
Emily Place, Woking's new respite centre, opens for family breaks
A £5.7m centre to offer respite for families caring for adults with additional needs has been opened in Woking, Surrey.Emily Place features a sensory room, lounge and eight en suite bedrooms at the property in Goldsworth Gardens.The building was officially opened by Surrey County Council leader Tim Oliver, a year after construction began.One mother whose daughter has made a five-night stay already, described it as "absolutely amazing".
Mr Oliver said: "My wife and I know from personal experience how challenging it can be when a loved one has disabilities and additional needs, and the level of commitment that takes from parents and carers."It's about the right support, in the right place, at the right time – that's absolutely what we're trying to achieve."Sinead Mooney, cabinet member for adult social care, said: "I can see how people coming to use the facility will be very settled and very happy here, and the location is great – you've got facilities right on the doorstep that people can use and access."It's fantastic to see this place up and running."
Jean, whose daughter has used the centre, said she had been able to drop her at Emily Lodge and "not panic"."The life of having a young adult with disabilities – or abilities, whichever way you want to go – is absolutely exhausting, so to have a few hours, a few days, a few nights, is irreplaceable" she said.Places in the centre will be allocated by the authority.
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BBC News
24 minutes ago
- BBC News
Hope for Somerset special school after extra £1.5m of funding
Nearly £1.5m of extra council funding will be provided to prevent a new special needs school from closing after less than a View School in Somerset was funded by the Department for Education (DfE), but "significant operational difficulties", including water ingress and faulty gates, meant it was not able to welcome more students in have criticised the DfE for not putting in enough money, with one saying it was "outrageous" for the council to have to "carry the can".The DfE has been contacted for comment. The government funded the building of Hill View Special School, near Yeovil, after accepting a bid by Somerset County Council to create more SEND spaces, the Local Democracy Reporting Service free school opened in September 2024 for 60 children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) and is run by the Oak Partnership Trust. But within the first month, it reported "significant operational difficulties", including substantial problems with the fabric of the included water ingress (forcing several classrooms to close), faulty gates on the car park (presenting a safeguarding issue), door fastenings which easily broke off, incorrectly installed "non-climb fences" and staff school put short-term emergency measures in place, but the disruption had caused its pupils to "become significantly dysregulated", damaging their education and wider quality of life, according to a report to the council's a series of visits, the DfE agreed to provide £684,000, allowing off-limits classrooms to be gradually the trust is still forecasting a deficit of £868,000 for the end of this academic year – and without a significant increase in pupil numbers and associated funding, it would have to "surrender" the school back to the DfE to avoid bankruptcy, it said. At a meeting on Wednesday, Somerset Council's executive agreed to allocate £1,433,000 from its dedicated schools grant (DSG) to the a statement, councillor Frances Nicholson said: "The DfE's official insisted on their design and contractor, saying they knew best – and they failed. They have put some money in to rectify their mistakes, but it's not enough."What is absolutely outrageous is that the council is being asked to carry the can for the DfE."Claire Winter, the council's executive director for children, families and education, said that not providing this funding would lead to even higher costs for the council in the years ahead. She said: "The cost of providing alternative spaces for children who could not be schooled at Hill View runs into the many millions of pounds. "Fixing this is the least these children deserve."By September they should be able to use the bulk of the building, and we are expecting 20 more children to enter the school in the autumn, with a further 20 pupils joining in February 2026."Demand for SEND education resources has vastly exceeded government funding for years, with Somerset's own Dedicated Schools Grant deficit now predicted to exceed £100m in light of this Liberal Democrat leader of Somerset Council, Bill Revans, is to write to the DfE to express the council's concerns about the school's delivery.


Telegraph
30 minutes ago
- Telegraph
The best supermarket tartare sauce, tried and tasted
Apparently tartare sauce is ready for a rebrand. Heinz, which withdrew its tartare sauce in 2002, launched a Fish & Chips Sauce this year which the company is touting as 'tartare 2... the new must-have for fish dinners.' I'm not sure I need an upgrade on tartare 1.0, thank you. The chunky condiment, known as tartar sauce (no 'e') on the other side of the Atlantic, is sauce qua non with fish, especially fried fish. But it's brilliant with chicken too, and was originally an accompaniment for steak tartar (which never has an 'e'). A proper tartare sauce has a creamy base, generally mayonnaise, although a few of the more expensive readymade versions add cream. Then it needs a feisty, vinaigery crunch, achieved with chopped gherkins, capers, shallots and herbs – the classic is fine herbes, parsley with some or all of chervil, tarragon and chives, although most of the commercially available sauces I tried for the taste test below featured just parsley. The exceptions are the M&S Collection version, which has untraditional but delicious dill, and Heinz which contains dill and parsley, though you'd never know from the flavour. Of course, you could easily make your own, especially if you use ready-made mayonnaise, just stirring in the other components. It will, however, require buying jars, packets and bunches of those ingredients, and using only a small amount. That's a big cost up front: a back-of-envelope calculation, and including only parsley in the way of herbs, came to just shy of £7, while a jar of ready-made costs from 65p to £2.60. But can the ready-made sauces measure up to homemade? Generally not, when it comes to ingredients that nudge them into ultra-processed food (UPF) territory. Of the 18 sauces I tried, most were 'shelf stable', or ambient: in jars that sit happily at room temperature until they have been opened, at which point they need to live in the fridge. All of them contain stabilisers, such as xanthan gum or guar gum, or even modified starch, which does the same job of holding the water in the emulsion. All but three contain preservatives, usually potassium sorbate. Heinz, M&S Collection and Waitrose Essential manage without preservatives at least, which goes to show what is possible. But bear in mind that using ready-made mayo to make homemade tartare sauce will almost certainly add a few industrial ingredients to the mix, such as the antioxidant, flavourings and paprika extract in Hellmann's. If making your own mayo feels like a step too far, but you want to avoid weird additives, there is an alternative, at a surprisingly reasonable price. M&S, Waitrose and Sainsbury's all sell chilled tartare sauce (although M&S's version wasn't available when I was testing). None of them have any untoward ingredients, and both the ones I tried taste much closer to what you might make at home. Better still, they are no more expensive than the top-end jars. That's the sauce. Skip to: How we tasted All the tartare sauce was brought to room temperature. While I was out of the room, my lovely assistant (AKA my husband) then dolloped them into individual containers and labelled them A-N to anonymise them. At this point I was allowed back into the room to taste the sauces. After I had judged the sauces for flavour and texture, the identity of each sauce was revealed and I examined the ingredients and nutrition, while also looking at price, in order to assess their value.


Daily Mail
35 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Warning issued to women over 'Mounjaro babies'
Blockbuster weight loss jabs could make contraception less effective, and prove harmful to unborn babies, according to an urgent warning from UK drugs chiefs. In a new alert, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) urged women using any slimming injection including Ozempic and Wegovy to use birth control, due to potential risks to both the pregnant woman and the foetus. Meanwhile, those using the 'King-Kong' of weight loss jabs, Mounjaro, were told to 'double-up' their methods of contraception if using The Pill. 'Mounjaro may reduce the effectiveness of oral contraceptives in those who are overweight,' the alert read, adding that safe sex is 'especially important for the four weeks after starting Mounjaro and after any dose increase.' Officials added that women who become pregnant while using the medications must cease taking them immediately. Those who are breastfeeding should the injections stop too. 'There is not enough safety data to know whether taking the medicine could cause harm to the baby,' the MHRA said. The regulator added that, to date, it had received more than 40 reports relating to pregnancy among women on the drugs. Of these, 26 were related to Mounjaro, one of which was for an unintended pregnancy. Eight related to semaglutide, the active ingredient in both Ozempic and Wegovy. The reports related to pregnancy, recorded by medics and patients, include problems such as birth defects, miscarriages, and unplanned pregnancies. The regulator added in some cases women should continue to use contraception for up to two months after stopping the medications before trying to get pregnant. Mounjaro, which boosts levels of appetite-supressing hormones, is known to make The Pill less effective due to disruption it causes to the digestive system, flushing out the contraceptive. Patients taking weight-loss injections are already advised to use contraception, and to stop taking the drugs if they get pregnant, in leaflets that come with the drugs. Some 35,000 British women of child-bearing age were prescribed the jabs on the NHS in England in 2024, official figures suggest. However, this is likely to be an underestimate, given that many acquire the drug privately. The MHRA alert also warned against buying the medicines from unregulated and non-medical sellers such as beauty salons or via social media. Dr Alison Cave, MHRA chief safety officer, said: 'Skinny jabs are medicines licensed to treat specific medical conditions and should not be used as aesthetic or cosmetic treatments. 'They are not a quick fix to lose weight and have not been assessed to be safe when used in this way. 'Our guidance offers patients a 'one-stop shop' for our up-to-date advice on how to use these powerful medicines safely. 'This guidance should not be used as a substitute to reading the patient information leaflet or having a conversation with a healthcare professional as part of the prescribing process.' Experts said it was suspected how weight-loss jabs work to help patients shed pounds, was also thought to be diminishing the effectiveness of contraceptives. Dr Channa Jayasena, an expert in reproductive health at Imperial College London, explained: 'We think that the absorption of oral contraceptive pills may be reduced with GLP-1 drugs which slow down emptying of the stomach, though more research is needed to confirm this.' He added, that the MHRA's alert seemed 'sensible'. 'We don't know how harmful GLP-1 drugs are during pregnancy; however, we know that other forms of weight loss like weight loss surgery can increase chances of a miscarriage,' he said. 'So, women are advised to do all they can to prevent pregnancy while taking GLP-1 drugs.' Professor Rebecca Reynolds, an expert in metabolic medicine at the University of Edinburgh, added that some studies had indicated the drugs could increase the risk of birth defects. 'There is hardly any available data from human studies to be able to advise if these weight loss drugs are safe in pregnancy. 'The data from animal studies suggests the potential for harm with low birthweight and skeletal abnormalities, though more evidence is needed to assess if there are risks of taking these drugs in pregnant humans.' Reacting to the MHRA's announcement Jasmine Shah, medication safety officer at the National Pharmacy Association, urged women using the drugs to take note. 'Community pharmacies have been experiencing unprecedented levels of interest for weight loss injections,' she said. 'It is therefore important that regulations and guidance keep pace with this demand and that patient safety is put at the heart of everything we do. 'Medicines are not like ordinary goods for sale; they must be handled with great care because they have the power to harm as well as to heal.' There are dozens of reports of women experiencing unexpected pregnancies while taking weight loss injections. Some of these are linked to the drugs helping people lose weight which in turn, boosts their fertility. However, there have been a smaller number whereby it is believed weight loss jabs have made contraceptive less effective. One US woman, Deb Oliviara, who is based in the US, detailed how she became pregnant while using semaglutide. 'It lessens the effectiveness of birth control and it also heightens your fertility,' she said in a clip viewed nearly a million times. She added she stopped using the drug immediately upon learning she was expecting. Another woman, who posted on a Reddit forum, revealed she had become pregnant while using Mounjaro, despite taking contraception. She shared an image of her positive pregnancy test and wrote that weight loss jabs ' make it hard for oral medications (like birth control) to be effective'. Weight-loss injections belong to class of drugs known as GLP- agonists, which help encourage fullness by mimicking a natural hormone released after eating. Some, like Mounjaro, also act on a second hormone involved in appetite and blood sugar control. The alert comes as findings suggest taking Ozempic and similar drugs may raise the risk of a 'silent cancer'. Reports of suspected side effects for drugs in the UK are logged under the MHRA's 'Yellow Card' scheme. Officials use the same database, set-up in the wake of the 1960s thalidomide scandal, to track the safety of Covid vaccines. Although impossible to prove, it allows doctors, pharmacists and patients to report adverse reactions believed to be caused by drugs used in Britain. This can lead to them being reviewed, having warnings added to the labels or being taken off the market completely.