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Party Goers Get Shot, Stripped During Wild Bronx Scene

Good Samaritan Pistol Whipped The NYPD is searching for this man in connection with a shooting and pistol whipping of two men during a party. -Photo by NYPD By Dan Gesslein Bronx Voice November 25, 2024 Follow @Bronxvoice1 BRONX - A South Bronx party got so out of control that one guest was shot and another was pistol whipped and stripped by a group of partygoers, cops said.  At around 1 am on November 17, a group of people attended a party inside an apartment building at 1880 Bathgate Avenue. Cops said during the party, a 38-year-old male got into an arguement with another man. When the fight turned physical both fighters’ supporters joined in. Cops said a 32-year-old and another unidentified male joined the fracas.   Then the unidentified male pulled out a handgun and shot the 38-year-old party goer in the torso. The victim somehow ran out of the apartment.  The attackers then turned their attention on t

How Poor Air Quality Increases Asthma Hospitalizations

-File Photo

Poor Air Quality Leads to more Asthma Hospitalizations 

 

Findings Published in the Journal of Asthma Suggest Pollution May Cause More Severe Asthma Exacerbations for Children 


Bronx Voice 

June 22, 2023



NEW YORK – Children with asthma spend more time in the hospital when there is a greater amount of particulate matter (PM 2.5) - tiny pieces of solids or liquids - and Ozone (O) - a colorless gas - in the air, according to a new study by researchers at the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore (CHAM). The study, just published in the Journal of Asthma, comes days after New York City was blanketed in wildfire smoke.


 

In this first-of-its-kind study in children, led by pediatric hospitalist, Elissa B. Gross, D.O., M.P.H, the investigators assessed medical records of more than 1,700 children, aged 2 – 18-years-old, admitted to CHAM between 2017 – 2019 and found that the mean length of stay increased up to 10% for every 10 micrograms of pollutants per cubic meter of air - equating to longer length of stay during times when air quality was poorer.




Asthma is a leading cause of pediatric hospitalizations in the United States. In the Bronx asthma prevalence in children is 17%, compared to 5.8% nationally. There are many factors that impact the condition, including socioeconomic status, environmental triggers found in homes, such as mold and pests, and air pollution – which disproportionately affects Bronx residents due to the many surrounding highways. 


The Bronx also has more federal air quality violations than any other borough.


 

The analysis found that children with asthma, whose developing lungs are especially vulnerable to air pollutants, had longer hospitalizations when PM 2.5 in the air was high on the day of admission to the hospital, and when O was elevated the day prior to hospitalization.


 

“Our findings suggest that children with asthma may experience more severe exacerbations and remain hospitalized longer when they are exposed to a higher level of pollutants in the air,” said Dr. Gross, who is also associate professor of Clinical Pediatrics at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. “Hospitalizations are very disruptive to a child and their family, so it would be beneficial for everyone if there were more effective environmental policies that could help to prevent high levels of pollution so asthma exacerbations and chronic illness could be lessened for Bronx children.”




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