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Relatives sue over man’s death during Kansas traffic stop

McKinnis-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections from 2010
McKinnis-photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections from 2010

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — Relatives of a 44-year-old Kansas City, Kansas, man who died after a traffic stop have filed federal lawsuits accusing the police of wrongdoing.

Craig J. McKinnis died in May 2014 after the car he was riding in was stopped by police, who said he tried to flee and died after a brief struggle.

Family members and his girlfriend have filed two federal separate lawsuits accusing the police of violating his civil rights. Both lawsuits, which were filed in 2015, together list several defendants, including the police department.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports that a lawyer representing most of the defendants denied the claims, noting police believed their use of force to be necessary.

From 1995- 2004 McKinnis had convictions in Wyandotte County for Robbery, Theft, Burglary, Flee/attempt to elude Law Enforcement, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

130-year-old former Kansas fruit plantation up for sale

Yaggy Plantation courtesy image by Scott Shuman Hall and Hall-Auction
Yaggy Plantation courtesy image by Scott Shuman
Hall and Hall-Auction

HUTCHINSON, Kan. (AP) — A former plantation near Nickerson that was once the largest shipping point for fruit between the Missouri River and California is for sale. See more on the sale here.

The 130-year-old Yaggy Plantation used to grow up to 50,000 apple trees and a million catalpa trees, which were used for fence posts and railroad ties. Up to 300 people worked there during harvest season.

Today, the land is mostly grassland and irrigated cropland, with no apple trees and few catalpas remaining.

The plantation was founded by Levi Walter Yaggy. His descendants have decided to auction off the acreage. The auction will be Oct. 5 at the Cosmosphere in Hutchinson.

The family is selling about 1,260 acres, which will be offered in five tracts and combinations.

Kansas man credits God, Seuss for 158 day hike inspiration

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — A 22-year-old Wichita, Kansas, man who hiked 2,190 miles of the Appalachian Trail through 14 states is crediting God and Dr. Seuss for giving him the inspiration.

Joshua Gribble completed the Georgia-to-Maine, 158-day trek on Sept. 15.  See his journey blog here.

Gribble says the motivation came from a 2015 church service in which he heard the pastor quote Dr. Seuss, “You’re off to great places! Today is your day! Your mountain is waiting! So get on your way!” Gribble says he took that as God nudging him.

Gribble says he prepped for the hike for a year before launching it on April 10. Along the way, he came across several rattlesnakes and a dozen black bears.

US Military health insurance will now cover transgender services

gay gender transgenderALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — A new Pentagon policy brings some relief to transgender military retirees and children of active-duty service members.

Starting Monday, the military’s health insurance will cover transgender-related services that include hormone therapy and supportive counseling.

The change follows the decision in June to allow transgender members to serve in the military. Roughly 7 million retirees and children who use the same health insurance will get many of the same benefits.

The policy comes with some controversy. Transgender advocates fault it because it covers gender-reassignment surgery only for active-duty personnel, not retirees or dependents. A conservative group says the benefits are expensive and lack military purpose.

The expanded coverage helps transgender teens like Jenn Brewer of Virginia, who says she attempted suicide after being bullied this year. The change puts support for Jenn’s mental and physical wellbeing during her transition within reach.

KU student will help grandmother with $10K from half-court shot

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — A 21-year-old University of Kansas student who won $10,000 in a half-court shot game has plans for the money: she’ll give it to her grandmother who rescued her from foster care when she was 10.

Jordan Stiers, a sophomore from Independence, Missouri, won the money Saturday when Brennan Bechard, director of Kansas basketball operations, made the half-court shot during Late Night in the Phog in Lawrence.

 

 

The Wichita Eagle reports that Stiers is the first one in her family to graduate high school and also to attend college. She says her grandmother took her in and also volunteered to raise four of Stiers’ siblings in her Independence home.

Stiers said the money will help her grandmother pay bills.

2 Kansas women in court on drug, weapons charges

Arell- photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections
Arell- photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

HUTCHINSON – Two Kansas women arrested on September 18, for drug distribution were in Reno County court Friday for the formal reading of charges.

Roberta Arell, 47, and Sunny Chew, 31, both of Wichita, are charged with possession of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia with intent to distribute, personal use drug paraphernalia, two counts of aggravated endangerment of a child while allegedly selling drugs and illegal transportation of alcohol.

Arell was also charged with criminal possession of a firearm because of a previous conviction for possession of marijuana. She allegedly had a handgun when she was arrested.

The two were allegedly in possession of between 3.5 and 100 grams of methamphetamine and had two children in the car, a 2-year-old and a 6-year-old.

Both women are free on bond and their cases will now move to a waiver-status docket.

Arell has previous drug convictions in 2011 and 2013 in Reno County

Tigers fall to No. 2 Jennies

FHSU Sports Information
WARRENSBURG, Mo. – Fort Hays State fell by a score of 1-0 on Sunday (Oct. 2) at No. 2 ranked Central Missouri. The Tigers held the Jennies scoreless for the first 71 minutes of the game, but UCM finally broke through late to run its win streak to nine matches. UCM is now 9-0, while FHSU moved to 6-3-1 overall.

The Tigers fought hard to keep the Jennies off the board, but the process became even more difficult after Regan Lawler was issued a red card in the 59th minute. FHSU had to play with just 10 the remainder of the match and held the Jennies scoreless for about 12 minutes with the disadvantage. However, Jada Scott broke the scoreless tie in the 72nd minute for UCM.

The Jennies have yet to allow a goal this year, posting shutouts in all nine of their matches so far. This was the fourth 1-0 win for UCM this year. Ana Dilkes moved to 9-0 on the season in goal.

Abbie Flax fought off seven shots for the Tigers despite surrendering one goal. The Jennies were able to get off 15 shots total, compared to just five for FHSU. Only two of FHSU’s shots were on goal. Flax moved to 5-3-1 on the season.

The Tigers return home for their next two matches, facing Northwest Missouri State on Friday (Oct. 7) at 8 pm and then Missouri Western on Sunday (Oct. 9) at 11 am.

Tigers down Northeastern State 4-1

FHSU Sports Information
TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Fort Hays State improved to 6-2-1 overall and 2-0 in the MIAA with a dominating 4-1 win at Northeastern State on Sunday (Oct. 2). The 17th-ranked Tigers scored three first half goals and added another after the break, giving them 13 goals over the last three matches (average of 4.33). FHSU extended its win streak to four matches.

The Tigers did not take long to get on the board as Derick Gonzalez scored his team-leading fifth goal in at the 1:30 mark. The RiverHawks responded with a goal to level the score 1-1 at 11:36, but the Tigers took the lead back for good at the 27:21 mark when Maurizio Costa scored his third goal of the season off a pass from Drew Wilson. Arsenio Chamorro added a penalty kick goal in the 38th minute to push the lead to 3-1 by halftime. Michael Cole capped the scoring for FHSU in the 56th minute with his second goal of the season.

The Tigers outshot the RiverHawks 20-6 for the match. The Tigers put 13 of their shots on goal, forcing NSU to make nine saves between goalkeepers Ryan Davis and Jackson Biles. Davis allowed all four goals before being lifted in the 57th minute. Michael Yantz made four saves for FHSU, running his record to 4-2-1 overall.

The Tigers finally return home after five straight road matches. They host Upper Iowa on Friday (Oct. 7) at 5:30 pm, then host Lindenwood on Sunday (Oct. 9) at 2 pm in another pair of MIAA matches.

🎥 Spike Lee film ‘Touched By Fire’ featured during Mental Health Awareness Week

nami national mental health awareness week 2016By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

National Mental Health Awareness Week is observed each year during the first full week in October.

Mental illness is a medical condition, but it is often surrounded by stigma or stereotypes that prevent people from getting the help they need.

One in five adults experiences a mental illness in any given year, according to NAMI, National Alliance on Mental Illness. MHAW is a time to come together to fight stigma, provide support, educate the public and advocate for equal care.

NAMI Hays, along with NAMI On Campus at Fort Hays State University, will host a special event Monday, Oct. 3, 6-8 p.m. at the Hays Public Library, 1205 Main. The public is invited to watch the Spike Lee executive-produced movie Touched With Fire. Popcorn will be provided.

Touched with Fire stars Katie Holmes and Luke Kirby as two poets with bipolar disorder whose art is fueled by their emotional extremes. When they meet in a treatment facility, their chemistry is instant and intense, pushing each other’s mania to new heights. They pursue their passions, swinging from fantastical highs to tormented lows, both of which place them on the edge of disaster. They must ultimately choose between each other and stability.

touched with fire authorInspired by the filmmaker’s own struggles with bipolar disorder, Paul Dalio wrote, directed, edited and scored his feature film debut. The film also includes performances by Griffin Dunne, Christine Lahti and Bruce Altman with a cameo by Kay Jamison, author of the book Touched with Fire, a definitive work on creativity and mental health. The film is produced by Jeremy Alter and Kristina Nikolova and executive produced by Spike Lee.

Discussion of the film will move to the FHSU Memorial Union Starbucks beginning at 8 p.m.

Facts about mental illness in America, along with resources for more information and how to get help, will be shared at both locations.

Approximately half of all lifetime cases of mental illness begin by the age of 14. Unfortunately, long delays−sometimes decades−often occur between the time symptoms first appear and when people get help. Early identification and treatment is important.

For more information about NAMI Hays, check their Facebook page,  website,  or  call or text Ann Leiker, coordinator of the NAMI Hays Resource Center at (785) 259-6859. The NAMI Hays Resource Center is located in the Center for Life Experiences, 2900 Hall Street.

(Disclosure: Becky Kiser is a member of the NAMI Hays Steering Committee.)

GeneralMHFacts

 

KU Cancer Center Stresses Broad Effort In Bid For Federal Recognition

Applying for recognition from the National Cancer Institute is no small task, so the University of Kansas Cancer Center created a wall chart to track progress on the 16 chapters. Cancer Center Director Dr. Roy Jensen relied on staffers Lisa Harlan-Williams (left) and Teresa Christenson to help edit, write, and coordinate the application. They placed a gold star on the chart upon completion of each chapter. CREDIT JOHN MCGRATH / FLATLAND
Applying for recognition from the National Cancer Institute is no small task, so the University of Kansas Cancer Center created a wall chart to track progress on the 16 chapters. Cancer Center Director Dr. Roy Jensen relied on staffers Lisa Harlan-Williams (left) and Teresa Christenson to help edit, write, and coordinate the application. They placed a gold star on the chart upon completion of each chapter.
CREDIT JOHN MCGRATH / FLATLAND

By MIKE SHERRY

Four years ago, former Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius returned home as U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services with a prize the University of Kansas Cancer Center had been seeking for years: certification as a nationally recognized center through the National Cancer Institute (NCI).

But amid the hoopla, KU Cancer Center Director Dr. Roy Jensen declared the NCI designation was “merely a water break and a rest stop” on the way toward earning higher-echelon status from the institute as a “comprehensive” cancer center.

Now it’s time for the nail-biting to begin again, as the cancer center last week electronically submitted its roughly 1,600-page application for that higher-level designation. NCI is expected to decide whether to grant it by summer 2017.

If the cancer center does earn comprehensive status, it would become just the 48th institution in the country to achieve the designation, joining the likes of the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center and Yale Cancer Center.

To a large extent, the regional impact of NCI designation comes through the improvements in patient care, research and prevention that have accompanied the hefty investment needed for the KU Cancer Center to even submit a credible application.

Dr. Roy Jensen, director of the University of Kansas Cancer Center, started this countdown clock four years ago and keyed it to Sept. 26, 2016, the due date for its application to the National Cancer Institute. The cancer center submitted its application this morning, with room to spare on the midnight deadline. CREDIT JOHN MCGRATH / FLATLAND
Dr. Roy Jensen, director of the University of Kansas Cancer Center, started this countdown clock four years ago and keyed it to Sept. 26, 2016, the due date for its application to the National Cancer Institute. The cancer center submitted its application this morning, with room to spare on the midnight deadline.
CREDIT JOHN MCGRATH / FLATLAND

The money has come from both public and private sources.

For instance, the cancer center secured nearly $30 million from the Kansas Bioscience Authority to upgrade research facilities in the Wahl/Hixon complex on the KU Medical Center campus in Kansas City, Kansas.

State-of-the-art facilities like these are used by the cancer center to recruit and retain top-notch physician scientists like Dr. Raymond Perez, who came from Dartmouth Medical School to head the cancer clinical trials program.

The goal is to reduce the prevalence and mortality of cancer in Kansas and western Missouri, which see about 22,000 newly diagnosed cases and about a third that many deaths from cancer annually.

“We need an organization that gets up in the morning, and it’s the first thing they think about and it’s the last thing they think about when they go to bed,” Jensen said in a recent interview. “And I can guarantee you that is the KU Cancer Center.”

Cancer center officials are hoping that three different initiatives — including one involving a repurposed jock-itch medicine — will help convince NCI that the center is worthy of the higher-level designation. They say their efforts are wider, deeper and larger than they were in the first application.

Obesity

Americans have been told for years that they are too fat and that obesity can lead to all sorts of health problems, including diabetes and an increased risk of stroke.

Cancer, too.

In fact, Jensen says, obesity is projected to overtake tobacco as the leading cause of cancer in the U.S. within the next decade or so.

While the smoking rate among American adults has dipped to below 17 percent, obesity is on the rise. More than a third, 36.5 percent, of U.S. adults are obese, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Janis Wearing (right) weighs in at Salina Family Healthcare Center as part of a weight-management study led by the University of Kansas Medical Center. Working with Wearing is Shari Sutton, a nurse at the health center. CREDIT BRYAN THOMPSON / HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR
Janis Wearing (right) weighs in at Salina Family Healthcare Center as part of a weight-management study led by the University of Kansas Medical Center. Working with Wearing is Shari Sutton, a nurse at the health center.
CREDIT BRYAN THOMPSON / HEARTLAND HEALTH MONITOR

The rate is even worse outside metropolitan areas, which is bad news for heavily rural states like Kansas and Missouri.

Obesity is associated with a higher risk for several types of cancers, according to NCI, including cancers of the esophagus, pancreas and breast.

Fat tissue produces excess estrogen, high levels of which have been associated with the risk of breast, endometrial and some other cancers. Obese individuals also often have chronic low-level inflammation, which has been associated with increased cancer risk.

Public health messages about the dangers of obesity have yet to penetrate as much as warnings about the link between smoking and cancer, says Christie Befort, co-leader of cancer control and population health at the KU Cancer Center and principal investigator on a KU Med Center weight-management study.

Weight is also a sensitive issue for doctors.

“Few patients even get told they are obese,” Befort says. “People don’t like that word or that they need to lose weight. It doesn’t even come up in conversation as much as it should, and that is complicated in small towns, where you know your patient personally.”

That’s where Befort’s weight-management study comes in. It’s called RE-POWER, which is short for Rural Engagement in Primary Care for Optimizing Weight Reduction. The five-year, $10 million study includes three dozen rural primary care clinics in Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa and Wisconsin.

Outside of its potential clinical benefits, KU Cancer Center officials hope NCI reviewers are impressed that competitive funding for the study came through the congressionally authorized Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI).

The study is testing which of three treatment models works best in helping overweight patients slim down: office visits with an individual provider; group counseling via conference call with a KU Med weight-management specialist; or group sessions coordinated by a staffer at a clinic and via conference call.

Salina Family Healthcare Center, one of the Kansas clinics, is a RE-POWER site. It started its two years of work in March, according to Dr. Bob Kraft, a staff physician.

Group members receive counseling on proper nutrition and are given an exercise goal of 45 minutes of walking at least five times a week. A loss of even 5 percent of the patient’s baseline weight can improve their health, Kraft says.

His hope is that RE-POWER will encourage discussions about weight in the exam room.

“Part of the difficulty physicians have in talking about being overweight is the lack of services to help patients,” Kraft says. “It is hard to talk about things we can’t do something about, so hopefully programs like this will help us develop services that we can then refer patients to.”

Survivorship clinic

Childhood cancer is not the killer it once was; the five-year survival rate for pediatric cancer now stands at more than 80 percent. NCI says there are 15.5 million cancer survivors in the United States, hundreds of thousands of whom were first diagnosed when they were younger than 21.

But the life-saving treatments can cause medical issues years, or even decades, later.

Radiation for a brain tumor, for instance, might affect the growth and fertility functions of the pituitary gland. Some chemotherapy patients face an increased risk of heart problems.

It can be challenging for these late-term-effect patients to find primary care physicians who are knowledgeable about treating cancer survivors.

For younger patients, the struggle comes as they get too old to see their pediatrician. For older patients, they might be geographically removed from the medical providers they saw in their hometown.

Enter the Survivorship Transition Clinic, which opened two years ago in the medical office building on the University of Kansas Medical Center campus. It’s a companion program to the pediatric Survive & Thrive program at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City.

Its relevance to the quest for comprehensive designation comes through its origins as a project of the Midwest Cancer Alliance, the “outreach division” of the KU Cancer Center. With 21 members throughout the region, it extends the cancer center’s capacity to treat patients throughout its primary service area of Kansas and western Missouri.

The clinic has tripled — to more than 100 — the number of patients it serves since it opened its doors, says Dr. Becky Lowry, medical director of the clinic.

“We have had a number of patients who show up in their 40s and 50s and who were treated in their childhood, and had a number of health conditions that had either not been diagnosed or had been dismissed, that turned out to be related to their treatment,” Lowry says.

That was not the case with Morgan Goodman, a 23-year-old new mom residing in Gladstone, Missouri.

Born and raised in Topeka, Goodman was treated at Children’s Mercy after she was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma as a high school freshman.

Seeing familiar faces from Children’s Mercy in the transition clinic made for a warm handoff into adult care, she says. Lowry is her primary care physician.

Goodman has a lot going on. She’s caring for 4-month-old Harper and studying for her nursing boards. So she doesn’t dwell on the health problems she might face as a result of her chemotherapy.

“I can’t worry about that,” she says. “There are so many other things to worry about in life. If it’s going to happen, it’s going to happen. That’s kind of what my treatment taught me.”

Bladder Cancer

The clinical name is tinea cruris, and it’s a fungal infection that crops up in warm, moist areas of the body, making uncomfortable places you don’t want to be scratching in polite company.

Outside the medical field, it’s known as jock itch. And the ring-shaped rash figures prominently in the NCI application because of KU Cancer Center’s role in leading the development of a new drug, which it has patented and hopes to begin testing in clinical trials early next year.

Work on the drug came through the Institute for Advancing Medical Innovation (IAMI), which is the product development arm of the cancer center.

IAMI has a long-standing relationship with the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, which is how the institute got involved with Canadian research showing that ciclopirox, the active ingredient in a common jock-itch cream, effectively combated a certain type of leukemia.

The leap to bladder cancer occurred in 2010-11, prompted by the early results of a clinical trial. Researchers found that upping the dosage of the orally administered drug to potentially effective levels irritated the digestive systems of patients with acute myloid leukemia.

But IAMI Director Scott Weir was loath to quit on a compound that had killed leukemia cells in the lab merely because it couldn’t be given orally.

So the real coup for IAMI and the cancer center came as they drew on an established practice that chemically cloaks the key parts of the drug molecule when it is injected into the body. Then, naturally occurring enzymes in the blood cleave off the protective coat, leaving the active ingredient.

This delivery mechanism avoids the irritation of the digestive system caused when the drug is taken orally. It also offers the hope of a new therapy that will avoid the excruciating sloughing off of the urinary tract lining that can happen with the established treatment for non-muscle-invasive bladder cancer, which has remained largely unchanged for 50 years.

Bladder cancer is one the most common cancers among men and women. A 2009 study published in the World Journal of Urology pegged it as the most expensive cancer to treat (costing more than $200,000 per patient in some countries) because it has the highest recurrence rate among all cancers, thus requiring ongoing monitoring.

IAMI scientists also made a breakthrough by separating out a salt from ciclopirox to make it more soluble.

Weir’s epiphany about the drug’s potential for bladder cancer came during his afternoon commute one day in 2012.

“Our bodies consider drugs foreign things, so our bodies have ways of either preventing them from getting into the bloodstream or, once they are in our bodies, getting rid of them,” Weir says. “And our bodies are really, really good at getting rid of ciclopirox. So I am driving and going, ‘The entire dose that gets into the body is out in the urine in 12 hours.’ So it hit me: What about bladder cancer?”

Weir says this is exactly the kind of breakthrough that NCI is looking for in evaluating centers seeking comprehensive designation. In their approval of the cancer center’s first application, the reviewers called it an area offering real potential.

Ultimately, however, Weir says the real satisfaction will come if and when the drug proves to be a safe, effective treatment for bladder cancer.

Surveying the totality of the cancer center’s initiatives, Jensen, the cancer center director, says his operation is now positioned to make a strong case to NCI for the upper-level designation. Other efforts include smoking cessation, working to close the health gap between rich and poor, and vaccinating teenagers against the human papillomavirus (HPV).

“What we are going to be able to demonstrate in the (application) is that we have moved forward across a pretty broad front of cancer control and prevention,” he says. So it’s tobacco, it’s HPV, it’s obesity, it’s health disparities. I think we have a really good story to tell.”

Mike Sherry is a reporter for KCPT television in Kansas City, Mo., a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor team.

Hunting, fishing amendment on November election ballot

pheasant huntKDWPT

TOPEKA–In addition to voting for their chosen candidates and other important matters in the November 8, 2016 general election, voters will decide whether to amend the Kansas Constitution’s Bill of Rights to add a constitutional right to hunt, fish and trap wildlife.

The proposed amendment would specify the people have a right to hunt, fish and trap by traditional methods, subject to reasonable laws and regulations that promote wildlife conservation and management and that preserve the future of hunting, fishing and trapping. The amendment would also specify that hunting and fishing are the preferred means for managing and controlling wildlife, and that the amendment shall not be construed to modify any provision of law relating to trespass, eminent domain or other private property rights.

The amendment would be created if approved by a majority of Kansas voters. A “Yes” vote will be a vote in favor of adding the amendment to the constitution, and a “No” vote will be a vote against adding the amendment. If the amendment passes, current laws and regulations governing hunting, fishing and trapping of wildlife would still apply, as the proposed right is subject to reasonable laws and regulations. If the amendment fails, there would be no changes to current laws and regulations.

The proposed amendment was introduced into the 2015 Legislative Session as House Concurrent Resolution (HCR) 5008 by Representative Couture-Lovelady and Representative Lusker, but no action was taken. It was carried over to the 2016 session where it passed both chambers by large margins. The Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism (KDWPT) testified in support of the resolution.

According to the website Ballotpedia.org, 19 states currently have similar constitutional provisions for the right to hunt and fish. Two others have constitutional provisions guaranteeing the right to fish, and two have statutes providing for the right to hunt and fish. Vermont established its right to hunt and fish in 1777, but most of the other states have created their rights since 2000.

Hunters and anglers provide all of the support for the state’s wildlife and fisheries management programs. These programs are entirely funded by license/permit fees and a federal match from the excise tax paid by hunters and anglers on equipment they buy (these revenues can only be used to fund wildlife and fisheries programs; they cannot be used for state park maintenance). The state’s share of the federal excise tax can only be returned to Kansas if someone buys a license or permit. KDWPT does not receive any state general funds for any of its programs.

For more information about the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism, visit KSOutdoors.com or TravelKS.com.

2 Kansas teens hospitalized after pickup rolls

BUTLER COUNTY –Two Kansas teen were injured in an accident just before 9p.m. on Saturday in Butler County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 1999 Chevy pickup driven by Jessie L. Krogman, 17, Towanda, was southbound on Dike Road just west of Augusta.

The pickup left the roadway to the east and rolled.

Krogman and a passenger Imagin Olson, 17, Towanda, were transported to Kansas Medical Center.

They were both properly restrained at the time of the accident, according to the KHP.

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