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Dec. 1, 2025, 9:42 PM ESTBy Dennis RomeroThe National Guard member hospitalized in critical condition after a fellow guard member was fatally shot near the White House is improving, West Virginia’s governor said Monday.Staff Sgt. Andrew Wolfe, 24, of the West Virginia Air National Guard, has shown signs of improvement, including responding to a nurse’s request that he display thumbs-up, Gov. Patrick Morrisey said at a news conference.”We were told that he also wiggled his toes,” he said. “So we take that as a positive sign.”Wolfe was hospitalized in critical condition after the attack Wednesday, which that killed Spc. Sarah Beckstrom, 20, of the West Virginia Army National Guard. President Donald Trump said the following day that Wolfe was “fighting for his life.” Sarah Beckstrom and Andrew Wolfe, the National Guard members who were shot Wednesday blocks from the White House.Nathan Howard / ReutersOn Monday, Morrisey described Wolfe, who is from Martinsburg, as being in serious condition but cautioned against using his update as a definitive medical evaluation. “I’m not the doctor,” he said.Rahmanullah Lakanwal, 29, is accused in the deadly attack near the White House. Lakanwal, an Afghan national who worked to support U.S. troops in Afghanistan, immigrated to the United States in 2021, under President Joe Biden, and was granted asylum during Trump’s second term.Lakanwal, who was injured, remained hospitalized, officials said. He will be charged with first-degree murder, Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. attorney for Washington, D.C., said last week.In the wake of the attack, the White House said it would halt all asylum decisions and pause issuing visas for people traveling on Afghan passports.D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said the shooting “appeared to target these guardsmen.” Both were among the first deployed to the district in August under Trump’s aggressive crime-fighting plan that federalized the D.C. police force. After the shooting, the Trump administration ordered 500 more National Guard troops to be deployed to D.C. Morrisey said that none were requested from West Virginia this time but that the roughly 170 from his state who remain in the city are doing so voluntarily.He said Wolfe’s family, whom he called “wonderful people,” are asking the public to pray for their son. “The mom has been such a positive force,” he said. “She has been asking people across the country to pray for her son. Those prayers are working.”Morrisey said Beckstrom’s family is finalizing memorial arrangements. She was a member of the West Virginia National Guard’s 863rd Military Police Company, according to an Army National Guard statement. She enlisted in June 2023, it said.Over the weekend, multiple events to honor the shooting victims took place across West Virginia and beyond. They included events at churches, on military bases and at the West Virginia high schools both attended. A ceremony was also held Monday at the 130th Airlift Wing headquarters at McLaughlin Air National Guard Base in Charleston, according to the West Virginia National Guard.Maj. Gen. Jim Seward, the state’s adjutant general, said in a video statement Sunday: “Both of these guardsmen have served with honor and distinction. They represent the very best of America.”On Sunday, Trump said he invited the families of both victims to the White House. “I said, ‘When you’re ready,’ because that’s a tough thing,” he said.Dennis RomeroDennis Romero is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.The Associated Press contributed.

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The National Guard member hospitalized in critical condition after a fellow guard member was fatally shot near the White House is improving, West Virginia’s governor said Monday



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Nov. 6, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Erika EdwardsTreating childhood fevers has long been a source of parental angst. Do you feed a fever or starve it? (Spoiler: Kids who are sick need to eat and drink enough to keep their bodies hydrated and well-nourished, doctors say.)But in September, when President Donald Trump told pregnant women to “fight like hell not to take” Tylenol over unfounded claims it was linked to autism, the ongoing debate over what’s long been considered a standard of care for kids’ fevers bubbled up again. “A friend’s baby (7 months) was running a 101 fever on Friday night and she texted me, ‘of course now I’m scared to give him Tylenol,’” one Reddit user posted recently. A person identifying as a health care worker posted in a different Reddit thread last month that a patient “brought their infant in with 103 fever and said they were too afraid to give acetaminophen.”The president, who has no medical training, said multiple times that pregnant women and their children should “tough it out” instead of taking the pain reliever.Acetaminophen is the generic name for Tylenol and is an ingredient in a variety of medications. There is no credible data, experts say, showing the fever-reducer isn’t safe when it’s used correctly. The American Academy of Pediatrics wrote last week that studies don’t find a “causal link” between acetaminophen and autism in children or during pregnancy. “Misleading claims that the medicine is not safe and is linked to increased rates of autism send a confusing, dangerous message to parents and expectant parents,” the group wrote. What’s the point of a fever?When a new and potentially harmful germ invades our immune system, the body reacts by raising its core temperature. Viruses and bacteria tend not to thrive in warm environments.That’s not necessarily a bad thing — within reason, said Dr. Molly O’Shea, a pediatrician in Michigan and spokesperson for the American Academy of Pediatrics.“Fever has value in fighting infection,” she said. “But there is a tipping point where that value is lost.”That’s when the child is so uncomfortable that they don’t want to eat or drink. “That’s when reducing the temperature makes sense,” she said. “More harm may come from dehydration.”Is a high fever always dangerous?When Seth Creech caught the flu during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, age 6 at the time, his fever soared to 106 degrees Fahrenheit. Seth Creech in 2009 at age 6. A bout with H1N1 sent his fever soaring to 106 degrees. Courtesy of Buddy CreechIt’s a frighteningly high temperature that would send most parents into a panic. Seth’s father, Dr. Buddy Creech, a professor of pediatric diseases at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, had a different view. “As a pediatrician, I knew that 106 wasn’t going to hurt him,” he said. “In a normal, healthy child, the body is really well calibrated to keep that temperature in a range that’s not going to be harmful to the child. That’s important for parents to realize.”What was concerning, Creech said, was how his son was acting while sick. “He looked terrible,” he said. “His eyes were glassy. He didn’t want to move.”Fever-reducing medications like acetaminophen and ibuprofen brought Seth’s fever down to about 101 degrees. “He was totally fine at that point,” Creech said. “He was gold, playing Legos, video games.” Seth Creech recovered and is now a 22-year-old college senior.“If the child looks well and is feeling fine, is playful and is active, you really don’t have to do anything,” Buddy Creech said. “You can ride that out in part to see how they’re doing and to let the fever increase the pressure on the germ to die.”O’Shea supported the stance that a child’s behavior is key in determining how to react to high temperatures. Signs to treat fevers include being unusually sleepy, cranky and refusing food and drinks.Still, the AAP recommends calling the pediatrician for advice when a child’s fever reaches 104 degrees.The threshold for babies younger than 3 months old is much lower, according to the group, at 100.4 degrees.Creech said there’s no evidence that giving kids Tylenol or other medicines to ease their pain or fevers would prolong their illness.“Parents should feel very safe giving their kids Tylenol when they need it,” he said.Erika EdwardsErika Edwards is a health and medical news writer and reporter for NBC News and “TODAY.”
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