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But the boy had never been able to get help

But the boy had never been able to get help for the infection.

His parents and his mother were unable to get the child vaccinated because he was in such a bad condition, according to a news release from the Oregon Department of Children and Families.

"The boy's parents are now trying to obtain a vaccine to prevent this from happening again," said Mike Anderson, a spokesman for the Oregon Department of Children and Families. "It is critical that our staff is able to provide care for the boy until there is an emergency, but we cannot do so simply because this is a chronic and debilitating condition, and he needs it to live a normal life."

The boy was hospitalized a few weeks ago and the boy's father is struggling with a spinal cord injury. His mother lives with him in Portland. Doctors are working to find an effective vaccine and hope to have a live baby at the boy's home in March.

The Oregon Department of Children and Families released the following statement Friday night: "We are grateful to the children of Moriah for their care and support, and wish them all the best in the future."

—With assistance from the Associated Press and Oregon Health and Science University.

This article has been updated to reflect the severity of the boy's pain.We've seen many of the big names on the scene in the space of the past year — Tom Cruise, Neil Patrick Harris, Ryan Gosling, and Chris Pratt — but this time, a team of ex-SpaceX crews has been hired to help us better understand the journey and the future of the space station. The team includes John Travolta, a professor of space science at the University of Washington's School of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences.

The mission is to examine the impact of the Apollo missions on the earth's magnetic field, and to study how the space station's magnets may affect their stability. The team plans to do several tests during this month's mission, including one with a spacecraft that will be ready to land by the end of this year or early next year.

It's a great time to be a space enthusiast, right?

Yes. You can buy tickets now and then for the mission, including tickets to the upcoming launch event.

"We're also looking forward to seeing what the astronauts on board can do in the future," Travolta says. "They might be able to run experiments on space hardware at any one time."

The mission will include an orbiter based at

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