Texas
Texas children’s hospital says it treats patients regardless of vaccination | Fact check
CDC increases RSV vaccine distribution
As winter sets in, the CDC is releasing over 77,000 additional doses of BeYFortus, an RSV vaccine for infants, to combat a surge in infections across several states.
Fox – 26 Houston
The claim: Texas Children’s Pediatrics doesn’t treat unvaccinated patients
A Dec. 6 Substack post (direct link, archive link) includes screenshots of several articles and a post on X about a Texas children’s hospital.
“Texas Childrens (sic) Hospital Pediatric Clinics Announce they Will no Longer Treat Unvaccinated Children,” reads the post’s heading.
The screenshotted post on X, formerly Twitter, claims the hospital sent a message to parents saying unvaccinated children will have to find a new healthcare provider within 60 days.
Similar versions of the claim were shared on Instagram.
More from the USA TODAY Fact-Check Team:
Our rating: False
A spokesperson for the hospital said it treats patients regardless of their vaccination status and sent out no such notice. The false claim was spread by a suspended healthcare professional with a history of spreading COVID-19 misinformation.
False claim spread by suspended doctor
Though all staff and volunteers at Texas Children’s Hospital are required to be vaccinated against the flu and COVID-19, there are no such requirements for patients.
A spokesperson for the hospital told USA TODAY in an email that the claim is false and that “all Texas Children’s Pediatric practices accept patients regardless of their vaccination status.”
The only mention of vaccines that can be found on the hospital website is regarding vaccination schedules and scheduling vaccine appointments, not vaccination requirements for patients.
Fact check: Australian Pfizer employees received same COVID-19 shots as general public
The X post was shared by Mary Bowden, an ear, nose and throat specialist who was suspended from her job at Houston Methodist Hospital in 2021 for spreading COVID-19 misinformation and refusing to treat vaccinated patients. Bowden also falsely suggested that hospital wasn’t treating unvaccinated patients, according to Houston Public Media.
The Texas Medical Board filed a formal complaint against Bowden in April for violating the standard of care when she prescribed medication to a patient in a hospital where she did not hold privileges.
USA TODAY reached out to Bowden and the user who shared the post for comment but did not immediately receive a response.
Our fact-check sources:
- Texas Children’s Pediatrics spokesperson, Dec. 18, Email exchange with USA TODAY
- Texas Children’s Pediatrics, accessed Dec. 13, Welcome to Texas Children’s Employee Health Virtual Assistant
- USA TODAY, Nov. 15, 2021, Texas hospital suspends doctor for spreading false information about COVID-19, vaccines
- CBS News, Nov. 16, 2021, Texas doctor suspended for spreading COVID-19 misinformation and refusing to treat vaccinated patients, hospital says
- Houston Public Media, June 9, Texas Medical Board files complaint against Houston doctor for prescription, patient confidentiality violations
- State Office of Administrative Hearings, April 25, Complaint against Mary Talley Bowden, M.D.
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USA TODAY is a verified signatory of the International Fact-Checking Network, which requires a demonstrated commitment to nonpartisanship, fairness and transparency. Our fact-check work is supported in part by a grant from Meta.
Texas
State to take control of Fort Worth ISD, sparking mixed reactions
Parents and teachers across Fort Worth ISD are reacting to news that the Texas Education Agency will take control of the district — a move that’s leaving many educators uneasy but giving some parents hope for change.
Longtime Fort Worth ISD teacher Kelsey De La Torre said the announcement immediately brought her to tears.
“Honestly, I read it today. I got the notification on my phone, and I glanced at it, and I got tears in my eyes,” De La Torre said. “Because it delivers a sense of insecurity and a sense of uncertainty in an environment where you need to be secure and certain.”
State plans leadership overhaul
Texas Education Commissioner Mike Morath said the state will appoint a new board of trustees and begin a nationwide search for a new superintendent.
De La Torre worries that leadership changes at the top will trickle down to classrooms.
“The people who are basically giving us our materials, our instruction, our strategies, our resources — that will inevitably impact each and every one of us,” she said.
Parents see opportunity for change
While some teachers fear the change, others in the community see it as a much-needed reset.
Fort Worth parent Adrienne Alexander Haynes said she felt relieved when the news broke.
“I feel like we’ve been stuck in this position of asking for a bare minimum,” Haynes said. “With the state takeover, it’s almost as though we’re finally being rescued out of this hamster wheel that we’ve been in, in our education system.”
Other parents echoed that optimism.
“I’m excited for the future,” said Kathy Kessler, another Fort Worth ISD parent. “I’m excited that there are opportunities to try and make things better, where our kids are being more productive in school.”
Concerns about deeper systemic issues
Still, De La Torre — who also has three children in the district — said the state’s intervention doesn’t address the real barriers students face.
“We’re still going to have an issue with poverty. We’re still going to have an issue with students who are homeless. We’re still going to have an issue with kids who go home and don’t have any food,” she said. “When are we going to fix those issues? Because that’s what’s keeping kids from growing.”
Support for current superintendent
Both parents and teachers agreed on one thing — they want Superintendent Dr. Karen Molinar to stay in her role. Many believe she’s made significant progress in the short time she’s led the district.
Texas
David Pollack gives score prediction, winner in Texas A&M-LSU game
The buildup to Saturday night in Baton Rouge carries all the tension of a late-season crossroads game. Texas A&M enters unbeaten at 7-0, while LSU finds itself searching for answers after a frustrating loss to Vanderbilt. For the Tigers, it’s a must-win moment to salvage momentum before facing Alabama. For the Aggies, it’s a chance to validate their rise and break a three-decade drought in Death Valley.
On the See Ball Get Ball podcast, college football analyst David Pollack laid out his view of how the matchup will unfold, citing the trenches and quarterback play as decisive factors. He pointed to A&M’s pass rush and LSU’s injuries up front, particularly at left tackle, as key reasons for his pick. “But I’m going A&M, and I do think this is a super close game… 27–23 is what I wrote down,” Pollack said.
Pollack emphasized that while LSU has talent, its protection issues have left quarterback Garrett Nussmeier exposed. He also highlighted the contrasting defensive strengths, noting A&M’s ability to pressure quarterbacks and LSU’s elite secondary depth.
Pollack detailed his reasoning by breaking down what he called one of the nation’s most exciting matchups between wide receivers and defensive backs. “This might be the best showcase you will see all year of receivers versus DBs,” he said. He praised Texas A&M’s Mario Craver and KC Concepcion for their explosiveness and LSU’s coverage unit led by Javien Toviano and Ashton Stamps for their discipline on the perimeter.
Beyond the individual matchups, Pollack cited the Tigers’ mounting injuries and offensive inconsistency as major red flags. “Nussmeier’s dad-gum hobbling around. He needs pain medication every practice because you haven’t been able to protect him,” he said. “They’re so elite at pass rush. They’re so elite on third down.”
He also noted Texas A&M’s balance behind quarterback Marcel Reed and running back Rueben Owens. The Aggies rank second nationally in third-down defense and bring one of the SEC’s most efficient passing attacks into Baton Rouge. Despite LSU’s strong defensive ranking, Pollack questioned whether its front seven can hold up.
Pollack’s cohost Brent Rollins reminded listeners that LSU has won every home meeting in this series since 2017, but Pollack said he couldn’t back the Tigers given their health and form. He predicted a narrow 27–23 Aggie win and added that a loss could intensify pressure on head coach Brian Kelly.
Texas A&M will play LSU at Tiger Stadium on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. ET on ABC.
Texas
Texas housewife was showing off new $150K Porsche when she drunkenly smashed into man on date, passenger says
A joy-riding Houston housewife was showing off her new $150,000 Porsche when she drunkenly mowed down a man on a date, one of her passengers revealed.
Arllette Reyes told jurors at the manslaughter trial against Kristina Chambers that she met up with Chambers at a bar before getting in the car with her for a terrifying ride that ended with the death of Joe McMullen on April 20, 2023.
Chambers blames her Christian Louboutin heels for the crash, claiming they slipped and caused her to accelerate into McMullen, who was leaving a donut shop on a first date.
At Lola’s Depot, a dive bar, Chambers told Reyes about about how she was an influencer and that her hedge fund manager husband purchased a Porsche 911 Carrera for her for $149,000 just two months earlier, Reyes recounted.
“I was hoping I could get a ride in it,” Reyes told jurors, according to the Houston Chronicle.
Chambers flaunted her wealth to her pals, living in a $1.6 million, modernist McMansion with husband Xuan Si. He filed for divorce after her arrest.
So Reyes, Chambers and a third friend got in the sports car and Chambers floored it for a short ride to her home.
But the alleged drunken driver — who had gone restaurant and bar hopping that night — was going so fast she missed a turn and careened into oncoming traffic, Reyes testified.
“I was praying or wondering why I was there,” the witness said.
Reyes recalled seeing a man and a woman standing on the sidewalk as the car was headed toward them.
“It all happened so fast,” she said. “One second we were on the wrong side of the road and then we were going to the right and I saw them. I think I put my hands out. I think I closed my eyes. I felt like there was nothing I could do.”
Reyes said she now knows the man and woman they hit were McMullin, 33, and Briana Iturrino.
The pair had gone to karaoke for a first date, and Iturrino narrowly avoided injury in the crash.
Reyes was the last witness called by prosecutors Tuesday. Chambers’ team began calling toxicology and intoxication experts, according to a report by Fox 26.
Prosecutor Andrew Figliuzzi told jurors during opening statements Friday that Chambers was “itching to show off her sports car,” despite allegedly being blind drunk.
Her blood alcohol was allegedly .301% — or almost four times the legal limit — an hour after the wreck. She also had traces of cocaine in her system, prosecutors said.
But Chambers’ lawyer Mark Thiessen told jurors the heel of her pricey pumps got stuck on the gas pedal at the same moment she started driving down “one of Houston’s most dangerous curves.”
An earlier witness, Officer Joseph Little, told jurors about how Chambers blew hundreds of dollars that night so her and her friend could feast on delicacies and drink cocktails and wine.
She spent $800, including $669 on a meal at high-end joint Bludom, where she splurged on caviar, oysters, martinis, wine, risotto and potato wedges, Little testified, citing bank records.
She and her pal went to at least four bars where, prosecutors estimate Chambers consumed at least six alcoholic drinks.
Chambers and Reyes were hospitalized after the crash.
She faces between up to 20 years behind bars if convicted.
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