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    mapomden.com<br>Rhode Island’s Department of Health introduced a campaign, “You Good, Man?”, to deal with males’s mental health.
    <br>- A lawsuit challenges the legality of a Brown Medicine medical professional’s deportation without a hearing and looks for to restore her H1-B visa.
    <br>- Rhode Island will require nonprofits receiving state funding to reveal magnate incomes. Here are the wages that are currently publicly understood.
    <br>- Four modifications that are coming to health care in Rhode Island, thanks to new laws gone by the General Assembly.
    <br>- A project is underway to set up a statue honoring two-time Boston Marathon winner and Rhode Island native Ellison “Tarzan” Brown.
    <br>
    Here are some of The Providence Journal’s most-read stories for the week of June 22, supported by your memberships.<br>
    <br>- When Slater Mill opened in 1793, it indicated the ultimate demise of river herring and other migratory fish in the Blackstone River. Their annual journey was eventually blocked by some 40 dams that sprang up to power the mills lining the mainstem of the river, which some referred to as the hardest operating in America. Now, strategies are underway to bring back a connection severed more than 200 years ago in between the Atlantic Ocean and Narragansett Bay’s longest tributary. The Journal’s environmental press reporter, Alex Kuffner, takes you along on this “holy grail” for fish passage in Rhode Island.
    <br>- Now that the week’s blistering and record-setting heat has actually eased off, it’s safe for golf players to come out from the AC. Here are five Rhode Island courses that should be on everyone’s pail list, according to Journal sportswriter Eric Rueb. For that and more sports coverage, go to providencejournal.com/sports.
    <br>- Food editor Gail Ciampa was in Chicago for the James Beard Awards on June 16 to report on the cheers and happy tears as Sky Haneul Kim of Gift Horse won Best Chef: Northeast. It was a night of celebration, for Kim as well as Providence’s three other finalists – a record for the city. Gail shares all their responses from the afterparty for what is thought about the Oscars of the food world.
    <br>- Take a minute to read one of the week’s most touching stories, about a roaming kittycat who grew to end up being a precious fixture and source of comfort to grieving families at Coventry’s Iannotti Funeral Home. RIP, Mongo.
    <br>
    Here are the week’s leading continues reading providencejournal.com:<br>
    <br>RI Department of Health would like to know if ‘You Good, Man?’ Why they’re asking<br>
    <br>PROVIDENCE – Rhode Island’s Department of Health has introduced a project to normalize conversations about mental health amongst working-age males.<br>
    <br>The campaign, called “You Good, Man?” seeks to attend to the high rate of suicide amongst men age 25 to 64 years old, which is twice as high as the state’s total suicide rate, according to RIDOH. Men, too, are overrepresented in deadly overdoses in Rhode Island – 70% of last year’s deaths attributed to overdoses were male.<br>
    <br>The campaign consists of a video that will be featured in social networks, streaming platforms, film theaters and filling station, along with an online resource center at YouGoodMan.org, with pointers for discussions and how to expect warning signs and links to support services.<br>
    <br>Read more to find out about this possibly lifesaving campaign.<br>
    <br>Health care: RI Department of Health wishes to know if ‘You Good, Man?’ Why they’re asking<br>
    <br>A Brown Medicine physician was without a hearing. The feds argue they were in the right.<br>
    <br>Border representatives at Boston Logan International Airport had every legal authority in March to speed up the removal of a Rhode Island Hospital physician from the nation without very first holding a court hearing, federal attorneys are arguing in court papers.<br>
    <br>U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents obstructed Dr. Rasha Alawieh, 34, a kidney transplant specialist for the doctors group Brown Medicine, from reentering the nation on March 14 after questioning her about pictures on her phone of Hassan Nasrallah, a Hezbollah terrorist group leader, as well as Hezbollah “fighters and martyrs.” The agents canceled her visa and deemed her “inadmissible” to reenter the United States.<br>
    <br>Lawyers for Alawieh have argued in a lawsuit that the physician must have been given a hearing before a migration judge prior to being positioned back on a plane for Lebanon.<br>
    <br>Her lawyers challenge the agents’ authority to make such life-altering decisions without being federal appointees under the Constitution’s “Appointment Clause.” And they are asking U.S. District Court in Massachusetts to buy the federal government to return Alawieh’s H1-B visa, which permits companies to work with immigrants for specialty professions.<br>
    <br>With Alawieh still in Lebanon waiting for the result of the case, The Journal’s Tom Mooney discusses the legal arguments on both sides.<br>
    <br>Immigration: A Brown Medicine physician was deported without a hearing. The feds argue they remained in the right.<br>
    <br>Four changes concerning health care in Rhode Island from the General Assembly<br>
    <br>Among the chief priorities at the State House this year was attending to the challenges facing Rhode Island’s ailing healthcare system. The state has a scarcity of medical care medical professionals, and healthcare facilities and community health centers are under monetary strain.<br>
    <br>The General Assembly thought about several bills that would give the state’s health care system a monetary booster shot. Not all made it through, but some managed to win passage as the session wound down in the wee hours of July 21.<br>
    <br>Here are four changes – pending the governor’s signature – pertaining to health care in Rhode Island from completion of session of the General Assembly, from repayment rate increases for Medicaid and primary care physicians; the lifting of prior authorization requirements for main care; changes to the 340B Drug Pricing Program; and a pathway for foreign-trained doctors to practice in Rhode Island.<br>
    <br>Politics: Four changes coming to health care in Rhode Island from the General Assembly<br>
    <br>How much do RI’s nonprofit heads make? Here’s a look at the salaries.<br>
    <br>A brand-new Rhode Island law will require nonprofits that get state financing to divulge just how much they pay their magnates.<br>
    <br>The legislation, sponsored by Rep. Patricia Serpa and Sen. John Burke, both West Warwick Democrats, was signed into law by Gov. Dan McKee on June 13. It applies to nonprofits that receive $50,000 or more from the state’s budget or direct grants from the General Assembly.<br>
    <br>Within 90 days of receiving funding, those nonprofits should divulge the total settlement paid to the 5 highest-paid employees who earned over $100,000 in the previous . They do not require to name those workers, but they should note their job descriptions.<br>
    <br>While a number of not-for-profit leaders objected to the costs, info about nonprofit salaries and benefits is already extensively readily available.<br>
    <br>Continue reading for a photo of what the leaders of some of Rhode Island’s biggest and most popular nonprofits made in the last few years.<br>
    <br>Local news: Just how much do RI’s not-for-profit heads make? Here’s a take a look at the salaries.<br>
    <br>Tarzan Brown did RI proud. Mark Patinkin says it’s time to step up and honor his tradition<br>
    <br>In the ranking of Rhode Island names who’ve done the state proud, Ellison “Tarzan” Brown is high up on the list. He won the Boston Marathon twice – the only Native American to do so. He ran in the 1936 Olympics, too.<br>
    <br>But he faced prejudice and poverty as a Native American, scratching out a living as a stone mason and shellfisherman. Later in life, he needed to sell his running medals to pay expenses.<br>
    <br>Tarzan had four kids, and his descendants have actually kept his spirit alive, as has his location in history.<br>
    <br>But columnist Mark Patinkin states it’s due time for Tarzan’s home state to produce a more tangible expression of gratitude, besides the simple stone plaque honoring him in Westerly’s Wilcox Park. A campaign has been introduced to build a life-size bronze statue.<br>
    <br>To discover more about Tarzan Brown’s legacy, and how you can add to the cause, read the full column.<br>
    <br>Columns: Tarzan Brown did RI proud. Mark Patinkin states it’s time to step up and honor his tradition<br>
    <br>To read the full stories, go to providencejournal.com. Learn how to subscribe here.<br>healthstarnutrition.com

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Odgovori na: Men's Mental Health Campaign; Deported Doctor; Nonprofit Salaries: Top Stories.
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