Gnats, roaches and cooler issues lead to low score at NW Side restaurant

A Mediterranean buffet on the city’s Northwest Side was written up last month after gnats and roaches were found inside the establishment.

Damasco Mediterranean Buffet, located in the 4800 block of Fredericksburg Rd., received a score of 74 and was also cited for having a walk-in cooler that was nearly 20 degrees warmer than allowed by city health rules.

An employee was seen putting food in a pan after rinsing it, but did not wash or sanitize the dish, health records show.

To see more health inspection scores and to go Behind the Kitchen Door with Dillon Collier, click HERE for our special section.

Score Guide:

100-90 = A (Very Good to Acceptable)89-80 = B (Acceptable to Marginal)79 or lower = C (Marginal to Poor)

Metro Health indicates that scores of 69 or lower are failing scores

Other scores this week:

Alamo City Chocolate Factory, 1203 N. FM 1604 West, 100Botello Food Store, 1200 El Paso St., 100Raising Canes, 10938 Culebra Rd., 100Berni Vietnamese Buffet, 8742 Wurzbach Rd., 99Taco Bell, 319 Valley Hi Dr., 99Buckhorn Saloon & Museum, 318 E. Houston St., 98Chela’s Tacos, 3420 N. St. Mary’s, 97El Valle Molino, 5658 Old Pearsall, 97Saeb Thai & Noodles, 226 W. Bitters Rd., 97Kosta’s Greek Food, 12606 Nacogdoches Rd., 96First Watch Restaurant, 700 E. Sonterra, 95Vicky’s Barbacoa, 1702 Pinn Rd., 94Hooters, 8527 Wurzbach Rd., 92Dunkin Donuts, 10222 Huebner Rd., 88La Fiesta De Jalisco, 7712 Marbach Rd., 88Old Hwy. 90 Cafe, 607 Old Hwy. 90 West, 87Culebra Super Meat Market, 14100 Nacogdoches Rd., 86Guerrero’s Mexican Restaurant, 680 Gillette Blvd., 86Pik Nik Foods, 1246 S. Gen. McMullen, 86Cinnamon Food Mart, 8822 Cinnamon Creek, 85Lee’s Kitchen Chinese Restaurant, 8181 Tezel Rd., 81Damasco Mediterranean Buffet, 4841 Fredericksburg Rd., 74

For food establishment complaints in the city of San Antonio, send an email to Metro Health or call 210-207-8853.

Check out more restaurant scores by clicking here.

A Picture Doesn’t Tell the Whole Story: An Inside-Out Transformation

Author’s note: This column is different from the previous mental wellness columns I’ve written for KSAT. I am putting myself out there for all to see in a very personal way so that others can know that working on your inside is worth it.

The year 2021 was my year of change. I changed more this year than in any of my 47 years because of one key component I figured out. We’ll get to that.

First, look at these pictures of me from the beginning of 2021 to now. You may see the side-by-side comparison photos and think this is a person who shed a few pounds. Or you may see someone who is happy, sad, aging, sagging – you can pick your fancy. What I see is a survivor, a fighter, and – most of all – a woman who did not give up.

Full disclosure: I was – and still am – obsessed with the People Magazine: Half My Size issue that comes out at the beginning of each year. This was my new year’s guilty pleasure, and one that I haven’t missed since I was a teenager.

I was taught from a young age that weight loss equaled success in life. So, this People magazine issue was my bible on not only how to finally lose weight, but how to get the life that I so desperately wanted. The brave souls who graced these pages, year after year, were my superheroes. They knew how to do something I couldn’t, which was lose weight and be happy… or that is what I thought.

I would wait each year to tear through the pages of this magazine, as if it was the roadmap that I would need to finally get my life in order. It was the one issue that put regular people on the cover to show how they drastically changed and improved their lives.

After countless years of promising to overhaul my life and stop my self-sabotaging behaviors, I realized that I was missing a crucial part of understanding the ingredients to positive, lasting change. It isn’t just about looking healthy on the outside.

The key component to building a better, healthier life journey was missing from these glorious magazine issues. That key is: You must make it as much of a priority to take care of and improve your inner self as you do with your exterior self.

MORE: Join Talli Goldman-Dolge on a ‘New You’ livestream about health during the holidays on Tuesday, Dec. 14, at 2 p.m. on KSAT.com

My 2021 demanded change

So let me paint a picture of the year that has shown a real light on why I had to change to truly save my life.

When the world shut down in March 2020, we were all aware that life would never be the same again. There would be no magic 8 ball to predict what would happen.

Most of my pandemic days went something like this: Wake up, put on makeup and do my hair (so I looked like I had it together), and then attend countless Zoom meetings. After an exhausting day of having to be “on,” I would end up sitting on the couch eating food, drinking wine, and watching mindless television all to avoid the fear I had about what was going on in the world.

These new rituals became my comfort, until they no longer began to serve me, and started to have the opposite effect. I did this nightly dance because I wanted familiarity, and I craved normalcy, like so many of us did during this unprecedented time.

But I consequently ate and drank my way into a major depression and severe anxiety.

The depression and anxiety in 2020 were not my first time dealing with these mental health challenges, as I have suffered from them for most of my life. During my senior year of high school, I had agoraphobia (not being able to leave my house for fear something bad would happen, such as a panic attack or even death) and was unable to leave my house for six months.

In my early 20s, I had a stint in a mental health/eating disorder in-patient facility. And now, in my 40s, I continue to spend a large portion of my life coming up with new, inventive ways to get through a day without having a full-blown panic attack.

The kicker is — not only do I have a mental illness, but I also eat, sleep, and breathe this as a professional in the mental health field. You see, I’m fully aware that if I don’t make my mental health a priority, that the bottom could possibly drop, and yet I still struggled with it.

During the year that almost broke me, I was speaking and educating others about the importance of mental health and wellness on a weekly basis, while feeling that I didn’t know how to take care of myself.

My internal voice was constantly telling me that I was a fraud, and how could I tell others to take care of their mental health when I wasn’t doing it myself. I knew I needed help, but I was too ashamed about how far I had spiraled.

Finding what works for me

One particularly challenging day, I finally called a colleague and asked her to recommend a therapist. I’d participated in counseling since a young girl, so I knew the ropes. But therapy does not truly work if you are not open and transparent with your therapist. This time I had to do things differently no matter how hard a task that would be.

Therapists are not one-size-fits-all, so take your time finding the one who fits your needs and personality. It is hard to find a good therapist, so know that trial and error in finding one is part of the process. I wish someone had told me that when I was struggling to find a therapist who was the right fit for me.

When I started with my new therapist in October 2020, I never imagined how much this time would change my thinking, my behaviors, and my life. This therapist validated my feelings and was honest about the work that I would need to do to get better. She said she would be with me every step of the way, no matter how dark and scary it looked for me. That statement in our first session was a big key to success in our working, therapeutic relationship.

This began what I now call my year of finding what works for me. This concept was a huge shift for me, as I spent most of my life living for everyone else. I used to put other people’s thoughts, perceptions, and opinions about everything before my own.

In therapy this year, I worked on the trauma of growing up with a mental illness, as well as family trauma I was too scared to unpack before now. I never cried so much or felt so much. Going through this internal process gave me the confidence to incorporate some healthy new habits into my life.

In the past, I used to take on everything all at once, only to find myself giving up at the stress of doing too much, too fast. I needed to take baby steps. I wrote about goal setting in a previous column. Ultimately, these small steps helped me find pieces of myself that were missing.

20 changes in my life

In addition to the work I’ve done in therapy, here are 20 of the small, yet important, changes I incorporated in my life over the past year, in no specific order:

I wrote every day in my journal about my day – whether it was good, bad, or ugly.I listed five things I was grateful for each day. The fun part is that I could not repeat any one item for at least a year. This helped me to dive into really seeing the beauty in the everyday things that I may have overlooked or taken for granted.I used an app to track my food so I could see what I was eating and the choices I made when I emotionally was not feeling well.I started to exercise three to six times a week for my mental health. I was surprised to realize how amazing I feel when the endorphins kick in from a workout.I began reading for fun again, incorporating books that helped me stay present.I made music a part of my life again.I put shame aside and opened up to close friends and family about my journey in a way that I never had before.I never canceled a therapy appointment, which is something I used to do a lot when therapy became too difficult to process my feelings.I stopped making excuses as to why I could not see friends. Before, I only wanted to be around friends if I was at my best for fear they wouldn’t accept me or that I was a burden.I did not weigh myself because I did not want to define my success by the scale.I stopped drinking alcohol because I noticed nearly a year ago that it was affecting my mental and physical health in harmful ways.I finally accepted that I was not capable of doing some of this hard work on my own.I began speaking kinder to myself and stopped judging myself, which in turn helped me to treat others with more compassion and kindness.I adopted a daily mantra: “It is none of my business what others think of me – good or bad.”I started working on not letting others dictate how I thought I should feel about myself.I learned to ask others for help.I discovered the joy of sitting with my emotions, even when they are uncomfortable.I learned what real friendship and love looks like for the first time in my life.I worked on not apologizing for who I am, and appreciating all the parts that make me who I am.I realized the beauty of making mistakes, learning from them, and not letting them slow me down.

So back to these pictures. When I look at them, I am so proud of that woman in both photos because I see a resilient, determined woman who did not give up at any cost. I see someone I am proud to call my superhero, and more importantly, my friend. This, to me, is the greatest gift and lesson of all.

I took a much-needed journey to find myself again and regain my mental health and wellness. I share this so that others may feel inspired to work on themselves from the inside-out and so that we can normalize talking about mental health.

If you or someone you know is struggling with a mental health challenge or mental illness, there IS help. If you don’t know where to start, the National Alliance on Mental Illness has a thorough list of national resources you can use to start your mental wellness journey.

Read more like this on our Mental Wellness page:

10 ways to be positive in a negative world4 ways to change your approach to goal setting4 strategies for taking care of yourSELF post-quarantine7 techniques you can use to work through fear and anxiety when making a major decision5 ways to help combat anxiety in the age of COVID-19KSAT Explains: Your mental health in 2021 amid COVID pandemicWATCH: KSAT Community’s ‘Resilience in the New Year Virtual Mental Health Town Hall’Social media during the pandemic: The good, bad and ugly

Man in serious condition after being shot 3 times on North Side, police say

A man in his 30s was taken to an area hospital after being shot on the city’s North Side early Monday morning, San Antonio police said.

Officers were called around 12:30 a.m. to a home in the 1200 block of Edison Drive, not far from Blanco Road and Interstate 10 after receiving word of a person wounded.

According to police, the victim was shot by a man wearing a black mask after he heard something out by his truck. The man walked outside and was told something he didn’t understand just before being shot three times, police said.

The victim was taken to University Hospital by EMS in serious condition. The suspect fled on foot and has not been found, police said.

The San Antonio Police Department, the San Antonio Fire Department and EMS all answered the call.

The investigation into the shooting is ongoing, police said.

SAPD investigating after man is brought to hospital with gunshot wound

San Antonio police are investigating after a man with a gunshot wound was brought to a Northwest Side hospital early Monday morning.

The incident occurred just after midnight at Methodist Hospital Texsan, located in the 6700 block of West Interstate 10 in Balcones Heights.

According to police, a man and a woman in a vehicle pulled up to the hospital with a man having a gunshot wound.

Police said the the victim and the witness were both uncooperative with officers, but that they have since determined the shooting happened in San Antonio police jurisdiction. A motive for the shooting, however, is not currently known.

The victim was transported to University Hospital in stable condition. The investigation in the shooting is ongoing, police said.

Blood shortage impacting sickle cell patient care

A severe blood shortage is affecting blood banks and hospitals across the country and here in San Antonio.

It can cause major impacts on those who need regular blood transfusions, like 18-year-old Kami Crawford.

“Going out and doing the things I love like you know, modeling, playing volleyball or anything else like hanging out with my friends,” Crawford said.

Her interests are the same as many high school seniors, but balanced in with her school work and social life, the teen also has to fit in with medical appointments.

“The treatment I get is called apheresis and uhm it’s where they take this huge machine and they take out my blood cells which are affected by sickle cell,” Crawford said.

It’s a treatment she receives every three weeks to manage her sickle cell disease as doctor Melissa Frei-Jones from UT Health San Antonio explained.

”Because it is a disease of the blood cells, one of our main tools to treat and prevent these serious complications is to provide the patients with regular blood transfusions,” Dr. Frei-Jones, the medical director of the sickle cell program said.

Unfortunately, it’s getting harder to get those transfusions because of a dwindling blood supply.

“I had to push it back even for a week and I was just in bed 24/7, couldn’t do anything just because of how bad I was feeling from needing the blood,” Crawford said.

During the height of COVID, Dr. Frei-Jones says they altered the amount of blood and how often sickle cell patients got transfusions.

As Christmas approaches, Dr. Leslie Greebon, the medical director of transfusion services at University Health fears the local blood supply will get to that low point again.

”My biggest fear is that I would have to tell a physician I’m not able to supply blood for your patient,” Dr. Greebon said.

In the meantime, Crawford will focus on graduation and hopes that sharing her story, it’ll inspire people to donate.

“I know it can be scary and that it’s not always something that you know you can make time for but if you are ever able to it changes so many people’s lives,” Crawford said.

Both doctors say we are one major incident away from not being able to serve all patients who need blood.

If you would like to donate blood, you can do so directly to University Health Systems or at South Texas Blood and Tissue Centers.

Man arrested in connection with fatal shooting of Harris County Pct. 4 constable deputy, officials say

A suspect is in custody Sunday following an October shooting that killed a Harris County Pct. 4 constable deputy and injured two other deputies, according to the Houston Police Department.

Constable Deputy Kareem Atkins was shot and killed on Oct. 16 while working an extra shift at the 45 Norte Bar and Lounge. Two other deputies, Darryl Garrett and Juqaim Barthen, were also shot, Houston Constable Mark Hermann said.

At 2:12 a.m., Deputy Atkins and Deputy Garrett were alerted of a possible robbery in the parking lot. While they were trying to arrest the robbery suspect, a second suspect opened fire on the deputies with an AR-15 assault rifle, officials said.

Both deputies were shot, authorities said. Deputy Barthen heard the gunshots and went outside to assist the other deputies but was also shot by the suspect.

Officials said Atkins died from his gunshot wounds. Atkins was 30-years-old and had been employed at Pct. 4 since Jan. 22, 2019.

Deputy Garrett was shot in the back and taken to a downtown hospital where he underwent surgery. At last check, he was in intensive care at the hospital.

Deputy Barthen was also taken to an area hospital but authorities say he has since been released and is recovering at home.

After several months, the Houston Police Department announced they arrested a suspect, releasing the following statement on Twitter.

“This afternoon, HPD officers and Fort Bend County Sheriff’s deputies arrested a male suspect believed to be the shooter in the murder of Harris County Precinct 4 Constable Deputy Atkins and attempted murders of Precinct 4 Deputies Barthen and Garrett. We want to thank the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office for their collaboration and the outstanding work of our HPD homicide detectives.”

At this time, suspect information has not been released.

Herman said in a Facebook post that he will join HPD Chief Troy Finner Monday for a news conference where they will provide more details on the case.

More on KSAT:

Police: 1 deputy killed, 2 wounded in ambush at Houston bar

Family of bicyclist who was fatally shot in Tobin Hill area remains hopeful for justice

Eight months later and one man’s killer is still on the run from San Antonio police.

The family of Jesus Cardenas, 38, returned to the scene of the crime on Sunday afternoon on Evergreen Street and Evergreen Court, to make sure no one forgets his memory.

Cardenas was seen riding a bicycle in the Tobin Hill area before he was shot by someone in a vehicle around 2 a.m., April 12.

He was struck in the head by the gunfire and died at the scene.

Ever since his death, his mother returns to the scene on the 12 day of each month to lay flowers or for this month add a Christmas wreath to keep his memory alive.

Cardenas’ mother and aunt said they aren’t losing hope of catching the person responsible for his death, adding that they’re now raising money for a reward to encourage someone with more information to come forward.

Anyone with more information on the case is urged to contact SAPD’s Homicide Unit at 210-207-7635.

More on KSAT:

Surveillance footage shows SUV following bicyclist before he was fatally shot on North SideMan fatally shot while riding bike in Tobin Hill neighborhood near downtown ID’d

Texas Biomedical Research Institute to expand facilities, bring new jobs to San Antonio

Texas Biomedical Research Institute is a nonprofit infectious disease facility in San Antonio that has worked on life-saving sciences.

Of the numerous diseases the institute has worked on, the organization’s COVID-19 research helped develop Pfizer’s vaccine, as well as therapeutics.

The President and CEO of Texas Biomed, Dr. Larry Schlesinger, joined Leading SA on Sunday to talk about the development process for the vaccine and what comes next for the institute.

“A lot of contributions to the institute launched our animal studies and in two months, validated those animal studies. And that’s what enabled early on for us to interact with Pfizer BioNTech, with Regeneron and Novavax and begin those studies in the late spring of (2020). It was the success in those animal models that resembled the success we’re seeing in humans that enabled those clinical studies to begin in the summer of 2020. And it’s hard to believe that the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine that Texas Biomed did all the work on has now been a year in administration to humans. Almost half a billion of those vaccines have been distributed worldwide, and I’m very proud of that accomplishment alone,” Dr. Schlesinger said.

Right now, Texas Biomed is in year two of a 10-year strategic growth plan that is expected to have a $3.2 billion impact on the local economy.

“The animal care complex is the first major capital project of our 10-year strategic plan in which we really are going to do a redo of the campus. This is an amazing project on the south end of campus. It’s really four buildings, 18,000 square feet of space, and it’s going to enable us to greatly expand what is a national and global shortage,” said Dr. Schlesinger.

The plan also includes a new veterinary hospital, where 150 employees will work out of to attend to animals that are taking part in the medical studies, according to Dr. Schlesinger.

“Animal caretakers can come together and deliver state-of-the-art humane care to those animals as we work with them to achieve great discovery that helps humans. This is going to be for buildings, and it was launched by actually a federal grant from Economic Development Administration and then generous donations by donors in the community, as well as institutional resources that enable us to build this building. This is really just the start of several of our capital projects. St. Jude, our center research building, which will be our new front door building, is really what we’re developing research sources for now. So, you know, these are game-changing opportunities for the institute in San Antonio,” Dr. Schlesinger said.

Dr. Schlesinger said this is just the start for Texas Biomed and the biomedical sector here in the Alamo City.

“This is a tremendous economic development plan for the city. We’re talking about moving from just under 400 current employees to 700 employees. These are high-wage-earning jobs. We anticipate our plan will bring in about 1,700 new jobs, either directly or indirectly to the institute. And, and I think it’s a great opportunity. There are three things I’d emphasize about Texas Biomed in terms of besides the science and our growth for the future, and that is economic development,” Dr. Schlesinger said.

The future is bright for the medical research institute and education plays a key role.

“It’s education and you know, currently we have about 10,000 students that we interact with in San Antonio and all 17 school districts for STEM. We have internships, externships, students on campus. We do outreach; it’s a very important part of Texas Biomed,” Dr. Schlesinger said.

San Antonio is Military City, USA and that connection is vital to the biomedical industry.

“Currently, we have grants with the military and we expect to expand them. And then finally, it’s the culture of San Antonio. The four presidents of the major research organizations in town, we speak frequently. We have collaborative research arrangements. It’s about exploiting all the talent resources San Antonio has to bear. And then, it’s about telling the world about us. We’re not a secret. We’re actually a great economic engine for the future in biomedical science and health care and I think our future is very bright and great,” Dr. Schlesinger said.

You can watch the full interview with Dr. Schlesinger in the video player above.

SAPD officer injured, suspect on the run after crash on North Side, police say

A search is underway for a driver who hit a San Antonio police car and injured an officer on the North Side early Sunday, according to police.

The crash happened in the 1000 block of NW Loop 410 around 1:30 a.m.

Police say an officer was pulling over a driver for a traffic violation when a small red or maroon car came up behind the patrol car and crashed into it.

The driver sped away from the scene, heading west on NW Loop 410, officers said.

The officer was taken to a nearby hospital where he suffered minor injuries, police said. The officer is a four-year veteran of the force.

Police say the driver will face charges of failure to stop and render aid if they are caught.

More on KSAT:

Investigation underway after man found shot, killed in vehicle on SW Side, SAPD says2 people in critical condition after multi-vehicle crash on I-10, police say

Investigation underway after man found shot, killed in vehicle on SW Side, SAPD says

A man was found shot to death in his vehicle overnight on the Southwest Side, prompting an investigation, according to San Antonio police.

Authorities said they were initially called to the 200 block of Briggs Avenue with a report of shots fired around 12:44 a.m., Sunday.

When police arrived, they found a 19-year-old man who had been shot multiple times in his vehicle. Several rounds of ammo were also recovered.

The man, identified by the Bexar County Medical Examiner as Avery Jacob Flores, was pronounced dead at the scene.

SAPD is still working to track down a suspect, and the investigation continues. We’ll bring more updates to this story as they become available.

More on KSAT:

2 people in critical condition after multi-vehicle crash on I-10, police say1 dead after man shoots at multiple vehicles while driving wrong-way on Hwy 90, sheriff says