logo
Elsie's parents support for 'crucial' blood drive

Elsie's parents support for 'crucial' blood drive

Yahoo18-05-2025

The mother of a seven-year-old girl who was murdered in the Southport knife attacks has praised the "inspiring" people who donated "crucial" blood during a drive in the town.
Elsie Dot Stancombe was one of three girls killed in the attacks during a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in the Merseyside town on 29 July.
Her parents, Jenni and Dave, joined 100 people, including supporters of their charity Elsie's Story, at a session at St John Stone Church to highlight the need for blood donations for emergencies.
Mrs Stancombe said: "Although the outcome for Elsie was tragically different, we know that blood transfusions were crucial for many of those injured that day."
"NHS Blood and Transplant made 10 emergency deliveries of blood to hospitals treating the casualties and that quick response meant the life-saving blood was available for everyone who needed it," she said.
"Following a conversation with a parent of a child who was injured that day, it felt really important that Elsie's Story supported this event."
She added the charity aimed to "create a legacy of love and hope" and the session was "so uplifting and inspiring".
Among the NHS Blood and Transplant staff supporting the session were two members of the transport team based at the Liverpool blood centre who played a critical role in the emergency response in Southport.
Stephen Kuypers and Dave Oxton were among a team of drivers who made the 10 emergency blue-light deliveries of blood supplies in three hours to four hospitals, including Alder Hey Children's Hospital.
Mr Kuypers said: "Hospital colleagues later told us that the quick response of the Liverpool transport team helped ensure that the patients received the best possible care.
"The was a very rewarding message to receive."
He donated his blood as he is O negative - the blood type most needed for emergencies as it can be given to anyone.
NHS Blood and Transplant chief executive Dr Jo Farrar said: "It is wonderful to see how many people have been inspired by Elsie's Story to give blood, and we are thankful to Elsie's brave parents Jenni and Dave for their incredible support.
"Because each donation can help up to three adults or six children, 300 lives or more will be saved and improved in Elsie's memory."
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.
Attack mum 'will never feel true happiness again'
Family set up charity in name of Elsie Dot
Southport chooses hope over hatred as it tries to heal

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Children with speech issues risk poor mental health, charity warns
Children with speech issues risk poor mental health, charity warns

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Children with speech issues risk poor mental health, charity warns

Children struggling with their speech and language are at greater risk of developing mental health problems like anxiety and depression, the charity Speech and Language UK has warned in a report seen exclusively by the BBC. The charity says almost half (45%) of all young people referred to mental health services are also dealing with serious speech and language challenges. That can include difficulties with learning new words, understanding non-verbal cues or stammering during speech. The government says it will "ensure thousands more children receive the help they need to overcome challenges with communication" through its Plan for Change. A record two million children in the UK are experiencing issues with their speech and language, according to Speech and Language UK. And one in five children and young people aged eight to 25 experienced a mental health problem in 2023, according to the NHS. Speech and Language UK's chief executive Jane Harris says children who struggle with talking and understanding words are more likely to develop poor mental health. "Everyone uses words to identify how they're feeling. If you're struggling with language, you can't say to yourself, 'I'm sad, I'm angry.' You can't categorise how you're feeling," she says. "So if we've got more and more children who are struggling with language, we're going to end up with more and more children with mental health problems." The charity wants better training in speech and language for teachers and school support staff, as well as mental health professionals, and better information sharing between schools and mental health teams to spot language issues in children at an early age. In a joint report with the Centre for Mental Health, the authors call for schools and mental health teams to move away from a reliance on talking-based therapies, adding that solutions like art therapy could sometimes be more appropriate. 23 language and literacy tips to support your child How can you talk with your child about mental health? How to become a speech and language therapist: Anne's story The government has committed to providing access to mental health support in every secondary school in England by 2030. Speech and Language UK says it's important those mental health teams in schools have mandatory training in spotting speech and language issues too. "They need to spot when a child has both communication and mental health issues, but also they need to make sure that whatever mental health support they're giving them is actually adapted and is suitable for that child." Speech and language is the most common form of support for children in England with special educational needs, according to the latest data. For around one million young people across the UK, speech and language challenges can last a lifetime, due to conditions like cerebral palsy, autism, or hearing impairments. An estimated 800,000 of those have developmental language disorder, known as DLD, a condition where people have long-term challenges talking or understanding words. Siouxsie, 19, has lived with DLD since she was a young child and finds it hard to put her ideas into words. She also has selective mutism, driven by anxiety. She says she didn't get the right support as a child, which has impacted her ability to communicate as an adult. "All my mental health struggles go completely hand-in-hand with my severe DLD and being misunderstood and feeling invisible. I find everything so hard as I cannot speak up," Siouxsie says, speaking to us over Zoom alongside her mum Rachel, after we sent her some of our question areas in advance. "To do things in life you have to continuously listen, understand and process what is being said. For someone like me this is just completely exhausting. "I get really anxious in restaurants, in cafes, shops, in any group situation, even at the hairdressers, so I don't go." She says she has found a creative outlet in the form of dance, and wants to study dance, mime and physical theatre, but is struggling to find a course she can access. Siouxsie has been receiving support from Speech and Language UK with her communication and says she is still working with a speech and language therapist. The BBC have approached Siouxsie's mainstream primary and secondary schools for a response to her claim that she was not well-supported as a child. Responding to the report, a Department for Education spokesperson said: "Our Nuffield Early Language Intervention programme is providing support with speech and language development for tens of thousands of children in reception year, and we are going further, faster by working with NHS England to embed specialist support for children struggling with communication in early years and primary school settings – preventing issues from escalating. "We're also taking action to cut NHS waiting lists, reform the Send system to prioritise early intervention and expand our mental health support teams to an additional 900,000 pupils by April 2026 so every child can achieve and thrive." How did the pandemic impact babies starting school as children now? Child speech delays increase following lockdowns Lockdowns hurt child speech and language skills

Scientists use bacteria to turn plastic waste into paracetamol
Scientists use bacteria to turn plastic waste into paracetamol

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Scientists use bacteria to turn plastic waste into paracetamol

Bacteria can be used to turn plastic waste into painkillers, researchers have found, opening up the possibility of a more sustainable process for producing the drugs. Chemists have discovered E coli can be used to create paracetamol, also known as acetaminophen, from a material produced in the laboratory from plastic bottles. 'People don't realise that paracetamol comes from oil currently,' said Prof Stephen Wallace, the lead author of the research from the University of Edinburgh. 'What this technology shows is that by merging chemistry and biology in this way for the first time, we can make paracetamol more sustainably and clean up plastic waste from the environment at the same time.' Writing in the journal Nature Chemistry, Wallace and colleagues report how they discovered that a type of chemical reaction called a Lossen rearrangement, a process that has never been seen in nature, was biocompatible. In other words, it could be carried out in the presence of living cells without harming them. The team made their discovery when they took polyethylene terephthalate (PET) – a type of plastic often found in food packaging and bottles – and, using sustainable chemical methods, converted it into a new material. When the researchers incubated this material with a harmless strain of E coli they found it was converted into another substance known as Paba in a process that must have involved a Lossen rearrangement. Crucially, while the Lossen rearrangement typically involves harsh laboratory conditions, it occurred spontaneously in the presence of the E coli, with the researchers discovering it was catalysed by phosphate within the cells themselves. The team add that Paba is an essential substance that bacteria need for growth, in particular the synthesis of DNA, and is usually made within the cell from other substances. However, the E coli used in the experiments was genetically modified to block these pathways, meaning the bacteria had to use the PET-based material. The researchers say the results are exciting as they suggest plastic waste can be converted into biological material. 'It is a way to just completely hoover up plastic waste,' said Wallace. The researchers then genetically modified the E coli further, inserting two genes – one from mushrooms and one from soil bacteria – that enabled the bacteria to convert PABA into paracetamol. The team say that by using this form of E coli they were able to turn the PET-based starting material into paracetamol in under 24 hours, with low emissions and a yield of up to 92%. While further work would be needed to produce paracetamol in this way at commercial levels, the results could have a practical application. 'It enables, for the first time, a pathway from plastic waste to paracetamol, which is not possible using biology alone, and it's not possible using chemistry alone,' Wallace said.

E.coli can turn plastic into painkillers, chemists discover
E.coli can turn plastic into painkillers, chemists discover

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

E.coli can turn plastic into painkillers, chemists discover

Scientists have found a way to use the bacteria to convert plastic waste into a popular painkiller, a study said Monday, though outside experts doubted the technique would make a dent in the fight against plastic pollution. Paracetamol, which is one of the most commonly used drugs worldwide, is made from the derivatives of fossil fuels, often by Asia-based subcontractors using cheap, polluting methods that contribute to climate change. The world is also facing an escalating crisis of plastic pollution, with countries set for another bruising round of negotiations in August in the hope of sealing an international treaty to reduce plastic waste. The British team of researchers behind the new study sought to find a solution to the two problems by roping in a third -- which is normally known for making people sick when they eat contaminated food. First the chemists used a molecule derived from PET plastic, which is used in bottles and many other plastic products the world over, to spark a chemical reaction in a strain of This created a molecule they called PABA, according to the Nature Chemistry study, which was partly funded by drug firm AstraZeneca. By genetically modifying the bacteria, the chemists were able to transform their molecule into acetaminophen, also known as paracetamol. "This work demonstrates that PET plastic isn't just waste or a material destined to become more plastic -- it can be transformed by microorganisms into valuable new products, including those with potential for treating disease," lead study Stephen Wallace said in a statement. Singaporean researchers not involved in the study praised how it combined synthetic and biological chemistry. But "several practical considerations remain" to take this idea beyond the proof-of-concept stage, they wrote in a linked commentary in the journal Nature Chemistry. The chemical reaction produces only a limited amount of PABA molecules, which "may be insufficient for industrial applications", they wrote. Melissa Valliant, communications director of the Beyond Plastics project of Bennington College in the United States, expressed scepticism. "A new 'plastic-eating bacteria' pops up in the news every few months and has been doing so for years," she told AFP. "These discoveries never scale up to anything significant enough to tackle the massive plastic pollution problem." This "crisis needs to be stopped at the source," she added, which means "companies and policymakers must reduce the amount of plastic being produced and used in the first place". jdy-dl/jxb

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