
'Dying Matters' chats to be held in East Yorkshire and Lincolnshire
People are being invited to meet the professionals for a chat at the following events:Tuesday, Grimsby hospital, main restaurant, 11:00 to13:30 BST.Tuesday, Hull Royal Infirmary main foyer, 10:00 to 14:00. Wednesday, Living Later Life Well project, Trinity Methodist Church, Barton-upon-Humber, 10:30 to 12:00. Wednesday, Health Bus, Brigg Garden Centre, 09:00 to 15:00. Wednesday, Queens Centre, Castle Hill Hospital, Cottingham, 10:00 to 14:00. Thursday, Brigg Market, 08:30 to 14:00. Friday 9 May, Scunthorpe Market, 09:00 to 15:00. Friday 16 May, Freeman Street Market, Grimsby, 09:00 to 15:00.Alex Wray, a matron for end-of-life care at Hull's hospitals NHS trust, said: "By opening up honest, compassionate conversations and respecting cultural differences, we can all play a part in ensuring dying well is something everyone has the chance to do – with dignity, comfort, and choice."Information about organisations that offer support with bereavement and end-of-life care can be found on the BBC's Action Line page.
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'I've never bought up her weight with her, we only ever talk about it if she raises it and make sure I praise her for other things outside of her appearance. When she said she wanted to try them I did a lot of research online and yes, I had to pretend they were for me, but they're from a reputable online chemist.' Emma adds that she hasn't thought too much about what they'll do when Hayley gets to her target weight. 'We'll cross that bridge when we come to it. I know we can go down to a maintenance dose but at some point she'll have to come off them all together,' she explains. 'Right now, I make sure her diet is as healthy as I can and we exercise together, so I hope the injections are enough of a reset that maybe coupled with a growth spurt, she'll never put the weight back on.' However, regardless of Hayley's well-meaning intentions, Dr Keenan warns that any parents thinking of getting weight loss injections illegally for their children should exercise extreme caution. ' Addressing childhood weight issues, particularly through medical interventions like weight loss drugs, is highly complex and must be approached with sensitivity and a strong, evidence-based framework,' she says. 'For weight loss injections to have genuine long-term benefits for children, they would need to be integrated into a multidisciplinary care plan.' *names have been changed to protect identities Arrow MORE: I didn't know why I was uncontrollably sobbing – then came the diagnosis Arrow MORE: Forget the Gen Z stare, I'm worried about Gen Alpha's rudeness Arrow MORE: I tried an AI therapist for a month – here is my verdict