What will Biden say on immigration? Border agent and ‘Dreamers’ expected at State of the Union

A Border Patrol agent from New York, an immigrant rights activist from Chicago and DACA recipients from California are among those expected at the president’s address.

News from California, the nation and world – Los Angeles Times

Illegal border crossings surge to highest of Biden’s term

Authorities say a surge in Cuban and Nicaraguan arrivals at the U.S. border with Mexico in December led to the highest number of illegal border crossings recorded during any month of Joe Biden’s presidency
ABC News: Top Stories

S. Korea fires warning shots after North drones cross border

South Korea fired warning shots after North Korean drones violated its airspace.
ABC News: Top Stories

Border apprehensions exceed 2 million: Enforcement increases as GOP buses migrants

U.S. Border Patrol apprehensions have exceeded 2 million so far this fiscal year, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection data.
ABC News: Top Stories

Flash flooding washes out eastbound Interstate 10 near California-Arizona border

The California Highway Patrol said flash flooding washed out the eastbound lanes of Interstate 10 outside Desert Center. The westbound lanes remained open Wednesday night but were slow.

California

Diabetes Health Type 1: Crossing the Border to Canada for Affordable Medications

By Claire Lynch

When Wendy Rhodes was 17 years old her mother took her to a rural community hospital in Washington State because she had lost a lot of weight, had an insatiable thirst and excessive urination. Doctors did a workup and diagnosed her as Type 1.

She spent five days in the hospital learning how to test her blood sugar levels, use a glucose meter, draw insulin with a syringe and give herself injections. She also spoke with a diabetic educator who answered lots of Wendy’s questions. “There’s no other history of any type of diabetes in my family, then or now, so being told I was Type 1 was a shock,” Wendy says.

 

Since her initial diagnosis she has gotten married to Jim and had a child. He is a professional window washer and Wendy, now 44, is the clerk for their mom and pop business.  “We have our busy times and our slower times,” Wendy explains. “In the fall we travel and enjoy the outdoors. We’ve also been home schooling our daughter for six years. Our schedule gives me a flexibility that I enjoy.”

Early on Wendy primarily used R and NPH insulin. She traveled with a Christian singing group and her meals and hours weren’t ideal so her blood sugar levels weren’t good.

“Being diabetic without health insurance is prohibitively expensive,” she notes. “During my pregnancy I used Lantus and Humalog but when I ran out I went back to using the R and NPH insulin. It’s available without a prescription and it’s less expensive.”

She’s grateful to the big-box stores like Walmart where diabetics can get a glucose meter and test strips relatively inexpensively. A vial of insulin costs $ 25 – no prescription needed.

Wendy and her family have made the two-hour drive from Washington to the Canadian border to get Lantus and Humalog for one-tenth of the price that it would cost in the U.S.

“A few months ago we drove to the border and my daughter and I waited in a park while my mom, who has a passport, drove another 45 minutes to get my medication from a pharmacy,” Wendy says. “She bought eight vials of Lantus and 12 vials of Humalog and paid about $ 685 USD. In the U.S. it would have cost about $ 6,600.

“My hope is that American health care can become more equitable and that diabetics across the country won’t have to ‘stretch their insulin’ or do without anymore. There’s got to be a better way.”

 

 

 

The post Diabetes Health Type 1: Crossing the Border to Canada for Affordable Medications appeared first on Diabetes Health.

Diabetes Health

Infectious Disease Experts Sound Alarm Over Risk of Outbreaks in U.S. Border Detention Centers

Newswise image– Over the past year, at least seven children have died from diseases including influenza while being detained by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency. Infectious disease experts at the University of Maryland School of Medicine (UMSOM) called for protections like influenza vaccinations to prevent serious outbreaks.
Newswise: Latest News

In a lifetime on the border, Agent Chancy Arnold has seen it transform

The Border Patrol assistant chief, son of an agent and a 35-year veteran himself, looks at the changes he’s seen at the California-Mexico border.

California

U.S. Border Patrol Agents Leverage Emerging S&T Tech to Ensure the Security of Our Nation’s Borders

Newswise imageDHS S&T recently collaborated with the USBP and FLETC to deliver a multi-part solution by implementing innovative tools and capabilities that enable USBP agents to leverage the knowledge, skills, and abilities of expert trackers (professionals trained to detect, track, follow and apprehend potential adversaries) and use emerging technologies to maximize their tracking performance.
Newswise: Latest News

South Korea confirms new cases of African swine fever in North Korea border town

South Korea on Wednesday confirmed two additional cases of African swine fever at pig farms in Paju, a town near its border with North Korea, the country’s agriculture ministry said, bringing its total number of cases of the disease to eleven.


Reuters: Health News