![]() Deperrio-Holland, 19, of 222 Holden St., Worcester, charged with two counts of violation of an abuse prevention order, dismissed without prejudice. Rashad Lateef Minor, 35, of 111 Country Club Blvd., Worcester, charged with driving with a suspended license, dismissed, $200 costs and driving with a suspended registration, dismissed.ĭerrick Burrus, 48, of 20 Blanche St., Worcester, charged with assault and battery, dismissed. Clark, 30, of 469 Old Colebrook Road, Barre, charged with shoplifting, fined $200 and conspiracy, dismissed.Ĭalvin Marte, 20, of 86 Austin St., Worcester, charged with driving with a suspended license, dismissed, $100 costs and stop sign violation, found not responsible. Rickey Allen Walker, 56, of 217 Cambridge St., Worcester, charged with assault and battery, dismissed upon payment of bar advocate fee.ĭavid Flotte, 22, of 43 Everard St., Worcester, charged with possession of Percocet, continued without a finding for six months, ordered to remain drug-free, to submit to random drug tests and to pay $50 victim witness fee.īenito Garcia, 39, of 245 Pleasant St., Worcester, charged with driving with a suspended license, fined $500 marked lanes violation and possession of an open container of alcohol in a vehicle, found not responsible.Īngela L. Gallant, 20, of 24 Stockholm St., Worcester, charged with two counts of driving with a suspended license and resisting arrest, continued without a finding for 3 months, $300 costs, $100 victim witness fee vehicle lights violation, having no inspection sticker on a vehicle, and failing to wear a seat belt, found responsible, filed and two counts of assault and battery, dismissed.įrancisco Semprith, 31, of 195 Chino Ave., Worcester, charged with driving with a revoked license for being a habitual traffic offender, dismissed, $500 costs and speeding, found responsible, filed. Hersh, 48, of 14 Walnut St., Shrewsbury, charged with violation of an abuse prevention order, continued to April 25. Though she said that “right now I’m pretty mad,” she added that “I’ve always had a really good experience. It was difficult to get the care I had planned,” she said. “It was difficult to get the appointment. “The staff there was kind and professional. As she left she saw that “other patients were leaving as well,” Kelly said.Ĭecere said that “while we rescheduled some patients,” the offices providing inpatient treatment, primary care and specialty care “remained open as scheduled.” On Thursday, Kelly said no one had called to reschedule her appointment and she wasn’t sure when she would try again. She offered to wait longer, but staff members told her that doctors had decided it wasn’t possible to go forward with care, she said. ![]() Her appointment was canceled at 9 a.m., she said. She reported hearing staff members say they needed to call everyone who was scheduled and tell them not to show up. They said, ‘This is like the old days’” and turned to paper with pens with their computers became unresponsive, Kelly said. On the other hand, “staff was visibly frustrated. A worker inserted an intravenous needle in her hand and attached her to a monitor, giving her reason for optimism that her appointment would go forward, she said. ![]() When she arrived at the clinic at 6:45 a.m., she said, a staff member said that “all our systems are down, we can’t register anyone.” She received an identification bracelet with handwritten information, she said.Īround 7:30 a.m. Not only did she take time off from work on Wednesday, she was required to test negative for Covid-19 one day before the appointment, which meant more time off from work. She said she had made an appointment last September, more than four months ago, for Wednesday at the gastrointestinal clinic at CHA’s Somerville campus. The problems caused more than inconvenience for Courtney Kelly of Cambridge. Spokesperson David Cecere said the problems ended after “several hours,” and the system was operating normally by afternoon.Īsked the cause of the outages, Cecere said it was a “systems failure” and didn’t elaborate.Ĭecere was also asked how widespread the outages were throughout the CHA system of two hospitals and emergency rooms, an urgent care clinic in Somerville, 13 primary care practices and three teen health centers. (Photo: Marc Levy)Ĭambridge Health Alliance suffered temporary outages of its information technology systems Wednesday that forced some patients to miss their appointments. A Cambridge police car stops at Cambridge Health Alliance’s Cambridge Hospital July 23.
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