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Public offered free suncream during hot weather

Public offered free suncream during hot weather

BBC News5 hours ago

Businesses and a local authority have been praised for offering members of the public free suncream as Britain basks in a heatwave.A Sheffield city centre pub is offering beer garden drinkers suncream with their pints, while Bassetlaw District Council has introduced dispensers in public places.Research by the charity Melanoma Focus found 54% of Sheffield residents suffered from sunburn at least once a year, while 39% rarely or never applied sunscreen when in the UK during the summer months.Charlotte Killeya, who has stage four skin cancer, is backing initiatives offering free suncream, saying it should be available "like hand sanitiser".
The Head of Steam pub in Sheffield's Tudor Square started offering free suncream and drinks of water during the coronavirus pandemic when it was limited to table service.General manager James Shaw told the BBC: "You're outside in this beer garden, you get a lot of sun a lot of the time and so [as a business] you need to have that more awareness and social responsibility."He said business was "all about customer retention nowadays and dwell time, how long can that customer stay in your venue".
The free suncream has been popular with drinkers.Customer Graeme Hunt, 31, said: "It's brilliant, the fact that I was able to sit out here in the sun and not escape into the shade."It is something that I never remember, it's never in my bag."
Charlotte Killeya, from Sheffield, was diagnosed with melanoma in 2020 and has campaigned to ensure children are aware of the risks of sun damage.She has also called on the government to remove VAT on suncream and believes it should be available in public spaces.Ms Killeya wants people to enjoy the summer weather but said: "Please be careful, please put your suncream on, your sunglasses, your hats."Please, please don't end up like me, who sometimes forgot to put suncream on, didn't put suncream on, missed a bit."
Bassetlaw District Council has introduced free suncream stations at four public places including Langold Country Park between Worksop and Rotherham.Councillor Lynne Schuller said the suncream dispensers were constantly having to be refilled.She said: "We do have positive feedback from parents that say, 'thank God that there was a suncream dispenser on site as I'd forgotten my sunblock'."
Skin cancer rates are even higher in the Netherlands than in the UK and there has been a big push to introduce free suncream dispensers at hospitals, beaches and schools in the country.Dermatologist Dr Karen van Poppelen, from VieCuri Medisch Centrum, led a programme to introduce suncream dispensers and education for children in the Limburg region.Dr van Poppelen said it was all about behavioural change,.She said: "By making it (suncream) available for the kids, they can take it whenever they need it plus the education, we hope it will be normal to use sunscreen and normal to protect your skin."Hopefully in a few years we can see that the skin cancer amounts are going to be decreasing."The Department of Health and Social Care said suncream was available on the NHS for people with certain conditions, such as photodermatoses, a group of skin conditions associated with an abnormal reaction to UV radiation.A spokesperson said: "High-factor sunscreen is on the NHS prescription list for certain conditions and is already provided VAT-free when dispensed by a pharmacist to these patients."Too many cancer patients, including those with skin cancer, are waiting too long for treatment, and we are determined to change that as we shift the focus of healthcare from sickness to prevention."Through our National Cancer Plan, we will look to improve all aspects of cancer care, reducing the number of lives lost to cancer over the next 10 years."
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BREAKING NEWS England's DEADLIEST maternity units to be investigated as Streeting launches urgent review into scandal-hit NHS services
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  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS England's DEADLIEST maternity units to be investigated as Streeting launches urgent review into scandal-hit NHS services

Wes Streeting has today announced a 'rapid national investigation' into England's maternity units following a litany of scandals that have rocked the NHS. The new investigation is intended to provide truth to families suffering harm, as well as driving urgent improvements to care and safety. It comes after Mr Streeting met families who have lost babies and amid the ongoing investigations at some NHS trusts into poor maternity care. Announcing the move at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, he said the 10 most at risk units will be investigated. It will also look at the maternity and neo-natal system as a whole. The review will be based on the similar investigation taken into the overall review of the NHS carried out by Lord Darzi. It follows a series of maternity failures including Shrewsbury and Telford and East Kent NHS Trusts, with a record number of services now failing to meet safety standards. Last year, the maternity regulator also found two-thirds of services either 'require improvement' or are 'inadequate' for safety. In a statement, Mr Streeting said: 'Over the last year, I've been wrestling with how we tackle problems in maternity and neonatal units, and I've come to the realisation that while there is action we can take now, we have to acknowledge that this has become systemic. 'It's not just a few bad units. Up and down the country, maternity units are failing, hospitals are failing, trusts are failing, regulators are failing. 'There's too much obfuscation; too much passing the buck and giving lip service.' He added: 'I have been meeting bereaved families from across the country who have lost babies or suffered serious harm during what should have been the most joyful time in their lives. 'What they have experienced is devastating—deeply painful stories of trauma, loss, and a lack of basic compassion—caused by failures in NHS maternity care that should never have happened. 'Their bravery in speaking out has made it clear. We must act and we must act now. 'I know nobody wants better for women and babies than the thousands of NHS midwives, obstetricians, maternity and neonatal staff, and that the vast majority of births are safe and without incident, but it's clear something is going wrong. 'That's why I've ordered a rapid national investigation to make sure these families get the truth and the accountability they deserve, and ensure no parent or baby is ever let down again. I want staff to come with us on this, to improve things for everyone. 'We're also taking immediate steps to hold failing services to account and give staff the tools they need to deliver the kind, safe, respectful care every family deserves. 'Maternity care should be the litmus test by which this Government is judged on patient safety, and I will do everything in my power to ensure no family has to suffer like this again.' Frontline midwives have previously warned working in the NHS is like playing a 'warped game of Russian roulette ', as there was a risk of harm or death at any time, partly due to 'dangerously' low staffing levels. The Royal College of Midwives (RCM) suggests staff shortages and lack of funding is making it harder for midwives to deliver better quality services. The RCM's latest calculation is that England is short of 2,500 midwives. It also comes as another report into the 'postcode lottery' of NHS maternity care last May also ruled good care is 'the exception rather than the rule'. A hugely-anticipated parliamentary inquiry into birth trauma, which heard evidence from more than 1,300 women, found pregnant women are being treated like a 'slab of meat'. At the time, Health Secretary Victoria Atkins labelled testimonies heard in the report 'harrowing' and vowed to improve maternity care for 'women throughout pregnancy, birth and the critical months that follow'.

Streeting launches investigation into NHS maternity services
Streeting launches investigation into NHS maternity services

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timean hour ago

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Streeting launches investigation into NHS maternity services

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My cocaine bender left me BLIND – I had ‘devil eyes' for months and was chased by a man with a bible
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My cocaine bender left me BLIND – I had ‘devil eyes' for months and was chased by a man with a bible

A PARTY animal was almost killed by a five-day cocaine bender - leaving him in a coma with such bloodshot "devil eyes" for months. Dave Mullen snorted his first "naive" line of the Class A drug on his 17th birthday after being offered it in a pub. 9 9 The former carpet fitter admitted he got a taste for it, sniffing it while drinking on football away days and lads' holidays. But the occasional dabble quickly spiralled into an addiction by 19, that at his worst saw him sink 15 pints a day and snort thousands of pounds worth of cocaine in seven-day benders. A shocking photo taken in August 2021 shows Dave with bloodshot eyes after waking up from a coma in ICU following a drug -induced psychosis. His eyes remained red for months afterwards. And they were so startling that when he went back to work, completing a job in an old people's home, a man chased him with a bible fearing he was the devil. Despite almost dying, Dave admits he only managed a few months sober before falling back into his dangerous habits for three more years. It was only after a hospital trip in March 2024, when doctors said he could die, that he decided to quit and begin his path to sobriety. Dave is now 15 months sober from alcohol and drugs and says he's finally been able to escape the "prison" he'd lived in for 15 years. The content creator is now sharing his story to warn others about the dangers of substance abuse. Dave, from Salisbury in Wiltshire, said: "Cocaine goes hand-in-hand with alcohol and at a weak or naive moment as I was young [17], someone offered me a line and I took it. "I would get some [cocaine] for the weekend football and before long this turned into an addiction; it wasn't for enjoyment anymore. Inside Europe's 'cocaine capital' where gangsters bomb cafes, gun down children & X in terrifying wave of drug violence "I was going on holiday to Ayia Napa at 17 and it was like The Inbetweeners 'lads on tour' - it was just relentlessly pushed down your throat as soon as you hit an age. "At 19 I noticed it had become an addiction. It was clear not only to me but my friends and people around that I had a bit of a problem with it." Things only got worse over the next few years, which Dave puts down to " mental health episodes". "I would go through periods to escape my mental health and I would just go out for five, six, seven days and I would just be gone," he added. "I always found a way to put myself in a situation where I could get cocaine for free or very cheap, but the amount I would do would be thousands of pounds worth." While addicted to cocaine, Dave says he lost friends and struggled to keep a job. When he ended up in hospital in August 2021, he says people thought this was his turning point as he was so close to death - but it took another hospital trip to be the wake-up call he needed. Dave, now 34, said: "In my case, those photos I've shared where I ended up in intensive care was not my turning point. "This was a result of a four or five-day bender. I ended up going into a drug-induced psychosis and I completely lost my mind. "I was completely blind; I had no vision. "Six weeks later my eyes were still bloodshot and my eyes were like this for two months." 9 9 9 Since going sober, Dave has swapped his cocaine addiction for the gym and has set up a TikTok page (@darkdays2brighterways) to document his sobriety journey. He says he has been left with a lot of mental trauma following his years of drug use but a constant runny nose is his only physical set-back so far. In the future, he hopes to set up a support group under the name Dark Days 2 Brighter Ways to help others suffering with addiction. How cocaine destroys your health, face and life The nose One of the most recognisable signs of cocaine overuse is a collapsed nose. The drug is snorted via the nose. Because it is a vasoconstrictor, meaning it narrows the blood vessels, blood flow is reduced. As the nasal tissue becomes starved of oxygen in the blood, it becomes damaged. FRANK, a national drug advisory service, says: 'Over time, snorting cocaine damages the cartilage in your nose that separates your nostrils. 'Heavy users can lose this cartilage and end up with one large nostril and a misshapen nose.' Users may also have difficulty with breathing and damage to nasal passages can also lead to chronic sinus infections. The mouth and facial deformity Chronic cocaine use doesn't only affect the nose - it can also harm the roof of the mouth or the hard palate, causing palatal perforation, according to UK Addiction Treatment Centres. Palatal perforation can lead to severe issues, such as difficulty speaking or voice changes, problems with eating and drinking and higher risk of infections due to the open gap between the nose and mouth. With the potential loss of nose cartilage, destruction of nasal tissue and sinuses and the mouth, the face may change shape with chronic cocaine use. Use of the drug can also cause the face to bloat and eyes to become bloodshot. Mental health Regular use of cocaine can dampen a person's mood. It can make them feel depressed, run down, anxious or paranoid, FRANK warns. It says: 'Cocaine can bring previous mental health problems to the surface too, and if a relative has had mental health problems, there might be an increased risk for you.' Infections Constant cocaine use will weaken your body's immune system. This makes it harder to fight off any infection - or blood-borne diseases that may occur when sharing needles. Heart The heart comes under a lot of pressure from cocaine use. It increases blood clots, which in turn can lead to heart attacks, pulmonary embolisms, strokes and deep vein thrombosis. 'It can also cause inflammation and death of the heart muscle, deterioration of the heart's ability to contract, as well as aortic ruptures, angina and permanently increased blood pressure,' says the Priory Group. Life-ruining The impact of cocaine use goes beyond obvious health issues. It can cause social withdrawal, financial problems, loss of job or reputation and risky behaviour, such as unsafe sex or driving when high. If you or someone you know is struggling with cocaine use, seeking professional help is crucial to prevent further harm. Try visiting Talk to FRANK, the NHS website, Narcotics Anonymous or Cocaine Anonymous. Dave said: "I want to spread awareness as it really did ruin my life. "[In March 2024], I was told I was going to die again and something about walking out of that hospital alone - I said I didn't want to do this anymore. "I was trapped in a life that was a prison with no enjoyment. "I would have walked out of the hospital and gone straight to the pub but I thought to myself, 'I'm not going to have a drink today'. "Fifteen months later and I'm here. I have a TikTok account and I still haven't looked back. "I feel completely reborn and I'm now excited for my future. "I don't think we're educated enough about the dangers of these drugs or alcohol. "We're told drugs are illegal but in this day and age, no one really pays attention to the law. "I think my story and the pictures in particular show that it's dangerous. "I don't want cocaine to be so normalised and acceptable in society." 9 9 9 9

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