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y/Iowa Capital Dispatch)(Radio Iowa) – Drake University officials say a $28-million donation will cover the remaining cost of building a new student center on the Des Moines campus. It’s the largest single-donor gift in school history. The gift comes from Greg Johansen, who graduated from Drake in 1973 and founded Medicap, a company that operates nearly two dozen pharmacies in central Iowa. Johansen says the center will give student organizations a new home on campus.
“It’s been sort of catch as catch can for their meeting spaces and documents and the things that each organization needs to function,” Johansen says. “This is going to give that space and so hopefully that will help the organizations flourish.” The student center is under construction in a former residence hall. Drake President Marty Martin says the donation will allow Drake to complete the center debt-free, so it won’t affect the general budget.
Martin says the project includes space for student groups and an intercultural center. “It invigorates the life of our students, creates that central location that we’ve never really had where they can gather and do the things that really make a valuable contribution to their formation as Drake alumni,” Martin says.
Johansen’s gift will also support the Drake women’s basketball team and the installation of solar panels on a university building.
(Iowa Capital Dispatch) – Several Iowa pharmacies have been cited by the state recently for dispensing incorrect medications, including one instance in which a patient might have died. The Hy-Vee Pharmacy located at 1501 First Ave. East in Newton, was recently charged by the Iowa Board of Pharmacy with dispensing the incorrect prescription to a customer.
The board alleges that on Jan. 14, 2024, the pharmacy mistakenly dispensed 30 milliliters of morphine concentrate to a patient with incorrect directions on the label, which the board says resulted “in a substantial overdose and possibly early death.” No other information on the case has been made public by the board. The board has imposed a $5,000 civil penalty against the pharmacy and ordered that the entire professional staff at the pharmacy undergo training on medication errors and patient safety.
Other cases recently addressed by the board include:
— A Hy-Vee Pharmacy at 2827 Hamilton Boulevard in Sioux City, which was charged with dispensing an incorrect prescription to a customer. The board imposed a $2,000 civil penalty, and the entire professional staff was ordered to undergo training on medication errors and patient safety.
— A Hy-Vee Pharmacy at 351 NE Gateway Drive in Grimes, which was charged by the board with dispensing the incorrect prescription to a patient on May 29, 2023. The board imposed a $2,500 civil penalty and the entire professional staff was ordered to undergo training on medication errors and patient safety.
— A CVS Pharmacy at 14201 Hickman Road in Urbandale, which was charged by the board with dispensing the incorrect prescription to a customer. The board imposed a $5,000 civil penalty on the store.
— Monroe Community Pharmacy, located at 112 E Washington St. in Monroe, which was charged by the board with failing to reconcile its actual inventory of narcotics with its documented supply, failing to maintain complete and accurate pharmacy records, failing to have adequate policies in place with regard to narcotics, and failing to train pharmacy technicians at a telepharmacy site.
The board fined Monroe Community Pharmacy $3,500 and placed the pharmacy’s license on probation for three years. In addition, the board ordered that the pharmacy staff complete educational training on narcotic theft.
In a separate but related case, Douglas Niedermann, who was the Iowa-licensed pharmacist in charge at the Monroe pharmacy, was charged by the board with failing to audit and reconcile the inventory, and with failing to maintain complete and accurate pharmacy records. The board imposed a $500 civil penalty on Niedermann for the violations and ordered him to complete complete-education courses on controlled substances and theft of narcotics.
— A CVS Pharmacy at 3414 8th St. SW in Altoona, which was charged by the board with failing to complete Drug Enforcement Agency records as to the loss of controlled substances, committing an act that would render its Controlled Substances Act registration “inconsistent with the public interest,” and with failing to submit a form to the DEA within 14 days of the theft or loss of controlled substances. The board imposed a civil penalty of $5,000 and placed the business’ pharmacy license and its Controlled Substances Act registration on probation for two years.
— DCA Pharmacy of Franklin, Tennessee, which was charged by the board with sending prescriptions into Iowa for two full years without an active Iowa license. Between January 2022 and January 2024, DCA PhIn addition, DCA was also accused of shipping compounded progesterone capsules into Iowa, despite its inability to show any of the required evidence of a clinically significant difference between the compounded medication and that which was available otherwise. The board imposed a $5,000 penalty against the company.
(Additional information can be found HERE)
(Radio Iowa) – All the recent rain has helped keep pollen counts down in Iowa, but soon enough, the state’s allergy sufferers will be red-eyed, sneezing and sniffling. Dr. Ravi Johar, at UnitedHealthcare, says while the chilly winter weather may be gone, that pesky pollen will force some Iowans with seasonal allergies to remain indoors.
Johar recommends allergy sufferers try using air purifiers indoors, limit their time outdoors, and to run their air conditioners in their homes and cars to keep the pollen out. Johar also says to avoid leaving clothes out to dry on a clothesline as they can collect pollen from triggers like trees, weeds and grass.
A wide variety of allergy medications are available without a prescription.
Sac-Calhoun-Crawford-Carroll-Greene-Boone-Audubon-Guthrie-Dallas-
Polk-Cass-Adair-Madison-Warren-Marion-Adams-Union-Clarke-Lucas-
Monroe-Taylor-Ringgold-Decatur-Wayne-Appanoose Counties….
534 AM CDT Wed May 15 2024
…Locally Dense Fog Through Sunrise…
Patchy fog has developed this morning over portions of central, western and southern Iowa. Visibilities below one mile have been observed in areas with a few locations dropping below one quarter of a mile. This fog is expected to persist through sunrise before some improvement. If traveling this morning, be prepared for rapid changes in visibilities over short distance and allow extra time to reach your destination.
DES MOINES, Iowa (KCRG) – At the Iowa Environmental Protection Committee’s next meeting (May 22nd), the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will present a litigation report in which they ask the Attorney General to seek penalties relating to March 11th, 2024 fertilizer spill in Montgomery County. The Iowa DNR announced approximately two weeks later that the spill resulted in nearly all the fish being killed in a 50-mile stretch of the East Nishnabotna River to the Missouri border.
New Cooperative notified the Iowa Department of Natural Resources following the spill that approximately 1,500 tons of liquid nitrogen fertilizer (32% solution) had discharged into a drainage ditch. Officials say the release occurred due to a valve left open on an aboveground storage tank overnight. The fertilizer then traveled from the drainage ditch into the East Nishnabotna River.
According to the Iowa DNR’s litigation report, Iowa Code states that those liable for polluting water of the state are in violation of state law and should be liable to pay restitution for injury caused to a wild animal due to the pollution.
You can read the full litigation report HERE.
Hawkeye Ten
Kuemper Catholic 9, Treynor 4
Creston 1, Winterset 0
Lewis Central 7, Shenandoah 0
Western Iowa Conference
Missouri Valley 15, Red Oak 7
Rolling Valley Conference
Ankeny Christian 4, Coon Rapids-Bayard 0
Corner Conference
Southwest Valley 11, Fremont-Mills 1
Griswold 11, Audubon 1
Raccoon River Conference
Dowling Catholic 12, ADM 2
Waukee Northwest 1, North Polk 0
North Polk 6, Waukee Northwest 1
Bondurant-Farrar 10, Pella 3
Class 1A
Marquette Catholic 5, Highland 1
Mid-Prairie 3, Sigourney Keota 0
Class 3A
LeMars 6, Spirit Lake 0
Winterset 11, Atlantic 1
Iowa Falls-Alden 4, Forth Dodge 2
North Scott 10, Clinton 0
Sioux City West 8, Council Bluffs Jefferson 0
Western Dubuque 10, Northeast Iowa United 0
Class 4A
Cedar Rapids Kennedy 3, Cedar Rapids Jefferson 1
Davenport Central 4, Davenport West 0
Des Moines Lincoln 2, Waukee 0
Marshalltown 3, Mason City 0
Regular Season Scores
Council Bluffs Lincoln 5, Glenwood 1
Regular Season Scores
ADM 5, Boone 1
Dallas Center-Grimes 4, Indianola 0
DOUGLAS COUNTY, Neb. [KETV] — Sheriff’s Officials in Douglas County, Nebraska report a body was found floating in the Missouri River, Tuesday. Authorities were notified when a person called 911 about possible human remains floating in the river just north of the Douglas/Washington County line.
Multiple agencies worked together to pull the body of an adult male from the river along North River Drive a little farther south of County Road P51.
Anyone with information concerning this incident is being asked to call the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office at 402-444-6000.
(Radio Iowa) – Legislation which Governor Kim Reynolds recently signed into law expands the definition of “pedestrian” in Iowa, which safety experts say is an enormous win for everyone who uses a crosswalk. Cara Hamann, director of training and education at the Injury Prevention Research Center, based at the University of Iowa, says broadening the legal description of pedestrian is an important move. “The law says that a pedestrian is a person on foot, and the new law expands that to pedestrian or pedestrian conveyance,” Hamann says, “and pedestrian conveyance includes things like people in wheelchairs, babies in strollers, people on rollerblades or skateboards, or people on bicycles.”
Hamann is an injury epidemiologist, meaning, she studies crash prevention and outcomes. While the law change won’t necessarily prevent accidents, she says the new distinction of what defines “pedestrian” is key. “People in vehicles are protected by the big metal surrounding that they’re in, whereas all these other users — or what we call vulnerable road users — don’t have that protection,” she says. “So ultimately, I think it makes sense that drivers should yield to users crossing the road legally in a crosswalk.” The new law doesn’t take effect for a few months, and while it won’t instantly make crosswalks any safer on July 1st, it -will- make drivers legally liable for anyone they may strike.
“Before this change, really only people on foot were written into the law, so that means if a driver hit a bicyclist in a crosswalk, they could walk away with no consequences,” Hamann says, “because there’s no law to uphold that says they should have yielded to that bicyclist.” Hamann, an associate professor in the U-I’s College of Public Health, says she’s very encouraged by the expanded legal definition of pedestrian: “This is a really positive change in the law that moves us toward a better traffic safety culture overall in the state, recognizing that all road users are important and we should take care of each other on the road.”
This is National Bike to Work Week.