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US officials worry paralyzing illness may grow more common

NEW YORK (AP) — One morning last fall, 4-year-old Joey Wilcox woke up with the left side of his face drooping.

It was the first sign of an unfolding nightmare.

Three days later, Joey was in a hospital intensive care unit, unable to move his arms or legs or sit up. Spinal taps and other tests failed to find a cause. Doctors worried he was about to lose the ability to breathe.

“It’s devastating,” said his father, Jeremy Wilcox, of Herndon, Virginia. “Your healthy child can catch a cold — and then become paralyzed.”

Joey, who survived but still suffers some of the effects, was one of 228 confirmed victims in the U.S. last year of acute flaccid myelitis, or AFM, a rare, mysterious and sometimes deadly paralyzing illness that seems to ebb and flow on an every-other-year cycle and is beginning to alarm public health officials because it is striking more and more children.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said it may bear similarities to polio, which simmered among humans for centuries before it exploded into fearsome epidemics in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Fauci, who published a report about the disease Tuesday in the journal mBio, said it is unlikely AFM will become as bad as polio, which struck tens of thousands of U.S. children annually before a vaccine became available in the 1950s.

But he warned: “Don’t assume that it’s going to stay at a couple of hundred cases every other year.”

Other countries have reported cases, including Canada, France, Britain and Norway. But the size and pattern of the U.S. outbreaks have been more pronounced. More than 550 Americans have been struck this decade. The oldest was 32. More than 90 percent were children, most around 4, 5 or 6 years old.

Most had a cold-like illness and fever, seemed to get over it, then descended into paralysis. In some cases it started in small ways — for example, a thumb that suddenly wouldn’t move. Some went on to lose the ability to eat or draw breath.

Many families say their children have regained at least some movement in affected limbs, but stories of complete recovery are unusual. Health officials cannot say how many recovered completely, partly or not at all, or how many have died, though the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says deaths are rare.

Scientists suspect the illness is being caused chiefly by a certain virus that was identified more than 55 years ago and may have mutated to become more dangerous. But they have yet to prove that.

And while doctors have deployed a number of treatments singly or in combination — steroids, antiviral medications, antibiotics, a blood-cleansing process — the CDC says there is no clear evidence they work.

Many parents say that when they first brought their child to the emergency room, they quickly realized to their horror that the doctors were at sea, too.

“Everyone is desperate for some magical thing,” said Rachel Scott, a Tombal, Texas, woman whose son Braden developed AFM in 2016 and has recovered somewhat after intensive physical therapy but still cannot move his right arm and has trouble swallowing and moving his neck.

A growing number of experts agree that physical therapy makes a difference.

“These kids can continue to recover very slowly, year over year. … It’s driven by how much therapy they do,” said Dr. Benjamin Greenberg of UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, one of the nation’s foremost experts on the condition.

Wilcox, Joey’s father, said his son made huge improvements that way. Joey can run and use his arms. Still, muscle tone is weak in his right leg and shoulder, and he still has left-side facial paralysis. “He can’t completely smile,” his dad said.

Other stories are more tragic.

Katie Bustamante’s son Alex developed AFM in 2016. The suburban Sacramento, California, mother realized something was wrong when she asked the boy, then 5, why he wasn’t eating his yogurt. Alex replied that his thumb had stopped working and he couldn’t hold his spoon.

That morning was the start of 17 months of hospital stays, surgeries, therapy, and struggles with doctors and insurers to find a way to restore his ability to breathe. It ended one morning last May, when the Bustamantes woke up to find Alex had died.

Government officials need to step up, Bustamante said.

“I want them to research it and find the cause, and I want them to find a way to prevent it,” she said. “This is growing. This shouldn’t be happening.”

More and more experts feel certain the main culprit is an enterovirus called EV-D68, based on the way waves of AFM have coincided with spikes of respiratory illnesses caused by EVD-68. Enteroviruses are a large family of viruses, some of which, such as polio, can damage the central nervous system, while many others cause mild symptoms or none at all.

In the U.S., doctors began reporting respiratory illnesses tied to EV-D68 in 1987, though usually no more than a dozen in any given year.

Then, in what may have been one of the first signs of the AFM waves to come, a 5-year-old boy in New Hampshire died in 2008 after developing neck tenderness and fever, then weakened arms and deadened legs. The boy had EVD-68, and in a report published in an obscure medical journal, researchers attributed his death to the virus.

The first real burst of AFM cases hit in 2014, when 120 were confirmed, with the largest concentrations in California and Colorado.

What ensued was an even-year, odd-year pattern: Cases dropped to 22 in 2015, jumped to 149 in 2016, and fell again, to 35 in 2017. Last year they reached 228, a number that may grow because scores of illnesses are still being investigated.

In keeping with the cyclical pattern, just four cases have been confirmed this year so far.

CDC officials consider an illness AFM based on scans and other evidence showing a certain kind of damage to the spinal cord. Proof of an enterovirus infection is not required for a case to be counted, mainly because such evidence has been hard to come by. So far, CDC investigators have been able to find evidence of enteroviruses in the spinal fluid of only four of 558 confirmed cases.

Scientists are using more sensitive spinal-fluid tests in hopes of establishing the connection between AFM and EV-D68 more firmly. That, in turn, could spur more focused work on treatments and maybe even a vaccine.

Meanwhile, Fauci’s agency has put out a call for researchers to apply for federal funds, and is tapping a University of Alabama-anchored network of pediatric research centers to work on the illness.

The CDC is pledging a greater focus, too. Parents have accused the agency of doing little more than counting cases and have complained that when they tried to contact CDC, they encountered only automated phone trees and form responses.

CDC officials have begun holding meetings and calls with families, set up a scientific task force and working to monitor cases more closely.

Fauci suggested it would be a mistake to assume that surges will take place every other year forever. The next one “may be in 2019, for all we know,” he said.

Man wounded in New Year’s Eve shootout takes plea deal

ST. PAUL, Neb. (AP) — A Broken Bow man wounded during a New Year’s Eve shootout with central Nebraska law officers has taken a plea deal.Howard County District Court records say 30-year-old Luke Lefever pleaded no contest Monday to attempted murder. Prosecutors dropped three other charges in exchange. A sentencing date hasn’t been set.Authorities say Lefever fired a handgun at a sheriff’s deputy around 9:30 p.m. Dec. 31 during a traffic stop on Nebraska Highway 11 near Elba. Lefever fled in a sheriff’s vehicle. After a second exchange of gunfire, Lefever fled on foot and later was found in a creek bed.

Lefever was suffering from hypothermia and a gunshot wound to his left forearm. No one else was hurt.

More rain causes new flood worries along the Mississippi

ST. LOUIS (AP) — A wall of rocks and sandbags on Monday protected scenic Clarksville, Missouri, from the surging Mississippi River as spring flooding swamped fields, threatened homes and temporarily shut down a bridge connecting Missouri and Illinois.Heavy rain over much of the Midwest on Saturday caused another spike in water levels along the river and its tributaries, especially in Iowa, Missouri and Illinois.

So far, Mississippi River flood damage is far less severe than March flooding along the Missouri River in Nebraska, southwest Iowa and northwest Missouri, where hundreds of homes were damaged. Still, several Mississippi River communities were battling to stay dry.

Clarksville, a 440-resident community 90 miles (145 kilometers) north of St. Louis is known for its antique shops and artist galleries operating out of 19th-century brick storefronts. The town sits square along the Mississippi, unprotected by a levee largely because town leadership doesn’t want to obstruct the view of the river, and has been through many floods.

As they’ve done so many times before, Clarksville residents and other volunteers built a makeshift wall around downtown, though this time, they started with a 6-foot layer of rocks as the base, with sandbags on top of the rocks. The river was expected to crest Monday about 9 feet (2.7 meters) above flood stage, making it the seventh-worst recorded flood in Clarksville. A downtown park on the other side of the makeshift levee was under water, and several homes beyond the rock and sandbag protection also were threatened.

In nearby Louisiana, Missouri, the flood briefly forced the closure of the Champ Clark Bridge that connects Missouri and Illinois because water was lapping near the Illinois entrance to the bridge Sunday night. The closure created a hardship for commuters because the next nearest river crossing is at Hannibal, Missouri, 27 miles (43 kilometers) to the north.

But by Monday morning the river had crested, the bridge deck was clear, and the Louisiana bridge was reopened, Illinois Department of Transportation spokeswoman Jessie Decker said.

Precautionary sandbags were added to the top of a levee at Foley, a tiny town about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of St. Louis. Lincoln County Emergency Management Director Jim Sharp said the river was expected to get close to the top of the levee and volunteers have been walking the levee to make sure it’s holding.

“We haven’t had anything over the top,” Sharp said. “We haven’t had a breach. We haven’t had a failure anywhere.”

The river was causing other problems, too. In St. Louis, the route for the upcoming Go St. Louis marathon and half-marathon had to be changed. The two runs combined are expected to draw about 15,000 participants on Sunday, and the original finish line was along the Mississippi near the Gateway Arch. That road is underwater, so the run will end elsewhere in downtown.

The severe flooding from last month in northwest Missouri may have claimed a life. The Platte County Sheriff’s Department is investigating after a 61-year-old man’s body was found Friday near an overturned boat in a flooded area not far from Bean Lake. The victim’s name has not been released.

Authorities in several flooded areas where water was receding warned that danger still exists. In Sioux Falls, South Dakota, an intoxicated man was rescued from the Big Sioux River late Friday after police heard him yelling for help. Rescue crews used a ladder to get down a 12-foot retaining wall and a rope to pull the man to safety. He was treated for exposure.

Sutherland native receives UNMC’s highest educational award

Courtesy Photo

James O’Dell, M.D., the Stokes Shackleford Professor and vice chair of the University of Nebraska Medical Center Department of Internal Medicine, and Paul Paulman, M.D., professor in the UNMC Department of Family Medicine, were honored recently as the Varner Educator Laureates for 2018-19.

The Varner Educator Laureate Awards were presented at the Impact in Education Awards Celebration through UNMC’s Academic Affairs Office. The awards recognize individuals with sustained achievement in education who have significantly improved the UNMC learning environment through the provision of outstanding educational experiences.

The Varner Educator Laureate Award – UNMC’s top award for educators – is named after Jerald Varner, Ph.D., associate professor in the University of Nebraska-Lincoln College of Engineering. In addition to his support of the Impact in Education Awards, Dr. Varner also currently funds the Varner Professorship in Pancreatic Cancer and Global Health in the UNMC College of Medicine, which is held by Chandra Are, M.B.B.S.

Dr. O’Dell has served as chief of the division of rheumatology since 1990 and as vice chair of internal medicine since 1997. He earned his undergraduate degree in electrical engineering (with highest distinction) from UNL and his medical degree from UNMC. He did his residency in internal medicine at UNMC and his rheumatology fellowship at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center.

An Omaha native, Dr. O’Dell joined UNMC in 1984 as assistant professor and was elevated to associate professor in 1990 and to professor in 1996. He has served as director of the residency program for internal medicine since 1990.

Dr. O’Dell has established himself as a ‘triple threat’ – a clinician, educator and researcher. He has trained the majority of internists and many of the subspecialists currently practicing throughout Nebraska. A prodigious researcher, he also has developed medical breakthrough therapies for rheumatoid arthritis and provided compassionate care for thousands of patients and their families.

A native of Sutherland, Neb., Dr. Paulman earned his undergraduate degree from Kearney State College (now the University of Nebraska at Kearney) and his medical degree from UNMC. He did his residency in family medicine at Broadlawns Medical Center in Des Moines, Iowa. After working in Spalding, Neb., as a family physician for two years, he joined the UNMC Department of Family Medicine in 1982 as an assistant professor. He was promoted to associate professor in 1991 and to professor in 1997.

During his 37 years on the faculty, Dr. Paulman has been a driving force on several educational initiatives at UNMC. He helped spearhead the creation of the SHARING Clinics, a student-run clinical program designed to provide students with more opportunities to interact with patients. More recently, he helped launch the Simulation in Motion-Nebraska (SIM-NE) trucks, which travel around the state to provide emergency medical personnel valuable training in emergency care through simulation exercises.

He has been a driving force in helping to develop UNMC’s experiential learning program for students. In its use of simulation technology, UNMC has established itself as one of the leading programs in the country. This program will assume even greater status when the Davis Global Center opens later this year. In 2017, Dr. Paulman won the Innovative Practices in Education Award through UNMC’s Academic Affairs Office. His goal as a physician, he said, has always been to help patients find ways to become healthier. His areas of expertise include disease prevention, smoking cessation, depression, and interprofessional collaboration.

Other recipients of 2018-19 Impact in Education Awards include:

Innovative Practices in Education Award:

  • Danish Bhatti, M.D., assistant professor, UNMC Department of Neurological Sciences.

This award recognizes an individual who demonstrates ingenuity, courage and creativity in teaching, including innovations in use of educational technology, experiential learning, adoption of simulation and creative use of the classroom, as well as an engaging presentation style.

Inspirational Mentor of Educators Award:

  • Shannon Boerner, M.D., assistant professor, UNMC Department of Internal Medicine.

This award recognizes an individual who has mentored and sponsored junior faculty or trainees at the local, regional or national level, including a consistent track record of fostering future educators.

Interprofessional Education Scholar Award:

  • Elizabeth Beam, Ph.D., assistant professor, UNMC College of Nursing Omaha Division.

This award recognizes an individual who has made significant contributions to interprofessional education locally, regionally or nationally.

Research in Education Scholar Award:

  • Kendra Schmid, Ph.D., professor and interim chair, UNMC Department of Biostatistics.

This award recognizes an individual who has advanced the educational literature through peer-reviewed publications, educational grants and original research.

Valor in Educational Service Award:

  • James Newland, M.D., emeritus professor, UNMC Department of Pathology & Microbiology. This award recognizes volunteer, emeritus, or adjunct faculty whose daily service to learners exemplifies the spirit of outstanding teaching or clinical supervision.

Visionary Leadership in Education Award:

  • Karen Gould, Ph.D., vice chair of education and associate professor, UNMC Department of Genetics, Cell Biology and Anatomy. This award recognizes an individual who has demonstrated the ability to skillfully establish or administer an educational initiative or role at UNMC or a national organization.

Ricketts proclaims statewide prayer day for flood victims

Niobrara
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Nebraska Gov. Pete Ricketts is proclaiming a statewide prayer day on Sunday for victims of the flood.

Ricketts announced the proclamation on Monday as first lady Susanne Shore urged residents to volunteer with the recovery effort.

Shore says Nebraska residents should visit the website www.nebraskaimpact.com to find new volunteer opportunities each day. Churches, groups and individuals can also register on the site and advertise their need for volunteers.

The Nebraska Impact initiative was launched in 2017 as part of the state’s 150th anniversary activities, with the goal of increasing volunteerism.

The flooding and severe weather has led 81 of Nebraska’s 93 counties to issue disaster declarations.

Robert E. “Bob” Pinneker

Robert E. “Bob” Pinneker, age 81, of Paxton, Nebraska, died on March 30, 2019 at Great Plains Health in North Platte, Nebraska.  He was born on December 6, 1937 in Sutherland, Nebraska to Fred and Helen (Lehl) Pinneker.

Bob Was a senior machine operator at Nebraska Public Power District for 34 years.  He was an avid hunter and fisherman, enjoyed gardening, helping with corn harvest each year and loved watching Husker sports.  Bob was a lifetime member of the Ogallala Elks Club for 60 years.

On May 16, 1975, he married Sally Chapman in North Platte.

Survivors include his wife, Sally Pinneker of Paxton; daughters, Becky (Chris) Condon of North Platte, Angie Thies (Ernesto Rivera) of San Diego, California; grandson, Chase and Riley Condon of North Platte; brother-in-law, Terry (Bonnie) Chapman of Sierra Vista, Arizona; and a sister-in-law, Jonelle Chapman of North Platte.  He was preceded in death by his parents.

Memorial donations are suggested to the Evangelical Trinity Lutheran Church and online condolences may be made at www.adamsswanson.com.

The funeral service will be at 10:30 a.m. MST on Wednesday, April 3, 2019 at the Evangelical Trinity Lutheran Church in Paxton with J.A. Welsh S.A.M. presiding.  Burial will be in the Paxton City Cemetery.  Open visitation will be Tuesday, April 2, 2019 from 9:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. at Adams and Swanson Funeral Home at 421 West 4th Street in North Platte.

Betty (McDermott) Halsey

Betty (McDermott) Halsey, 83, of North Platte, passed away on March 31, 2019 at her home.  She was born on October 21, 1935 to Howard and Lola (Beerman) Wilmeth at Gothenburg Hospital.  when she was very young the family moved to a ranch south of Maxwell, Nebraska.  She attended a one room school house through the eighth grade.  When her father died, the family moved to Gothenburg, Nebraska.  She graduated from high school in 1953.

Betty went to work at the Northwestern Bell Telephone Company.  She was united in marriage to Sy McDermott on April 9, 1955.  They moved to Sidney, Nebraska where she transferred to the telephone company there.  She accepted Jesus in 1957.  Due to her husband’s job, they moved quite often.  Wile living in Lincoln, Nebraska, Sy passed away in 1983.  Betty then moved to North Platte, Nebraska where she worked at the Outlet-London Fog and Dress Barn, until they closed.  After that, she worked for Gateway Auction.

In 2001, Betty married George Halsey.  George passed away in 2011.

She was preceded in death by her parents; step-father, Les Clark; both husbands; an infant great grand son, Taten McDermott; step-brother, Nathan Clark; two step-sisters, Jane Miller and Karen Adams; and numerous brothers and sisters-in-law, nieces and nephews.

Betty is survived by her son, Troy McDermott; two daughters, Joy (Doug) Butolph and Shawna (Monte) Davison all of North Platte; brother, Larry Wilmeth of North Platte; sister, Creta Waltemath of Kearney; step-sister, Sharon Karre of North Platte; sister-in-law, Verdena Clark; eight grandchildren, 12 great grandchildren; and many nieces, nephews and other relatives.

Online condolences may be shared at www.carpentermemorial.com.  Memorials are suggested to Parview Community Church of the Nazarene.  Services will be at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, April 5, 2019 at Parkview Community Church of the Nazarene with Pastor James Trippett officiating.  Burial will be at the Wellfleet Cemetery in Wellfleet, Nebraska.  Visitation will be Thursday from 1:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. with family receiving friends from 5 to 7 p.m. at Carpenter Memorial Chapel, which in in care of arrangements.

Anna Marie Hoban

Anna Marie Hoban, age 67, of Maxwell, Nebraska, died unexpectedly on Tuesday, January 22, 2019 at Great Plains Health in North Platte, Nebraska.  Cremation was chosen.

Graveside services and inurnment will be at 11:00 a.m. on Friday, April 5, 2019 at Fort McPherson National Cemetery in Maxwell with Robin Storer officiating.  The memorial book may be signed at odeanchapel.com, at the graveside services, or from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Thursday at Odean Colonial Chapel at c & Sycamore in North Platte, which is in charge of arrangements.  In lieu of flowers, memorials are suggested to the Salvation Army.

NPCC softball loses two at Beatrice to SECC

BEATRICE – The North Platte Community College softball team dropped a pair of games to Southeast Community College Sunday losing the first game 13-5 and the second game 9-3.

“We played hard and fought back both games, but just didn’t have the gas to get over the hill we created early,” said North Platte Community College coach Janelle Higgins.

In both games the Storm had at least seven runs before the end of the second inning.

“They got in our heads early and we couldn’t shake them. We had glimpses of playing our game, but we were not consistent today,” Higgins said.

The condition of the field was also a factor in the game according to the coach.

“We did better today fielding fly balls but the field was super soft today, so everything died quickly and we rushed our throws on easy grounders.” Higgins said.

Southeast improves to 8-6 on the year and 2-0 in conference.

North Platte falls to 8-16 on the year and continue a six-game road swing through the Nebraska Community College Athletic Conference with a pair of games Monday at Columbus against Central Community College at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. The next games are set for April 10 at McCook Community College at 4 p.m. and 6 p.m.

“We are very proud of our athletes for how they handled themselves today on the field,” Higgins said.

Game 1 – Southeast CC 13, North Platte CC 5: The Storm jumped on the Knights for four runs in the first inning and added six runs in the second.

North Platte cut the gap to 4-2 in the top of the second. Emily Marsden (Papillion) led off with a single and went to second on a sacrifice bunt from Erika McClung (Victoria British Columbia). With two out Marsden scored on a Southeast error and the Knights cut the margin to two runs on a Sienna Pfaff (Salem, Utah) RBI-single.

Southeast took a 10-2 lead in the second and stretched it to 11-2 in the third and 13-2 in the fourth before the Knights added three runs in the fifth. Pfaff, Kayleigh Bucio (Rialto, Calif.) and Mikayla Gibson (West Valley, Utah) singled to load the bases. Hallei Morales (North Platte) had a two-run single and a Marsden ground out provided the final North Platte run.

Marsden started the game in the pitching circle allowing nine runs on six hits in 1.1 innings. Hailey Wilkins (Tyler, Texas) went 2.2 innings and gave up four runs on five hits.

Gibson and Pfaff both had two hits each for the seven-hit North Platte offense.

“We had some solid hits but played most of the day hitting the ball right at them,” Higgins said.

Game 2 – Southeast CC 9, North Platte CC 3: It was another early big-run inning in the second game that North Platte was unable to recover from, giving up seven runs in the second inning.

Hallei Morales singled to lead off the North Platte second, went to second on an error and scored on a two-out Erika McClung single to give the Knights their only lead of the day.

After the Storm took a 7-1 lead in the second, North Platte did fight back to cut the lead to 7-3 in the top of the third. Willow Chitty (North Platte) was hit by a pitch to lead off the third, she stole second, went to third on a Kayleigh Bucio single and scored on a groundout off the bat of Mikayla Gibson. With two outs, Alea Binkley singled in Bucio, but that’s as close as the Knights got as Southeast added runs in the fifth and sixth to close out the game.

Sophomore pitcher Ashlynn Krueger (Littleton, Colo.) took the loss for North Platte she went six innings, allowed two earned runs on 11 hits.

NPCC Softball Team aids flood victims

Members of the North Platte Community College Softball Team spent their spring break helping flood victims in eastern Nebraska.

Fifteen players, two coaches and a bus driver, dedicated almost seven hours to cleaning up a basement belonging to the parents of Emily Marsden. Marsden is one of the players on the team. Her hometown of Papillion suffered significant flood damage from storms earlier this month.

On March 21, Marsden’s teammates joined her in carrying out wet carpet, padding, woodwork and furniture from her family’s home. They also helped push water out of the house and sandbag around the property.

“Those girls were rock stars,” said Cheryl Marsden, Emily’s mother.

Inspired by the players and coaches, the team’s bus driver, Todd Hanneman, made a generous contribution as well. In addition to helping with the cleanup, he drove the team to Papillion for free.

“I figure since the team wanted to donate their time and efforts to help, I can do the same,” said Hanneman.

The cleanup was one of many volunteer projects the team has taken on this year and was part of an overall lesson Head Coach Janelle Higgins hopes to instill in her players.

“I just want them to always do their part,” Higgins said. “Papillion isn’t our community, but it’s home to part of our family, and we take care of our own. Our true goal goes beyond wins on the field. It’s about being pillars in the community and kind and caring people overall.”

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