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Surrey's housing plan will help 'build futures', councillor says

Surrey's housing plan will help 'build futures', councillor says

BBC News6 days ago

Plans to develop four council-owned sites into new housing which include accommodation for people with mental health needs, have been announced.Surrey County Council says it proposals will help meet local housing needs in Merstham, Great Bookham, Cranleigh and Staines. A portion of the homes could be self-contained apartments where people with mental health needs would receive care and support.Sinead Mooney, the council's cabinet member for adult social care, said: "There are strong economic, health and community drivers for seeking to improve housing, accommodation and homes in Surrey."
The final number of homes at each site, and the mix of general housing and supported accommodation, will be confirmed during the bidding process.However, the council predicted there would be about 20 to 30 homes per site, or about 100 in total.
'Building futures'
All four sites – Chalkmead in Merstham, Keswick in Great Bookham, Longfield in Cranleigh, and Meadowside in Staines – have been assessed as suitable for housing based on access to local services, transport links and community facilities. A fifth site – Heathside, in Woking – is not being progressed at this stage, pending further consideration and review.In January 2020, the council was supporting 1,621 people with mental health as their primary social care need, and by May 2025 that number had almost doubled to 3,212.Mooney said: "This initiative is not just about building homes, it's about building futures. "It's about ensuring some of our most vulnerable residents have access to safe, supported and sustainable accommodation, enabling them to live independently and thrive in their communities."

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Warning UK's housing crisis will deepen if Reeves makes further cuts in spending review
Warning UK's housing crisis will deepen if Reeves makes further cuts in spending review

The Independent

time35 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Warning UK's housing crisis will deepen if Reeves makes further cuts in spending review

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Cellulite creams don't work and nothing replicates a facelift – but here's what you CAN do about ageing
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  • The Sun

Cellulite creams don't work and nothing replicates a facelift – but here's what you CAN do about ageing

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Weight-loss jabs can stop HRT working, doctors warn
Weight-loss jabs can stop HRT working, doctors warn

Telegraph

time41 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Weight-loss jabs can stop HRT working, doctors warn

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The loss of the protective effect of progesterone on the womb was the primary concern for the British Menopause Society, which recommended doctors move women to an intrauterine device, such as a Mirena coil, or increase the dose of progesterone. Prof Annice Mukherjee, a consultant endocrinologist and member of the society's medical advisory council, who led on the guidance, said an imbalance in the hormones, particularly among women with obesity, would put them 'at increased risk of womb cancer '. 'Oestrogen is almost always given through the skin for HRT in women living with obesity, but progesterone is frequently given as a tablet, and that formulation is thought to be the safest route for women who have complicated health issues,' she said. 'If we then start one of these injectable weight-loss drugs, then you're preferentially stopping absorption of the progestogen that's coming in orally, but you're allowing plenty of the oestrogen through the skin. 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'But if they are prescribed to a woman who's on oestrogen through the skin, and she might already have womb thickening because she's living with obesity, and she's not absorbing the progesterone because she's been put on a weight-loss injection, she's potentially getting loads of oestrogen on top of her thickened womb lining, and that could potentially unmask cancers that are there or drive an early cancer to a more advanced stage.' More than 1.5 million people in the UK are now taking weight-loss jabs, with demand doubling in the last six months. The overwhelming majority are accessing them privately from pharmacies at a cost of around £200 per month. It is not known how many people are on both drugs, but the British Menopause Society has created guidelines after calls from GPs for advice to give to patients. 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