Republican Senate Candidate Fiorina Hospitalized
California Republican Senate candidate Carly Fiorina was
admitted to hospital Tuesday morning for treatment of an infection
related to breast reconstruction surgery she had last summer
following breast cancer.
Fiorina was taken to an undisclosed hospital where she received
antibiotics, her chief of staff Deborah Bowker said in a statement,
the
Wall Street Journal reported.
The statement also said that Fiorina remains cancer-free.
"While this will impact her campaign schedule today, Carly is upbeat and her doctors expect her to make a quick and full recovery and be back out on the campaign trail soon," according to Bowker, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Fiornia is running against Democratic Sen. Barbara Boxer.
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Haiti Cholera Outbreak Stabilizing
The cholera outbreak in Haiti appears to be stabilizing but
efforts to fight the waterborne disease must continue, experts
say.
Only six new deaths have been reported since Sunday, said Health
Ministry Director Gabriel Timothee, the
Associated Press reported. So far, more than 250 people have
died in the outbreak.
"The worst part is over, but you can always have a new spike of cholera," Timothee said.
Aid groups and government workers are striving to purify water
and warn people across the country about the outbreak. A major
focus is the capital Port-au-Prince, where more than a million
survivors of the Jan. 12 earthquake live in camps, where poor
sanitation would lead to the rapid spread of cholera, the
AP reported.
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High School Bullying Common: Survey
Nearly half (47 percent) of American high school students have
been bullied in the past year and 50 percent have bullied or teased
someone in that time, says a study released Tuesday.
The survey of 43,321 teens, ages 15 to 18, from 78 public and 22
private schools also found that 52 percent of respondents said they
have hit someone in anger in the past 12 months, while 37 percent
of boys and 19 percent of girls said it's okay to hit or threaten a
person who angers them,
USA Today reported.
The survey was conducted by the nonprofit Josephson Institute of
Ethics, based in Los Angeles.
"There's a tremendous amount of anger out there," said institute president Michael Josephson, USA Today reported.
The survey also found that 60 percent of students said they had
cheated on a test, and 34 percent did so twice or more. Students at
non-religious private schools were much less likely to cheat on
test (33 percent) than those at religious schools (56 percent).
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Companies May Be Allowed to Change Health Plans Without
Penalty
Changes that would allow businesses to shop for cheaper employee
health insurance plans without having to pay a penalty under the
new health care law are being weighed by the Obama
administration.
Currently, the law requires companies who change health insurers
to provide added services, including preventive care. But the
government is considering permitting employers to avoid the
requirement as long as worker benefit levels remain the same, a
White House official told
Bloomberg news.
The move would fit with the law's goal of lowering costs,
according to John Green, of the National Association of Health
Underwriters.
"I think they really do care what businesses are saying," Green told Bloomberg.
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