Tag Archives: carers

New group for visually impaired in Plymouth

Low vision group to deal specifically with issues relating to people with sight loss.

Thursday, June 28, 2012

PLYMOUTH City Council has set up a separate low vision group to deal specifically with issues relating to people with sight loss.

The group has deliberately been kept separate to ensure that visual impairment issues do not get lost in wider disability-related issues.

Plymouth’s highlights:

As soon as a person is diagnosed staff at the Royal Eye Infirmary send over the paperwork to the council.

Government should care for carers

 

Government should care for carers

‘The Way We Are: Autism in 2012’.

Sarah Lambert, Head of Policy at The National Autistic Society (NAS) and co-writer of the 50th birthday report: ‘The Way We Are: Autism in 2012’.

Published Wednesday, July 4, 2012 – 10:25

 

To mark our 50th birthday, The National Autistic Society commissioned the largest ever survey into autism, in order to show what life is like in the UK for people affected by the condition.  Covering the wide range of autism experiences from diagnosis and employment to school and independent living, the survey  informed a major new report from the charity,  ‘The Way We Are: Autism in 2012’.

Man bids for motor neurone disease awareness

“MND is a rapidly progressing disease which destroys the lives of the patients as well as the whole family.

By Angela Brooks
July 03, 2012

A TERMINALLY ill man is fighting back and campaigning to raise awareness of his condition, starting with his home town of Horley.

Liam Dwyer, 48, of Balcombe Road, was diagnosed with motor neurone disease (MND) in 2005 after going to see a doctor about minor pain in his knee.

Now unable to walk, he is on a mission to raise the profile of a disease which kills five people every day in the UK.

Mr Dwyer, who has been with his wife Anna for 25 years and has an 18-year-old son, said: “I feel I am on borrowed time at the moment. Nine people [who] I have met since I was diagnosed, all diagnosed after me, have died.

“The doctors can’t tell me how long I will live now. I could be just a cold away from dying.”