OC nursing home fined over sandwich choking death KGET 17 Bakersfield Wed, 25 Feb 2009 10:08 AM PST An Anaheim nursing home has been fined $75,000 for reporting an elderly man died of heart attack when he actually choked to death on a tuna sandwich. | Go Red for Women: The heart of the matter Midland Daily News Wed, 25 Feb 2009 10:07 AM PST    Denial is killing us.     As proactive as women have learned to become in early detection of breast cancer, only one in five women accept that heart disease is their leading cause of death as a population. | Lady Goblins show size of heart in loss Harrison Daily Times Wed, 25 Feb 2009 10:06 AM PST GREENWOOD â" The Harrison Lady Goblinsâ hopes for a playoff berth were dashed last week. After the two final games this week, so of the athletes will move on to softball or soccer. Usually the athletes that are on the way to another sport, donât put much into their current sport. | Finally Some Heart-Warming News The Chattanoogan Wed, 25 Feb 2009 09:52 AM PST I'm really sick and tired of bad news. Every day I am reminded of who and what on this planet is bad. Bad brokers, bad athletes, bad parents, bad economy, bad politicians, bad headache, bad everything. Bad, bad, bad and getting much worse every single day. | O.C. Nursing Home Fined For Sandwich Choking Death CBS 2 Los Angeles Wed, 25 Feb 2009 09:42 AM PST An Anaheim nursing home has been fined $75,000 for reporting an elderly man died of heart attack when he actually choked to death on a tuna sandwich. California Health and Human Services documents show the Anaheim Crest Nursing Center resident suffered from dementia and was supposed to be given only pureed food. | k1014 BC-KS-HeartTransplants- 02-25 0227 Hays Daily News Wed, 25 Feb 2009 09:39 AM PST Eds: APNewsNow. Will be led. WICHITA, Kan. (AP) -- A Wichita hospital is ending the only heart transplant program in Kansas. Via Christi Regional Medical Center says its program falls short in the volume requirements set by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. | Grapplers state-bound Edwardsville Intelligencer Wed, 25 Feb 2009 09:33 AM PST PEORIA â" Quincy Jackstadtâs shoulder may not have been 100 percent, but his guts and heart were working at 110-plus. | Red hair for hearts Daily Pilot Wed, 25 Feb 2009 09:26 AM PST When 57-year-old Thomas Kiserâs wife died in his arms of a heart attack just outside of their condominium on the day after Christmas three years ago, he was stunned. | âSurvivor, not a victimâ Daily Pilot Wed, 25 Feb 2009 09:19 AM PST There were seven of them, once laid low by heart disease and stroke, but now walking tall on the runway in the Island Hotel ballroom. | | |
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