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NBA Suspends Season After Jazz’s Rudy Gobert Tests Positive For Coronavirus

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“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” March 11, 2020

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“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” March 11, 2020

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning National or International issues.
The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “MIDDLE JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB” is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

Ulta Theft

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  The Evansville Police Department would like to have the people in these pictures identified. These pictures were taken from the Ulta Cosmetic Store at 6601 E. Lloyd Expressway where over $500 in cosmetics were stolen.  

  If anyone knows who these people are, they are asked to contact the Evansville Police Department’s Detective Office at 812-436-7979.

BREAKING NEWS: The NCAA OFFICIAL STATEMENT CONCERNING COVID-19 Advisory Panel On NCAA Events

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Statement From The NCAA COVID-19 Advisory Panel On NCAA Events

The NCAA COVID-19 Advisory Panel recognizes the fluidity of COVID-19 and its impact on hosting events in a public space. COVID-19 is spreading rapidly in the United States, and behavioral risk mitigation strategies are the best option for slowing the spread of this disease.

This is especially important because mildly symptomatic individuals can transmit COVID-19. Given these considerations, coupled with a more unfavorable outcome of COVID-19 in older adults – especially those with underlying chronic medical conditions – we recommend against sporting events open to the public. We do believe sports events can take place with only essential personnel and limited family attendance, and this protects the players, employees, and fans.

Chase on I-69 ends after Suspect Crashes, Driver and Passenger Arrested

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Last night at approximately 8:34, Trooper Angermeier was patrolling I-69 near the 51 mile-marker in Pike County when he used his radar and clocked a northbound 2014 Jaguar at 116 mph. Trooper Angermeier activated his emergency lights and siren and attempted to stop the vehicle, but the driver failed to stop and continued to travel north at a high rate of speed. The vehicle continued north into Daviess County reaching speeds over 150 mph before exiting the interstate to US 150 at Washington. The driver lost control as he was attempting to turn west onto US 150 and collided into a concrete wall. Two males immediately exited the vehicle and ran northwest. After a brief foot chase, Trooper Angermeier apprehended the driver, who was identified as Benjamin Harrison, 24, of Miami, Florida. The other male continued to flee on foot. Additional officers from Indiana State Police, Washington Police and Daviess County Sheriff’s Office arrived and set up a perimeter while Washington Police Sergeant Greg Dietsch and his K-9, Drago, searched the area. Approximately 14 minutes later the passenger, who was identified as Jason Joseph, 23, of Washington, was located laying in a field northwest of I-69 near an exit ramp. Joseph was arrested without further incident. Harrison and Joseph were transported to the Daviess County Jail where they are currently being held on bond.

Arrested and Charges:

  • Benjamin Harrison, 24, Miami, FL
  1. Resisting Law Enforcement with a Vehicle, Level 6 Felony
  2. Resisting Law Enforcement, Class A Misdemeanor
  3. Reckless Driving, Class C Misdemeanor
  • Jason Joseph, 23, Washington, IN
  1. Resisting Law Enforcement, Class A Misdemeanor

MEDIA NOTE:

Mug Photo 1 is Benjamin Harrison (Mug photo 60547)

Mug Photo 2 is Jason Joseph (Mug photo 59401)

Arresting Officer: Trooper Brayden Angermeier, Indiana State Police

Assisting Agencies: Washington Police and Daviess County Sheriff’s Office

Health Department updates COVID-19 case counts

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The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) has updated its new COVID-19 online dashboard to reflect four additional presumptive positive cases. The patients reside in Howard and Johnson counties and are all adults. This brings to 10 the number of Hoosiers who have tested positive for COVID-19.

Scientists Were Close To A Coronavirus Vaccine Years Ago. Then The Money Dried Up.

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By Mike Hixenbaugh

 

“We just could not generate much interest,” a researcher said of the difficulty in getting funding to test the vaccine in humans.

Dr. Peter Hotez, co-director of the Texas Children’s Hospital’s Center for Vaccine Development in Houston, at his lab in 2012.Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle via AP

HOUSTON — Dr. Peter Hotez says he made the pitch to anyone who would listen. After years of research, his team of scientists in Texas had helped develop a vaccine to protect against a deadly strain of coronavirus. Now they needed money to begin testing it in humans.
But this was 2016. More than a decade had passed since the viral disease known as a severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS had spread through China, killing more than 770 people. That disease, an earlier coronavirus similar to the one now sweeping the globe, was a distant memory by the time Hotez and his team sought funding to test whether their vaccine would work in humans.
Dr. Peter Hotez, co-director of the Texas Children’s Hospital’s Center for Vaccine Development in Houston, at his lab in 2012.Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle via AP
“We tried like heck to see if we could get investors or grants to move this into the clinic,” said Hotez, co-director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Children’s Hospital and dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. “But we just could not generate much interest.”
That was a big missed opportunity, according to Hotez and other vaccine scientists, who argue that SARS, and the Middle East respiratory syndrome, or MERS, of 2012, should have triggered major federal and global investments to develop vaccines in anticipation of future epidemics.
Instead, the SARS vaccine that Hotez’s team created in collaboration with scientists at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston is sitting in a freezer, no closer to commercial production than it was four years ago.  “We could have had this ready to go and been testing the vaccine’s efficacy at the start of this new outbreak in China,” said Hotez, who believes the vaccine could provide cross-protection against the new coronavirus, which causes a respiratory disease known as COVID-19. “There is a problem with the ecosystem in vaccine development, and we’ve got to fix this.”

Hotez took that message to Congress on Thursday while testifying before the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology. He argued that the new coronavirus should trigger changes in the way the government funds vaccine development.

“It’s tragic that we won’t have a vaccine ready for this epidemic,” Hotez wrote in prepared remarks. “Practically speaking, we’ll be fighting these outbreaks with one hand tied behind our backs.”

As of Sunday, there had been well over 100,000 confirmed coronavirus cases globally and at least 3,700 deaths. Public health officials are concerned that the virus, which can lead to respiratory failure brought on by pneumonia, will spread widely in the U.S. and last beyond this year — much like the seasonal flu, but more severe and potentially deadlier.

In response, pharmaceutical companies, university researchers and the federal government have been rushing to develop a vaccine. In addition to the official government effort led by the National Institutes of Health, several drugmakers are also scrambling to develop a vaccine that can be tested in humans in the coming months. But even under the rosiest of projections, one won’t be ready for more than a year, government officials say.

“I’m cautiously optimistic that we will get a vaccine,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the National Institutes of Health’s director for infectious diseases, said in an interview this week. “The thing that’s sobering is that it’s not a vaccine we’re going to have next month, so we’re going to have to tough it out through this evolution.”

Image: Dr. Peter Hotez
Dr. Peter Hotez in 2016.Jennifer Weiss / NBC News

For weeks, Hotez has been reaching out to pharmaceutical companies and federal scientific agencies — and even the Medical Research Council in the United Kingdom — asking them to provide the roughly $3 million needed to begin testing the vaccine’s safety in humans, but so far none have done so.

“We’ve had some conversations with big pharma companies in recent weeks about our vaccine, and literally one said, ‘Well, we’re holding back to see if this thing comes back year after year,'” Hotez said.

He said he hopes the seriousness of the outbreak leads to reforms in how the federal government funds vaccine development, although he notes that he called for similar changes after the SARS and Ebola outbreaks. He said he’s particularly worried about the toll the coronavirus will take on elderly nursing home residents and health care workers. But in his testimony to Congress on Thursday, Hotez also made an economic argument.

“Because nobody would invest a few million dollars into these SARS vaccines, we’re looking at, I don’t know what the number is, $10 billion, $100 billion in economic losses,” Hotez said ahead of his appearance in Washington. “The stakes are so high, and the amount of money you’re talking about to fund this research is so modest.”

Medicare & Coronavirus

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Medicare & Coronavirus

Your health, safety, and welfare in the face of the 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) is our highest priority. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), older adults and people who have severe chronic medical conditions like heart, lung, or kidney disease seem to be at higher risk for more serious COVID-19 illness. Older people are maybe twice as likely to have serious COVID-19 illness. This means that most people with Medicare are at higher risk.
Note
For the latest information on the coronavirus, including travel advisories, visit the CDC’s website.

Precautions To Take Now

  • Avoid close contact with people who are sick.
  • Clean your hands often.
  • Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds, especially after being out in public, blowing your nose, coughing, or sneezing.
  • If soap and water aren’t available, use a hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol.
  • To the extent possible, avoid touching high-touch surfaces in public places, like elevator buttons, door handles, handrails, and handshaking with people. Use a tissue or your sleeve to cover your hand or finger if you must touch something.
  • Avoid touching your face, nose, and eyes.
  • Clean and disinfect your home to remove germs: Practice routine cleaning of frequently touched surfaces—tables, doorknobs, light switches, handles, desks, toilets, faucets, sinks, and cell phones.

Extra Caution With Crowds And Travel

  • Avoid crowds, especially in poorly ventilated spaces. Your risk of exposure to respiratory viruses like COVID-19 may increase in crowded, closed-in settings with little air circulation if there are people in the crowd who are sick.
  • The CDC recommends that you defer all cruise ship travel worldwide, particularly if you also have underlying health issues.
  • Older adults and travelers with underlying health issues should avoid situations that put you at increased risk for more severe disease. In addition to avoiding crowded places, you should avoid non-essential travel such as long plane trips, and especially avoiding embarking on cruise ships.

Preparing For Healthcare Needs

  • Be sure you have over-the-counter medicines and medical supplies (like tissues) to treat fever and other symptoms. Most people will be able to recover from COVID-19 at home.
  • Have enough household items and groceries on hand so that you’ll be prepared to stay at home for a period of time.

Medicare Covers Related Needs

  • Medicare covers the lab tests for COVID-19. You pay no out-of-pocket costs.
  • Medicare covers all medically necessary hospitalizations. This includes if you’re diagnosed with COVID-19 and might otherwise have been discharged from the hospital after an inpatient stay, but instead, you need to stay in the hospital under quarantine.
  • At this time, there’s no vaccine for COVID-19. However, if one becomes available, it will be covered by all Medicare Prescription Drug Plans (Part D).
  • If you have a Medicare Advantage Plan, you have access to these same benefits. Medicare allows these plans to waive cost-sharing for COVID-19 lab tests. Many plans offer additional telehealth benefits beyond the ones described below. Check with your plan about your coverage and costs.

Telehealth & Related Services

Medicare covers “virtual check-ins” so you can connect with your doctor by phone or video, or even an online patient portal, to see whether you need to come in for a visit. If you’re concerned about illness and are potentially contagious, this offers you an easy way to remain at home and avoid exposure to others.

  • You may be able to communicate with your doctors or certain other practitioners without necessarily going to the doctor’s office in person for a full visit. Medicare pays for “virtual check-ins”—brief, virtual services with your established physician or certain practitioners where the communication isn’t related to a medical visit within the previous 7 days and doesn’t lead to a medical visit within the next 24 hours (or soonest appointment available).
  • You need to consent verbally to using virtual check-ins and your doctor must document that consent in your medical record before you use this service. You pay your usual Medicare coinsurance and deductible for these services.
  • Medicare also pays for you to communicate with your doctors using online patient portals without going to the doctor’s office. Like the virtual check-ins, you must initiate these individual communications.
  • If you live in a rural area, you may use communication technology to have full visits with your doctors. The law requires that these visits take place at specified sites of service, known as telehealth originating sites, and get services using a real-time audio and video communication system at the site to communicate with a remotely located doctor or certain other types of practitioners. Medicare pays for many medical visits through this telehealth benefit.

Other Ways Medicare Is Helping

Every day, Medicare is responsible for developing and enforcing the essential health and safety requirements that health care providers must meet. When you go to a healthcare provider, you expect a certain standard of care, and we work to make sure you get it. That includes taking additional steps in response to coronavirus:

  • Establishing new codes to allow providers to correctly bill for services related to diagnosis and treatment of the illness.
  • Instructing our national network of State Survey Agencies and Accrediting Organizations to focus all their efforts on infection prevention and other cases of abuse and neglect in nursing homes and hospitals.
  • Instructing nursing homes and hospitals to review their infection control procedures, which they’re required to maintain at all times.
  • Issuing important guidance answering questions that nursing homes may have with respect to addressing cases of COVID-19.

 

Indiana Virtual Charter Schools Linked To A Decline In Student Test Scores, A  New Study Shows

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Indiana Virtual Charter Schools Linked To A Decline In Student Test Scores, A  New Study Shows

 

Faced with low academic results at online schools across the country, supporters often defend virtual education because it provides a haven for struggling students.

But a new study in Indiana found that students fell further behind after transferring to virtual charter schools. The findings suggest that online schools post low outcomes not simply because the students they serve face challenges, but because of problems with how online learning works — and the shortfalls of not having a physical classroom.

The new research, to be published in the journal Educational Researcher, is in line with other studies that have shown that students who transfer to virtual charter schools saw significant drops in their math and reading scores.

“Parents need to know that as they’re making these choices,” said Mark Berends, director of the University of Notre Dame’s Center for Research on Educational Opportunity.

Berends, along with three other researchers, tracked seven years of recent test scores to look at how Hoosier students in grades 3-8 performed before and after they transferred to virtual charter schools. The study compares students at virtual charters to peers in brick-and-mortar classrooms with similar profiles at the same academic level.

The declines equate to a student who was performing at an average level (50th percentile) sinking to the 35th percentile in math and the 40th percentile in reading, Berends said.

It didn’t make much of a difference in which virtual charter schools they attended or which teachers they had, according to the study. And the negative effects weren’t just due to the disruption of switching schools — unlike students who transferred to brick-and-mortar charter schools, students’ scores didn’t bounce back after the transition.

Even if students had been struggling before changing to an online setting, researchers concluded that they would have fared far better had they stayed at a traditional public school.

Researchers couldn’t exactly pin down why those declines happen. Their theory is that the problem could lie in the very nature of a virtual environment being “inherently limiting” when it comes to how teachers interact with students and how many more students are in each class. It can be hard to track how long students really spend at their computers and to make sure students keep up with their schoolwork.

“Policymakers better have their eyes wide open about virtual charter schools,” Berends said. “While we don’t know what virtual charter schools are actually doing with students, we know that student achievement drops in math and reading to a significant degree.”

Profound problems at two virtual charters spurred lawmakers to look more closely at how online schools monitor student activity and what they do when students stop logging onto classes. A critical challenge lies in not being able to actually “see” what’s happening in online classrooms. A State Board of Accounts investigation recently found that two large virtual charter schools, Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy, inflated enrollment for years with inactive students, taking in $68 million more in state funding than they should have.

It’s too soon to tell whether recent changes to state law, such as requiring student onboarding and withdrawing truant students, have paid off with an improved performance at the state’s remaining virtual charter schools.

Virtual charter school enrollment fell to about 6,500 students after Indiana Virtual School and Indiana Virtual Pathways Academy collapsed and shut down last August. But thousands of other students attend virtual programs in traditional districts, putting the number of Indiana students in all-online environments well over 10,000.

This latest study on Indiana virtual charter schools backs up a broad consensus among several other studies showing online schools cause a drop in academic achievement. A widely cited national study by the Center for Research on Education Outcomes at Stanford University found that students attending online schools lost a full year’s worth of math and nearly half a year in reading.

But one administrator for a local virtual charter network said the Indiana study doesn’t capture why families choose virtual schools. Many students look to online learning because of factors such as bullying or health challenges — which isn’t necessarily reflected in test scores.

“Something has happened to that student and family so that the student is not just trying to academically succeed, but emotionally succeed as well,” said Chandre Sanchez-Reyes, who oversees Indiana Connections Academy and Indiana Connections Career Academy.

Sanchez said she doesn’t discount the research and wants her schools to be high-performing. Connections, which serves grades K-12, is rated a D by the state. Connections Career hasn’t been open long enough to receive a school grade.

But she also pointed out that some students turn to virtual charter schools for only a few years while they’re going through challenges. Frequently switching schools can be detrimental to students, and Sanchez said outcomes are much better for students who stay with Connections for a longer time.

The study’s findings of academic declines, however, could indicate that online schools are not providing enough support for their students, said Carycruz Bueno, a postdoctoral research associate at Brown University who has studied virtual education outcomes in Georgia. Online schools might suit some particular needs, but Bueno questioned whether they work for most students.

“It is a big deal that [students] are not receiving the education that we think,” Bueno said. “Maybe this is not the best solution for the average family.”

Internal tracking at virtual charter schools could reveal a lot about how much time students are spending on lessons, but researchers haven’t been able to access that type of data, which is typically owned by the private companies running the schools.

Berends, who has studied academic outcomes at different types of school options in Indianapolis, said he wants to continue to unpack what accounts for differences in school quality — such as whether the agencies overseeing charter schools or the companies running charter schools have an effect.

“Let’s figure out the conditions under which charter schools are effective or not,” he said. “So we can learn some lessons that people can follow so we can improve the sector as a whole.”