09/28/24 - The News

Saturday, September 28, 2024

Utah mother diagnosed with Stage 4 Small cell lung cancer, given 3 months to live

September 28, 2024 0

 An Ogden mother who has been fighting for life after being diagnosed with a rare terminal cancer has now been given three months to live, and she’s decided to spend it with her kids. People across the country have rallied around her, donating over $750,000 to her GoFundMe, which had an original goal of only $5,000.



Erika Carr, 30, is a single mother of two children — Jeremiah, 7, and Aaliyah, 5. She calls them her “whole life, light and soul … and what keeps [her] going.”

On May 7, 2022, Carr was diagnosed with Stage 4 Small cell lung carcinoma, a “high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma,” she stated on her GoFundMe. Her diagnosis came the day before Mother’s Day, and she’s been battling for her life for over two years now.

Doctors told her, “I hope you have a good support system at home because you’re going to need it, you have a long and hard journey ahead of you.”

Her condition had improved — positive scans giving her the opportunity to stop treatment and see how she progressed. During this time, on Jan. 17, 2024, she developed Cushing’s syndrome — a rare hormonal disorder that occurs when the body is exposed to too much cortisol for an extended period. It has had a multitude of difficult impacts on her body, including rapid weight gain and swelling, muscle and bone deterioration, high blood pressure, and Type 2 diabetes.

Though she restarted treatment, on Sept. 18, 2024, doctors told her that she had three months to live. She’s chosen to discontinue treatment and spend that time cherishing her two children.

Carr’s been given the seemingly impossible task of planning her own funeral, and she decided to create a GoFundMe to help cover the costs. She set a modest goal, asking for only $5,000, hoping that maybe she’d be able to leave some extra money behind for her children.

She has since received over $750,000.

There have been over 26,000 donations given to her cause. She’s now created a trust fund, and she’s thankful her children will be okay when they grow up.

“It happened overnight. I never expected that,” she told ABC4. “I never expected to have a big funeral service, or a lot of people reach out and help me. With the way it’s went, I’m just in shock … just very grateful for everybody and everything that’s been there.

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Kim Richards Was Placed on Psych Hold, Law Enforcement Called After Dispute with Sister Kyle Richards amid Relapse

September 28, 2024 0

Kyle Richards and Kim Richards

(L) Kyle Richards and Kim Richards. PHOTO: RICH FURY/GETTY; TARA ZIEMBA/GETTY

Kim Richards is reportedly facing struggles after years of being candid abo








A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police Department confirms to PEOPLE that law enforcement reported to an incident on Wednesday, Sept. 25, in the Encino area where a source tells PEOPLE Kyle owns a home that Kim had recently been staying in.

The LAPD tells PEOPLE officers responded to "keep the peace" after a female reportedly violated a restraining order. However, after an investigation, they determined there was no order on file and no crime was committed.

"Both parties were informed of eviction process and officers kept the peace," added officials, who could not confirm Kim and Kyle's involvement in the scuffle.

A manager for Kim and Kyle has not responded to requests for comment from PEOPLE.

Kim Richards (L) and Kyle Richards
(L) Kim and Kyle Richards. AMANDA EDWARDS/WIREIMAGE

According to TMZ, earlier this month Kim, 60, was staying in a Hilton hotel until she was placed on a 5150 psychiatric hold and taken to a hospital for her "incoherent" behavior. After her release, Kyle, 55, reportedly allowed Kim to stay in her home to help her get back on her feet.

The outlet reports that the family has cut off all contact with Kim in hopes the shut-out will help her get sober again.

Over the years, the reality star has been open about her struggles with alcohol addiction. Her journey with sobriety has long been documented on RHOBH.

In 2010, Kyle famously outed Kim to be an alcoholic in the first season of the longtime Bravo show. A year later, the actress entered rehab and then again in April 2015 following her arrest for public intoxication. She left a Malibu treatment facility for her daughter’s nuptials in May 2015, but checked herself back in two weeks later.

(L) Kim and Kyle Richards on 'The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills'. JASON DECROW/BRAVO

In March 2016, Kim told PEOPLE that she had her "first real drink" when she was 24 years old and her addiction began when she split from her second husband, Gregg Davis in 1991. She recalled drinking a glass of wine at night, which soon escalated into more. “I started noticing I was drinking a lot,” she said at the time. “That’s when my issue started.”

A few months later in December, Kim opened up about feeling gratitude for her sobriety. At the time, she had been five years sober.

“Before I started the show, life was really good and then, you know, things happened and it wasn’t,” she told PEOPLE. “And it wasn’t just my relapse that was hard, but I went through a depression as well after that.”

“I’m just so grateful to be where I am today, and to be this happy and have life this good and have the relationships that I have … I feel so blessed,” she said. “I feel powerful. I feel so grateful. Honestly. Life is so amazing today. I wake up happy. I go to sleep happy.”

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Helene death toll rises; 2+ feet of rain in some areas

September 28, 2024 0

 Dozens killed. Hospital-goers scrambling to rooftops to be whisked away in helicopters. Mayors frantically telling citizens to flee. And inmates desperately removed from a jail directly in the path of floodwaters.



Helene has brought a cascade of destruction across the Southeast. The record-breaking storm hit Florida as a hurricane with wind speeds of 140 mph that flattened buildings. It has since weakened to a post-tropical cyclone with 25 mph winds, but the deluge of rain it carries is leaving parts of North Carolina and Tennessee underwater, and some 3.8 million are without power Saturday morning.

“It’s destroyed,” Jordon Bowen of the Florida State Guard Special Missions Unit told The Palm Beach Post, part of the USA TODAY Network, about the area where Helene made landfall. “Not accessible, debris, lots of hazards, downed power lines, houses cut in half.

Meanwhile, eye-popping rainfall totals were measured in the North Carolina mountains, including 29.6 inches at Busick and 24.2 inches at Mount Mitchell, the highest peak east of the Mississippi River and a landmark along the Blue Ridge Parkway.

Helene made landfall at about 11:10 p.m. ET Thursday near Perry, Florida, becoming the first known Category 4 storm to hit Florida’s Big Bend region since records began in 1851. The storm continued its push across western Kentucky on Saturday, and is expected to slowly move southeast, then east along the Kentucky-Tennessee border through the weekend, the National Hurricane Center said.

At least 43 people have died under Helene’s onslaught as of late Friday, according to authorities and media reports across the Southeast. Officials have said they expect the death toll to keep rising as they go door-to-door in the aftermath of the storm. Millions lost power and many lost their homes altogether or suffered extensive damage to their properties.

The destruction brought by Helene will continue to unfold even after its passing as the water it dumped flows into populated areas. But millions of people are beginning to take stock of what the storm took from them. 

Why did Helene cause so much rain?

A confluence of weather patterns over the eastern U.S. set up the historic flooding that forced people from their homes in the dead of night Friday along the Nolichucky River in Tennessee, as officials warned of dam failures and raging torrents ravaged communities.

SOURCE 

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