logo
Children making Confirmation asked to include vaping in their abstinence pledge

Children making Confirmation asked to include vaping in their abstinence pledge

Irish Times13-06-2025
Children making their Confirmation in Ireland will be invited, from next year, to take an expanded 'pledge'. As well as vowing to abstain from alcohol until adulthood, they would abstain from vaping and smoking.
The pledge has long been a rite of passage for 12- and 13-year-olds receiving the
Catholic
sacrament, traditionally involving a promise to abstain from
alcohol
and drugs.
The development forms part of Church leaders' efforts to encourage children to make healthier lifestyle choices in their formative years.
The Irish Bishops' Drugs and Alcohol Initiative, in partnership with the Catholic Primary School Management Association, which provides advice and support to the boards of management of over 2,800 schools, will make a new online module available to all schools whose students wish to take the updated pledge.
READ MORE
The expanded pledge seeks to honour Matt Talbot who died 100 years ago last week. Talbot was first exposed to alcohol aged 12 and became a heavy drinker before quitting when he was 28 and devoting his life to spirituality. He was described as 'a person of hope, faith, and charity' by Archbishop of Dublin, Dermot Farrell.
The Irish Catholic Bishops Conference said that the updated pledge 'supports our young people in terms of physical and mental health, and goes some way to address the concerns of parents regarding new and harmful substances impacting the health and wellbeing of their children'.
[
Child-related benefits lift 150,000 children out of poverty, ESRI finds
Opens in new window
]
Chris Macey, director of advocacy with the Irish Heart Foundation, said such practices 'normalise vaping in the eyes of children'.
A ban on the sale of vaping products and e-cigarettes to people under 18 came into effect in 2023.
According to a 2024 Growing up in Ireland survey, almost 10 per cent of 13-year olds had tried vaping.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A close shave: Colm Keena on  the trials and tribulations of a summer job in St James's hospital
A close shave: Colm Keena on  the trials and tribulations of a summer job in St James's hospital

Irish Times

time10 hours ago

  • Irish Times

A close shave: Colm Keena on the trials and tribulations of a summer job in St James's hospital

A while ago, while telling a friend about the job I got during the summer after I left school, he appeared shocked when I mentioned that, among other duties, I'd shaved a dead man. The job was that of ward orderly in James St Hospital, Dublin. It was reasonably well paid and came with the bonus of working alongside a load of female student nurses. I was working in the geriatric wards and, still years away from having to shave myself, one of my duties was shaving the patients. This quickly became the cause of some anxiety, not for me, but for the poor patients. The equipment comprised a plastic basin, a bar of soap, a shaving brush, and a razor. After my first few outings, I added a roll of loo paper. I'd soap the men's faces, then set to work with the razor, often as the patient and I indulged in friendly banter. The problem was the nicks. I'd be shaving away and then I'd feel it, the nick, and the patient would too, as evidenced by their flinch. A dribble of blood would begin to mingle with the lather on their cheek as I tore off some loo paper and used it to stem the flow. READ MORE Sweeny Todd, one of the men kindly called me, referring to the fictional London barber who used to murder his customers. One of older wards had six to eight beds on each side of a long, wide room and I have a memory of surveying my morning's work and seeing an array of older men in striped cotton pyjamas, all with brave smiles, the shakes, and spots of bloodied loo paper stuck to their faces. I have no memory of any complaints, and a hazy view that, despite the nicks, they wished me well. Ireland, back then, was a less litigious place. As already mentioned, one of the upsides to the job was the student nurses. I was hugely shy and both delighted and terrified to be working with them. I had lots of different jobs, including giving the men baths, helping with meals, and helping the nurses with various unskilled nursing chores. One day, a few weeks into the job, a nurse came up to me and told me to stop what I was doing and go shave Mr X, who was in another ward. There were some visitors nearby and I motioned the nurse to one side and, speaking quietly, conveyed what I thought was important news. 'Mr X is dead.' She looked at me as if there was no bottom to my stupidity. 'I know he's dead. That's why I want you to shave him.' I fetched my equipment and off I went. The curtains were drawn around the dead man's bed and when I stepped inside it was just me and him. Someone had placed a ribbon around his head to hold his jaw in place until rigor mortis set in. It felt a bit weird, being there, in a tight space, with the body of a man I'd washed and fed over the previous days and weeks. But I decided to get on with it. I removed the ribbon, lathered his face, and started to shave. Pretty soon I felt it, a nick, and I stopped. But no blood emerged. Ah, I said to myself, as the penny dropped. No blood flow. And I proceeded to give him a good close shave. Curiously enough, I felt glad of the opportunity to do him the service. As I remember it, there was quite a good atmosphere on the wards, among both the staff and the patients. Everything I've seen in the years since has bolstered the idea that caring for others, and thereby not having the time to fixate on your own needs, makes humans happy. When doing so as a team, this creates its own, special atmosphere, so that even those receiving the care are positively affected. Or so it seems to me, Sweeny Todd.

Assessments of children who may have had unnecessary hip surgeries pushed back to next year
Assessments of children who may have had unnecessary hip surgeries pushed back to next year

Irish Times

time14 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Assessments of children who may have had unnecessary hip surgeries pushed back to next year

Children who may have been subjected to unnecessary hip dysplasia surgery must wait until next year before they are assessed by a team of external experts for a second medical opinion. In May, the HSE published an independent audit on hip surgery thresholds for children with developmental dysplasia of the hip. It examined 147 cases across three hospitals : Temple Street , the National Orthopaedic Hospital Cappagh and Crumlin Hospital . In Temple Street, 60 per cent of surgeries audited did not meet the clinical threshold for surgical intervention, while this was the case for 79 per cent in the Cappagh hospital. Following the report, the HSE announced it was commissioning an independent expert review panel that will work to review patient files to determine the appropriateness of the original decision to operate. READ MORE The HSE said then that the review panel would be set up within six months. However, a spokeswoman for the executive has now said it will be January before the review of individual cases begins. The health service issued an international call for experts, with applications accepted up until last Friday. 'Expressions of interest have been received from a wide range of regions including Ireland, the UK , the USA , Canada , Asia and other parts of Europe,' the spokeswoman said. 'These submissions will be subject to a shortlisting and recruitment process prior to the formal announcement of the panel, which is expected to convene in September.' She said an international expert has been identified and agreed to chair the external panel, and terms are being negotiated. The organisation is designing a 'robust scientific and methodological framework' for the review, which is expected to be agreed between September and December this year. 'It is expected that the review of individual cases will commence in January. This timeline reflects the complexity of the work involved and the need to ensure a rigorous and comprehensive approach,' it added. The HSE, Children's Health Ireland (CHI) and patient advocates held a meeting on the external review panel last Thursday. In a statement following the meeting, Hip Dysplasia Advocacy Group, a newly-established representative organisation, said there must be 'full transparency' between the HSE and the families regarding these reviews. It said 'everyone is left completely in the dark'. 'We strongly suggested they set up a webpage to inform families of updates in a timely manner and we hope to see this implemented swiftly,' the statement said. The advocacy group described the engagement with CHI at the meeting as positive, adding that the paediatric healthcare provider anticipates all follow-up appointments for affected children will be completed by the end of the year.

Why do my potatoes look warty – and are they safe to eat?
Why do my potatoes look warty – and are they safe to eat?

Irish Times

timea day ago

  • Irish Times

Why do my potatoes look warty – and are they safe to eat?

Why is the skin of my home-grown potatoes covered in patches of what almost looks like a rough, warty growth, and are they still safe to eat? Andrew Cullinane, Co Galway It sounds as if your potatoes have a disease known as common scab. The good news is that while it sounds horrible and looks unsightly, it doesn't affect the flavour or edibility of the tubers themselves. Symptoms of common scab, which is naturally present in many soils as a microorganism known as Streptomyces scabium, are exacerbated by the developing baby potatoes being exposed to periods of sustained dry weather like those experienced in Ireland this spring and summer. It's also more likely to affect potatoes grown in a limy soil, or a soil to which lime has recently been applied. The rough, scabby growth on the skin of your potatoes is actually the plant's way of limiting damage to the flesh of the tubers. There is no treatment for this disease, which can also be inadvertently introduced into a garden or allotment by way of infected seed potatoes. For this reason, it's always recommended to source the latter from reliable suppliers as certified free from disease. It's also a good idea to keep young plants sufficiently watered during any prolonged dry spells. Crop rotation will help too, by preventing a build-up of the disease in the soil. READ MORE It's worth noting that some varieties, typically those with thinner skins, are more vulnerable to common scab than others. Examples of varieties with good resistance to the disease include 'Connect' (maincrop); 'Cammeo' (maincrop) and 'Charlotte' (early). Importantly, all these varieties also have good resistance to blight, a far more destructive disease that can wipe out an entire crop in a bad year. [ Is it too late to save my blighted potato plants? Opens in new window ] If your potatoes are a maincrop variety that you're planning on storing to use over the coming months, then take extra care to give them a cool, dark, dry spot to reduce the possibility of the scabbed areas of the tubers becoming infected by soft rot, which could then spread to the rest of the potatoes and destroy them. For the same reason, make sure to examine the stored tubers regularly to check for any early signs of rot, discarding any that you find (but not in the compost heap). Finally, for obvious reasons, also avoid reusing any of them as seed potatoes next spring. An interesting footnote to the above is that the microorganism that causes common scab in potatoes belongs to the same Streptomyces genus that's also played a vital role in the production of the majority of antibiotics. Just a few years ago, a new soil-dwelling species of Streptomyces was discovered by scientists in west Fermanagh, which promises significant potential as a new generation of antibiotic. How amazing is that?

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