Rhode Island
One year later, no answers for why a 26-year-old R.I. marathoner died – The Boston Globe
His autopsy came back “normal,” and the medical examiner’s “working diagnosis” was that a sudden electrolyte shift caused an abnormal heartbeat, which might have been aggravated by a small, unseen area of heart muscle inflammation, said Lipton’s father, Dr. Jordan D. Lipton, an emergency medicine physician.
“We miss and love him terribly and are devastated that he will never be able to continue the work he loved and the good things he was doing for everyone, while we watched with pride and admiration,” Dr. Lipton told the Globe. “We miss his future, and of course, the lack of a definitive explanation makes it even more devastating.”
Deaths and cardiac arrests involving young athletes are shocking, and often receive media attention. In May, a 27-year-old man from Brooklyn died after running a half marathon in Providence. In July, Bronny James, the 18-year-old son of NBA star LeBron James, was hospitalized and survived after going into cardiac arrest during basketball practice.
But deaths among young athletes are rare, and the benefits of exercise outweigh the risks, said Dr. Paul D. Thompson, chief of cardiology emeritus at Hartford Hospital, and past president of the American College of Sports Medicine.
When he was on the Brown University faculty, Thompson and others wrote a 1982 Journal of the American Medical Association article reporting that just 12 men died while jogging during a six-year period in Rhode Island. They concluded the state had seen only one death per year for every 7,620 joggers.
In 2007, Thompson and others wrote a New England Journal of Medicine article, assessing cardiac arrests in US marathons and half-marathons from 2000 to 2010. They found that of 10.9 million runners, 59 had cardiac arrests, an incidence rate of 0.54 per 100,000. Cardiovascular disease accounted for the majority.
“I don’t want people to get freaked out about the danger of exercise,” he told the Globe.
Thompson — who qualified for the 1972 US Olympic Marathon Trials as a third-year medical student, and finished 16th in the 1976 Boston Marathon — said most people who die while exercising are older men with blocked arteries.
Deaths among young athletes can involve hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (thickening of the heart muscle), abnormalities in coronary arteries, arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia (a rare familial disorder), and inflammation of the heart caused by viral infections, including the coronavirus, cardiologists said.
But Lipton said an examination of his son found no vascular disease, genetic cardiac testing was normal, and he had good cholesterol levels. He said his son had been vaccinated and had COVID-19 a year earlier, but the exam showed no heart inflammation.
Thompson said that when people die of cardiac arrest for unclear reasons, those cases are categorized as Sudden Arrhythmic Death Syndrome, or SADS. “When there is no explanation, we put those together as SADS, and boy, I tell you, it is sad,” he said. “These are usually young people.”
In those cases, the heart goes into ventricular fibrillation, twitching and failing to move blood, he explained. Underlying causes include Long QT syndrome — a heart signaling disorder that can cause fast, chaotic heartbeats — or Brugada syndrome, a rare but potentially life-threatening heart rhythm condition, he said.
“As time goes on, we find more and more deaths during exercise are related to SADS,” Thompson said.
The coronavirus and COVID-19 vaccines can cause heart inflammation in rare cases, Thompson said. “But I am not an anti-vaxxer. The benefits outweigh the risks. I have had four shots.”
Thompson noted some advocates want to screen young athletes for conditions that might cause cardiac arrest. But he said those programs aren’t worth the effort because the problems are so rare. He said that effort would be better spent teaching CPR and making defibrillators available.
Lipton said paramedics used a defibrillator on his son “relatively quickly” after he lost a pulse. Also, two doctors were at a medical tent and helped load his son into the ambulance, he said. One doctor was preparing to intubate him, he said, “but they were reportedly kicked off the ambulance by the medics due to being ‘against their protocol.’ “
While Lipton’s working diagnosis is a “sudden electrolyte shift,” Thompson said, “I wouldn’t blame it on electrolyte abnormality. That sounds like something pushed by sports drinks people.”
Dr. Steven Lome, a cardiologist in Monterey, Calif., said the most common cause of death during marathons among women with structurally normal hearts is hyponatremia, when sodium levels in blood become abnormally low. “If you overconsume water, it dilutes the blood,” he said. “That can induce an arrhythmic ventricular fibrillation.”
Runners can also die from hyperthermia when body temperatures become abnormally high, Lome said. But when Lipton ran the Mesa (Arizona) Marathon, temperatures ranged between 46 and 69 degrees, and a finish line photo shows him looking relaxed, gliding with both feet off the ground.
Lome made national news in 2022 when he performed CPR on two runners during one half marathon in California, helping to save their lives. But he said both runners were much older than Lipton — men in their 50s and 60s, with family histories of heart disease.
Lome said at least 80 percent of heart disease is preventable. As the founder of the Plant Based Nutrition Movement, he encourages plant-based or Mediterranean-style diets, and he emphasized the importance of not smoking, checking your cholesterol, and paying attention to risk factors like a family history of heart problems.
Lipton said there is a family history of high cholesterol, but his son’s exam “was completely normal and his previous lipids were fantastic due to his healthy lifestyle.” He said his son adhered to a “mostly vegan” diet, and was “the healthiest person in our entire extended family.”
Pierre Lipton’s girlfriend, Eleanor Pereboom, said, “I know that Pierre was running fully within his capabilities, and I don’t know anyone who treated their body with more respect than he did.”
Dr. Brian G. Abbott, of Lifespan’s Cardiovascular Institute and Brown University’s Warren Alpert Medical School, said the most common reason for sudden death in young athletes is thickening of the heart muscle leading to arrhythmia. If a person’s heart is structurally normal, other possibilities include the Long QT syndrome that can lead to irregular heartbeats, but most 26-year-olds don’t take tests to screen for such conditions, he said.
“The benefits of running and exercise far outweigh the potential risks,” Abbott said. “Whatever he had was something not clinically apparent. Obviously, he was running fine, he said. “In a way, it’s like getting hit by lightning.”
Lipton said he certainly hopes that whatever happened to his son is extremely rare. “But when it happens to a person like our son, it doesn’t matter,” he said.
Edward Fitzpatrick can be reached at edward.fitzpatrick@globe.com. Follow him @FitzProv.
Rhode Island
AARP report highlights scale and value of unpaid caregiving in Rhode Island
“Nationally there are 59 million Americans who are providing care for a loved one and that is 49.5 billion hours of care annually. It’s valued at a trillion dollars,” said Catherine Taylor, the director of AARP Rhode Island; AARP, the nation’s largest non- profit, dedicated to empowering people 50 and older.
In Rhode Island, the report shows 155,000 people serve as caregivers, providing 111 million hours of care.
Barbara Morse reports on unpaid caregivers. (WJAR)
“The total impact is $2.8 billion a year,” said Taylor.
It’s not just babysitting a loved one.
Catherine Taylor, the director of AARP Rhode Island, spoke with NBC 10’s Barbara Morse about the value of caregiving. (WJAR)
“People are doing a lot more nursing tasks, you know–wound care, injections and things like that and they’re doing a lot more intensive daily care, like bathing, and dressing and feeding than we used to,” she said.
Its latest report–“Valuing the Invaluable.”
“The whole point of this report is to draw attention to how many family care givers there are and what the magnitude of what the need is for their support,” said Taylor.
That includes financial support and respite care.
AARP wants you to know this:
An older man using equipment in a gym. (FILE)
In Rhode Island, temporary caregiver insurance or TCI is available to folks who qualify, for up to eight weeks.
There are federal tax credits you may qualify for. There is help.
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“All you have to do is call 211 and say you’re a family caregiver and they will connect you to all of AARP’S trusted information, including a Rhode Island specific guide on resources for caregivers,” she said.
Rhode Island
A new safety role at Rhode Island College comes into sharper focus after Brown shooting – The Boston Globe
Lawrence was recently named RIC’s first emergency management director, a role college leaders had been planning before the December mass shooting across town at Brown University, but which took on new urgency after the tragedy.
Few resumes are better suited to the job.
A 20-year career in the New York Police Department. Commanding officer of the NYPD’s Employee Assistance Unit. A master’s degree from Harvard.
Lawrence got to Rhode Island the way a lot of people do: through someone who grew up here and never really left, at least not in spirit. Her husband, Brooke Lawrence, grew up in West Greenwich, and is director of the town’s emergency management agency.
“I couldn’t imagine retiring in my 40s,” Lawrence told me. “And I couldn’t imagine not giving back to my community.”
Public service has been part of Lawrence’s life for as long as she can remember. A New Jersey native, she dreamed of following in the footsteps of her mentor, a longtime FBI agent. She graduated from Monmouth University and earned a master’s degree in forensic psychology from John Jay College in 2001, shortly before the Sept. 11 attacks.
There was high demand for police in New York at the time, so Lawrence raised her hand to serve. She worked her way up the ranks from patrol to lieutenant, eventually taking charge of the department’s Employee Assistance Unit, a peer support program that helps rank-and-file officers navigate the most traumatic parts of the job. She later earned a second master’s degree from Harvard’s Kennedy School.
“It’s making sure our officers are getting through their career in the same mental capacity as they came on the job,” Lawrence said.
There’s a version of Lawrence’s new job that feels routine, especially at a quiet commuter campus like Rhode Island College. And when Lawrence was initially hired part-time last fall, it probably was.
Then the shooting at Brown University changed the stakes almost overnight.
On Dec. 13, Claudio Manuel Neves Valente, a Portuguese national and one-time student at Brown, opened fire inside the Barus and Holley building, killing two students and injuring nine others. Neves Valente also killed an MIT professor before he was found dead in a New Hampshire storage unit of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
In eerie videos recorded in the storage unit, Neves Valente admitted that he stalked the Brown campus for weeks prior to his attack. He largely went unnoticed by campus security, which led the university’s police chief to be placed on leave and essentially replaced by former Providence Police Chief Colonel Hugh Clements.
Lawrence assisted with the response at Brown. She leads the trauma response team for the Rhode Island Behavioral Health Medical Reserve Corps, which staffed the family reunification center in the hours after the shooting.
RIC’s campus is more enclosed than Brown’s — there are only two major entryways to the college — but there are unique challenges.
For one, it’s technically located in both Providence and North Providence, which requires coordination between multiple public safety departments in both communities.
More specifically, Lawrence noted that every building on campus has the same address, which can present a challenge in an emergency. Lawrence has worked with RIC leadership and local public safety to assign an address to each building.
Lawrence stressed that she doesn’t want RIC to overreact to the tragedy at Brown, and she said campus leaders are committed to keeping the tight-knit community intact.
But she admits that the shooting remains top of mind.
“Every campus community sees what happened at Brown and says ‘please don’t let that happen to us,’” Lawrence said.
Lawrence said everyone at RIC feels a deep sense of responsibility to keep students safe during their time on campus.
And she already feels right at home.
“I want to come home from work every day and feel like I made a difference,” she said.
Dan McGowan can be reached at dan.mcgowan@globe.com. Follow him @danmcgowan.
Rhode Island
Taylor Swift And Travis Kelce Tying The Knot In RI? Online Casino Doesn’t Think So
If you thought the smart money was on pop icon Taylor Swift and gridiron star Travis Kelce tying the knot in Rhode Island, an online crypto casino and sportsbook is here to tell you you’re wrong.
The Ocean State was the second favorite at +155 and 39.22%, and Pennsylvania and Ohio were together at a distant third at +1,600 and 5.88%.
Tennessee was the fifth choice at +2,000 and 4.76%.
“New York is the favourite because it’s the city most closely tied to Taylor Swift’s public life, with multiple residences, strong emotional branding, and world‑class venues that offer privacy and security for a high‑profile event,” an unidentified spokesperson said in a media release.
Human Remains Found Near Taylor Swift’s Mansion Identified: Report
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