logo
Elliot to operate The Doorway in Manchester starting July 1

Elliot to operate The Doorway in Manchester starting July 1

Yahoo05-06-2025
Elliot Health System announced Thursday it has been selected to operate the Manchester location of The Doorway, a statewide program that connects people to treatment and recovery services for substance use.
The transition will officially take place on July 1.
The Doorway is a statewide network coordinated by the state Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), with nine regional hubs offering access to screening, evaluation, treatment options and ongoing recovery support.
The Greater Manchester location is currently located at 60 Rogers St., Suite 210.
'Assuming leadership of The Doorway aligns with our mission,' said Dr. Gregory Baxter, president & CEO of Elliot Health System, 'and we are ready to strengthen this critical access point, enhance coordination and ensure every person who reaches out is met with timely, effective support.'
Officials at Elliot Health System said that under the leadership of Annette Escalante, director of substance use services, The Doorway will be 'positioned within a continuum of services' that includes behavioral health, crisis stabilization, and care coordination, 'making it easier for individuals to get the help they need at any stage of recovery.'
Martha Dodge, senior vice president and chief nursing executive said Elliot is 'preparing to serve approximately 1,500 individuals annually, and we are committed to ensuring each person receives timely, respectful, and effective care.'
For the past five years, the state has received about $28 million annually to address substance use disorders. The Doorway is part of that response.
In 2024, New Hampshire's two largest cities recorded the lowest number of overdoses in a year since the COVID pandemic.
There were 710 suspected overdoses in Manchester and Nashua in 2024 — 526 of those occurred in Manchester, 184 in Nashua, according to data released by American Medical Response, which provides ambulance services to both cities.
Sixty-six overdoses last year were fatal — 46 in Manchester, 20 in Nashua.
Nashua recorded both the lowest number of suspected opioid overdoses and lowest number of suspected opioid deaths in one year since AMR began tracking the data in 2015.
pfeely@unionleader.com
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

31 Bizarre Body Quirks Women Have Learned To Accept
31 Bizarre Body Quirks Women Have Learned To Accept

Buzz Feed

time4 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

31 Bizarre Body Quirks Women Have Learned To Accept

Reddit user Conscious_Can3226 recently asked the r/AskWomenOver30 community, "What's a weird thing your body does that you've never heard of anyone else experiencing?" Some of the responses were super shocking! But body does them too! Wild. Check it out: "I always know my period is coming because my right upper leg feels extremely nauseous. That makes zero sense, but I can't find a better way to describe the feeling than severe nausea in my leg." "I hear music when I'm falling asleep every single night. Sometimes it's rock, sometimes country, sometimes classical. No, there aren't any radios playing anywhere in our home or our neighbors' homes. It happens literally wherever I am and am falling asleep." "My cheeks sweat when I eat apples." "I cry when I pee. It's completely involuntary/not emotion-driven. Tears just start streaming down my face as soon as I start. Mainly, if I hold my bladder too long." "Every time I was pregnant, my nipples would behave like they had Raynaud's disease. They would turn black and then start turning white at the tip. I would have to take all my clothes off and just have them in warm water. I would be walking around and feel a chill, and my nipples would get hard and start this reaction that felt like someone was holding a hot iron to the tips. Went away immediately at birth. It was once the first symptom I felt. I knew I was pregnant because my nipples burned." "I get incredibly nauseous right before I sneeze. Like I think I'm gonna puke, and right when I get to the point where I'm heading to the bathroom, I sneeze and it's like I'm fine. I didn't develop this until after I gave birth." "My right elbow hurts if I eat McDonald's. Never my left elbow or any other fast food." "Instead of brain freeze, I get spine freeze. The location is about two inches down from the top of my sternum, only on the inner side of my spine." "I get nauseous if the inside of my belly button is touched. People interpret that to mean I'm ticklish, but I get a full-body reaction!" "My eyes squeak when I rub them." "I have to crap every time I go shopping." "Some people have a gene that makes cilantro taste like soap. I have a gene that makes cucumbers taste rancid, like bad fish." "Since having COVID, I can taste metal when I hold some in my hand, like a fork or a metal cup. I hate it!" "If you tickle my left elbow, I can feel it in my inner ear." "My throat always gets sore for a couple of days before my period, like clockwork." "The base of my skull makes fizzy popping noises when I'm super hungry. I've looked it up and apparently it's a thing, but it doesn't happen to anybody I've ever mentioned it to." "If I have a moment of genuine connection with another person, I get tingly over the entirety of my scalp. It's pretty cool. This can also happen when I see a particularly poignant video or hear a song that evokes a lot of emotion." "My teeth hurt when I hear sounds I don't like. One of my biggest triggers is someone running their finger along paper." "Sometimes when I pinch my skin in one place, I can feel it in a different place too. For example, I pinched my skin above my right knee, and I've felt it above my right elbow. It's more prominent before my period." "When my throat is itchy, I get an itch in my lower abdomen too, with the exact same sensation and intensity of the itch." "My eyes start watering whenever anyone describes something supernatural (ghosts, alien encounters, or unexplained goings on). It's like I'm crying, but without the emotion or the lump in the throat. I just start tearing up." "I have one tooth that randomly 'itches.' There's nothing wrong with the tooth or gum there. Itching is the best way I can describe it. It's super weird and annoying. I don't know what causes it. I brush, floss, and use mouthwash. Just got good remarks from my dentist last month, so I don't get it. When I tell my husband or friends about it, they have no idea what I mean or what I'm describing." "When I go to other people's houses, if I'm not 100% comfortable with them, I get really gassy after being there for longer than an hour or two. It used to happen a lot when I visited my in-laws, and once it happened when I drove to Arizona to visit a friend I hadn't seen in a few years. It's funny because when I told my friend I was gassy, her husband laughed and said it happens to her too." "My left thumbnail grows at twice the rate of the rest of my fingernails. I get manicures every three weeks like clockwork, and my nail tech noticed." "The left side of my body sucks. I get kidney stones, migraines, shoulder pain, itching, toothaches, ovarian cysts, all on my left side." "The inside of my ears hurts in the cold weather, wind, or when I have to run. It stings, and no one else ever seems to have it when my ears are killing me." "When I feel deep emotional pain or anguish, I get this aching sensation in my right wrist and hand. I've found very little online about it. It's so odd, but I lowkey love it when it happens while reading a novel or watching a movie. It shows me I'm really connecting with the plot!" "My left thumbnail has a defect that causes it to split in the same spot, so I always have a notch in my nail that gets caught on everything. My mother and my grandmother had the same thing on the same finger, and all three of us developed it at around 35. It must be a genetic quirk. I haven't heard of other people/families that have this." "Sometimes, my feet get warm when I pee. I remember telling my dad about it years ago, and in typical dad fashion, he told me to quit pissing on my feet. Still no answers." "When I get scared, my legs itch and tingle, and it's purely psychological. Never noticed until I started riding a motorcycle." And: "I get shoulder pain when I have to poop really badly. It's only in my right shoulder." Women, do you have any body quirks you literally can't explain? Tell us in the comments or share anonymously using this form. Note: Submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity.

Flu, COVID can reawaken dormant breast cancer cells: Study
Flu, COVID can reawaken dormant breast cancer cells: Study

The Hill

time13 hours ago

  • The Hill

Flu, COVID can reawaken dormant breast cancer cells: Study

Respiratory infections like COVID-19 and the flu can activate dormant cancer cells in breast cancer patients who are in remission, new research finds. The study, published in Nature, found that common viruses can reawaken small numbers of dormant breast cancer cells in the lungs. Researchers began investigating the link after the team noticed that U.K. patients who were in remission from breast cancer and tested positive for COVID later showed a two-fold increase in cancer-related deaths. They also analyzed a U.S. database that included nearly 37,000 patients and found that COVID infection was associated with a more than 40 percent increased risk of metastatic breast cancer in the lungs. Studies on mice found that influenza and COVID infections triggered dormant breast cancer cells after just days of infection. Within two weeks, researchers observed 'massive expansion' of the cancer cells into metastatic lesions by more than 100 times. Scientists have suspected that common viruses like Epstein-Barr can trigger some cancers. Human papillomavirus (HPV) is already documented to trigger cervical cancer. When it comes to breast cancer, however, research on human cells was limited, and it's not entirely known how the virus triggers the disease to spread. The findings suggest the body's immune response plays a role. After breast cancer goes into remission, a tiny number of cells remain dormant in lung, bone and liver tissue. Sometimes, inflammation can wake up the cells. In the mouse experiments, both influenza A and coronavirus only reawakened dormant cells if they triggered an inflammatory cytokine response. More research is needed to see if vaccination makes a difference when it comes to the possibility of reawakening dormant cells.

25 Ways People Won The Great Genes Lottery
25 Ways People Won The Great Genes Lottery

Buzz Feed

time14 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

25 Ways People Won The Great Genes Lottery

Recently, I wrote an article sharing people's answers to the question, "In what small way have you won the genetic lottery?" and in response, even more people detailed their own genetic "wins." It's always fun to appreciate the positives about yourself, so I decided to share! Here are some of the best: "I don't have B.O. when I sweat, and I've read it's a genetic mutation. I don't wear deodorant, and I've gone a whole 10 days without a full shower (camping), and my pits and feet don't smell. Only one of my kids got this genetic gift, and the other kid is so bummed that they started getting B.O. at 11." —Anonymous, 48, Los Angeles, CA "I have no wisdom teeth, none. I was also born without tonsils." —Anonymous, 45, Dallas, TX "I have naturally long and curled eyelashes. They are blonde, so I have to use mascara, but I've never used an eyelash curler in my life. People assume I'm wearing falsies." "I have naturally big lips that people made fun of me for as a child, and now everyone is jealous of my naturally plump big lips. Thanks, Kardashians." —Anonymous, 28, NJ "I've had abs since I was 7. I'm female, and neither of my parents has a very athletic build, but it's very easy for me to just always have them. Even if I've gained weight in my face or body, my abs always show through." "My irises have gradually turned a gold/yellow color. They're basically a combination of several colors, and, when mixed together, they look gold. I get a lot of comments on them and people ask if I wear contacts." —C., 30s "I have never experienced a headache. It's difficult for me to even imagine what it would feel like. Once I had a full-blown migraine attack with sensory aura, nausea, and sensitivity to sounds and smells, but no headache." —Anonymous "I've got great skin! Inherited from my mom, who is in her 70s and has never had any work done, but looks like she has. Terrible spine and joint problems, though. 😒" "I'm resistant to COVID-19. Everybody in my workplace got it, and I didn't. My husband even got it, and I still didn't get it." —Anonymous "I'm lucky two different ways. I never had wisdom teeth, and I don't get caffeine headaches on days I don't have caffeine." —Anonymous, 45, IL "My mom's side of the family has a gene mutation that leads to a very aggressive form of stomach cancer that can't be caught early enough to effectively treat. Turns out, I don't have it! It's one of the gene mutations where if you don't have it, your kids won't either. Neither I nor any of my cousins have it, so we don't have to worry about it anymore!" "My hair is not graying. I'm 71 and have long blonde hair. My sister grayed at age 30." "My mother had three sisters. The oldest did not go salt and pepper gray until she was nearly 90. We all thought she was lying and dying it! But then she started going salt and pepper at nearly 90. The second oldest grayed at 50. The third grayed at 40 and the youngest grayed at 30. So it seems that somehow the oldest grays late and the youngest grays early."—Anonymous, 71, TX "My dad and I don't get hangovers. My mom, sister, and brother hate that! We do get bad reactions to bug and bee stings, but on the whole, pretty happy about my luck!" —Kristin, 53 "I don't really scar. I've had stitches more than once, along with some serious injuries. After about two years, all scars disappear." "I'm immune to jellyfish stings! I found this out by swimming through a huge school of jellyfish, and my sister got stung, but I didn't." —Anonymous, 31, MN "Mosquitoes don't seem to like me. I've had, maybe, four bites in my life (all before the age of 12, and have had none since). Kind of a weird flex, but super handy!" —Anonymous, 24 "I have freakishly good eyesight. I can read signs at 35+ feet away. I didn't realize how special that was until I had kids. One can see 20/20, but I can see way farther than him, easily. It's not even close!" "I was born without tonsils, which is chill because that, plus my immune system, means I've only ever been seriously sick twice, once with COVID and once when I got mono." —Anonymous, 37, CA "I'm not allergic to poison ivy/oak/sumac. I've been exposed to all of them often and have never gotten a reaction. I'm either very lucky, or immune, but I don't plan on testing that theory any time soon." "Not a particularly fun or sexy one, but I have naturally low blood pressure, which vastly reduces my long-term risk of stroke and heart disease." —Anonymous, 36, North Carolina "I have an extra artery supplying blood to my retina in each eye. It's called a cilioretinal artery. If the main artery is ever damaged or blocked, it can cause immediate vision loss in that eye. My vision would be protected though, because the extra artery would continue to supply blood to my retina." —Anonymous "Redhead here! I have extremely decreased pain. (Broke three bones, and each time I had no clue until an X-ray.) I helped someone move on a broken foot! Had no clue until I was limping later." "I have freakishly nimble and long toes that I can pick things up with. It's nice because I don't have to bend over to pick things up." —Anonymous, 36, MA "I inherited my dad's ability to not get hangovers, no matter what I drink!" —Anonymous, 41, TX And finally: "I inherited amazing hearing from my grandmother. Many a time, I've heard people whispering in other rooms, and shocked them by commenting on what they'd said." —Anonymous, 38 What d'you think? Do you have any of your own "genetic lottery wins" to share? Let me know in the comments! Or, if you prefer to stay anonymous, you can check out this anonymous form. Who knows — what you share could end up as part of a future BuzzFeed article! Please note: some comments have been edited for length and/or clarity.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store