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Posts Tagged ‘best’

St. Lucie County fire, rescue crews bypass new ER in St. Lucie West

Thursday, September 10th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

PORT ST. LUCIE — Patients wanting to try out Martin Memorial’s freestanding emergency department in St. Lucie West should find their own ride.

St. Lucie County fire and rescue crews are bypassing the freestanding facility in favor of emergency departments at hospitals such as St. Lucie Medical Center and Lawnwood Regional Medical Center & Heart Institute.

“We’re evaluating what type of patients we will transport to that facility,” St. Lucie County Fire Chief Ron Parrish said. “We want to make sure the citizens of the community are going to get the best care in the most timely manner.”
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Indian River and St. Lucie medical centers reportedly have elevated mortality rates

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009 by TCPalm.com

TREASURE COAST — Two Treasure Coast hospitals have made a national list of poorly performing health facilities near travel hot spots.

USA Today included Indian River and St. Lucie medical centers on a list of hospitals with greater-than-average mortality rates near vacation spots. The national newspaper used statistics from Hospital Compare, a government-run Web site, to look at the mortality rates for heart attack, heart failure and pneumonia and singled out hospitals whose rates were worse than the national average.

Heart failure put Indian River Medical Center on USA Today’s list. St. Lucie Medical Center made the list with higher-than-average rates for heart failure and heart attack.
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Katrina victim ‘Peanut,’ taken in by Vero couple, returns after New Orleans owner can no longer care for him

Thursday, August 27th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

VERO BEACH — New Orleans resident Lionel Sims broke a hole in his roof to be rescued from Hurricane Katrina’s devastating flood waters in August 2005, but he had to leave behind a best friend, his dog Peanut.

Rescuers said they couldn’t take the dog.

Sims didn’t know if Peanut was dead or alive for about two months, until an American Red Cross volunteer tracked it to the Humane Society of Indian River County and Vero Beach.

And the two were reunited.
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Palm Bay High student had only perfect Fla. score on ACT in spring

Thursday, August 20th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

PALM BAY — Palm Bay High senior Tyler Laprade received a perfect score on the ACT, the only Florida student to do so this spring.

Laprade, 16, scored a 36 on the nationwide college entrance exam, which he took as a junior.

The average Florida student in the class of 2009 received a score of 19.5 on the test, but results for Laprade’s class aren’t available.

He also received a perfect score of 2400 on the SAT, the other nationwide college entrance exam.

“I was always raised to be the best,” said Laprade, who participates on the wrestling, swimming and track teams. “My parents expect me to be a high achiever.”

Laprade is enrolled in all Advanced Placement classes at Palm Bay High. He said he hopes to study mathematics next year and likely will become a computer programmer. He’s filling out applications to Harvard, MIT and the University of Florida.

He turns 17 Saturday and plans to go to Walt Disney World for his birthday.

By MEGAN DOWNS, Florida Today

Surfrider’s 25-year celebration in Port St. Lucie owes $75,000 in debts

Monday, August 10th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

STUART — The nonprofit Surfrider organization isn’t doing much celebrating two weeks after its 25th anniversary Arts and Music Celebration has left about $75,000 in unpaid debts, about half to local vendors.

The Treasure Coast chapter president has resigned under pressure from the local board, which said he exceeded his authority in organizing the event.

And, the Surfrider Foundation’s Florida group of chapters has canceled its state conference to put that money toward paying the bills.
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Man born at Martin Memorial needs public’s help to find his birth mother

Monday, June 29th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

John Christopher Woods is hoping his photos and additional information about his birth parents he has been able to extract from the Florida Department of Children and Families will trigger memories in someone on the Treasure Coast, maybe even his mother or siblings.

Woods, born Jan. 16, 1961, at Martin Memorial Hospital, said he feels he is creeping closer to identifying and perhaps meeting his birth mother, but her name and location are still elusive. His mother was 24 when she gave birth to him and then gave him up for adoption. (more…)

7 Treasure Coast high schools make Newsweek’s best list

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

Seven Treasure Coast high schools made Newsweek’s Best High Schools list this year, according to a report released Tuesday.

The report recognizes the top 1,300 high schools across the country for offering challenging courses to its advanced students in Newsweek’s annual study of “America’s Best High Schools.” Only the top 100 schools are listed in the magazine, but the entire list of schools is available on the magazine’s Web site, www.newsweek.com.
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Martin County hospital defends sending brain-damaged patient native Guatemala

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

MARTIN COUNTY — When Martin Memorial Medical Center hired a jet in 2003 to repatriate a brain-damaged patient to his native Guatemala, hospital officials “never took the law into their own hands,” according to documents filed ahead of a June 23 trial.

“They never stuffed Mr. (Luis Alberto) Jimenez in the back of a van under the cover of darkness and drove him out of town,” Martin Memorial attorney Scott Michaud stated in papers detailing Jimenez’s predawn flight to Guatemala City on July 10, 2003.

“When Martin Memorial discharged Jimenez to the facility in Guatemala,” Michaud noted, “Martin Memorial did so with the honest belief based on the evidence it uncovered, that the hospital in Guatemala was properly equipped to care for him.”
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34-year-old Port St. Lucie Elementary shuts down

Tuesday, May 19th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

PORT ST. LUCIE — Cheers, tears and roses were on display before a standing-room-only crowd in the auditorium of Port St. Lucie Elementary Monday night.

The gathering was to say goodbye to the 34-year-old school that is being closed in June as part of the school district’s plan to save $30 million next year.

“We have always been a family,” said Deb Mock, a reading coach who has taught at the school 31 years. “We’ve been there for each other through all the challenges we’ve had — hurricanes, flooding, the deaths of faculty members. We always strived to do the best for our students,” she added.
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Stuart handyman will work free to help those in need

Thursday, May 14th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

STUART — A new handyman-service company is trying to help the community by offering free home repair services for those who need it most.

“I just hope I can actually get to the people that need help,” said David Noel, owner of Nomad Industries.

Noel started the Stuart-based company about a month ago after getting laid off from St. Lucie Pump & Water.
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