the man was given topical treatment. At a 10-day follow-up, the man’s eye was back to normal with no other symptoms.

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