Tim Melia voted MLS Player of the Week

Sporting Kansas City goalkeeper Tim Melia was voted MLS Player of the Week for Week 31 of the 2015 season, Major League Soccer announced on Tuesday.

Melia recorded the only MLS shutout in Week 31, his eighth of the season, in a 1-0 road win at the Portland Timbers on Saturday.

Melia kept his second clean sheet in a month’s time at Providence Park, becoming the first goalkeeper to hold the Timbers scoreless at home twice in one season in the club’s five-year history. In doing so, he extended Portland’s scoreless streak against Sporting KC to 392 minutes dating back to 2013.

The defensive performance came with two rookie SuperDraft picks at outside back (Amadou Dia and Saad Abdul-Salaam) along with three Kansas City natives (Matt Besler, Kevin Ellis and Erik Palmer-Brown) on the backline in front of Melia. Krisztian Nemeth came off the bench to score a stunning 83rd-minute game-winner and Sporting KC snapped the Timbers 14-game home unbeaten streak against Western Conference opponents.

Melia, in his first season as an MLS starter, logged six saves in the victory and is the first KC goalkeeper since Kevin Hartman in 2008 to make six saves in four different matches during a regular season campaign. In addition, he was credited with three punches on Saturday and leads all MLS goalkeepers with 31 punches this year.

Melia is 14-6-5 as a starter for Sporting KC this season with a 1.14 goals against average across all competitions. He started all five matches in the club’s Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup championship run, making seven saves in last week’s final in addition to two stops in the penalty shootout.

The MLS Player of the Week is selected each week of the regular season by a panel of journalists from North American Soccer Reporters. The group consists of members of print, television, radio and online media.

For the first time since 2006, Sporting KC has had three different players earn MLS Player of the Week honors in a single season in 2015. Paulo Nagamura received the recognition in Week 24 and Benny Feilhaber was selected for the award in Week 29.

– Story from Sporting KC

Kansas woman sues over cucumber-related salmonella

by Bryan Thompson, Heartland Health Monitor

A Kansas woman is suing a San Diego-based produce distributor after she was hospitalized with salmonella poisoning linked to tainted cucumbers.

Monica Rios of Sedgwick County said she bought a Fat Boy brand cucumber in August at a Walmart store, washed it thoroughly and ate it in a salad. Within a couple of days, she was hospitalized with abdominal cramping and pain.

“I would call my sister, like, every day, just to ask her, ‘Am I gonna die?’ Because the pain wouldn’t go away,” Rios said in a telephone interview.

More than 670 people in 34 states have been sickened in the latest salmonella outbreak, including two in Kansas. The victims range in age from just 8 months to the elderly, and as of Sept. 29 three people had died. The case count could go higher, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The CDC estimates that salmonella causes 1.2 million illnesses annually in the United States and 450 deaths. People are typically sick for four to seven days, and most recover without treatment. Symptoms include diarrhea, fever and abdominal cramps.

Rios said doctors tried several medicines in an attempt to control her pain. The intestinal symptoms were soon followed by intense headaches, and she became too weak to walk to the bathroom without assistance.

Rios was hospitalized at Wesley Medical Center in Wichita for nearly a week. When she went home in mid-August, she said she was prescribed 10 medicines. Rios described her recovery as slow and said she’s only now getting back to full strength.

Rios is represented by Bill Marler, a Seattle lawyer who specializes in food safety issues. Marler said Rios tested positive for the same strain of Salmonella found in cucumbers recalled by Andrew & Williamson Fresh Produce.

How the cucumbers became contaminated remains under investigation, but Marler said he suspects the water used to wash them contained salmonella.

“When you have something that’s this large of a contamination event, it usually has to do with water contamination,” Marler said in a phone interview. “The idea is to catch the salmonella before it leaves the manufacturing plant. With current regulations, high levels of bacteria can slip through the cracks, and it results in hundreds of really sick people. We can prevent it, for the most part, but legislation needs to change for that to happen.”

The Rios suit is the 12th Marler has filed against Andrew & Williamson, according to a release from his law firm, Marler Clark. Rios said she has incurred medical expenses of more than $52,000, but that’s not the main reason she filed suit.

“I feel like these companies need to make sure what they’re doing, so these people don’t get sick,” she said. “I didn’t think I was going to live, and anybody could die from this.”

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

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Program offers funding for Kansas community wellness projects

by KHI News Service

For the sixth year, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas and the Kansas Recreation and Park Association are offering BlueCHIP awards for community health improvement programs.

Up to six communities will receive awards of $2,500 to support health and wellness efforts. The awards program has three categories: small community (10,000 or fewer residents), medium community (10,001 to 20,000 residents) and large community (20,001 or more residents).

Applications, which are due by Dec. 4, and more information are available on the Kansas Recreation and Park Association website at https://krpa.wildapricot.org/Blue-Chip-Award.

Erika Devore, executive director of the Kansas Recreation and Park Association, said previous awards have gone to community programs designed to support clean air, increase healthy food choices, lower the incidence of obesity and boost physical activity.

The nonprofit KHI News Service is an editorially independent initiative of the Kansas Health Institute and a partner in the Heartland Health Monitor reporting collaboration. All stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to KHI.org when a story is reposted online.

– See more at http://www.khi.org/news/article/program-offers-funding-for-kansas-community-wellness-projects#sthash.X4eaqlkw.dpuf