- Women’s Gymnastics Brings High Risk for Concussion
- Move to ‘Zero-Emission’ Vehicles Would Save 90,000 U.S. Lives by 2050
- Smoke From Canadian Wildfires Blackens Skies, Prompts Air Quality Alerts in Much of U.S.
- FDA Finalizes Limit on How Much Arsenic Can Be in Apple Juice
- As Medical Debt Rises, So Do Cancer Death Rates
- Patients With Bladder Cancer May Avoid Removal of Extra Lymph Nodes, Study Finds
- Your Risk of COVID-Linked Smell Loss Is Much Lower Now: Study
- Going Solo: Masturbation May Give Humans an Evolutionary Edge
- Kids With ADHD, Behavior Issues Have Poorer Trajectories as Adults
- Gene-Targeted Drug Tagrisso Cuts Death Rate in Half for Patients With Early-Stage Lung Cancer
Sen. Mitch McConnell Leaves Rehab, Heads Home After Concussion

Sen. Mitch McConnell is back home more than two weeks after he fell at a private dinner and was hospitalized with a concussion and broken rib.
The Senate Minority Leader spent five days in the hospital and the remainder of the 2-1/2 weeks following his fall in inpatient physical therapy.
“I’m in frequent touch with my Senate colleagues and my staff,” McConnell said in a statement released Saturday. “I look forward to returning in person to the Senate soon.”
McConnell said he resumed talking directly with his team leadership last Tuesday, saying he was “eager” to return.
McConnell, 81, was injured March 8 at a private dinner at a Washington hotel. He’s not the only senator currently out for illness.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) is recovering from shingles, while Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) is receiving inpatient treatment for clinical depression.
Although it’s not clear exactly when McConnell will return to his office, he said he will be working from home for now. The Senate starts an Easter recess Thursday and won’t reconvene until April 17, the Washington Post reported.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on concussion.
SOURCE: Washington Post
Source: HealthDay
Copyright © 2023 HealthDay. All rights reserved.