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Civil rights leader Jesse Jackson to be removed from the ICU but will remain hospitalized
Rev. Jesse Jackson, 84, remains hospitalized for progressive supranuclear palsy and was moved out of ICU after his condition stabilized, family said Monday.
- The Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. will be moved out of the Intensive Care Unit at Northwestern Memorial Hospital on Monday, though he will remain hospitalized.
- Jackson was diagnosed with Parkinson's syndrome in 2013, and his diagnosis was later changed to supranuclear palsy , a neurological disorder.
- The 84-year-old civil rights activist gained national attention in the 1960s as Martin Luther King Jr.'s protégé and spent over 60 years advocating for racial equality and economic justice.
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38 Articles
The civil rights leader, Reverend Jesse Jackson, remains in stable condition on Monday and will be transferred out of the Intensive Care Unit (ICU), according to an update by the Rainbow Push Coalition. Jackson, 84, protected by Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., will remain at the Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, Illinois, where he is under observation for progressive supranuclear paralysis (PSP), added the update. “We believe in the po…
Coverage Details
Total News Sources38
Leaning Left8Leaning Right1Center21Last UpdatedBias Distribution70% Center
Bias Distribution
- 70% of the sources are Center
70% Center
L 27%
C 70%
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