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Tuesday, Nov 25th

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Man arrested in bloody Walmart stabbing

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In a twist of irony, a man that was a victim of a stabbing earlier this week, stabbed a man at Gallup Walmart June 5.

Gallup Police arrested Fernando Largo, 28, of Sundance, N.M. on one count of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon and two counts of tampering with evidence.

The call came into Gallup Police shortly before 4:30 pm, to 1650 West Maloney Ave., in reference to a man who was bleeding profusely from his head.

Patrolman Julio Yazzie was the first officer to arrive on scene and requested paramedics to treat the man's wound, according to GPD spokesperson Lt. Erin Toadlena-Pablo.

"This victim had lacerations to the head area and informed officers that he was stabbed by a male, who he knew as first name Fernando," Toadlena-Pablo, wrote in a news release. "Through investigation, officers were able to identify and apprehend the suspect in this incident."

The victim, whose name hasn't been released, underwent surgery at a local hospital the evening of June 5. Toadlena-Pablo said detectives told her that the victim's injuries do not appear to be life-threatening.

Meanwhile, days prior to Largo's arrest, on June 3, Samantha Singer, 28, was arrested for stabbing Largo, and charged with aggravated battery with a deadly weapon.

First Native American named to lead National Endowment for the Humanities

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President Joseph R. Biden nominated Shelly Lowe to be the 12th Chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Shelly C. Lowe is a citizen of the Navajo Nation and grew up on the Navajo Reservation in Ganado, Ariz.. She is currently a member of the National Council on the Humanities, the 26-member advisory body to NEH, an appointment she received from President Barack H. Obama.

Lowe’s career in higher education has included roles as Executive Director of the Harvard University Native American Program, Assistant Dean in the Yale College Dean’s Office, and Director of the Native American Cultural Center at Yale University.

Prior to these positions, she spent six years as the Graduate Education Program Facilitator for the American Indian Studies Programs at The University of Arizona.

Last OB-GYN doctor resigns from RMCHCS

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Women’s Health Unit closes, temporarily

RMCHCS is losing doctors and they’re not asking why.

Dr. Hannah Palm, who has been at Rehoboth McKinley Christian Health Care Services for less than a year, said she didn’t feel safe or heard. She believed the hospital was not well-staffed on the nurse or physician side in order to provide safe patient care, and found it difficult to work with the current administration.

When she announced her plan to leave, she said she was reminded of the lack of support she experienced previously at the hospital, by the actions of a single member of the administration, the only one who talked to her about it, who called her decision a “bummer,” and then asked her to help fill empty positions with traveling nurses and locums (people who temporarily fulfill the duties of others).

She said when she announced her resignation no one from the administration questioned her decision or asked if there was anything that might make her change her mind.

So, in addition to saying goodbye to patients and helping them find nearby facilities where they can go to deliver their babies, and assisting in arranging their transport, Palm is now helping RMCHCS to fill her own post, and that of the latest labor and delivery nurse to resign.

Another reason Palm said she decided to leave was because her mentor, Dr. Andrea Walker, resigned. At that point she felt she no longer had anyone to help with complex patient situations.

Those resignations meant RMCHCS had to close its Women’s Health Unit at 1902 Red Rock Dr. for the time being. Expectant mothers needing treatment are now being directed to the hospital emergency room or told to contact their primary OB-GYN doctors.

But that is only one of the repercussions of the resignation of the last OB-GYN doctor at RMCHCS.

For Dr. Neil Jackson and his wife the change has meant rearranging plans for delivery of the couple’s first baby.

It’s added a layer of stress to the pregnancy. It means they would have to leave the area and all the people they have been working with in preparation for the birth. They have to find another place to have the baby in another city, maybe as far away as Albuquerque.  Jackson said it means they probably can’t take their doula with them and transportation could be difficult, even dangerous.

“We found out about this two days before our due date,” he said.

Jackson said going through this is making him painfully aware of what it is like for some of his patients. He is hoping for there to be a shared plan to keep labor and delivery open at the hospital to maintain stability for pregnant patients.

Jackson, a family practice physician who has worked in the primary care and prenatal clinics, performed labor and delivery and has a concentration in obstetrics, said the hospital went from having four OB-GYN providers to having only two. Now the last of those providers is leaving.

Palm is the last OB-GYN at the hospital now and she’s only staying until her contract ends in December. With the Women’s Health Unit closed and the resignation of the last labor and delivery nurse, Palm is the lone OB-GYN doctor at the hospital and she’s now working in the ER and is only supposed to help out with emergency deliveries.

“We’re able to address any emergency, but when a patient comes in [to the ER] in labor, especially because of COVID and the national nursing shortage, it can take several hours to arrange [for them to go to] another hospital,” Palm said.

However, they haven’t lost any babies because of the current situation.

Things are up in the air at the family medicine residency program, too. It offers a general curriculum to train doctors, in hopes that they will stay and provide rural health care in the area.

“They need labor and delivery experience for that program … or they need to search it out in the area  — or the training program would need to be re-established elsewhere,” Palm pointed out.

However, RMCHCS leadership seems confident that the OB-GYN vacancies will not be a problem.

Speaking on behalf of the hospital, interim CEO Don Smithburg said, “the hospital is constantly recruiting new doctors … that is the nature of small, rural hospitals.”

He believes the OB-GYN doctor and nurse shortage will be resolved by the end of October.

The hospital is already looking for traveling nurses and doctors and permanent obstetrics staff replacements.

“We have about 130 doctors attached to the institution,” he said. “There was one released in July and there are a couple of others who have resigned.

“They’re loud when they leave the institution. That is a fact,” he said.

Some of those voices may be heard at a community town hall scheduled for Oct. 2 at the First United Methodist Church at 1800 Redrock Dr., #7000. The organizers want to address the state of patient care, women’s health, and services at RMCHCS.

Smithburg won’t be there and neither will any members of the hospital administration.

As far as he’s concerned the community town hall is a union-sponsored event —the union being the Union of American Physicians and Dentists.

To attend the meeting via Zoom, RSVP at uapd.com/rehoboth to receive the link, or check out the recording at KGLP.org.

By Beth Blakeman
Managing Editor

FCC introduces telephone changes

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The Federal Communication Commission is adopting  new rules for suicide prevention and mental health crisis assistance, veterans’ crisis assistance and 10-digit dialing.

● The FCC adopted rules to establish a new three-digit number for Americans in crisis.

Dialing 988 will direct callers to 1-800-273-TALK, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, which will remain operational even after the transition to the 988 in July 16, 2022 becomes effective.

The idea is to make the number easy-to-recall in hopes that more people in critical need will be able to access services immediately.

● The Veterans Crisis Line is veteran-specific for suicide and crisis assistance and can be reached at 1- (800) 273-8255 and pressing 1, or by texting 838255. It is also available for those who wish to chat online at veteranscrisisline.net.

Access to these crisis lines will apply to all telecommunications carriers and all interconnected and one-way Voice over Internet Protocol service providers. They will provide for a two-year transition, reflecting the nature of this nationwide effort, including the need for network changes and providing time for the suicide lifeline to prepare for an expected increase in the volume of calls.

All covered providers will lso be required to implement 10-digit dialing in areas that use seven-digit dialing and those that use 988 as the first three numbers in seven-digit telephone numbers.

● Consumers are reminded to begin using 10 digits for all local calls. Although the calls will be connected if they only use seven digits, the FCC is transitioning and encourages use of area codes when dialing local calls. Beginning Oct. 24, seven-digit calls in local areas may not be completed.

In New Mexico (505) and (575) are the area codes that will be required to transition to 10-digit dialing.

Missing Endangered Juvenile Advisory issued by Gallup Police

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(PHOTO PENDING)

The following is information for the distribution of a Missing Endangered Juvenile Advisory from the Gallup Police Department. Please refer all media inquiries to the Gallup Police Department at (505) 722-2002.

The Gallup Police Department is seeking the public's assistance in locating Emmanuel Gavin Haudley, a Native American male, 16 years old, 5’8” tall, 130 pounds, with brown eyes, and black hair.  He has a diamond tattoo on his right hand and a bruised left eye.

He was last seen on May 12, around 4:55 pm, near South Fourth Street in the Gallup area. It is unknown what type of clothing he was last wearing. Emmanuel is MISSING and is believed to be in DANGER if not located.

Anyone with any information regarding this New Mexico MISSING ENDANGERED JUVENILE ADVISORY is asked to call the Gallup Police Department at (505) 722-2231 or dial 911.

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