WBAL-TV Covers Safe Streets Baltimore Award

WBAL-TV recently highlighted Safe Streets Baltimore in the Park Heights community with the story, "Safe Streets Baltimore Awarded Ravens Honor Row." View the full coverage by visiting WBAL-TV 11 at the link below.

"Safe Streets Baltimore Awarded Ravens Honor Row"



 

Related Stories

"Heroin: A public health emergency" (Baltimore Sun) July 19, 2015

As an ER doctor, I have treated hundreds of patients who were dying of heroin overdose, and I know that it is a disease that claims lives. As a family member of loved ones who struggled with addiction, I have seen that heroin isn't just an individual disease; it's a family disease. As a public health official in Baltimore, where an estimated 19,000 of our residents use heroin, I have witnessed how heroin ties into the very fabric of our city; it's a community disease. Read more of Dr. Leana Wen's Baltimore Sun Op-Ed here.

"Rising cost of overdose treatment drug alarms city" (Baltimore Sun) July 8, 2015

Baltimore officials and others are alarmed at a nearly a fourfold jump in the cost of a drug used to save the lives of people who have overdosed on heroin — a price spike that has prompted calls for state and federal action. City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana S. Wen says a leading manufacturer of naloxone has since spring raised the 10-dose cost from $97 to $370, with the most recent hike coming last week. "This means we can only save half the lives of patients we were able to before," Wen told the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

"Warning To Parents: Do Not Leave Children Alone In A Hot Car" (WJZ) June 30, 2015

With one heat-related death in the city already this summer, city officials are issuing an important warning to parents. Two-year-old Leasia Carter was the city’s first heat-related death of 2015. Police say she’d been left inside a scalding hot car for nearly 16 hours by her father, 31-year-old Wilbert Leon Carter, who is now charged with murder. “This is a preventable tragedy, and it should never occur again,” said City Health Commissioner Dr. Leana Wen.