logo
Rugby world's support for Biddulph boy with cancer

Rugby world's support for Biddulph boy with cancer

BBC News6 hours ago

A nine-year-old boy who was diagnosed with cancer has received an outpouring of love and support from the rugby world.Sam, from Biddulph, Staffordshire, was diagnosed with lymphoblastic leukaemia in January and has been undergoing chemotherapy.Due to his illness and the treatment, the youngster had to stop playing for his beloved Congleton Rugby Club, temporarily giving up a sport he always wanted to be a part of.After news of his diagnosis spread, and with a little help from family friends, international players started to learn of Sam's story and began sending him video messages.
They include Ollie Lawrence, Finn Russell, Marcus Smith, Danny Care and Sam Burgess, after whom Sam was named, his father Chris said."It was amazing just to watch his face light up and see that," he told BBC Radio Stoke.
Chris said players' response had helped the family, adding the first weeks since Sam's diagnosis were "chaos"."It's just been a continuous whirlpool of different things that have been happening and things we've got to go through," he added."It's been a bit of a rollercoaster to say the least."Sam has just gone through his first round of chemotherapy, his dad said, and he has lost a lot of weight in the process.But despite "going through hell", Sam was said to be in a "better space" than he was previously, eating better and laughing with his sister."He's one of these lads who's extremely jovial and happy, cracking jokes and making fun of people all the time, in a good way," his dad added.
'Origin story'
As well as the video messages, Sam was also invited to watch two games at Wakefield Trinity and meet the players.Meanwhile, Sale Sharks invited him to a training session, where he spent much of the day among the players.Chris said Sam was treating his current struggle as his "origin story", adding: "This is him becoming that superhero at rugby."Family, friends and Congleton Rugby Club have also raised thousands of pounds in Sam's name, with the money going towards Ronald McDonald House Charities, Young Lives Vs Cancer, Birmingham Children's Hospital and University Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust Charity.
Follow BBC Stoke & Staffordshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ministers urged to act to protect hospice care for children
Ministers urged to act to protect hospice care for children

The Independent

time22 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Ministers urged to act to protect hospice care for children

Seriously ill children may be denied end-of-life care without further funding for hospices, a charity has warned. Together for Short Lives said hospices are being forced to rely on donations and funds raised from charity shops to prop up services as it called on ministers to increase ring-fenced NHS funding for children's hospices. A new poll of 30 hospices in England found almost nine in 10 (89%) expect their costs to exceed their income this financial year. The charity warned seriously ill children may die without accessing end-of-life care, symptom management and emotional and psychological support as a result. A report from the charity, seen by the PA news agency, states inflation, workforce shortages, and rising demand for care are stretching services to 'breaking point'. The report estimates costs for hospices have risen by 34% since 2021. However, statutory funding for children's hospices is still 'falling short' of what is needed, it adds. 'With reserves set to dwindle and deficits projected to grow, the future of children's hospice care is becoming increasingly unsustainable,' the authors wrote. The report also reveals disparities in funding across England, with neighbouring health authorities spending vastly different amounts on care. Together for Short Lives is urging ministers to increase ring-fenced NHS funding for children's hospices in England from £26 million in 2025/26 to £30 million by 2029/30. It said hospices have said that without this funding they would have to cut back on respite care and short breaks, emotional and psychological support, as well as end-of-life care. Nick Carroll, chief executive of Together for Short Lives, said: 'As ministers try to shift greater levels of healthcare from hospitals into communities, our amazing children's hospices are doing more than ever before to provide crucial support to seriously ill children and their families. 'But as their costs soar, they are having to rely even more on the generosity of the public amid patchy and unsustainable funding from the NHS. 'To expect the complex and often specialist healthcare these families need to be funded by charity shops and donations is wrong – we wouldn't accept this for other parts of our health and care system, so to add more uncertainty to families' lives when many simply don't know how long they have left with their children is unacceptable.' As well as providing end-of-life care, hospices also offer services including emergency support, symptom management and short breaks for respite. One parent described how she 'couldn't live without' the support of her local hospice. Laura McArthur, from Bristol, relies on the Jessie May hospice in the city for support in caring for her seven-year-old son Archie, who has cerebral palsy. But the future of the hospice remains 'unclear' after its charitable expenditure has risen sharply, and uncertainty around funding has forced it to draw on its reserve and rely on voluntary income, Together for Short Lives said. Ms McArthur said: 'Jessie May has known Archie since he was six months old. 'They have been there through it all. 'His needs are so complex, requiring around-the-clock care – at times it can be very difficult. 'Jessie May come and look after Archie so I can have a short break. 'As the years go on, caring for a disabled child is both physically and mentally exhausting. The truth is that I couldn't live without their support.' Mr Carroll added: 'As it finalises its NHS 10-year plan, the UK Government must put in place a long-term, sustainable funding model for children's palliative care in England. 'Immediately, ministers should act to protect and maintain the NHS children's hospice grant and put it on a path to £30 million by 2030. 'Only by doing so can the Government make sure lifeline services are not cut for seriously ill children, which could deny many the choice of accessing end of life care from a children's hospice.' A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: 'The Government recognises the incredible work that children and young people's hospices do across the country. 'We are investing £100 million to improve hospices facilities, and a further £26 million specifically for children's hospices this year, the biggest investment in hospices in a generation. 'We are also working to make sure the palliative and end of life care sector is sustainable in the long-term and are determined to shift more healthcare out of hospitals and into the community through our Plan for Change.'

EXCLUSIVE Former Rangers owner who came close to buying Manchester United labels Sir Jim Ratcliffe's decision-making at Old Trafford as 'shoot your-head stuff'
EXCLUSIVE Former Rangers owner who came close to buying Manchester United labels Sir Jim Ratcliffe's decision-making at Old Trafford as 'shoot your-head stuff'

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Former Rangers owner who came close to buying Manchester United labels Sir Jim Ratcliffe's decision-making at Old Trafford as 'shoot your-head stuff'

The British steel magnate who owned Glasgow Rangers in a period when they won 35 trophies and once came close to buying Manchester United, has described Sir Jim Ratcliffe 's decision-making at Old Trafford as 'shoot your-head stuff.' Sir David Murray, who was so close to owing half of United and installing Graeme Souness as a successor to Sir Alex Ferguson in 1989 that he was even negotiating the former Liverpool captain's contract there, told Mail Sport that the club had become 'dysfunctional.' Referencing one of the most outlandish of the many eye-watering salaries being paid at Old Trafford, Murray said: 'Without being disrespectful, whatever United are doing now is dysfunctional. The guy Ratcliffe has come in… and how anyone can pay Casemiro the money [he gets] and take food off the staff and get rid of the backroom staff. That's shoot-your-head stuff. Why would anybody do that?' Ratcliffe's cost-cutting measures at Manchester United have included the closure of the staff canteen and replacing free lunches with complimentary fruit. He has stood by this decision, insisting: 'No-one ever gave me free lunches.' Casemiro, meanwhile, has commanded a wage of £370,000 a week. Referencing Ratcliffe's ownership of the Scottish Grangemouth refinery, which the United co-owner has claimed is financially unviable, Murray said of United: 'This is not a gasoline terminal. This isn't Grangemouth. It's a business thing 'The boy Ratcliffe has put his money in for a third [of United] and though I don't want to be criticising him, he's got to watch he doesn't rip the heart and soul out of the club. Because that's what's made Manchester United, like it's made Rangers. It's the people.' Murray recognised that the demise of Rangers after his disastrous sale of the club to businessman Craig Whyte in 2011 also impacted on ordinary employees at Ibrox. 'One of my big regrets about what has happened at Rangers - and I've apologised – is the impact on the hardworking people who've worked at the club,' he said. 'It's the bond that I have with those people here to this day.' Murray's agreement to buy half of United from the club's chairman Martin Edwards in 1989 came after maverick business Michael Knighton asked him to go halves on the £10million needed. Murray was confident, even asking his marketing team to produce a 12-point 'merger plan' outlining 'exactly where United and Rangers could jointly benefit.' The plan, published in Murray's new autobiography, Mettle, proposed joint United/Rangers pitches for 'advertisers', reducing administration costs by 'merging accounting and banking facilities' and 'improving players' perks' by striking joint club deals for cars and other products. 'While the formation of a power base could not be the main objective of any merger, it is an inescapable fact that a unified voice presented by Manchester United and Rangers would be a powerful one at home and in Europe,' the report also states. Murray was asked to help raise collateral for his Knighton against his co-investor's properties – which included a castle in Scotland. But the valuation process established that they were not worth the £5million he was trying to raise.

UK slides down women's health rankings for fourth year in a row
UK slides down women's health rankings for fourth year in a row

Times

time38 minutes ago

  • Times

UK slides down women's health rankings for fourth year in a row

The UK has dropped down a worldwide women's health league for the fourth consecutive year, as countries such as Lithuania, Kazakhstan and Saudi Arabia perform better. Experts described the change as 'alarming' and 'unacceptable', as it was also revealed women in the UK were more likely to experience poor emotional health and chronic pain than the EU average. There has been a year-on-year decline in how women in the UK rate their pregnancy care, and they were less likely to be screened for conditions such as diabetes, high blood pressure and cancer than in comparable countries, the global study found. The UK now ranks at just 41 out of 142 countries in the Hologic Global Women's Health Index, down from 37 last year and 30 in 2023. The annual league table is based on surveys of more than 78,000 women globally. The UK is also below the US, where women's healthcare has been hit by restrictions on access to abortion in many states. The report found women living in the UK were now more likely to experience negative feelings such as sadness, stress and anger than they were in 2020 during the pandemic, with 39 per cent saying they felt 'worry'. The number of women in the UK who thought their pregnancy care was 'high quality' has also dropped every year since the survey began, falling from 79 per cent four years ago to 72 per cent in this year's report. • Hilary Rose: Gynaecology is seen as a lifestyle medicine — women are being betrayed And a record 29 per cent of UK women said they experienced daily physical pain, up from 24 per cent four years ago. More than 25 per cent said they were limited in daily activities by ongoing health issues. Janet Lindsay, the chief executive of the charity Wellbeing of Women, said: 'These figures are unacceptable for one of the world's wealthier nations and reflect long-standing underinvestment in women's health. 'Women's health should not be treated as an afterthought. It requires sustained political leadership, better access to care, increased research funding, and a shift in culture that truly values and listens to women.' Lindsay called for women's health to be put at 'the heart of our national agenda' in the government's forthcoming ten-year plan for the NHS. • NHS drops dementia and women's health targets to end 'overspending' Researchers blamed the rankings slide on the UK's failure to act to improve women's healthcare since the pandemic, despite the creation of a women's health strategy. 'While the women's health strategy, now nearly three years in, has delivered some progress, it is yet to deliver significant impact,' the report's authors said. 'The latest data exposes a widening gap between policy ambition and the everyday experiences of women.' Professor Ranee Thakar, president of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, added: 'Too often, systemic, operational, structural and cultural issues mean women do not get the care they deserve. The government's ten-year health plan offers a vital opportunity to change this.' For the index, each country was assigned a score based on its performance in five areas of women's health and wellbeing: preventive care (such as screening for cancer and high blood pressure); basic needs (including ease of access to food and housing); health and safety (including how safe women feel walking at night and the quality of pregnancy care); individual health (including how pain affects women's daily lives); and emotional health. The UK scored 59 out of 100, putting it below the EU average of 60 and on a par with Iceland, Bulgaria and France. Although the UK ranked in the top third of countries worldwide, it was in the bottom third in Europe, placed at just 23 out of 31 European countries. Other countries have made progress and moved ahead. Slovenia, for example, was ranked at 27 out of 31 European countries last year, but has now edged in front of the UK into 19th place. 'This is a four-year decline that no one can ignore,' said Tim Simpson, a senior director at Hologic. 'Women's health must remain a national priority, yet this data shows we are losing ground.' The top-ranked countries globally were Taiwan (68), Kuwait (67), Austria (66), Switzerland (65) and Finland (65). • Women left in pain by healthcare no better than Kosovo, poll finds Other countries which outperformed the UK included Bahrain, which was eighth overall with a score of 64, Kazakhstan (13th with a score of 63), Saudi Arabia (14th with a score of 63), Slovenia (31st with a score of 60) and Kosovo (35th with a score of 60). New Zealand was ranked at 37th and the USA at 38th, both with a score of 60, while Australia dropped to 43rd place, with a score of 59. The worst countries for women's health were Afghanistan, with a score of 30, followed by the Democratic Republic of the Congo (34), Chad (35), Sierra Leone (36) and Liberia (37). Globally, the average score was 53. This year's index was compiled based on data obtained from interviews carried out in 2023 with around 500 women in each country by the global analytics firm Gallup and Hologic, a medical technology company specialising in women's health. A Department of Health and Social Care spokesman said that the previous government was in power at the time the surveys for the report were carried out. 'Women have been let down by a health service which was not focused on their needs, which is why we are on a mission to get the NHS working for women,' the spokesman added. 'Equality will be at the heart of our ten-year health plan to fix the NHS. 'We're making progress, including adding 4.2 million extra appointments, tackling gynaecology waiting lists using the private sector, trialling AI for breast cancer screening, and from October this year, making emergency hormonal contraception free in pharmacies. 'There's still more to do, and we are committed to turning commitments into tangible action.'

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