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The system says metal detectors had been in the works for months but expedited the installation after a woman was charged with killing her terminally ill husband at a nearby hospital.
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Watch this video to hear from some multitalented health care workers on what making music means to them.
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Dr. Vincent Valente says quick detection is crucial as about 97 percent of people who get sick with the amoeba will die.
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Hospitals in the region say most of their staff have received COVID-19 vaccines.
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Sarasota Memorial Hospital, which had not been allowing visitations, said it will now allow most patients to have two visitors. It also resumed nonemergency surgeries this week.
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At the forefront of the concerns is a shortage of nurses, which the executives told lawmakers has created an emergency for hospital administrators.
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Prior to President Joe Biden's announcement that hospital workers must get a coronavirus vaccine, leaders of hospital systems in the region have been reluctant to make it a requirement.
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Dr. Neil Finkler, chief clinical officer for the Central Florida Division, says cases in the seven-county region have peaked and "we are looking at the beginning of what we believe to be a downward curve.”
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NPR's Debbie Elliott talks to Orlando-based epidemiologist Dr. Vincent Hsu about the state's strained health care resources amid a new surge of coronavirus cases. He says it's the worse it's ever been.
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They're temporarily stopping elective procedures and limiting patient visits.
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The only exception is children under 18 and obstetrics, pediatrics and end-of-life patients.
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This status is for the Central Florida Division: Polk, Orange, Osceola, Lake, Seminole, Volusia and Flagler counties. Orange County Mayor Jerry Demings says the region is in a crisis mode.