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CINCINNATI — Major Chris Ketteman says the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office is doing its best to keep drugs out of the Justice Center after three overdoses in the last six months.“In the old days, we were worried about tobacco coming in. This is a much more serious problem,” said Ketteman, who’s in charge of Justice Center operations.The sheriff’s office says it is continuing to investigate the apparent overdose death of a 31-year-old Satwinder Singh in March. Singh was accused of driving while intoxicated, swerving onto a sidewalk and killing a 2-year-old boy in a stroller in January.Last November, two other inmates in custody at the Justice Center also overdosed. Deputies revived both inmates with Narcan and they survived.More than 30,000 people come through the Justice Center every year and deputies follow a very strict procedure to make sure inmates don’t bring drugs into the jail.Ketteman said the screening process inmates go through before entering the jail includes everything from a patdown to a strip search to a full-body X-ray scan and the use of narcotics K-9s."They only have to be right once,” Ketteman said. “We have to be right each and every time.”The problem is not unique to Hamilton County.“It’s something that every jail across Ohio, every jail across this country is facing,” Ketteman said,In August 2018, an inmate at the Ross Correctional Facility in Chillicothe, Ohio apparently overdosed from a mixture of heroin and fentanyl, sending 27 exposed staff members to the hospital.Last week, an inmate at a jail in a Cleveland suburb died after a suspected drug overdose.“When there’s a will, there’s a way,” said Sarah Manchak, criminology professor at the University of Cincinnati.Opioids have changed the game, Manchak said, pointing out that addicts need less of the substance to get high.“It’s much easier than trying to smuggle in some of the other drugs of the past where larger quantities are needed,” Manchak said.Ketteman said the trick to preventing smuggling is to constantly adapt.“We are doing everything we can within our power and within legal means to stop it,” Ketteman said. “Are we going to be 100 percent all the time? No, but we’re doing everything we can to try to hit that.”Singh’s case is an ongoing investigation. 2286
EVANSTON, Ill. – A woman suffering from constant irritation thought she had a yeast infection, but she ended up being diagnosed with a cancer causing HPV strain.Mary Ellen Ball 189
CHICAGO, Ill. – Contigo is recalling about 5.7 million of its kids water bottles because their clear silicone spouts can detach, posing a choking hazard to children. The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) announced the recall Wednesday, saying Contigo has received a total of 427 reports of the spouts detaching, including 27 spouts found in children’s mouths. The affected water bottles were sold at Costco, Walmart, Target and other stores nationwide, as well as online on various websites, from April 2018 through February 2020 for between and . The water bottles were sold individually as well as in two-packs and three-packs.The water bottles come in three sizes (13 ounce, 14 ounce and 20 ounce) and four colors (solid color, graphics, stainless steel and stainless steel solid colors).The CPSC says the base and cover of the clear silicone spout will always be black, and only black colored spout base and spout cover models are included in this recall. Contigo is printed on the rim and along the front near the bottom of the bottles.In addition to the water bottles, the recall also involves replacement lids that were given to consumers as part of an August 2018 recall of the same product. The CPSC says consumers should immediately stop using the recalled bottles and take them away from children. Consumers with the products should contact Contigo for a free replacement bottle. 1417
CINCINNATI — When Irina Chamberlain went online to pay her student loans, she was surprised to learn that she's dead.Chamberlain — who moves, talks and isn't decomposing — said she was declared dead by the Social Security Administration in early December. Since then, she's had trouble accessing her bank accounts and making payments. "With my busy life, I'm always running, doing something," she said. "I actually thought, 'Maybe I actually died and did not realize that.' I reached for my dog and I was like, 'Can I touch them? Am I still alive, or what's going on?'"The mistake led Chamberlain to call the Social Security office, which she said had her on hold for an hour. "She said, 'Well, what's more important — to lose money or prove that you're alive?' I said both are important, but who pays me for losing a day of work," Chamberlain said.Since Chamberlain was declared dead, she hasn't been able to make deposits or withdrawls, or pay any bills. The process of being declared alive is also taking a lot of her time."I don't have time to prove that I'm alive," she said. "Somebody's mistake should exist like that, you can't [make a] mistake like that, claim somebody dead and don't even check maybe this person is alive."It could take months to get sorted out, according to Deborah Wagner, a senior attorney with Legal Aid."A lot of times it happens if your spouse dies and you have a joint bank account," Wagner said. "They report it, and for some reason the names get confused and it gets reported on both Social Security numbers."Chamberlain said the only death in her family was her father-in-law back in October."He's a male, completely different life and Social Security number, but same last name," Chamberlain said. "But everybody else in my family is alive, except me."Chamberlain is one of thousands of people this happens to each year. About 2.8 million deaths are reported to the Social Security Administration each year. A spokesperson said less than a third of a percent are corrected.In a statement, the Social Security Administration said it "recognizes erroneous death cases are very sensitive because of financial hardship and distress," and that it works to correct cases like this immediately.Wagner said Legal Aid gets about two of these cases a year."You have nothing," she said. "They've frozen your bank accounts, you can't use credit cards."It used to happen even more often, according to Mike Walters. He used to work as a claims representative with Social Security, and is now Pro Seniors."It used to be that Social Security would take phone calls and take somebody's benefits based on a phone call from a family member who said, 'My mother passed away,'" Walters said.Now, there are more checks and balances in place to avoid something like Chamberlain's situation."There were serious problems with resurrecting somebody on the computer system if they got terminated," Walters said.But why does something like this happen in the first place? Walters said the error could have had to do with the fact that Medicare used to have Social Security numbers on Medicare cards. "The Medicare number would be that spouse's Social Security number followed by a letter," he said. "Hospitals would report death in a patient, and maybe left off that letter at the end of the claim number."There are a lot of reasons why it could've happened. According to the Social Security Administration, deaths are reported to them from states, family members, funeral homes and financial institutions. 3527
DENVER, Colo. – After nearly two months of being closed, Denver clothing store Rockmount Ranchwear is reopening.“I liken this to being a startup,” said Rockmount Ranchwear’s owner Steve Weil. “This company started up in 1946 and in some ways, being closed for two months is like being a startup again.”The feeling of starting up, versus simply reopening, stems from the very new environment in which the store is opening. With coronavirus concerns still lingering, Rockmount and other businesses have to make a lot of changes to their business operations to more safely serve customers. “We are doing everything we know of to do, including masks for staff and customers,” said Weil. “Hand sanitizer when you walk in. We are segregating shirt that have been tried on to be steamed.”From retail to the service industry, every business reopening has had to modify their operations to include new safety protocols and social distancing.“On one hand, we want to avoid more people getting infected. On the other hand, we want to get the economy going again, it feels like a terrible choice,” said Howard Tiersky. Tiersky is the CEO of a company called FROM, The Digital Transformation Agency. FROM is developing an app called “Social Safety,” that hopes to make the choice to reopen easier and safer.“The main purpose of it is to act as a proximity detector,” said Tiersky. “In a workplace, each employee would have a phone with the app installed and when the app detects another person running the same app is closer than approximately 6 feet away, it will start to give you an alert.” Social Safety can also help with contact tracing within the workspace, by collecting data on employees that have worked near each other.“Technology has made it easier for viruses to spread, so I think we need to be asking ourselves how do we use technology to combat the virus as well,” said Tiersky. “I know that Apple and Google are working on embedding contact tracing abilities into both the Android and Apple operating system. I know that companies like Ford are working on wearable devices that can do similar types of things to what we are working on.” 2152