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Central Maine Healthcare encourages blood donations

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Central Maine Healthcare encourages blood donations


LEWISTON — Lab analysts and technicians from Central Maine Healthcare, which includes Central Maine Medical Center, Rumford Hospital and Bridgton Hospital, are urging members of the public to consider giving blood.

While CMH maintains an adequate supply of blood for its patients, the region is facing severe shortages. January is National Blood Donor Month.

Sandy Clark, left, confers with Nick Aripez, lab medical technologist at CMMC. Submitted photo

The American Red Cross is experiencing an emergency blood shortage, with donations at a 20-year low. In Maine, about 1,500 donor appointments are unfilled, according to a news release from Central Maine Healthcare.

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Of the more than 200 million Americans who are eligible to give blood, about six million donate.

The need for a dependable blood supply was highlighted during the Oct. 25 mass casualty event in Lewiston at CMMC. But CMH team members say the need is year-round.

“Working in the lab, I see first-hand the need for blood for our patients,” said Sandy Clark, lab analyst at CMMC. Clark lives in Bridgton and started her lab career at Bridgton Hospital 30 years ago and donates blood regularly, herself.

“Being in the lab, you see the patient orders. At Bridgton, these are my family, my friends and my neighbors. Giving blood is a very real and very simple way that I can help take care of them,” she said.

“Our biggest concern is maintaining the supply,” said Adam Norfolk, technical lab supervisor at CMMC. “Our blood supply has been maintained by a few altruistic individuals wanting to help sick people. As this cohort ages and retires, they stop donating and younger people are not donating enough to replenish the inventory.”

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Anyone who wants to donate can check out the list of blood drives happening across the state and register at redcrossblood.org.

 

Check out other upcoming area events!

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Maine veterans find closure, connection on Honor Flight to D.C.

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Maine veterans find closure, connection on Honor Flight to D.C.


WASHINGTON, D.C. (WABI) – Maine veterans returned home Sunday after a weekend in Washington, D.C.

Giving local veterans and their loved ones a visit to the capital of the nation they dedicated their lives to is the aim of Honor Flight Maine.

Marking their second trip of the year, the nonprofit provided about 70 Pine Tree State veterans a free trip to Washington to visit the memorials and monuments dedicated to their service.

For many, this was this first time seeing the capital in person.

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“Unreal,” “a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” and “tear-dropping” were among the sentiments shared by veterans about the Honor Flight. Others remarked on the memories revived by visiting the ceremonial spaces.

“I have some friends that’s over there, so it really was nice,” said Edward Lee, a Vietnam veteran from Bangor.

Lee was able to find one friend’s name engraved on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Using graphite and a piece of paper, he made a rubbing of the name to take home.

Rose Marie Curtis, a Navy nurse who served in Vietnam, said seeing the three nurses depicted at the Vietnam Women’s Memorial sent her back in time.

“For so many years, you don’t think about something. You’re doing this and doing that and having children, whatever. But this really brings you back,” Curtis described.

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Not only does the trip give veterans the opportunity to see these sites, it allows a chance to connect; with perhaps a past or present self, and with fellow veterans.

“It’s what makes Honor Flight Maine special because you’re with your own kind,” explained Charlie Paul, a Vietnam War veteran who has been involved with Honor Flight Maine for a decade. “We’re a segment of society, they remember us on Memorial Day. They remember us on Veteran’s Day. They remember us on Armed Forces Day. But then they forget about us. And so for us as an organization to take them down here and see their memorials, it just lets them know they’re that special.”

For Lincoln veteran Richard Rollins, the visit gave him “closure,” considering, “…when I got out of the service, I mean, to be honest, even in ’79, I was never thanked.”

Among former servicemembers of all ages, father-son veterans James and Michael Sherman said the trip opened up conversation, sharing stories they had never told each other about their service.

“It means the world that people care, and we shouldn’t wait a moment to tell the people that are important to us what they mean to us,” Michael Sherman remarked.

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Car catches fire on Maine Turnpike in Kennebunk

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Car catches fire on Maine Turnpike in Kennebunk


KENNEBUNK, Maine (WGME) — A car caught on fire on the Maine turnpike Saturday.

It happened in Kennebunk in the southbound lanes of the turnpike.

A car caught on fire on the Maine turnpike Saturday. (Courtesy of Kennebunk Fire Rescue)

You can see a large cloud of black smoke coming from the scene.

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Nobody was hurt.

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Firefighters were able to extinguish the flames.



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In Maine governor’s race, connection is preferable to cronyism | Letter

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In Maine governor’s race, connection is preferable to cronyism | Letter


After Maine’s first Democratic gubernatorial debate, I commented that the candidates seemed to be vying with each other to be agreeable. Would it last? Back then, I thought I’d be happy with any of them as Maine’s next governor.

Not so now, as I observe the cronyism of Shenna Bellows, Troy Jackson and Hannah Pingree, whose plan to rank each other when they vote provides a blueprint for gaming the ranked-choice voting system in the primary. The political insiders are forming an alliance against the outsiders, Nirav Shah and Angus King III.

Shah’s campaign responded that it would stay focused on winning voters’ support, a more principled approach, in my estimation.

I prefer a governor who listens and learns from his constituents over one experienced at alliances and deal-making. I want integrity and leadership, not manipulation and exclusion.

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I no longer believe that Bellows, Jackson or Pingree would make a good governor.

Moriah Freeman
Brunswick

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