logo
TikTok stars help govt highlight risks of travelling abroad for cosmetic procedures

TikTok stars help govt highlight risks of travelling abroad for cosmetic procedures

Yahooa day ago
Influential TikTok stars are to help the government highlight the risks of travelling abroad for cosmetic procedures.
A new campaign will explain how hair transplants and dental treatments can go wrong overseas, so Britons can make "more informed choices before they go under the knife".
Videos featuring well-known medical influencers such as Midwife Marley and Doc Tally are planned, with clips urging patients to speak to British doctors first.
Other top tips include avoiding package holidays that include procedures, checking a surgeon's credentials and how their clinic is regulated, and understanding aftercare.
These influencers have tens of thousands of followers, and may manage to reach those who are less likely to see government warnings in newspapers and on TV.
It forms part of wider efforts to crack down on "cowboy" cosmetic procedures, amid warnings that medical complications can be life-changing or even fatal.
Last month, Sky's spoke to one woman after developing botulism that was linked to an unlicenced anti-wrinkle injection.
The disease is so rare that many doctors have never seen it in their entire careers - with slurred speech and breathing problems among the common symptoms.
Meanwhile, after contracting sepsis from a liquid Brazilian butt lift procedure carried out by a non-medical practitioner here in the UK.
At one point, Louise Taylor was told that her leg may need to be amputated to save her life.
Read more UK news:
The government hopes teaming up with TikTok stars - and campaigns like it - will tackle medical tourism and ensure the NHS isn't footing the bill when things go wrong.
Health minister Karin Smyth said: "Too many people are being left with life-altering injuries after going abroad for medical procedures, without access to proper advice or safeguards.
"Often drawn in by deals too good to be true and promoted by influencers - some of whom have never been to the practice in question."
Foreign Office minister Stephen Doughty said travelling overseas for treatment must not be done lightly, adding: "Informed choices today can help avoid serious complications tomorrow."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cornish care teams shortlisted for national award
Cornish care teams shortlisted for national award

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Cornish care teams shortlisted for national award

Some of Cornwall's care teams have been nominated for a national award for helping more than 230,000 people. Cornwall Integrated Neighbourhood Teams (INT) are part of an NHS health programme to provide better care and reduce hospital admissions. It has been shortlisted for the Integrated Care Initiative of the Year at the Health Service Journal Awards. Kate Shields, CEO of NHS Cornwall Integrated Care Board, said it was a "proud moment" for the team. She said Cornwall was "leading the way" with its neighbourhood teams, which were "a shining example" of the NHS' 10-year strategy. Cornwall Integrated Care Board said the teams helped solve several "well-known challenges" including making care more joined up and reducing the time for ideas to be put into practice. The county initially set up six INTs in 2024 in areas including Falmouth and Penryn, Truro, and St Austell. More news stories for Cornwall Listen to the latest news for Cornwall It will now be expanded to 16 across Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. Katrina Percy, who co-developed and delivered the programme, said it empowered "frontline teams to lead the change". She said the programme demonstrated what was "possible" when the NHS invested in "relationships, trust, and shared purpose". Cornwall NHS said the awards were "the most prestigious recognition of healthcare excellence in the UK", with more than 1,250 entries. Follow BBC Cornwall on X, Facebook and Instagram. Send your story ideas to spotlight@ More on this story Cornwall 'leading the way in diabetes care' People urged to save hospitals for most vulnerable Integrated health plans for Cornwall published Related internet links HSJ Awards Cornwall Integrated Care System

Modern medicine has its scientific roots in the Middle Ages − how the logic of vulture brain remedies and bloodletting lives on today
Modern medicine has its scientific roots in the Middle Ages − how the logic of vulture brain remedies and bloodletting lives on today

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Modern medicine has its scientific roots in the Middle Ages − how the logic of vulture brain remedies and bloodletting lives on today

Nothing calls to mind nonsensical treatments and bizarre religious healing rituals as easily as the notion of Dark Age medicine. The 'Saturday Night Live' sketch Medieval Barber Theodoric of York says it all with its portrayal of a quack doctor who insists on extracting pints of his patients' blood in a dirty little shop. Though the skit relies on dubious stereotypes, it's true that many cures from the Middle Ages sound utterly ridiculous – consider a list written around 800 C.E. of remedies derived from a decapitated vulture. Mixing its brain with oil and inserting that into the nose was thought to cure head pain, and wrapping its heart in wolf skin served as an amulet against demonic possession. 'Dark Age medicine' is a useful narrative when it comes to ingrained beliefs about medical progress. It is a period that stands as the abyss from which more enlightened thinkers freed themselves. But recent research pushes back against the depiction of the early Middle Ages as ignorant and superstitious, arguing that there is a consistency and rationality to healing practices at that time. As a historian of the early Middle Ages, roughly 400 to 1000 C.E., I make sense of how the societies that produced vulture medicine envisioned it as one component of a much broader array of legitimate therapies. In order to recognize 'progress' in Dark Age medicine, it is essential to see the broader patterns that led a medieval scribe to copy out a set of recipes using vulture organs. The major innovation of the age was the articulation of a medical philosophy that validated manipulating the physical world because it was a religious duty to rationally guard the body's health. Reason and religion The names of classical medical innovators like Hippocrates and Galen were well known in the early Middle Ages, but few of their texts were in circulation prior to the 13th century. Most intellectual activities in northern Europe were taking place within monasteries, where the majority of surviving medical writings from that time were written, read, discussed and likely put into practice. Scholars have assumed that religious superstition overwhelmed scientific impulse and the church dictated what constituted legitimate healing – namely, prayer, anointing with holy oil, miracles of the saints and penance for sin. However, 'human medicine' – a term affirming human agency in discovering remedies from nature – emerged in the Dark Ages. It appears again and again in a text monks at the monastery of Lorsch, Germany, wrote around the year 800 to defend ancient Greek medical learning. It insists that Hippocratic medicine was mandated by God and that doctors act as divine agents in promoting health. I argue in my recent book, 'Embodying the Soul: Medicine and Religion in Carolingian Europe,' that a major innovation of that time was the creative synthesis of Christian orthodoxy with a growing belief in the importance of preventing disease. Establishing an intellectual framework for medical study was an accomplishment of early medieval scholars. Doctors faced the risk of being lumped together with those who dealt in sorcery and pagan folklore, a real possibility given that the men who composed the Greek medical canon were pagans themselves. The early medieval scribes responsible for producing the medical books of their age crafted powerful arguments about the respectability and piety of the doctor. Their arguments manifest in illustrations that sanctified the human doctor by setting him parallel to Christ. This sanctification was a crucial step in including medicine as its own advanced degree program at the first universities that were established around 1200 in Europe. Thus began the licensing of healers: the elite 'phisici' – the root of the English word 'physician' – trained at the university, along with empirical practitioners like surgeons, herbalists and female healers who claimed a unique authority to treat gynecological illnesses. Today, religious dogmatism is often equated with vaccine hesitancy and resistance to basic scientific truths like evolution. But deeply religious thinkers of the past often saw rational medicine as an expression of faith, not something endangering it. Herbal remedies were scribbled into the margins of early medieval works on theology, history, church sacraments and more. This suggests that book owners valued such knowledge, and people of all classes were actively exchanging recipes and cures by word of mouth before writing the most useful ones down. The body in nature Though the Dark Ages is a period from which no case histories survive, we can still form a picture of an average healing encounter. Texts from that period emphasize the need for the doctor to be highly learned, including being well read in philosophy, logic, arithmetic and astronomy. Such knowledge enabled healers to situate their observations of sick bodies within the rules that governed the constant transformations of nature. There was no way to perceive the internal state of the body via technology – instead, healers had to be excellent listeners and observers. They sought to match the patient's description of suffering with signs that manifested externally on the body. The inside of the flesh could not be seen, but the fluids the body excreted – sweat, urine, menstrual blood, mucus, vomit and feces – carried messages about that invisible realm to the outside. The doctor's diagnosis and prognosis relied on reading these 'excreta' in addition to sensing subtle changes in the pulse. Medieval people were detailed investigators of the natural world and believed the same forces that shaped the landscape and the stars operated inside bodies formed from the same four elements of earth, water, air and fire. Thus, as the moon's waxing and waning moved the ocean tides, so did it cause humors inside the body to grow and decrease. The way the seasons withered crops or provoked tree sap to flow might manifest in the body as yellow bile surging in the summer, and cold, wet phlegm dripping in the winter. Just as fruit and meats left untouched began to rot and putrefy, so did dregs and undigested material inside the body turn poisonous if not expelled. Standing water in ponds or lakes generated slime and smell, and so were liquids sitting stagnant in the body's vessels seen as breeding grounds for corrupt vapors. In this sense, the menstrual cycle was representative of all bodies, undergoing internal transformations according to seasonal cycles and periodically purged in order to release pent-up fluids. According to this logic, health depended above all on maintaining the body's relationship to the physical environment and ensuring that substances were passing through their proper transformations, whether it was food turning into humors, blood disseminating throughout the body, or excess fluids and wastes leaving the body. Bloodletting was a rational therapy because it could help rebalance the fluids and remove toxins. It was visible and tangible to the patient, and, to the extent that we now better understand the placebo effect, it may well have offered some kind of relief. Fasting, purging, tonics and, above all, monthly dietary regimens were also prominent tools healers used to prevent and relieve sickness. Several medical books, for instance, specified that consuming drinks with cinnamon in November and pennyroyal in August could recalibrate the body's temperature in winter and summer because one drink was warming while the other was cooling. Some medieval remedies – such as one produced from wine, cow bile, garlic and onion to heal eye infections – were later proven to be likely effective in treating sickness. But whether these remedies worked isn't the point. For medieval doctors, vulture brains and cow bile operated according to the same logic that continues to inform research today: Nature operates in mysterious ways, but rational deduction can unlock the hidden mechanisms of disease. The M.D. has direct roots in the Dark Age elevation of 'human medicine.' Before mocking medieval doctors, consider how popular juice cleanses and detox regimens are in the 21st century. Are we really so far from humoral medicine today? This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit, independent news organization bringing you facts and trustworthy analysis to help you make sense of our complex world. It was written by: Meg Leja, Binghamton University, State University of New York Read more: Poison or cure? Traditional Chinese medicine shows that context can make all the difference Medieval illustrated manuscripts reveal how upper-class women managed healthy households – overseeing everything from purging, leeching and cupping to picking the right wet nurse Medieval medical books could hold the recipe for new antibiotics Meg Leja does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

Michael Barrymore suffering from uncontrollable seizures that could cause death
Michael Barrymore suffering from uncontrollable seizures that could cause death

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Michael Barrymore suffering from uncontrollable seizures that could cause death

Michael Barrymore revealed he has "uncontrollable seizures" which could cause death or brain damage if left untreated. The beloved TV presenter - who has shifted from Television to TikTok in recent years - said he had developed epilepsy after experiencing a mini stroke. On his now preferred social media site, the 73-year-old admitted he found his diagnosis "scary" and he'd had "several attacks this year". According to the NHS, symptoms of epilepsy - a condition that affects your brain and causes seizures - often start in young children and people over 50. Speaking about his diagnosis on the platform, the former game show host said: "A mini stroke caused me to develop epilepsy where I have uncontrollable seizures... "I suffer from cluster seizures, which affects a quarter of people with epilepsy. "It means I have more than one, usually three individual seizures in a short period of time." Michael must take emergency medication if he has a seizure. Recommended reading: Mountain Warehouse plans on opening dozens more stores across the UK JK Rowling compares Nicola Sturgeon to Donald Trump and Bella Swan Prince William and Kate Middleton to start 'new beginnings' in new home The star continued: "It's scary because there's a 40 per cent chance of going into epilepticus, which causes brain damage and death without prompt medical attention. "I've had several attacks this year and have emergency medication at home if I go into a seizure. "It doesn't really affect my life otherwise, but it would be nice to talk with other sufferers on here about it." The entertainer, who has become popular with Gen Z with his TikToks and vlogs, has received more than 580,000 views on the video, which shows him in a hospital bed.

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