Category Archives: Carers
Peanut allergy clinics to open in Britain
British scientists are celebrating a major breakthrough in the treatment of potentially deadly peanut allergies
3:49PM GMT 30 Jan 2014
Children can be protected from the dangerous effects of peanut allergy by slowly building up their tolerance, research has shown.
After six months of the therapy, up to 90 per cent of allergic children taking part in a study could safely eat five peanuts a day.
Peanut allergy, which affects one in 50 children, can lead to anaphylactic shock – a potentially fatal immune reaction. It is the most common cause of deaths due to food allergies.
‘Wealth of the Web’ Report Launched
27 January 2014
Age UK London Calls for More to be Done to Help Get Older Londoners Online
Age UK London has today launched a report outlining recommendations for getting more of the 2.1 million older people in London online.
78% of Londoners aged over 75 are not online and a total of 661,000 people over the age of 55 in London have never used the internet; Wealth of the Web: Broadening Horizons Online tackles the issue of how to decrease these figures. Specific recommendations are made for older people themselves, the Age UK London Network, voluntary sector organisations, regional and local government, funders and those in the private sector.
The report looks at the obstacles to older people being online, which range from lack of interest to financial cost and lack of training and support as well as the drivers behind getting older people online which include family support and specific interests and hobbies.
What a way to treat the widow of one of our greatest war heroes
Douglas Bader’s anguished family reveal the shocking neglect his wife Joan has suffered in TWO care homes
- Joan Bader has been in four age homes
- One failed to give her medical attention when she suffered stroke
- Another left her in soaked sheets
- Her daughter Wendy is appalled by level of care in some homes
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Walking into her elderly mother’s care home, Wendy McCleave was shocked by the sight that confronted her. It had been a matter of days since she had last visited, yet in that time her mother’s condition had deteriorated horrifically.
Sunken-eyed, with a livid bruise on her temple, she seemed unable to speak or swallow.
‘I thought she was dying,’ Wendy recalls. ‘It was the most horrendous shock.’
In fact, her mother Joan, the widow of Sir Douglas Bader, Britain’s most famous wartime pilot whose story was told in the film Reach For The Sky, had suffered a stroke. Yet no one at her residential care home had taken action, despite the attempts by one nurse, Adeline Dalley, to seek medical treatment.
Zest for life: Joan with war hero Douglas Bader on their wedding day