Three In Disabled Car Killed In Accident Near Madison, Wis.

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Posted on 9th October 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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 Three young people who stopped on an interstate median near Madison, Wis., to fix a flat tire were killed when a car struck their disabled vehicle Thursday.

Carlos Rios, a star diver from Riverside High School who survived the horrific accident, told his version of the crash to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/104594819.html

 Rios was one of the three men to exit the Chrysler Sebring to fix its flat tire. The disabled vehicle was on a median on Interstate 39/90 early Thursday morning in the Madison suburb of Burke when an Acura came out of nowhere and struck them.

Although Rios was able to get out of the way, the other two men with him were killed, as was one of the women in the back seat of the Sebring. 

Officials are deciding whether to bring charges against the Acura’s 31-year-old driver. Authorities said that alcohol was a factor in the crash.

The victims were Marcus Johnson, 19,  of Glendale; Elysia Rapp, 23, of Racine; and Wilfredo Ugarte, 23, of Puerto Rico.    

 

Wisconsin Has Spate Of Football-Related Concussions

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Posted on 19th September 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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In the past few weeks there has been a rash of concussions involving Wisconsin and football, from the NFL to college to the sixth grade.

As the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel pointed out, last Sunday Philadelphia Eagles linebacker Stewart Bradley collapsed on the gridiron in a game against the Green Bay Packers. Both Bradley and Eagles quarterback Kevin Kolb sustained concussions during that game, and didn’t play this weekend.

 http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/103216894.html

In another incident, this one on Sept. 11, University of Wisconsin-Madison receiver David Gilreath was hit and rendered unconscious in a game against San Jose State. He was carted off the field in a stretcher, and did not play in a recent game against Arizona State University.

And in a truly heart-breaking case in early September, 11-year-old Evan Coubal of Muskego sustained a concussion during a youth football game. In a freak accident several days later Coubal, a student at Bay Lane Middle School, hit his head on a football sled. He died of head trauma in a local hospital.  

http://www.jsonline.com/news/waukesha/102406834.html

 http://www.620wtmj.com/news/local/102330324.html

The incident involving the Eagles’ Bradley, which was seen by more than 28 million people via Fox, brought the team’s handling of the situation under scrutiny.

As The New York Times wrote, during the game “Bradley rose woozily, stumbled and then collapsed onto the turf. The Fox announcers Joe Buck and Troy Aikman expressed concern and even horror. Players waved frantically for medical assistance.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/16/sports/football/16concussions.html?ref=todayspaper

Yet Bradley was sent back to the field only minutes later, and his concussion wasn’t diagnosed until halftime. The Eagles defended their actions, saying that Bradley wasn’t immediately taken out of the game, as mandated by new NFL rules, because a sideline exam didn’t find a concussion. Huh? It seems that none of the Eagles’ medical personnel witnessed him take his hit or saw his collapse.

As The Times astutely pointed out, “If a concussion this glaring can be missed, how many go unnoticed every fall weekend on high school and youth fields, where the consequences can be more serious, even fatal?”      

A lot, I would venture to say.

And right next to The Times’ story Thursdsy about Bradley was another article on NFL head injuries. The headline on that piece was “A Giant’s Concussions Begin to Add Up.” The story was about New York Giants’ tight end Kevin Boss, who has suffered three concussions since 2008, with the most recent one during a game against the Carolina Panthers. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/16/sports/football/16giants.html?ref=todayspaper

In that story, Boss downplayed the seriousness of his concussions, telling The Times, “I’ve seen guys come stumbling off the field who can’t remember their own name. Nothing has been that bad.”

But the latest research shows that repetitive concussions have a cumulative effect on the brain, causing progressive damage. That’s what Boss is at risk of, whether or not he can remember his name after being hit on the field.  

The issue of concussions and youth athletes will be the topic of Thursday’s hearing of the U.S. House Education and Labor Committee, which is considering legislation to cut down on head injuries.  

The Journal Sentinel outlined the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Associations’s rules on concussions. Under those guidelines, young athletes who have symptoms of concussions or are unconscioius can’t go back to a game or practice the same day without a doctor’s written permission. A doctor must also approve an athlete before he or she can come back to competition afterward. And Wisconsin has a protocol for athletes to follow before they return to play fulltime.   

 

Milwaukee Hosts Brain Research Conference This Weekend

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Posted on 18th September 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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This weekend Milwaukee is the site of a major conference on the brain, drawing hundreds of brain researchers, according to the Journal Sentinel.  http://www.jsonline.com/features/health/103169729.html

The Second International Conference on Resting-State Functional Brain Connectivity is chaired by Christopher Pawela, who is a researcher at the Medical College of Wisconsin, where the confab is being held. The fancy name of the conference simply refers to the study of the brain at rest, inactive, an area that has become a hot topic of interest in neuroscience.

For example, there have been studies on whether a person in a coma is aware and whether his or her brain responds to voice and touch.

This area of research has just gotten a boost from the National Institutes of Health, which have just given out $40 million in grants to fund research to create high resolution maps of the brain. The grants are going to two research groups: Washington University in St. Louis and the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, who have teamed up; and Harvard University and UCLA.  

Wisconsin has helped lead the way in some of this research, particulary that relating to magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI. In 1995 the Medical College of Wisconsin used resting-state functional MRI to be among the first to demonstrate that the brain is never truly at rest. 

Researchers are banking that testing the brain while it is at rest, and finding abnormalities, can potentially lead to the early diagnosis of maladies such as schizophrenia, depression, bipolar disorder and Alzheimer’s disease.

       

 

Sheboygan Man Killed When His SUV’s Tire Blows Out

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Posted on 27th August 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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A Sheboygan man died Tuesday when his Ford Explorer had a tire blow out, sending the SUV rolling over several times and landing in a ditch, according to the Sheboygan Press.

http://www.sheboyganpress.com/article/20100826/SHE0101/8260463/Crash-victim-remembered

Joseph Godbert, a 59-year-old British citizen, was driving north on Interstate 43 at 5 p.m. when his SUV blew a tire and had the rollover crash. He was not wearing a seatbelt, and died at the accident scene from trauma to the head and chest. 

According to a witness, Godbert was speeding at about 80 mph when he passed a car in the left lane. He was moving back to the right lane when his tire went out.

Godbert was originally a carpenter but had spent  the last 27 years working for Kohler Co. as a display technician

So far this year three people have been killed in Sheboygan County in vehicular accidents, a fraction of last year’s 12 fatalities.

When he was young, Godbert was “an elite soccer player” in England, according to the Sheboygan Press.

He had lived in the United States for three decades, but kept his British citizenship.

Wisconsin, ACLU Reach Settlement On Female Prisoner Suit

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Posted on 18th August 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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In a settlement of a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union, Wisconsin must ante up and foot the bill to offer female prisoners the same type of health care and mental health services that men receive, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported Wednesday. http://www.jsonline.com/news/wisconsin/101013499.html

The case will cost Wisconsin “hundreds of thousands of dollars,” according to the newspaper. The settlement of the federal litigation, filed by the ACLU against the state Department of Corrections, is expected to be filed Friday. 

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of 700 women prisoners doing time at the the Taycheedah Correctional Institution in Fond du Lac.

Under the settlement, the prison will have a full-time family practice doctor on staff at $195,000 a year. Currently, the prison only has a part-time physician, according to the Journal Sentinel.      

 The corrections department will also have to bring in a consultant to recommend improvements to the prison’s health care and psychiatric services. That consultant is also in charge of making sure that Taycheedah implements those changes. 

Finally, the prison must build new therapy facilities and a center for inmates with serious mental health problems. Those facilities must be ready and in use by June 1, 2012.

 

Three Men Abandon Sexual Abuse Suit Against The Vatican

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Posted on 16th August 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Three Americans who allege they were sexually abused by priests are dropping their landmark lawsuit against the Vatican, according to The Wall Street Journal.

 http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703435104575421443951992242.html%3

The attorney for the trio last Monday asked U.S. District Court Judge John Heyburn to dismiss the landmark lawsuit, filed in federal court in Louisville, Ky., in 2004. The lawyer, William McMurray, basically said his clients wouldn’t be able to hold the Holy See in Rome responsible for the priest sex abuse scandal in the United States, because of the “impossible burden” of proof  required by U.S. courts.

A Illinois man has a similar federal suit pending that alleges he was abused by the Rev. Lawrence Murphy at St. John’s School for the Deaf in Francis, outside Milwaukee.  Before he died in 1998 Father Murphy confessed to molesting 200 school boys from 1952 to 1974.  

There have been hundreds, if not thousands, of lawsuits filed by people who allege that they were molested by Catholic priests. But those suits usually name a priest or diocese as defendants, not the Vatican.

The federal litigation involving Father Murphy names Pope Benedict XVI, the Holy See and several top Vatican officials.

Earlier this year the U.S. Supreme Court let a lower court ruling, which said that suits can be filed against the Vatican on certain grounds,  stand. That case stemmed from a lawsuit filed by a man in Portland, Ore., who alleged he was molested when he was a teenager by a priest. 

http://wis-injury.com/blog/2010/07/u-s-supreme-court-lets-sex-abuse-suit-against-vatican-stand.html?preview=true&preview_id=479&preview_nonce=363a4a7017

Girl Falls 40 Feet In ‘Free Fall’ Ride Accident In Wisconsin Dells

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Posted on 11th August 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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 A 12-year-old girl was injured on a ride at a Wisconsin Dells amusement park after falling 40 feet when the mechanism that was supposed to break her fall didn’t work, according to the Associated Press.

http://www.aolnews.com/nation/article/12-year-old-girl-injured-after-plunging-more-than-40-feet-in-wisconsin-amusement-park/19576000

The girl was at the Extreme World amusement park on the Terminal Velocity, which is supposed to give riders the feeling of  “an unattached, controlled free fall,” when she had the accident July 30. Riders are strapped into a harness, brought up an elevator, and then released straight down into an airtube-supported net. 

But when the girl was released for her free fall, a safety net mechanism failed to break her fall, and she hit the ground, according to Lake Delton police.

The girl was visiting the Wisconsin Dells with her family, who live out of state. She was taken to the University of Wisconsin Hospital in Madison for treatment, and details of her injuries weren’t disclosed.  

    

NASCAR’s Jack Roush Recovering From Oshkosh Plane Crash, But Did He Sustain Brain Injury?

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Posted on 1st August 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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 NASCAR team owner Jack Roush remained hospitalized and recovering from the facial injuries he sustained when he crashed his jet in Oshkosh last Tuesday, according to Fanhouse.com.

http://motorsports.fanhouse.com/2010/07/30/jack-roush-doing-better-drivers-expect-him-back-soon/

As a brain injury attorney, I can’t help but wonder if Roush has also been tested for potential brain injury. If his face was cut up, then that of course is a head injury, so my immediate thought was that he might have sustained a mild concussion.

Roush was moved to the Mayo Clinic on Wednesday, where he remains. He had undergone surgery at a hospital in Neenah, Wis., on Tuesday night.    

Roush, an aviation buff who owns many planes, flew to Oshkosh to attend the Experimental Aircraft  Association’s annual AirVenture show.

The NASCAR owner was trying to land his Premier Beechcraft jet at Wittman Regional Airport in Oshkosh when it crashed. Roush and his passenger walked away from the plane, but Roush sustained major facial injuries.     

NASCAR Team Owner Jack Roush Hurt In Oshkosh Plane Crash

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Posted on 28th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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 NASCAR team owner Jack Roush crashed his plane in Oshkosh, Wis., Tuesday night, and he is in serious but stable condition with injuries that included facial wounds, according to the Associated Press.  

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2010/07/28/sports/AP-CAR-NASCAR-Roush-Plane-Crash.html

Roush and his passenger were both lucky enough to be able to get out of his plane after it crashed and walk away. Roush is an aviation aficionado who was in Oshkosh to attend the Experimental Aircraft Association’s annual AirVenture event this week.

The EAA had posted a statement on its website about Roush’s crash, saying that a Beechcraft Premier jet registered to Roush Fenway Racing had an accident while landing at Oshkosh’s Wittman Regional Airport. The only occpants of the plane were Roush and Brenda Strickland, his friend from Plymouth, Mich. 

Strickland was hospitalized with what were described as non-threatening injuries.

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the accident.

Roush, an ex-Ford engineer and college physics professor, owns a number of planes.

He was almost killed in a plane crash in 2002, when he landed in a pond and almost drowned. But he was rescued and pulled out of the water.         

Why Wisconsin Needs A Mandatory Motorcycle Helmet Law

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Posted on 18th July 2010 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

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Early this Sunday morning at about 3 a.m., which is roughly the witching hour when bars close. a motorcyclist with a female passenger crashed into a car in West Milwaukee. The accident took place at the intersection of Miller Parkway and West National Avenue.

 The motorcyclist was killed. His passenger, who sustained traumatic brain injury, was taken to Froedert Hospital.

Neither of  them was wearing a helmet. Police declined to identify them. But the Milwaukee motorcyclist, 43, had lost his motorcycle license in April for operating under the influence. His badly injured woman passenger, 41, Sunday was from West Allis. 

 http://www.jsonline.com/news/milwaukee/98701229.html

Is that fatal accident an argument for Wisconsin to pass a law requiring motorcyclists to wear helmets? I think it is, but it’s a controversial topic that people feel strongly about. The Wilwaukee Journal Sentinel story about the accident had 36 comments posted on it, most of them debating whether or not Wisconsin should make helmets mandatory, as they are in some states.

Those who oppose a helmet law believe that such legislation amounts to the government intruding on their freedom (comments printed as written, typos and misspellings intact).  

“It’s unfortunate what happened to these people, but we don’t need a helmet law,” November 2012 posted. “The Government doesn’t need to make a law for every little thing. These people are adults and made a choice NOT to wear a helmet. Society does not need Government involved in every decision we make.”

 And plenty of other people, like Milltowngurl, agreed with him.

“No, the government does not need to make laws for every little personal choice in MY life, Thank you very much,” she posted. “If I want to be an idiot and not wear a helmet when I ride a donor cycle, then so be it. If I do not want to wear a seat belt when driving a car, then that should also be my choice. The only time it should not be a choice is when it applies to minors who are not mature enough to make adult decisions. Get a grip. Get the government out of our personal lives already! (or do you need someone to tell you how to live your life? If so, join the military!)”

 Those who were in favor of mandatory helmets for motorcylists were just as vocal about the need for a helmet law, not just to protect the motorcylist, but so that Wisconsin — and ultimately its residents —  aren’t burdened with the costs that are repercussions of accidents.

 “It is the govt’s role (to mandate helmets),” wrote Leatherface49. “Let’s say the passenger needs extensive hospitalization and doesnt have insurance. there’s $5 million costto society!! wear helmets you doofus’s”

Lannonresident, who was actually at the fatal accident site, agreed with Leatherface49.

“I counted 5 different law enforcement agencies that were involved when I left the scene: West Milwaukee, West Allis, City of Milwaukee, Sheriff, and State Patrol,” Lannonresident posted. “I will also let you know that all of this support came at a cost- the freeways were left unpatrolled and the drunk that almost hit me got to drive home as their were no units available due to the accident. My drunk was able to from the zoo interchange north all the way up to his far nw-side home without any law enforcement in sight. As far as more laws, remember that we do have mandatory auto insurance now and we will soon have mandatory health insurance.”

LMinMKE put it succinctly.

“Your personal freedoms end when my tax dollars have to pay for the remains of your stupid decision not to wear a helmut,” LMinMKE wrote. “Laws are made to protect me from stupid people. Sadly, they don’t always work, but they reflect SOCIETY values.”

The statistics about how helmets save lives are overwhelming. The American College of Emergency Physicians back in May, motorcycle safety month, put out a press release urging helmet use.

“People are riding bicycles, motorcycles and ATVs more often at this time of year,” Dr. Angela Gardner, president of the doctors’ group, said in the release. “Now is the time to get in the habit of wearing a certified safety helmet, because it only takes one tragic crash to end your life or cause serious injuries to your brain that can alter your life forever.”

The emergency doctors then provided these numbers:

  • The National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) estimates that helmets saved the lives of more than 1,800 motorcyclists in 2008. 
  • An additional 800 lives could have been saved if all of those motorcyclists had worn helmets. 
  • Motorists without helmets are 40 percent more likely to die from a head injury.

“Helmet use is the single most important factor in people surviving motorcycle crashes,” Dr. Gardner said. “They reduce the risk of head, brain, and facial injury among motorcyclists of all ages and crash severities.” 

 Wisconsin needs a helmet law.