Louisiana
Fallen Louisiana Navy veteran laid to rest on the 81st anniversary of the Pearl Harbor attack
NEW ORLEANS (WVUE) – A fallen Louisiana Navy veteran is house on the 81st anniversary of the Pearl Harbor assault.
Seaman’s first-class Houston Temples was honored and eventually laid to relaxation at present in Bogalusa, 81 years after his loss of life.
Bagpipes performed, and American flags waved because the neighborhood and repair members paid their respects to a soldier who gave his life for our nation on a tragic day in American historical past.
Temples died in the united statesS. Oklahoma on Dec. 7, 1941; at present, greater than 80 years later, he lastly had a correct burial.
The group gathered at “American Legion Corridor” in Bogalusa Wednesday afternoon to honor Temples, whose stays weren’t recognized till April of this yr.
“361 of about 396 have been recognized and Seaman First Class Houston Temples was certainly one of them. And so after they recognized the stays, one of many neat issues they have been capable of do was put the stays in a casket. They put the uniform in there with him and so they ship them again house as a result of we need to present some closure for the households and to be sincere, it’s simply good to get the sailor again house,” stated Rear Admiral Terry Eddinger.
On Dec. 5, his stays have been flown into New Orleans and escorted throughout the lake.
Temples was certainly one of greater than 400 troopers who died when Japanese troops bombed the Oklahoma.
He was certainly one of greater than 2300 who died throughout the assault on pearl harbor.
See a spelling or grammar error in our story? Click on Right here to report it. Please embrace the headline.
Copyright 2022 WVUE. All rights reserved.
Louisiana
It’s not just hot flashes: Louisiana doctors share what to know about menopause symptoms.
As the ovarian production of estrogen diminishes in midlife and ultimately stops, it is estimated that more than 47 million women worldwide enter the menopause transition annually.
The average American woman will experience menopause between 51 and 52, but the hormonal change can happen anywhere from 45 to 57.
Perimenopause symptoms can start anywhere between two and 10 years before menopause, meaning some women begin seeing symptoms in their 30s. This phase is called perimenopause.
A difficult diagnosis
Physicians define menopause as not experiencing a period for an entire year — for a woman who has regular monthly periods.
“That’s like the old school of thought, and we need to change that narrative,” said Dr. Gunjan Raina, a family medicine physician in Baton Rouge. “If a woman is suffering or she’s having symptoms, we need to start addressing it.”
Dr. Robin Bone is an OB-GYN at Ochsner Health in New Orleans. Since the surge of menopause research, largely guided by patient demand, Bone has studied perimenopause, menopause and postmenopause.
If a woman doesn’t have a period because of an IUD, other forms of birth control, a hysterectomy or more, “we use blood work to define or determine whether or not labs are consistent with menopausal levels,” Bone said.
The ups and downs of estrogen levels trigger menopausal symptoms, according to Bone. So typical blood tests and hormonal levels may not be helpful to physicians to determine a woman’s progression through the process of perimenopause, menopause and postmenopause.
Bone is of the mind that the best way to help patients is to “put the puzzle pieces together” and figure out the cause of the symptoms — whether that be perimenopause, menopause or something else.
Some symptoms are noticeable, like night sweats and hot flashes. But some may be harder to detect.
Because menopause is identified retroactively, determining whether or not a woman is in that process is difficult. Adding to the confusion is that the process isn’t linear.
“If you would have asked OB-GYNs five years ago, ‘What are the symptoms of menopause?’ They probably would have said: hot flashes, night sweats, trouble sleeping, vaginal dry and osteoporosis,” Bone said. “But now we have at least 35 and some say 65 symptoms of that can be attributed to menopause.”
The common and unknown symptoms
Perimenopause and menopause do not present differently, according to both Bone and Raina.
Raina, a concierge doctor, treats patients for all of their ailments, including the symptoms of menopause. Raina, however, found that medical school did not prepare her for the complexities and realities women face in menopause.
“It’s almost like they skipped through it,” Raina said. “I had itchy ears for three years, and I didn’t even realize it was related to perimenopause.”
More than 70% of women who go through menopause experience musculoskeletal symptoms and 25% will be affected more acutely by the symptoms during the transition from perimenopause to postmenopause.
“A lot of times, women don’t recognize it because they are just getting older,” Bone said.
According to Bone, doctors are learning that estrogen is an anti-inflammatory hormone. And when the body loses estrogen, as it begins to do in perimenopause, the body’s stem cell production decreases causing less “healing in our muscles, our joints and our bones,” Bone said.
The loss of estrogen due to menopause makes muscles recuperate more slowly.
“Exercise is important, especially strength training or resistance exercises, to help build muscle to start off with good muscle mass,” Bone said.
Here’s a list of the most common perimenopausal and menopausal symptoms:
- Changes in mood
- Irritability
- Insomnia
- Difficulty concentrating
- Brain fog
- Anxiety
- Depression
- Panic attacks
- Decreased libido (sex drive)
- Night sweats
- Hot flashes
- Irregular periods
- Breast tenderness
- Headaches
- Weight gain
- Bloating
- Digestive problems
- Joint pain
- Muscle tension
- Decreased muscle strength/mass
- Dizziness
- Changes in taste
- Burning mouth sensation
- Heart palpitations
- Body odor
- Hair loss
- Brittle nails
- Itchy skin
- Tinnitus
- Bleeding gums
- Tingling extremities
- Electric shocks
- Vaginal dryness
- Urinary urgency/frequency.
Managing the symptoms
Hormone therapy is the most effective treatment for managing menopause symptoms, particularly hot flashes, night sweats and sleep disturbances. However, many women hesitate to use hormone therapy due to safety concerns, according to new Mayo Clinic research.
These concerns may stem from a 2002 study that showed an increased risk of breast cancer, coronary artery disease, stroke and blood clots from specific hormone therapies such as conjugated equine estrogens and medroxyprogesterone acetate.
“The lingering fear caused by the initial Women’s Health Initiative trial results in 2002 has promoted a false belief of a lack of safe options for treating menopause symptoms, Dr. Ekta Kapoor said, a Mayo Clinic endocrinologist and author of the study. “This has most likely affected how health care professionals approach evaluation of menopause symptoms.”
More recent studies have established the relative safety of hormone therapy when started by women in their 50s or those within 10 years of menopause.
“The study was misleading, and because of that, a whole generation of providers in the last 20 years were taught that estrogen was dangerous and causes cancer,” Raina said. “And it’s actually been debunked now.”
Bone, 54, said she would tell her 40-year-old self to do more strength training and more yoga as well as supplement to promote bone health like vitamin K, vitamin D, calcium and magnesium.
“I’m big on resistance training three times a week,” Raina said. “All of these things will help a woman through perimenopause, in addition to being a candidate for hormonal therapy.”
Louisiana
U.S. Department of Justice sues Louisiana over prisoners being held past release dates
The U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit Friday alleging that Louisiana and its correctional department continue to keep prisoners detained far past their sentences.
The lawsuit is aimed at both the state and the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections for confining incarcerated people for “weeks and months” after their legitimate release dates.
“Every person in the United States, whether incarcerated or otherwise, enjoys certain fundamental rights,” said Kristen Clark, assistant attorney general of the DOJ’s Civil Right’s Division. “Foremost among them is the right to individual liberty. The Founders were keenly aware of the potential abuse of power when government can arbitrarily take away a person’s freedom without a lawful court order specifying the period of their confinement.”
State department of corrections officials could not immediately be reached for comment.
Ongoing problem alleged
In a release, the Department of Justice said its lawsuit comes after a multiyear investigation into allegations of “systemic overdetention” in LDOC’s system.
In a report from January 2023, DOJ made Louisiana aware of the alleged conditions, providing written notice of the supporting facts and what the minimum necessary measures would be to remediate them.
The report was required under the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act, which also authorizes the DOJ to act when it believes an institution is depriving detainees of their constitutional rights.
“In this context, the right to individual liberty includes the right to be released from incarceration on time after the term set by the court has ended,” Clark said in the DOJ statement.
The lawsuit reportedly does not seek monetary damages, but instead “injunctive relief” to the ongoing conditions in LDOC’s institutions, outlined in the DOJ’s investigation.
The release says Louisiana has made “marginal” efforts to address the problem of overdetention, but the DOJ does not find them adequate, since the problem has allegedly been well-known to Louisiana for a long time.
“To incarcerate people indefinitely, as LDOC does here, not only intrudes on individual liberty, but also erodes public confidence in the fair and just application of our laws. The Justice Department looks forward to proving its case in court,” Clark said in the statement.
A report from the Louisiana Legislative Auditor earlier this year found that the Department of Public Safety and Corrections did not have an adequate review process to ensure changes to release dates are accurately calculated. An agency official said it was the fourth time the auditor’s office had made such a finding.
The corrections department disputed the findings at that time, asserting in a response that its review process was adequate and noting the auditor did not find any errors in the release date calculations it reviewed.
Louisiana
In Louisiana’s River Parishes, one museum is helping residents’ piece together their histories
The land in Louisiana’s River Parishes is populated with lost families.
Unmarked graves of formerly enslaved people — sometimes totaling more than 1,000 in a single area — have been found in tree clusters in the middle of empty fields.
In 2018, Shell Convent memorialized the Bruslie Plantation and Monroe Plantation cemeteries, which had been found on its property. BASF completed a similar project in 2022, preserving a Native American burial site and cemetery of around two-thirds of the 300 enslaved people who lived and worked at what was once the Linwood Plantation.
And in October, research conducted by an environmental advocacy group identified five formerly enslaved people — Stanley, 31; Simon, 23; Harry, 18; Betsy, 18; and Rachel, 9 — believed to be buried on the site of the proposed Formosa plastics plant in St. James Parish.
Many of the graves are unidentified. And family histories in the region remain incomplete because of the lingering effects of the trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, from the unmarked burials to the recording of people as property — without names — in U.S. Census Bureau records from the era.
But the River Road African American Museum in Donaldsonville is working to help people uncover and repair some of those voids through quarterly genealogy workshops, which educate attendees on databases and ways to search for their history.
Untold stories
One such largely forgotten story is that of Lawrence Minor, who was enslaved as a child at the Linwood Plantation, where the BASF plant in Geismar currently sits.
Regina Bergeron, the museum’s former board director and a BASF employee, led the museum’s most recent workshop in early December. During it, she explained her role in BASF’s preservation of the cemeteries on its property and her research into Minor’s life.
“Learning about this is history … opens doors, and we can have more conversations about it,” she said during the session. “ … I run into a roadblock with the 18th century, and so (for) my peers to understand those challenges that I had as an African American just opens a door and some additional dialogue.”
The Linwood Plantation owner, Phillip Minor, had at least three children with an enslaved woman named Lucy, Bergeron explained. In his will, Phillip Minor left provisions for Lucy and her children to be freed.
“One of those children is Lawrence Minor. Lawrence was the first president of Prairie View A&M, and he was very influential in the Underground Railroad,” she explained.
Prairie View A&M, a historically black college in Texas, is the second-oldest public college in that state and one of its two land-grant universities, according to its website. Bergeron said she discovered Lawrence Minor’s story when Steve Kleinpeter, another member of the BASF project, sent her an old newspaper article he found.
“Steve actually found this article, and he saw that it was a Black man. And he said, ‘Well, this can’t be the same Minors that I’m looking for because this is a Black man,’” she explained. “And then when he read the article again, he said, ‘Maybe this is connected, it says this man came from a plantation in Ascension Parish.’”
He notified Bergeron early in the afternoon, and the two independently found Minor’s will that emancipated Lucy and her children around 3 a.m. the next day. From there, they reconstructed his tree using newspaper articles, and records from his bank and Oberlin College, which he attended.
Workshop in action
But reconstruction is difficult. Census records from 1850 didn’t record any names for enslaved people. Instead, they documented the enslavers’ name, and the age, sex and color of each person owned. Fugitive slave advertisements, which offered rewards for runaways and were posted in papers including The Advocate and Times-Picayune, usually only contained a first name.
“In 1859, if enslaved people were transferred from one plantation to another, they would get the name of the plantation owner from the prior,” Bergeron said during the workshop. “So if they came from the Harris plantation, they might have the name Harris.”
The workshops guide attendees through the building their ancestry trees and locating these disparate sources of information. Dawn Kaigler, of Gonzales, said the December workshop was her second as she was trying to reconstruct her ancestral tree.
“With my father’s family … they had already done theirs,” she said. “But I was looking to find out some information about my mom’s family because we’re still trying to piece together some information on that.”
Kaigler added that the previous workshop she attended included a presentation on the 272 enslaved people who Georgetown University’s Jesuit founders sold to two Louisiana sugar cane planters in 1838. In 2022, the museum opened a permanent exhibit in the Episcopal Church of Ascension in Donaldsonville about the sale. The Jesuit order formally apologized in 2017 to the descendants of the enslaved.
“We got information on that and where some of those families migrated to once those enslaved people were sold off to further areas in Louisiana,” she said. “ … They had a list of the names of the people who were descendants … it was really quite interesting.”
During December’s meeting, Kaigler said she was looking into her grandfather’s history.
“My sister and I had started looking into things for that, and we went to the Ascension Parish Library and … got some information on various databases to try to start finding things,” she said. “And we kind of did find a census document from when my grandfather might have been about 16-years-old or so.”
‘Stories are beginning to be become erased’
The museum, which celebrated its 30th anniversary this year, has another workshop tentatively planned for February, Executive Director L’Oréal Evans said. The museum owns five properties, including one of 400 original Louisiana Rosenwald Schools that were established to educate Black students between 1912 and 1932.
In the school’s bathroom, a quote attributed to Henry Brougham is framed on the wall: “Education makes a people easy to lead, but difficult to drive, easy to govern, but impossible to enslave.”
Evans emphasized that historical education such as the workshops are vital to understanding the region’s history.
“We’re at a very detrimental time right now in America, where stories are beginning to be become erased as we see people taking books off of shelves, burning books, destroying books. Saying that these books are not good for education, for the future of America,” Evans said. “But what we do is we collect and preserve those stories. And so, part of doing so means that we allow people to come in, trace their heritage, find out … what their past is and who their people are. And in doing so, they record their own history.”
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