Free NEWS Letter
The Sugar Trehalose
Store Front
Your Resource Area
Affiliate Program
Helping others raise funding
We Accept
VisaMaster CardAmerican ExpressDiscoverssl lock
Main Menu
Home
- - - - - - -
Email a Friend
Contact Us
- - - - - - -
Sugar Science Forum
Glycomics Training
Glycomics Brochure
PRESS RELEASE
NEWS
- - - - - - -
HOT Links of Interest
The Sugar Trehalose
Inside the Human Cell
Disclaimer
Sitemap
Evaluation Forms

Huntington’s General
Health Evaluation
FORM for Trehalose
Nutritional Pilot Survey

Parkinson's General
Health Evaluation
FORM for Trehalose
Nutritional Pilot Survey

Alzheimer / Dementia
General Health Evaluation
FORM for Trehalose
Nutritional Pilot Survey

Diabetic Health Evaluation
FORM for Trehalose
Nutritional Pilot Survey

General Public Health
Evaluation FORM for
Trehalose Nutritional
Pilot Survey (For General
Public without Huntington’s,
Alzheimer’s, or Parkinson’s.)

Search This Site
Make Your Donation

Enter Amount:

Mysterious illness prompts mid-Mass evacuation Print E-mail
User Rating: / 1
PoorBest 
WETHERSFIELD, Conn. -- A mysterious illness forced the evacuation of hundreds of parishioners in the middle of a Mass Sunday at a local church.

Police, fire and environmental crews responded to The Church of Incarnation during 11 a.m. Mass after getting reports that several people had fallen ill.

The symptoms included dizziness, nausea and, in one case, fainting, said Deputy Fire Marshal Jeffery Morrissette. About a dozen people were affected and at least two were taken to the hospital.

Some 400 people were evacuated while crews from the Department of Environmental Protection took air samples. Tests for carbon monoxide came back negative, but the church remained closed while authorities await results of further tests. A confirmation service scheduled later in the afternoon was moved to a church in Rocky Hill.

"Until the fire chief and health director are totally convinced that things are safe, obviously they're not going to let us return to the church," the Rev. James Moran told WVIT-TV.

Source