Florida
Florida ranked No. 10 for syphilis in US
TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — In the case of well being and infections, america has a giant drawback in addition to ending the COVID-19 pandemic. That drawback is STDs, significantly gonorrhea, syphilis, and chlamydia.
A brand new report from the U.S. Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention ranked all 50 states by how frequent totally different venereal, or sexually transmitted ailments are, amongst state populations. Florida ranked No. 10 for syphilis.
Rankings for different frequent STDs like gonorrhea or chlamydia had been a lot decrease within the Sunshine State, No. 27 for each ailments. Whereas the info in the principle CDC report relies on infections in 2020, preliminary information from 2021 reveals the issue is just not going away, as a substitute, the well being company mentioned syphilis was spreading.
In its report surveillance report, the CDC mentioned that chlamydia infections had gone down 1.2%, to 1.6 million instances throughout the U.S. since 2016. Nevertheless, gonorrhea instances rose 45% over 4 years by way of 2020, whereas syphilis had risen 52%. Congenital syphilis, an an infection from pregnant mom to toddler earlier than delivery, was greater too, with a 235% improve.
The CDC mentioned the report “serves as a reminder that STDs stay a big public well being concern, even within the face of a pandemic.”
Throughout the U.S., there have been 1,579,885 instances of chlamydia in 2020. Right here had been the highest states, ranked by instances per 100,000 residents.
Rank
State
Case Depend
Price Per 100K
1
Mississippi
23,919
803.7
2
Louisiana
32,997
709.8
3
Alaska
5,090
695.8
4
South Carolina
34,118
662.7
5
North Carolina
64,640
616.3
6
Georgia
62,582
589.4
7
New Mexico
12,084
576.3
8
Tennessee
37,907
555.1
9
Alabama
27,075
552.2
10
Illinois
68,716
542.3
27
Florida
100,030
465.7
For gonorrhea, Florida held the identical rank, however the high 10 was a bit totally different. Within the U.S., there have been solely 677,769 instances in 2020. The CDC mentioned the info in 2020 was a giant concern as a result of historical past of the illness’s unfold over time.
“Charges of reported gonorrhea have elevated 111% for the reason that historic low in 2009,” The CDC reported. “Throughout 2019–2020, the general charge of reported gonorrhea elevated 5.7%.” They mentioned the quantity of reported instances had elevated primarily amongst males from 2009 to 2013. The variety of instances elevated in 36 states, in line with the CDC.
Rank
State
Case Depend
Price per 100K
1
Mississippi
13,773
462.8
2
Louisiana
15,483
333.1
3
South Carolina
16,705
324.4
4
Alabama
14,426
294.2
5
Oklahoma
11,204
283.1
6
Missouri
16,855
274.6
7
South Dakota
2,424
274
8
Alaska
1,982
270.9
9
Tennessee
18,458
270.3
10
North Carolina
28,258
269.4
27
Florida
40,788
189.9
Nevertheless, when it got here to syphilis instances within the U.S., Florida did break into the highest 10 in 2020. There have been solely 41,655 instances within the nation.
Rank | State | Case Depend | Price per 100K |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Nevada | 767 | 24.9 |
2 | Mississippi | 741 | 24.9 |
3 | Alaska | 176 | 24.1 |
4 | Oklahoma | 941 | 23.8 |
5 | New Mexico | 467 | 22.3 |
6 | Arizona | 1,454 | 20 |
7 | California | 7,688 | 19.5 |
8 | Arkansas | 502 | 16.6 |
9 | Georgia | 1,757 | 16.5 |
10 | Florida | 3,520 | 16.4 |
The variety of instances of syphilis infections amongst infants, attributable to congenital syphilis, there have been simply 2,148 instances nationally. The bulk had been in Texas.
Rank
State
Case Depend
Price per 100K
1
New Mexico
42
182.9
2
Arizona
120
151.2
3
Texas
561
148.6
4
Nevada
46
131.2
5
Oklahoma
53
107.8
6
California
481
107.7
7
Louisiana
63
106.9
8
Mississippi
37
101
9
Alaska
8
81.4
10
Hawaii
12
71.4
11
Florida
154
70
The rise of syphilis instances, regardless of a confirmed and efficient methodology of each remedy and prevention, has prompted the CDC concern. In 1999, the CDC reported it will be doable to “remove syphilis” inside the entire of the nation’s borders. The report famous the vast majority of infections on the time had been within the South.
The traits reported greater than 20 years in the past nonetheless maintain true, as proven by the variety of Southern states within the high 10 for syphilis and congenital syphilis.
Following the CDC’s launch of the info on April 12, some reactions to it had been blended, particularly from advocates who had been reviewing President Joe Biden’s finances plan.
The Nationwide Coalition of STD Administrators, a nationwide public well being membership group representing well being division STD administrators and their workers, urged the U.S. authorities to extend the CDC’s finances to help in preventing the unfold of the ailments within the report, amongst others.
“This affirms as soon as once more that America isn’t taking the STD disaster critically,” David C. Harvey, government director of NCSD, mentioned. “We will solely battle this out-of-control epidemic with new funding and the type of urgency that displays the enormity of this disaster.”
NCSD has tracked how COVID-19 affected the power to trace illness unfold throughout within the U.S. in the course of the pandemic. It’s an issue the CDC additionally acknowledged when publishing the STD surveillance information.
“In 2020, COVID-19 considerably affected STD surveillance and prevention efforts,” the CDC mentioned. “This report displays the realities of a strained public well being infrastructure, whereas concurrently offering essentially the most present information on reported instances of STDs in america.”
NCSD mentioned the challenges of the pandemic led to interruptions in testing and entry to healthcare in communities preventing off STDs. They mentioned the ailments impacted the younger “deeply” and added to a “dramatic climb in congenital syphilis.” When the president launched the finances plan for the approaching fiscal yr, the group mentioned maintaining the CDC’s STD finances flat, or unchanged, wouldn’t assist to handle the upward pattern of infections within the U.S.
Florida
Biden gives life in prison to 2 death row inmates from Florida, 35 others
WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden announced on Monday that he is commuting the sentences of 37 of the 40 people on federal death row, including two Florida men, converting their punishments to life imprisonment just weeks before President-elect Donald Trump, an outspoken proponent of expanding capital punishment, takes office.
The move spares the lives of people convicted in killings, including the slayings of police and military officers, people on federal land and those involved in deadly bank robberies or drug deals, as well as the killings of guards or prisoners in federal facilities.
It means just three federal inmates are still facing execution. They are Dylann Roof, who carried out the 2015 racist slayings of nine Black members of Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina; 2013 Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev; and Robert Bowers, who fatally shot 11 congregants at Pittsburgh’s Tree of life Synagogue in 2018, the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S history.
“I’ve dedicated my career to reducing violent crime and ensuring a fair and effective justice system,” Biden said in a statement. “Today, I am commuting the sentences of 37 of the 40 individuals on federal death row to life sentences without the possibility of parole. These commutations are consistent with the moratorium my administration has imposed on federal executions, in cases other than terrorism and hate-motivated mass murder.”
Of the 37 people who received commuted sentences, two are from Florida. Ricardo Sanchez Jr. and Daniel Troya were sentenced to death in 2009 for killing two children, ages 3 and 4. The men were also convicted of killing the children’s parents in a 2006 shooting along the Florida Turnpike, which prosecutors said was related to a drug debt.
Sanchez and Troya were the only men from Florida on federal death row.
The Biden administration in 2021 announced a moratorium on federal capital punishment to study the protocols used, which suspended executions during Biden’s term. But Biden actually had promised to go further on the issue in the past, pledging to end federal executions without the caveats for terrorism and hate-motivated, mass killings.
While running for president in 2020, Biden’s campaign website said he would “work to pass legislation to eliminate the death penalty at the federal level, and incentivize states to follow the federal government’s example.”
Similar language didn’t appear on Biden’s reelection website before he left the presidential race in July.
“Make no mistake: I condemn these murderers, grieve for the victims of their despicable acts, and ache for all the families who have suffered unimaginable and irreparable loss,” Biden’s statement said. “But guided by my conscience and my experience as a public defender, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, vice president, and now president, I am more convinced than ever that we must stop the use of the death penalty at the federal level.”
He took a political jab at Trump, saying, “In good conscience, I cannot stand back and let a new administration resume executions that I halted.”
Trump, who takes office on Jan. 20, has spoken frequently of expanding executions. In a speech announcing his 2024 campaign, Trump called for those “caught selling drugs to receive the death penalty for their heinous acts.” He later promised to execute drug and human smugglers and even praised China’s harsher treatment of drug peddlers. During his first term as president, Trump also advocated for the death penalty for drug dealers.
There were 13 federal executions during Trump’s first term, more than under any president in modern history, and some may have happened fast enough to have contributed to the spread of the coronavirus at the federal death row facility in Indiana.
Those were the first federal executions since 2003. The final three occurred after Election Day in November 2020 but before Trump left office the following January, the first time federal prisoners were put to death by a lame-duck president since Grover Cleveland in 1889.
Biden faced recent pressure from advocacy groups urging him to act to make it more difficult for Trump to increase the use of capital punishment for federal inmates. The president’s announcement also comes less than two weeks after he commuted the sentences of roughly 1,500 people who were released from prison and placed on home confinement during the COVID-19 pandemic, and of 39 others convicted of nonviolent crimes, the largest single-day act of clemency in modern history.
The announcement also followed the post-election pardon that Biden granted his son Hunter on federal gun and tax charges after long saying he would not issue one, sparking an uproar in Washington. The pardon also raised questions about whether he would issue sweeping preemptive pardons for administration officials and other allies who the White House worries could be unjustly targeted by Trump’s second administration.
Speculation that Biden could commute federal death sentences intensified last week after the White House announced he plans to visit Italy on the final foreign trip of his presidency next month. Biden, a practicing Catholic, will meet with Pope Francis, who recently called for prayers for U.S. death row inmates in hopes their sentences will be commuted.
Martin Luther King III, who publicly urged Biden to change the death sentences, said in a statement issued by the White House that the president “has done what no president before him was willing to do: take meaningful and lasting action not just to acknowledge the death penalty’s racist roots but also to remedy its persistent unfairness.”
Donnie Oliverio, a retired Ohio police officer whose partner was killed by one of the men whose death sentence was converted, said the execution of “the person who killed my police partner and best friend would have brought me no peace.”
“The president has done what is right here,” Oliverio said in a statement also issued by the White House, “and what is consistent with the faith he and I share.”
By WILL WEISSERT and DARLENE SUPERVILLE Associated Press
Tampa Bay Times staff writer Romy Ellenbogen contributed to this report.
Weissert reported from West Palm Beach, Florida.
Florida
SpaceX launches 21 Starlink internet satellites from Florida, lands rocket at sea (photos)
SpaceX launched 21 Starlink internet satellites from Florida’s Space Coast early Monday morning (Dec. 23) and landed the returning rocket on a ship at sea.
A Falcon 9 rocket carrying the Starlink spacecraft — 13 of which can beam service directly to cellphones — lifted off from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida today at 12:35 a.m. EDT (0535 GMT).
The Falcon 9’s first stage came back to Earth as planned, touching down in the Atlantic Ocean about eight minutes after launch on the SpaceX droneship “Just Read the Instructions.”
It was the 15th liftoff and landing for this particular booster, according to a SpaceX mission description. Eight of those flights have been Starlink missions.
The Falcon 9’s upper stage continued hauling the 21 Starlink satellites to low Earth orbit, where they will be deployed about 65 minutes after launch.
Starlink satellite train: how to see and track it in the night sky
Monday morning’s Starlink launch was the 129th Falcon 9 mission of 2024. About two-thirds of those flights have been devoted to building out the Starlink broadband megaconstellation, which current consists of more than 6,800 active satellites.
Florida
3 most underrated signees in Florida State football's 2025 class
Florida State football had an embarrassing 2024 campaign where it finished with a 2-10 record. This is not the expectation of what the Seminoles are all about.
Head football coach Mike Norvell understood the urgency as he could not allow the program to snowball into a laughing stock after a productive 13-1 season in 2023. Norvell was heading into a pivotal sixth season with his job on the line.
As a result, he went out and hired a ton of new coaches on his staff, including Gus Malzahn, Tim Harris Jr., Herb Hand, Tony White, Terrance Knighton, and Evan Cooper. This was uncharted territory for Norvell since he had never had to fire multiple coaches like that.
Nonetheless, we were wondering how the Seminoles’ 2025 recruiting class would play out with new coaches as well as the struggling year in 2024.
The recruiting class did well, and it finished with the 20th-best in the 247Sports Composite rankings (prospects can still sign in February). In this article, I want to highlight three of the most underrated signees from Florida State’s 2025 recruiting class.
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