logo
Bathers urged to check water quality in the East this summer

Bathers urged to check water quality in the East this summer

BBC News8 hours ago

The Environment Agency is urging bathers to check water quality before taking a dip in rivers and beaches this summer. The agency is taking samples from 451 bathing waters throughout England between 15 May and 30 September - on the look out for levels of two particular types o bacteria.In the East, samples will be taken from 43 bathing spots, from The Wash in Norfolk to West Mersea in Essex - and including the Stour Estuary, the Deben in Waldringfield, Suffolk - and the River Cam in Cambridge.Andrew Raine, the agency's area environment manager, said: "I'm a keen conservationist, keen on wildlife. I'm very keen that we improve further our water quality both in rivers and in bathing waters."
He said more than 7,000 water samples were taken each year, with the majority in the East rated excellent. According to the EA, anything above 1,000 colonies per 100ml is poor. Speaking in Sheringham, Norfolk, he said: "In England, 92% of our bathing waters are above the guidelines set by the WHO for safe bathing water swimming."
Scientists test for two types of bacteria - E-coli and intestinal enterococci - which can be harmful in large quantities to humans. Samples are taken from 30cm (12in) below the water surface in bathing areas, with the results published within two to five days.
'Urban run-off'
In Sheringham the water quality has been rated as excellent in samples taken between 2021 and 2024. So far this year, 15 samples have been collected from this location.However, the agency advises against swimming in three areas in the East: Heacham, in Norfolk, Clacton, in Essex, and at Sheep's Green on the Cam in Cambridge. Sheep's Green was one of 27 sites in England to receive designated bathing water status in May 2024 but is rated as having poor water quality. Mr Raine added: "I wouldn't advise swimming after a heavy downpour as you'll see lots of urban run-off from streets and pavements, you'll see run-off from agricultural land and you also could potentially get sewage spills."Water companies have done huge investments over the past few years to make sure that that most of the sites around our coast have ultra violet filtration and treatment so that kills 99% of the bacteria. "If bacteria has got into the water, it can still have an impact." He said people should also consider if the beach they are visiting has Blue Flag status. You can check bathing water quality on the Environment Agency's Swimfo website
Follow East of England news on X, Instagram and Facebook: BBC Cambridgeshire, BBC Essex, BBC Norfolk, or BBC Suffolk.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Surgeon is sued for £200,000 after 'binge-eating' 16-stone mother-of-three's gastric sleeve op left her hospitalised with malnutrition
Surgeon is sued for £200,000 after 'binge-eating' 16-stone mother-of-three's gastric sleeve op left her hospitalised with malnutrition

Daily Mail​

time32 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Surgeon is sued for £200,000 after 'binge-eating' 16-stone mother-of-three's gastric sleeve op left her hospitalised with malnutrition

A top surgeon is being sued for over £200,000 after a mother-of-three ended up hospitalised with a stomach the size of a walnut after a weight-loss operation went wrong. Paramedic Alison Tarrant had struggled with binge-eating and her weight after having children and, in 2019 after reaching 16 stone, decided to undergo a gastric sleeve operation. The operation is described as a drastic and 'irreversible' procedure involving 85 percent of the stomach being removed to reduce its capacity to about the size of a banana to prevent overeating. Top bariatric surgeon Simon Monkhouse carried out the operation, but after Ms Tarrant reported she was struggling to eat solid food in the aftermath, he went on to carry out another procedure to stretch out the smaller stomach using a special medical balloon. Unfortunately, following the balloon procedure her newly reduced stomach perforated and begin to 'leak,' the court heard, leading to an emergency gastric bypass operation to save her life. She was left in a life-threatening condition, which saw her hospitalised for 'many months' and fed through a tube due to malnutrition. Six years later Mrs Tarrant is still suffering from 'ongoing severe health difficulties' and is now suing Mr Monkhouse, claiming compensation of over £200,000 for her life-changing ordeal. The crux of her argument lies on the basis that the bid to stretch her insides should not have happened and that she should have been given more support post-op. But Mr Monkhouse's lawyers are defending the claim and deny negligence, insisting the balloon procedure was the best option given the symptoms she reported. London's High Court heard that Mrs Tarrant, from Eastbourne, East Sussex, had paid privately to have the weight loss operation at the Spire Gatwick Park Hospital, in Horley, Surrey, in September 2019. After the operation, patients have to undergo a phased reintroduction to eating, starting with liquids before moving on to 'mush' and then returning to solid food. But Mrs Tarrant had expressed concerned that she was struggling to make normal progress after the op and to eat enough and keep food down. After an investigation, the surgeon decided to go ahead in November 2019 with the balloon procedure, having decided that her issues were being caused by the new surgically reduced stomach being too narrow. But shortly after the stretching procedure, she developed a disastrous 'leak' in her stomach, leading to an emergency gastric bypass operation in December 2019. The life-saving operation reduced her stomach to the size of a walnut, and she spent months in hospital recovering and ongoing issues relating to eating. Holly Tibbitts, for Mrs Tarrant, who was still too ill to attend court and gave evidence via videolink from her home, told Judge Michael Simon that she didn't receive enough support around returning to eating after the initial operation. She said that had she done so, her difficulties would have passed without the need for her stomach to be stretched. She said that the risky procedure should not have been carried out without clear evidence that there was a physical 'stricture' or a 'stenosis' [narrowing] of the stomach and causing the issues, and which she insisted was not the case. 'Sleeve gastrectomy is an irreversible operation which involves removal of a large part of the stomach decreasing its capacity to around 15 percent of its original volume,' said the barrister. 'This results in a significant reduction in the amount of fluid and food that can be taken by the patient after surgery. 'Patients need access to robust support to deal with the dietary lifestyle and psychological changes following bariatric surgery. 'Mrs Tarrant was a vulnerable patient who had been assessed as likely requiring support to adjust post-operatively. She had not progressed as expected... and therefore required further support. 'She had not been seen or assessed by the dietician at all in the post-operative period, despite the recommendations of the guidelines. 'Her support should have been escalated to intensive follow up, including with the dietician, bariatric nurse and psychologist as required. 'Her position is that if her support had been escalated following the six-week post-operative review, her lack of progression in terms of oral intake and symptoms would have been addressed and her symptoms would gradually have resolved. 'She submits that the decision to proceed with balloon dilation at the gastroesophogal junction in the absence of a confirmed stricture or stenosis is illogical and does not stand up to scrutiny. 'Proceeding to balloon dilation in the absence of a confirmed diagnosis of stricture or stenosis falls outside established diagnostic pathways,' she added, claiming it 'amounted to a breach of duty'. 'If there is no stricture or stenosis present, dilation will be of no benefit, but is likely to traumatise other tissues in the area,' she continued. 'Both experts agree that she would have avoided the subsequent complications of conversion to gastric bypass - ongoing nausea, vomiting and food intolerance, malnutrition, hypoglycaemia and the need for enteral nutrition - but for the sleeve leak. 'In the circumstances, Mrs Tarrant invites the court to enter judgment in her favour.' Anna Hughes, for Mr Monkhouse, insisted he had followed the right path and that the balloon stretching procedure had helped Mrs Tarrant eat more easily before her stomach began to leak. 'There is no suggestion at all that the problems experienced were due to a failure to stick to the diet or to any emotional eating problems,' he said. 'In view of this, the claimant has not explained how it is that psychological support would have led to a resolution of her symptoms. 'The fact that the claimant's symptoms improved after she had been given the treatment designed to target the functional stenosis is strong evidence that it was in fact a functional stenosis that was causing her problems. 'Even if, which is denied, the dietician and/or psychologist ought to have been contacted prior to the balloon dilatation, there is no evidential basis for any finding that this would have either led to a resolution of the claimant's symptoms and/or that it would have meant that the balloon dilatation was avoided. 'This is an unfortunate case in which the claimant has clearly suffered a very significant injury. The care provided by the defendant was reasonable given the information he had, or could reasonably have had, to hand at that time. 'There has been no causative failure of care in the present case... accordingly, this claim must be dismissed,' she said. The judge will give his ruling in the case at a later date.

Northamptonshire addiction documentary premieres
Northamptonshire addiction documentary premieres

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Northamptonshire addiction documentary premieres

A man who shared his lived experience of addiction in a new documentary said he did so to show others that "change is possible".David Sagar's story was one of nine in Breaking the Chains of Addiction, which premiered at Cineworld Rushden Lakes on Thursday film was commissioned by the Northamptonshire Combatting Drugs and Alcohol Partnership - a collaboration of local agencies including the police and Sagar, who has been sober for almost 10 years, said it was important show people "you can go on to other things". The 47-year-old from Desborough said he had experimented with substances from a young age and explained how he struggled to break his addiction because "I surrounded myself with people who wouldn't question [drug taking]."He said he had tried "many times" to "make changes" to his life, but said the turning point was when a doctor told him he would be dead in a matter of months if he did not break his habit."At that point I thought 'I'm not done with life yet' and I started to reach out and get more support," said Mr now works for Change Grow Live, a charity which supports people to move away from addiction and start afresh. The 28-minute documentary was produced by One to One Development Trust - which is an arts charity - and follows people from Northamptonshire from the beginnings of their addiction through to their Judi Alston said: "When people are in addiction, they're disconnected. "All the people that are in the film have been through a process of becoming connected back to themselves, their communities, their families, the world and their ambitions in a way."That's been very interesting and very powerful."She continued: "This is an invitation for people to get ready on their recovery journey."We're not here to judge what the pathway is that people take, we're just saying there are pathways."If life feels unmanageable then take a pathway and reach out." 'Addiction doesn't discriminate' Thursday's premiere was attended by representatives from north and west Northamptonshire councils and a range of support services across the Office for Improvement and Disparities, which is a government department, gave a grant to the Watkins, a partnership development manager for Change Grow Live, encouraged anyone suffering with addiction to reach out to its STAR Northamptonshire initiative to access support, treatment, advice and recovery."Addiction doesn't discriminate, it doesn't care about your postcode, pay grade or profession," she said."Even the people you don't think would be coming to addiction services can come to us."It's just harder for those with social standing to open up and say they need that help. It's free, confidential and there's no waiting lists."A list of organisations in the UK offering support and information with some of the issues in this story is available at BBC Action Line Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

UK weather: Health alerts come into force ahead of second heatwave
UK weather: Health alerts come into force ahead of second heatwave

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

UK weather: Health alerts come into force ahead of second heatwave

Heat health alerts have come into force across most of England as the country braces for a second summer amber alert covers the East Midlands, south-east, south-west, east and London - meaning various health services and the whole population could be affected by the heat, according to the Met Yorkshire and the Humber, as well as the West Midlands, less serious yellow alerts apply, meaning that the elderly and vulnerable could be are forecast to rise into the 30s over the weekend, coniciding with Glastonbury Festival, before reaching a new high for the year on Monday, when the Wimbledon tennis championship begins. Monday could be the hottest day of the year so far, with a 20-30% chance of it reaching 34C or 35C in London and towards the Cambridgeshire area, according to BBC Weather. The Met Office says London could reach would make Monday the hottest ever start to Wimbledon too, exceeding the previous opening-day record of 29.3C in 2001 - although players and spectators can expect more comfortable temperatures in the 20s by the middle of next hottest day during Wimbledon as a whole was on 1 July 2015 when 35.7C was recorded. Temperatures will remain in the mid to high 20s for the 200,000 festival-goers descending on Glastonbury in Somerset this weekend, with a potential peak of 28C on are expected to remain dry with sunny spells - free of the mud baths of years past - but warm nights could make things for uncomfortable for in Britain, dry and sunny spells are forecast, with temperatures in the low to mid 20s this weekend. By Monday, Cardiff could match the 30C highs expected across large parts of England. A heatwave, but for how long? The sunny spell shows no sign of fading, with few places in Britain expected to see much, if any, rain by the middle of next parts of England will officially enter a heatwave - classed as three consecutive days of a temperature above a threshold, which varies by region - around the same time. These heatwaves are expected to last four to six days, finishing on European countries are seeing their own heatwaves too, with temperatures widely in the high 30s to low 40s. A scorching 44C is expected in Cordoba, southern Spain, on Sunday. Parts of Suffolk are already in an official heatwave, with temperatures exceeding 27C at Santon Downham for three consecutive days. Many more locations will join them over the of England could see a "tropical night" on Sunday and Monday - a term used to describe a night when temperatures do not fall below heat will not be far away from the June record which stands at 35.6C, recorded in Southampton during summer are becoming more common due to climate change, with a greater chance of extreme at World Weather Attribution - which analyses the possible influence of climate change on extreme weather events - say June heatwaves with three consecutive days above 28C are about 10 times more likely to occur now when compared to the pre-industrial climate, before humans started burning fossil heat health alert system has been used since 2023 by the UK Health Security Agency and the Met Office to prepare health and social care professionals for the impacts of hot are four levels of warning - green, yellow, amber and red. Among examples given by UKHSA are difficulties managing medicines, the ability of the workforce to deliver services and internal temperatures in care settings exceeding the recommended thresholds.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store