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How Maryland, Virginia, DC fared in nationwide study on COVID mortality

A new state-by-state analysis of COVID-19 death rates showed Maryland had the fifth fewest deaths in the country per 100,000 residents, while D.C. had the second-highest rate in the nation. The study, published in the medical journal The Lancet, showed death rates varied dramatically by state, in analyzing the rates of COVID deaths in the U.S. between January 2020 and July 2022.

Read More: WTOP
Department of Health begins administering abortion training grants

The Maryland Department of Health announced Tuesday it will begin accepting applications for enrollment in the Abortion Clinical Training Program, $3.5 million in funding for which was released by Gov. Wes Moore at the start of his term. According to a press release, the program will “help expand the number of healthcare professionals with abortion care training, increase the racial and ethnic diversity among healthcare professionals with abortion care education, and support the identification of clinical sites in need of training.”

Baltimore blocks treatment of contaminated water from Ohio train derailment

An environmental company abandoned a plan Tuesday to treat contaminated runoff water from East Palestine, Ohio, in Baltimore after city officials blocked it from using the sewer system, the latest challenge to cleaning the train derailment site amid opposition from communities unwilling to accept waste. Fast, informative and written just for locals. Get The 7 DMV newsletter in your inbox every weekday morning. Clean Harbors told Baltimore officials last week it was preparing to receive train car loads of wastewater contaminated after the Feb. 3 derailment for processing at a facility in the Maryland city.

Food Aisle on Supermarket
Maryland offers reimbursements to victims of SNAP benefits fraud

Maryland is offering reimbursements to thousands of residents who have recently fallen victim to Electronic Benefits Transfer fraud. Maryland Gov. Wes Moore announced Monday that his administration had approved compensation for nearly 1,300 fraud claims since last week, totaling around $762,000 in reimbursed benefits. The new process uses federal funding from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

Read More: WTOP
What kept Maryland hospitals afloat during COVID — and saved taxpayers millions

Maryland hospitals largely escaped the financial crisis that struck providers nationwide in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, when elective procedures were canceled and routine care was postponed. That’s thanks, in part, to a unique system for regulating hospital revenue. The same system saved taxpayers $781 million in Medicare costs over three years and improved quality of care, according to a recent report.

Maryland ranked 5th in nation for fewest COVID-19 deaths per capita

Maryland ranked fifth in the nation for having the fewest COVID-19 deaths per capita in a comprehensive study on variations in pandemic policies and behaviors among states published Thursday in The Lancet. The state was likely helped during the pandemic by its relatively low poverty rate and high level of educational attainment, said Emma Castro, a researcher at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington in Seattle and a co-lead author on the paper.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
5 things to know about East Palestine wastewater coming to Baltimore

City and county officials shared “grave concerns” when the news broke Friday that a company in South Baltimore would be treating contaminated water from the Norfolk Southern train derailment in Ohio and disposing it to the city sewer system, and eventually the troubled Back River Wastewater Treatment Plant in Dundalk.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
UMB’s first executive director of the Center for Violence Prevention wants to listen to Baltimoreans

Prevention is a tricky business, according to Nadine Finigan-Carr. Take, for example, measles, mumps and chickenpox — contagions she experienced as a child. Vaccines have been so effective at fighting off the trio that some people now lack appreciation for the protections they provide. “When you prevent something, people don’t realize it’s even there,” she said.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Local nonprofits to help homeowners avoid losing a house to tax sales

With Baltimore’s tax sale date set for May 15, homeowners who owe at least $750 in property taxes or citations, or a combination of both, are at risk of losing their home to tax sale. To help families hold onto their homes, Maryland Volunteer Lawyers Service (MVLS) in partnership with the Pro Bono Resource Center of Maryland and Stop Oppressive Seizures (SOS) Fund, will host three free tax sale prevention clinics to help struggling homeowners.

Fifth graders in their classroom at school
How have school systems in Maryland struggled to hire educators? New Blueprint reports detail difficulties

Now that local education officials submitted Blueprint for Maryland’s Future implementation plans, work must continue to ensure they’re followed or risk money being withheld. The Blueprint’s Accountability and Implementation Board, which is tasked with oversight of the sweeping multi-billion-dollar reforms, will determine in the next several weeks whether each of the state’s school systems met minimum requirements. Rachel Hise, executive director of the implementation board, said during a virtual meeting earlier this month that one of the most basic reviews will be whether each public school system in the state sufficiently answered more than 150 questions meant to guide implementation of reforms.

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