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Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

I was terrified of leaving my sons without a mother: Slimmer of the year sheds HALF her body weight

  • 'My friend was getting married and I was scared of fitting in the pews'
  • Dropped from 35st 7lb to 15st 7lb and dress size 36 to 14-16

A 35-stone mother who used to gorge on up to 15 packets of crisps a day and struggled to even walk up the stairs has lost 20 stone so she could live to see her two sons grow up.

Zelda Haxby, 47, was so overweight she refused to leave the house for fear of being ridiculed and could not manage everyday tasks like doing the shopping.

But after being hospitalised five years ago the mother of two from York vowed to turn her life around for the sake of her boys, Liam, 19, and 15-year-old James, and has now been crowned Slimming World's Greatest Loser 2011. In the process she dropped from 35st 7lb to 15st 7lb and from a dress size 36 to a 14-16.

She said: 'When I was in hospital that was the final straw for me. I hated being away from my two boys and I realised that if I didn't lose some weight I might leave them without their mother for ever.

Transformation: Zelda Haxby, from York, pictured next to a cardboard cut-out of herself, lost 20 stone

Transformed: Zelda Haxby, 47, was so overweight she refused to leave the house for fear of being ridiculed and could not manage everyday tasks like doing the shopping

zelda haxby slimmer champion

Zelda pictured in 2006. 'Now I can walk up the stairs without bracing myself first that I might not get to the top,' she said after being named Slimmer Of The Year

'I was offered tablets and a gastric bypass, but the risks and side effects were too terrifying to even contemplate.


'Before I had to check restaurants before we would go just to see if I could fit in the seats, but now I don't even think about it'

'I just wanted to be me again and do all the things people take for granted, like shopping. I could do it but it would take twice as long, and things like leaning on the shopping trolley I just couldn't do. It hurt to stand up.

'When I'd take the boys to the beach in the summer I would stay in the car because I was too embarrassed to get out. I felt like I couldn't be there enjoying it with them.

'At my biggest I wasn't living, I was existing. I struggled to walk or stand for long and I was hugely embarrassed about my weight so I didn't leave the house unless I absolutely had to. When I did, people would laugh and shout things at me - you take a lot of stick when you're that big.'

The mother, who at her biggest was a size 36 and still keeps the skirt she used to wear as a reminder to keep the weight off, is now a trim 14-16 and says she feels healthier than when she was a teenager.

She said: 'As a teenager my weight would go up and down. I'd always been a big girl and was around a size 16 then. Me and my friends would sponsor each other to lose weight but nothing ever worked.

'Then when I had the boys the weight just piled on. Being at home with then it was easy to snack. Crisps were my real weakness and I'd eat as many as 15 packets a day.

'I tried different things to lose weight. I'd buy diet books, do fitness videos and I'd lose a bit but then I'd start eating bad things again or eating at the wrong times, and the weight would creep back on.'

zelda haxby slimmer champion

Zelda, left, in 2006, and, right, last month. She used to regularly eat 15 packets of crisps a day

BEFORE THE DIET

Breakfast: White toast with butter

Mid-morning: Bacon and egg sandwiches
Lunch: Sandwiches, crisps, chocolate bars

Mid-afternoon: Crisps (sometimes 15 packets a day)

Dinner: Chinese takeaway or spaghetti Bolognese made from a pre-prepared sauce with garlic bread

Snacks: Crisps and chocolate

AFTER THE DIET

Breakfast: Weetabix or porridge with chopped banana
Lunch: Jacket potato, beans and cheese with a mixed salad of lettuce, tomato, cucumber, pepper, onion and celery
Dinner: Roast dinner with vegetables or pasta dish made with chopped vegetables, lean smoked bacon and passata
Snacks: Fat free yoghurts, fresh fruit or fresh fruit salad or Alpen light bars

But it was her friend Chantelle Byford's wedding in September 2007 that really made her want to get the weight off in time for the big day.

Zelda, who ended up losing 12 stone in just one year so see Chantelle walk down the aisle, said: 'When Chantelle told me she was getting married I was determined to go. It would have been heartbreaking for me not to be there.

She said: 'She was getting married in a church and I was scared of fitting in the pews but one day Chantelle, who was already a member of Slimming World, left their magazine at my house. I read one of the stories and it was like I was reading about myself, so I got on the phone to her and asked how I could join.

'I was so terrified at the time. I sat outside in the car shaking, scared the scales wouldn't be able to weigh me, but the consultant came out to the car to introduce herself. She was so kind and friendly and reassured me that I didn't have to get weighed in front of everyone.'

Now Zelda, who used to gorge on takeaways, bacon butties and chocolate, has gone on to lose a massive 20 stone in just five years and has vowed to keep it off.

She said: 'Before I had to check restaurants before we would go just to see if I could fit in the seats, but now I don't even think about it.

'Now I can walk up the stairs without bracing myself first that I might not get to the top. I feel amazing, even better than when I was a teenager and the kids are so, so proud of me. They've been such a support.'

Her next goal is to get back in the swimming pool, which she used to love before she piled on the pounds.

She said: 'I've started looking at swimming costumes again. There was one time I wouldn't even have given them a second glance, but now I've got my sights set on going back in the pool.

'I can't believe I've done it. If you'd have told me five years ago I'd have lost 20 stone I would have said you're mad.'


Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Woman, 21, spends £5,000 on plastic surgery... so people will think she's a DRAG QUEEN

A young woman has paid thousands of pounds for plastic surgery - to make her look more like a drag queen.

Collagen Westwood, 21, from north London said she is thrilled if she is mistaken for a man dressing as a woman on a night out.

Collagen Westwood (pictured), loves dressing herself up to look like a drag queen. Her early idols were Boy George and Lily Savage

Barbie girl: Collagen Westwood (pictured), loves dressing herself up to look like a drag queen. Her early idols were Boy George and Lily Savage

The aspiring singer is so desperate to achieve her look she's splashed out £5,000 on surgery to plump up her lips and straighten her nose. She even plans to have some ribs removed so she can fit into smaller corsets.

Collagen, who counts Lily Savage and 80s group Dead or Alive singer Pete Burns among her idols has also bought elaborate wigs and revealing low-cut dresses.

The young woman said: 'I've admired drag queens since I was a little girl.

'They're glamorous and beautiful - what woman wouldn't want to look like that?

'I have a couple of different wigs that I wear when I go out, and people are always assuming I'm a transvestite. I love it when people mistake me for a man. It doesn't offend me - I think drag queens look fantastic.'

Painful: Collagen had her lips plumped and her nose straightened and plans further plastic surgery

Painful: Collagen had her lips plumped and her nose straightened and plans further plastic surgery

Collagen spends at least three hours getting ready for a night out - and her huge blonde wig and elaborate make-up are so difficult to put on, she has to be helped by her make-up artist friend.

She added: 'I'm saving up for more surgery. I love being plastic.

'I can't wait until I've got enough for liposuction and to have some ribs removed - so I can fit into even smaller corsets, but I want a breast enlargement too.

'I have my lips plumped up with collagen injections every few months. I've always been fascinated by the elaborate clothes and make up that drag queens wear.'

Collagen said her mother had many friends who were drag queens when she was growing up and she always wanted to be like them.

She said: 'As a child, I used to love dressing up as Boy George and when I was a bit older, I used to enter talent contests as Cher.

Collagen, 5, pictured left. She was a fan of Boy George (right) when growing up

'When I started secondary school, I got quite badly bullied, and I grew to hate the way I looked.

'From the age of about 12, I was desperate to have surgery and change my appearance.

'A lot of people have made fun of me and treat me like a bit of a freak, especially when I was at school - but I don't let them bother me now.

'I just get on with my own life, and concentrate on being happy.'

Collagen was bullied as a child but now says she ignores any negative comments

Collagen was bullied as a child but now says she ignores any negative comments

Collagen, who is now trying to launch a singing career, admitted that some of her friends and family are not accepting of her look.

She added: 'My partner, Ally, is a lot more reserved than I am - sometimes I think she wishes I'd tone it down a bit.

'She worries about my health and doesn't like me having surgery. But I love who I am - and I'll carry on trying to look like a drag queen.'

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Britain's smallest twin who weighed just 13oz at birth wins eight-month fight for life and goes home to her delighted parents

Liz and Jeff Barrett were devastated when they lost their daughter Mollie just two days after Liz went into premature labour at 23 weeks.

But they were thrilled and amazed when her smaller twin Freya-Grace refused to give up the battle for survival despite only weighing 13oz at birth.

Over eight months she had nine blood transfusions, a plasma transfusion, and a delicate heart valve operation.

Britain's smallest twin: Liz with newborn Freya-Grace, who weighed just 13oz at birth

Britain's smallest twin: Liz with newborn Freya-Grace, who weighed just 13oz at birth

The feisty youngster was allowed home from hospital today to Deri in South Wales with an oxygen supply to help strengthen her lungs.

Many hospitals leave babies born before 24 weeks to die because they only have a two per cent chance of survival and often have severe disabilities.

However, doctors are hopeful that Freya-Grace will go on to live a normal life.

Mrs Barrett said: 'We are so proud of her. It's just fantastic Freya-Grace is home and putting on weight every day.

'She already brings us so much joy and her fighting spirit has got her through.'

Liz and her self-employed builder husband Jeff, 33, kept a cotside vigil - taking it turns to be with their little girl.

When their daughter was born she fitted easily into Liz's hand and her skin was so transluscent some of her veins were visible.

Home at last: Freya-Grace, pictured with her mother Liz, has left hospital today weighing nine pounds - still less than some full-term babies

Home at last: Freya-Grace, pictured with her mother Liz, has left hospital today weighing nine pounds - still less than some full-term babies

Customer service advisor Liz said: 'At first, we were shocked that Freya had survived - she was the smallest of the two girls.

'We thought the doctors had made a mistake - we thought Mollie was going to live.

'When I saw Freya, she reminded me of cooked chicken. She was so small. Her skin was shiny, you could almost see straight through her.

'She didn't look like a normal baby should. It was horrible to see her hooked up to all these wires. I wanted to hold her but she was too fragile to touch.'

But she said her brave little girl is living proof that babies are viable at 23 weeks.

She is furious after a leading consultant questioned whether babies should be resuscitated when born at 23 weeks.

Dr Daphne Austin, of the West Midlands Specialised Commissioning Team, told a BBC documentary that rescuscitating '23-weekers' was doing more harm than good.

Liz, who became pregnant through IVF treatment, said: 'I was infuriated by her comments.

'I would like to meet Mrs Austin, ask her to look into Freya-Grace's eyes then ask whether she thinks treating 23-week babies is a waste of money.'

Liz and Jeff say they will always be grateful to the doctors and staff at the specialist neo-natal unit at Singleton Hospital, in Swansea, where Freya-Grace spent her first eight months.

Freya-Grace weighs in at 9lbs now - still less than the birth weight of many babies.

Liz said: 'She's a determined little girl. She's already pulling herself up and arching her back. She's so strong.

'Every milestone that Freya reaches is that little bit happier, I'm just so grateful she's still here.'

The previous smallest surviving twin born in Britain was in July 2010 to Amanda Staplehurst in Portsmouth to a boy weighing 1lb 4oz. His sister, weighing 1lb 20z also survived.

Monday, March 21, 2011

The 76st family that's cost the NHS £1.2m: (but say that going on a diet isn't an option)

An obese family of three has cost the Health Service more than £1.2million in slimming treatments and weight-loss surgery.

Zaneta Jones, 46, and husband David have both had gastric bypasses and their 17stone son Stanleigh, 15, is due to have his stomach stapled later this year.

At their heaviest, the trio had a combined weight of 76st 10lb.

Supersized family: Zaneta, Stanley and David Jones weighed more than 76stone at their heaviest and insist they feel bad about the cost of their treatment

Supersized family: Zaneta, Stanley and David Jones weighed more than 76stone at their heaviest and insist they feel bad about the cost of their treatment

The £1,235,000 cost of their treatments so far would be enough to fund around 1,000 lumpectomies for suspected breast cancer, or a year’s supply of medication for 1,235 Alzheimer’s patients.

The Government has called for a new approach to tackling obesity, which costs the NHS around £4.2billion a year, including £49million in gastric operations.

But the Jones family claim dieting was not a ‘realistic option’, and believe their obesity is a genetic problem. Their adopted son Liam, 11, is a healthy size.

Jobless Mrs Jones told Closer magazine: ‘I understand people’s anger because they’re paying for us, but obesity is an illness.

‘We’re not villains – we need NHS support, just like other people who are ill.’

Mr and Mrs Jones, who live near Truro in Cornwall, admit their diet and lifestyle led to their weight gain.

They ate up to 10,000 calories a day in fat-laden fry-ups and super-sized McDonald’s meals, and passed their eating habits on to son Stanleigh.

By the age of four he was eating five Weetabix for breakfast and wearing clothes meant for a 12-year-old. By 13 he weighed 19stone and was diagnosed with borderline diabetes and now takes daily medication.

Big eaters: At her heaviest Mrs Jones weighed 36st 10lbs but has since lost half that, while her son Stanley at one stage was 20st before losing 3st when he began exercising

Big eaters: At her heaviest Mrs Jones weighed 36st 10lbs but has since lost half that, while her son Stanley at one stage was 20st before losing 3st when he began exercising

He suffered from sleep apnoea – a weight-related breathing disorder – since he was four, which required regular treatment costing some £5,000.

At his heaviest, Stanleigh was 20stone, although he has since lost three through exercise. He requested a £14,000 stomach staple to restrict the amount he can eat, and the operation is scheduled for this summer.

Mrs Jones said Stanleigh’s problems started when he was a toddler.

‘I hate myself for letting him eat so much but I couldn’t bear him crying,’ she said. ‘Dieting isn’t a realistic option. I’m scared about him having the op but if he carries on he’ll kill himself.’

Mrs Jones said her own weight problems began as a teenager, and she was a size 22 by the time she was 18. The problems continued after her 1985 wedding to car worker David.

She said: ‘For lunch we’d have egg, sausage and bacon and for dinner we’d eat a large roast and baked apples with lots of sugar.

‘By 8pm we’d be eating a fried egg sandwich. We’d snack on super-sized McDonald’s meals.’

By the time she gave birth to Stanleigh, Mrs Jones weighed 23stone and she was diagnosed with diabetes, high blood pressure and kidney failure. She was prescribed up to 29 tablets a day for her weight-related health problems, at a cost of £5,000 a month. She says she took them for 15 years, leaving taxpayers a £900,000 bill.

Closer magazine carries the story of the Jones family

At her heaviest, the 5ft 3ins woman weighed 36st 10lbs and she struggled to breathe and needed sticks to walk. She said: ‘I tried every diet – I even had my jaw wired twice and lost 10stone.

But I’d start eating again. I feel guilty and embarrassed. I’d love to see every penny spent on me go to treat cancer, but once I got to a certain weight I couldn’t help myself.’

Mrs Jones’ £18,000 gastric bypass helped her drop to 18stone. But this has left her with five stone of excess skin, and she is due to have a £22,000 operation to remove it.

She and her husband have both been treated for sleep apnoea, which has cost the NHS another £5,000 each. Mr Jones, 58, also had high blood pressure and cholesterol after his weight rose to 20stone.

Medication for his weight-related health problems has cost around £290,000. He had a £14,000 gastric bypass last November and is now 14stone.

Mrs Jones added: ‘I accept responsibility for putting on weight, but I couldn’t lose it alone. After Stanleigh has his op we can live a normal life.

‘I can see why people resent the money spent on it, especially if they have an ill relative the NHS is struggling to fund treatment for.’

She added: ‘Perhaps we should pay extra for our health care – but then people who drink or take drugs should too. Obesity is a mental illness and an addiction.’

Emma Boon of the Taxpayers’ Alliance said: ‘Patients are being denied life-saving treatments so it’s staggering that cheaper alternatives aren’t being explored for obesity, like diet and exercise.’

The full interview appears in this week’s Closer magazine, out now.


Thursday, March 17, 2011

They left my baby to die in my arms: This mother thought her son had a fighting chance when he was born at 22 weeks. but the hospital staff refused


  • Hospital only intervenes with babies born after 24 weeks

Holding her newborn son Tom for the first time, Tracy Godwin marvelled at his eyelashes, and counted every precious finger and toe.

After the drama of his arrival at just 22 weeks, she knew she had a little fighter in her arms.

But at a mere one pound, and battling to breathe, he would need all the help he could get. That help never came.

Grief-stricken: Tracy Godwin whose baby boy Tom was 'left to die' in her arms after being born at 22 weeks because of a hospital policy not to resuscitate

Broken dreams: Tracy Godwin with a teddy bear she bought for her baby boy, Tom

Not forgotten: Tom was born on March 6 last year and survived for 46minutes

Not forgotten: Tom was born on March 6 last year and survived for 46 minutes

Forty-six minutes later, and despite her desperate pleas to midwives for assistance, Miss Godwin’s son died as she held him.

She has since been told that the hospital has a policy not to resuscitate babies born earlier than 24 weeks into pregnancy.

Yesterday Miss Godwin, who visits her little boy’s grave every day, told how she is haunted by fears she and her partner didn’t do enough to help their baby when the medics around her refused.

‘They put him in my arms and he cried and was wriggling around. I could feel him breathing and see his eyelashes and fingers and toes,’ she said.

‘But I kept thinking, “Where’s the incubator?” We were begging the midwives to do something to help him but no one was saying anything. He was not stillborn, he was trying to live.

‘If they had tried for an hour and said they couldn’t do anything more for him or he was severely brain damaged, that would have been different, but he wasn’t given a chance.’

Miss Godwin, 31, had been due to give birth to her first child on July 8 last year. She and her partner of two years were looking forward to becoming a family.

All went well until March 4 when she developed stomach pain and went to Southend Hospital in Essex. There, she was distraught to be told she was already in labour.

Put into a private room, she spent the next day in bed and was told by a doctor it might be possible to use a cervical stitch to prolong the pregnancy.

THE RESUSCITATION RULES

Although the NHS offers guidance on when to resuscitate premature babies, health trusts can decide individually whether or not to follow it.

Under the guidelines, doctors are advised not to try to save those born under 22 weeks as they are too underdeveloped.

Between 22 and 23 weeks it is not thought to be in the child’s best interests but can be done at the parents’ request after discussion of the likely outcomes.

At 23-25 weeks babies are routinely resucitated. Even with expert round-the-clock care, only 1 per cent of 23-weekers survive without disability.

Baby Tom survived for 46 minutes at Southend Hospital maternity wing

Baby Tom survived for 46 minutes at Southend Hospital maternity wing

Tiny fighter: Little feet in the palm of his mother's hand

Tiny fighter: Little feet in the palm of his mother's hand

DON'T RESUSCITATE, SAYS LEADING DOCTOR

While Southend Hospital chooses not to treat babies born before 24 weeks it is up to individual NHS trusts to decide their own policy on this contentious issue.

Recently a leading NHS official said babies born after just 23 weeks or earlier should be left to die.

Dr Daphne Austin, who advises local health trusts how to spend their budgets, said doctors were ‘doing more harm than good by resuscitating 23-weekers’ and that treatments have ‘very marginal benefit’.

She added only one in 100 grows up without some form of disability. The most common include blindness, deafness and cerebral palsy.

The NHS spends around £10million a year resuscitating babies born this early and keeping them alive on incubators and ventilators.

But in the early hours of March 6 – 22 weeks and two days into her pregnancy – she was in terrible pain and given the painkiller pethedine. Shortly afterwards she was aware of the midwife breaking her waters. She gave birth an hour later.

‘Because of the drug I wasn’t myself and I keep thinking if I hadn’t taken it and withstood the pain, maybe I would have had more fight in me to demand a doctor,’ she said.

‘We never saw one. It was a disgrace. I just kept crying and crying.

‘My partner was shouting at the midwives to help us but they just left us with Tom. We felt so alone, no one was helping us. I don’t know when, but I was suddenly aware Tom had gone.’

His tiny body was blessed by a priest and the couple went home later that day.

It was only four weeks later when they called a meeting with a consultant that Miss Godwin was given the news that resuscitating her baby was against hospital policy.

‘I just couldn’t believe it,’ she said. ‘I had all these questions about what had happened and why, and was just told: “I don’t know, it’s our policy.”

‘When you are pregnant you do not check what your hospital’s policy is on premature babies. To think he could have had a chance if he was born in a different hospital is just heartbreaking. You just assume the doctors will do everything they can to help you live.’

Miss Godwin said the tragedy led to the couple breaking up some months afterwards.

‘The grief tore us apart,’ she said. ‘We blamed each other for not doing more to put pressure on them to help him. I’m still grieving so much, I visit Tom’s grave every day.’

Miss Godwin, who lives in Southend-on-Sea, is still waiting for an inquest, which can take place only when the hospital submits a report on the incident.

Earlier this month, leading NHS official Dr Daphne Austin said resuscitating babies born under 23 weeks would ‘do more harm than good’ and that the £10million annual cost yielded ‘very marginal benefit’.

Miss Godwin said: ‘We spend a fortune on things like drug addiction. You can’t say £10million is too much when a baby’s life could be saved.’

Sarah Ballard-Smith, director of nursing at Southend Hospital, said: ‘I am very sorry and sad to hear of Miss Godwin’s experience. It is essential to inform the prospective parents regarding the expectation for infant survival. I can only apologise if this was not the case with Miss Godwin.’

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Boy, 9, born with no ear is left delighted after surgeons rebuild it using tissue from his ribcage

Born without a right ear, Ethan Giles-Bowman became increasingly shy and self-conscious with each passing year.

He grew his hair long to try and cover up the flap of skin where his ear should have been, but was always aware of the way strangers looked at him.

Now the nine-year-old is enjoying a new lease of life after surgeons created an ear for him using cartilage taken from his ribcage.

Ethan Giles-Bowman has had his hair cut so it no longer hides his ear, after he had one crafted out of his rib cartilage

Ethan Giles-Bowman has had his hair cut so it no longer hides his ear, after he had one crafted out of his rib cartilage

It was a painful process, but the schoolboy is delighted with the result and proud of his realistic-looking new ear.

His insecurities have disappeared overnight and he immediately had his hair cut short to show it off. He can't wait for summer to come along so he can wear sunglasses on holiday.

Ethan was one of the first children in the UK to undergo the complicated six-hour operation. He has never been able to hear from his right side, but a permanent hearing aid may be fitted in future to give him some hearing.

His rare congenital condition Hemi-facial Goldenhar Syndrome meant his right ear was originally little more than a lobe.

Mother Kathryn Giles-Bowman, 33, from Sheffield, said he has coped with the problem bravely and went to a mainstream junior school.

'Ethan always managed quite well with one ear, it was something he grew up with and he became accustomed to, but obviously it affected him. As he got older he became more aware of it.'

Ethan has Goldenhar Syndrome, which is a rare congenital defect characterized by incomplete development of the ear

Ethan has Goldenhar Syndrome, which is a rare congenital defect characterized by incomplete development of the ear

Extracting the cartilage was a 'very invasive procedure.' Mrs Giles-Bowman, who owns a beauty salon, said: 'It resulted in Ethan having to put up with a lot of pain and discomfort but he was determined he wanted to do it.

'Now he is fantastic, the first thing he wanted was to have his hair cut shorter, instead of hiding away underneath it and we're getting used to his new look.

'The change in him since then has been enormous. He is now much more outgoing. It is wonderful for me and his father to see him looking so happy and confident.'

The family knew surgery was an option but they had to wait until he was physically big enough for surgeons to take enough cartilage.

In 2009 their GP recommended top surgeon Greg O’Toole at the Royal Free Hospital in London and the operation was carried out last September.

Mrs Giles-Bowman, who has two other children aged 13 and one, said when the bandages were removed after two days Ethan's face 'lit up.'

'All his friends think it's really cool,' she said.

At the moment the ear looks 'pinned back' and a further operation will be carried out in April to take more cartilage and build up the ear further.

His father Richard Bowman, 41, a joiner, said:'Ethan has had to live with the problem all his life, but he has just got on with things. He has been so brave and I'm sure he will be able to cope with further surgery. The whole family is proud of him.'

As for Ethan, he is overjoyed to no longer stand out from the crowd. 'It's just nice to feel normal now like my friends,' he said.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Everything's okay mum! Unborn baby gives reassuring thumbs up in the womb

A mother-to-be who was worried about her unborn baby was reassured when she had a hospital scan.

For the scan photographs showed an entirely normal baby who was also captured giving the thumbs up.

Expectant mother Donna Sayer, 29, had two scans at a hospital in Canterbury Kent several weeks after becoming pregnant in August.

Enlarge Everything's okay: Donna Sayer was surprised to see her unborn baby giving a thumbs up

Everything's okay: Donna Sayer was surprised to see her unborn baby giving a thumbs up

She and her partner Simon Biscoe became concerned when it appeared their baby's head seemed to be elongated and too small.

But the pair were delighted when they went for their third scan at the Kent and Canterbury Hospital.

It showed their baby's head had reached a normal size and there were no medical concerns.

But Ms Sayer and the nurses laughed when they realised the baby was giving the thumbs-up.

Miss Sayer from Whitstable said she and her partner were relieved to see their baby was developing normally

Miss Sayer from Whitstable said she and her partner were relieved to see their baby was developing normally

Ms Sayer, who is food and beverage manager at Kent County Cricket Club, said today: 'After checking everything was okay. the nurse said she would try to get some more photographs of the baby.

'But it was hiding and all she could get was its hand giving the thumbs-up as if it was trying to tell us that everything was fine. The image was quite clear.

'We had both been concerned during the two weeks before I had the third scan, but everything is okay. We have shown the photograph to family and friends. They all think it is quite apt.'

Donna, from Whitstable, who is due to give birth in May, added: 'Everyone who has seen the picture has been astonished.'

Fay Smith, an ultrasound practitioner at William Harvey Hospital in nearby Ashford, said: 'You see them sucking their thumbs, doing rude gestures, and, in later scans, blinking.

'I often laugh with parents-to-be when babies have got their hands over their private parts!'

Friday, January 28, 2011

Nut allergy boy, 7, suffers two heart attacks after teacher hands him chocolate HAZELNUT in class

  • 'Our son could have died', say horrified parents

A schoolboy with a nut allergy suffered two heart attacks after a teacher handed him a chocolate with a whole hazelnut inside it.

Rehan Butt, seven, had a massive allergic reaction and had to be rushed to hospital where he was hooked up to a ventilator to help him breathe.

His family said staff at the Bradford school had been aware of the boy's allergy since he started there three years ago.

It appears the youngster was handed the treat by a substitute teacher but his mother said there was a board in class with pictures of which children were allergic to what.

Consequences: Allergic Rehan Butt was rushed to hospital after he was handed a chocolate containing a hazelnut

Consequences: Allergic Rehan Butt was rushed to hospital after he was handed a chocolate containing a hazelnut

Rehan was handed the Quality Street chocolate with a hazelnut in it at the end of the school day on Tuesday and began eating it.

His mother then saw him spit it out at the school gate and a few minutes later noticed his complexion change and face swell.

She immediately gave him a shot from an EpiPen - a boost of adrenaline - which he carried on him. But it failed to make an immediate impact, and an ambulance was called to the school.

Rehan Butt

Rehan spat out the chocolate when he realised it had a nut inside but his face had already started to swell

It is thought a substitute teacher at St Matthew's C of E Primary School in Bradford was handing out chocolates because it was a child's birthday and handed Rehan the 'Big Purple One' from a selection box.

His mother, Razwana Butt, 28, said: 'The chocolate was given to him but he didn't tell me until he had eaten it. When I saw him he had the purple wrapper and then his eyes started to swell up about 10 minutes later.

'He was saying he was finding it difficult to breathe and he was panicking. We called an ambulance and luckily it arrived really quickly.

'They gave him adrenaline and oxygen and then we got to Bradford Royal Infirmary.

'When we got to the hospital he went into cardiac arrest and his heart stopped twice. Luckily, he came round after CPR.

'We really want to raise awareness of how dangerous giving a child the wrong thing can be, because it could have been much worse, Rehan could have died.'

The boy's aunt Farzana Hussain, 26, said: 'We have been really let down by the school and it's not a small thing that has happened here.

'Rehan has a serious allergy, he suffered two cardiac arrests and one respiratory arrest because he ate that sweet. He couldn't breathe on his own and he had to be hooked up to a ventilator.

Rehan was given 'the purple one' from a Quality Street box

Rehan was given the 'big purple one' from a Quality Street box

'He has been going to that school for three years and everyone there knows about his allergies and how serious they are. I just can't believe that someone would give him a chocolate with a nut in.

'He asked the teacher if he was a allowed a chocolate and when they said yes he trusted them. By the time he had bitten into it and realised what had happened it was too late.'

Rehan was transferred from Bradford Royal Infirmary (BRI) to the Intensive Care Unit at Leeds General Infirmary before being taken back to BRI at about 5pm on Wednesday afternoon, where he is still staying.

Mrs Butt, a civil servant, said: 'I don't know how this could have happened, in the school's classroom they have an allergy board which has each child's picture on it and what they are allergic to.

'My sister always reminds people that he is allergic to nuts at birthday parties and all the children in his class know he is allergic to them.

'I went to see the head teacher to tell them how badly it had affected Rehan. He apologised to me.

'Luckily Rehan is off the ventilator now but he is very disorientated. We have been talking to him about his friends from school and he doesn't remember them.

'After one of his family came to see him, we were talking to him about it later and he couldn't remember the visit.'

She added: 'We were told that Rehan could have suffered brain damage if the ambulance hadn't got there so quickly and given him oxygen. He is much better now and is able to sit up in bed.'

Head teacher Bob Curran said in a statement: 'We can assure Rehan's family that there will be a full investigation into the incident.

'We wish Rehan and his family all the best for his recovery.'

Monday, January 24, 2011

I dropped six dress sizes after doctors warned my weight was straining my heart, says new Miss Slinky

Enlarge Confession: People thought I was pregnant said Dominique Bellas, 26, from Leigh-on-Sea

Confession: People thought I was pregnant said Dominique Bellas, 26, from Leigh-on-Sea

A woman who was bullied at school for being overweight has been named Miss Slinky 2011 after losing 8st and dropping six dress sizes in just over a year.

Dominique Bellas, 26, was teased about her size from the age of 10 and weighed more than 19st by August 2009.

She was even mistaken for being pregnant while at her heaviest.

The council worker said she was spurred on to start slimming after her brother was diagnosed with the heart condition left ventricular cardiomyopathy.

The aspiring model and actress was warned by doctors she may also have the disease.

Miss Bellas, of Leigh-on-Sea in Essex, said: 'I knew that being overweight was putting extra strain on my heart so I had to do something about it.

'I'd been in denial for so long and it was time to face up to it. On the outside I was confident - perhaps over confident - and always making jokes, but I think that was just my way of hiding the fact that my weight was making me really unhappy.'

Before she joined Slimming World in September 2009, Miss Bellas said her normal diet included peanut butter on toast and a banana for breakfast, two rounds of sandwiches for lunch and creamy pasta dishes or takeaways for dinner.

The former drama student, who attended the Arden School of Theatre in Manchester, said her dreams of being a model had been held back by her size.

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  • This cynical five-a-day myth: Nutrition expert claims we've all been duped

But after losing more than 10in from her waist, Miss Bellas said she now hoped to pursue her ambitions.

Dominique Bellas, 26
Dominique Bellas, 26

New start: Miss Bellas said she would love to start modelling after losing 8st in a year

'I had a few successful acting jobs and I was even approached by a modelling agency after they saw my headshot, but I knew that as soon as they realised how heavy I was I wouldn't stand a chance so I didn't pursue it,' she said.

'Now I've lost weight, I've got so much more confidence in the way I look and I'd love to get into modelling.'

Miss Bellas, who works for Lambeth Council in south London, lost the weight by eating a more healthy diet, joining a gym and playing badminton.

She now weighs just over 11st and has gone from a size 24 to a size 12, earning Slimming World's Miss Slinky 2011 award and picking up a £2,000 cash prize.

She said: ;For the first time my confidence is 100% real and I feel good top to toe.

;Even better I know I can stay feeling this way because with Slimming World I've got the tools to stay slim for life - a healthy attitude to food and great support too.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Real-life horror: First video reveals how malaria parasite invades and destroys human blood cells

A malaria parasite has been caught on camera for the first time breaking and entering human red bloods cell before savagely destroying them from the inside.

The Plasmodium parasite transmits malaria via the bite of infected mosquitoes. The infectious disease kills one million people every year and infects 400million.

Scientists have captured in great detail the moment a malaria carrying parasite invades a human red blood cell

Scientists have captured in great detail the moment a malaria carrying parasite invades a human red blood cell

Australian researchers used super resolution microscopy to watch the organism make windows in the walls of the human cells before burrowing through.

The technology provides images at a much smaller scale than normal light microscopes and so could capture the parasite, which is just one millionth of a metre across.

Dr Jake Baum, of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute in Melbourne, said: 'The real breakthrough of super resolution microscopy is that it… basically allows you to build a three-dimensional image of cellular processes at very high resolution.

'It's like we've taken CCTV snapshots of thousands and thousands of bank-robberies.'

The results, which are published today in the journal Cell Host & Microbe, could provide new insights into the molecular and cellular events that drive cell invasion.




'It is the first time we've been able to actually visualise this process in all its molecular glory,' said Dr Baum.

Though scientists have observed the parasite driving its way into cells before, the new technology provides a big leap in the amount of detail they can see.

'One of the most thrilling things we saw was the parasite inserting a ring-shaped protein into the cell wall to make a window through which it climbs.

'You can actually see the parasite climbing through,' Dr Baum said.

The footage also revealed that once the parasite had attached to the red blood cell and formed a tight bond with the cell, a master switch for invasion was initiated and invasion continued unabated without any further checkpoints.

Dr Baum said he had been working towards tracking the parasite for seven years. He hopes the new knowledge will allow scientists new opportunities to 'throw a spanner in the parasite's works'.

He said: 'If, for example, you wanted to test a particular drug or vaccine, or investigate how a particular human antibody works to protect you from malaria, this imaging approach now gives us a window to see the actual effects that each reagent or antibody has on the precise steps of invasion.'

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Fitness fanatic balloons from size 10 to 18 in weeks after developing tumour on her pituitary gland


  • 26-year-old finally diagnosed after five years of tests

Fitness fanatic Kathryn Weir's life turned into a 'living hell' when her weight mysteriously shot up, making her so fat she was ashamed to leave the house.

The sporty 26-year-old, who enjoyed 90-minute sessions in the gym, ballooned from a trim size 10 to a size 18 in the space of a few weeks.

Doctors were baffled when Kathryn Weir, from Widnes, Cheshire, suddenly began to gain weight around her stomach for no apparent reason.

Her face became bloated and swollen and she began to grow dark hairs on her chest and back.

Kathryn Weir, at the age of 21. Also pictured is her Dad, Andy Weir.
Kathryn has Cushings Syndrome, a disease which has affected her appearance

Size matters: Kathryn was healthy before the shock weight gain that 'snapped' her leg bone

Her bones became so brittle that one of her legs 'snapped' when she was on a night out - breaking under her weight.

She was finally diagnosed with Cushing's syndrome, a rare tumour on the pituitary gland, after five years of anguish.

The condition, which affects fewer than one in 200,000 people, causes a small tumour to develop next to the pituitary gland,affecting the hormones released into the bloodstream.

Kathryn, who works as a carer for people with disabilities, said: 'Cushing's syndrome has transformed me into a completely different person.

'I'm ashamed to go anywhere or see anyone now. I rarely leave the house.

'I used to take such pride in my appearance - I was devastated when I started gaining weight. My friends tried to save my feelings and didn't say anything, but when we went out, people assumed I was pregnant, because my belly was so huge, but my arms and legs are still very skinny.

'I was mortified when I kept having to tell people I wasn't expecting.

'I couldn't find any clothes to fit me, because my middle was so big but my legs weren't.

'If I don't tie my trousers up with a belt, they fall down because my legs are so much smaller than my bum.

'I wasn't eating any more than normal, and I wasn't exercising any less - but everyone was baffled by my symptoms.

'I couldn't understand what was happening to me - and neither could my doctors.'

Cushing's syndrome also causes 'moon face' symptoms

Cushing's syndrome also causes 'moon face' symptoms

After five years of tests and hospital visits, Kathryn was diagnosed by doctors at Warrington Hospital in December 2010.

The syndrome affects the amount of Cortisol released into the body, causing major rapid weight gain around the middle.It also makes sufferers' faces bloated and round - known as a 'moon face'.

The tumour can also cause brittle bones or osteoporosis, a condition usually associated with elderly women.

Kathryn is due to have an operation next month in which surgeons are hoping they will be able to remove the tumour and get her life back to normal.

She added: 'I'm really very lucky that I was able to be diagnosed and that surgeons are hopeful that they can cure me.

'It took years for doctors to realise what was wrong with me, but some people never get diagnosed.

'If the tumour had never been spotted, the osteoporosis could have got so bad that it could have killed me.

'I've been in a living hell for the last six years - and it's only now that I can start to see a light at the end of the tunnel.

'There are times when I've felt like I didn't even want to go to work, because I felt everyone was staring at me.

'But thanks to my family and friends, who have stood by me, I have managed to make it through, and hope that I can go back to being fit and healthy Kathryn soon.'

Monday, January 17, 2011

You should have tried this Gordon! Prison worker solves baldness with £15 nanofibre spray

Gordon Ramsay's £30,000 hair transplant has been hailed as a rip off by a prison warder who solved his own baldness - using a £15 spray.

Father-of-three John Banks, 47, was nicknamed Friar Tuck over his lack of hair but instead of resorting to expensive treatment he trawled the high street for a cheaper solution.

He bought a can of Nanofibres, which filled in the empty patches on his head with tiny keratin fibres that clung to his existing hair.

Prison warder John Banks (pictured before treatment)

Before spraying his head (above), Mr Banks said he was called 'Friar Tuck' by his friends. He said he is far more confident after using the Nanofibres (below)

Prison warder John Banks

Mr Banks from Eastbourne, said: 'It just shows you don't have to be a rich celeb like Gordon Ramsay to cover up your baldness. I was amazed about how quickly the treatment worked; people noticed straight away and gave me compliments.'

The prison worker was 35 when he first began thinning and spent years cutting his hair short and wearing hats in a bid to disguise the growing bald patches at the top and back of his head.

Mr Banks said: 'I used to just grin and bear it when my hair first started falling out, but in the last 3-4 years it's started to come out much more.

'At first I had to cut my hair really short as I didn't want to have one of those awful comb overs.'

But three years ago the patches had grown and people began calling him 'baldy', with some saying he looked like Friar Tuck.

Even his fiance Claire Sharman, 42, joked that she wanted to marry him before he went completely bald.

Prison warder John Banks (pictured with fiancee Claire Sharman) who used a £15 spray from Boots to stop people calling him Friar Tuck

Prison warder John Banks (pictured with fiancee Claire Sharman) who used a £15 spray from Boots to stop people calling him Friar Tuck

Fed up of trying to cover up his embarrassing condition he turned to the internet for a non-surgical solution to his problem, where he found Nanofibres by Nanogen on sale at Boots.com. It comes in black, brown and grey and costs around £30 for two-months supply.

Mr Banks said: 'My only concern was if it started to come out, especially in the rain. I've been out and about though now and never had any problems even when it's wet. It only comes out when you wash it properly.

'I use it more for going out than work. A lot of people know at work anyway, so it doesn't matter so much there. Plus I wear a cap as a part of my uniform so my head is well covered up.

'But when I go out with Claire I want to look my best for myself and for her.

'At a Christmas party people couldn't believe the difference it makes. They were all taking pictures of the back of my head!'

Celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay spent £30,000 to thicken his thinning pate. Mr Banks spent just £15 on his own treatment

Mr Banks, who lives with his fiance and step-daughter Holly, nine, and has three sons, aged 18, 19 and 24, says he now has the confidence to walk down the aisle with his girlfriend.

Miss Sharman, who runs a bridal shop, said: 'It sounds harsh but working in my industry for so long I talk to blokes all the time about this and know how much it affects them and how self conscious it makes them.

'Obviously I love John for him, but hair loss ages men so I would like to marry him whilst he's at his best!

'Women use all kinds of make-up and little tricks to make us feel better about ourselves. It's no different to me using hair straighteners or having fake eyelashes on.'

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Going up in the world: The baby born in a hospital lift


Baby Natalya Ionna Bunn is a girl destined to reach the heights - after being born in a LIFT.

The fast-rising tot floored her shocked mum when she came along in the elevator at Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital.

Natalya emerged as mum Suzy Bunn, 29, was due to be induced because she was 11 days overdue.

Suzy Bunn and baby Natalya with her seven-year-old daughter Alanna and husband Jason

Uplifting: Suzy Bunn and baby Natalya with her seven-year-old daughter Alanna and husband Jason

Baby dash: Suzy Bunn felt a contraction as she arrived at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital

Baby dash: Suzy Bunn felt a contraction as she arrived at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital

The mobility specialist had dashed to hospital with husband Jason, 40, a sales executive, after her waters broke.Then came her uplifting experience.

Suzy, from Mattishall, Norfolk, said: 'We were walking across the hospital car park and I thought she was coming.

'We got in the lift to meet the midwife when I had another contraction.

'As the doors opened, a midwife and a nurse were waiting there with a wheelchair but as I moved to get in it, Natalya was born.

'The midwife managed to catch the baby just in time.'

Suzy was back home within six hours of giving birth and proudly showed off the new family member to seven-year-old daughter Alanna.

She said: ' Alanna is a very proud big sister and is telling everyone about her baby sister being born in a lift.

'When Natayla gets married it will definitely be something Jason mentions in the speech.'

Friday, January 14, 2011

My baby nearly died when the hospital that failed Lana Ameen sent him home with swine flu


Home safe: Michelle Dyer with son Harvey after his ordeal

Home safe: Michelle Dyer with son Harvey after his ordeal

Hospital doctors failed to notice that five-week-old Harvey Flanagan had swine flu.

When it was eventually diagnosed at another hospital, they promised his parents they had learned their lesson from the baby’s brush with death.

Yet only days later, Stepping Hill Hospital also failed to diagnose three-year-old Lana Ameen with the swine flu that went on to kill her.

Yesterday, Harvey’s mother Michelle Dyer suggested that Lana had been doubly betrayed by the NHS.

The 24-year-old, whose son has fully recovered, backed Lana’s doctor father in his calls for under-fives to be routinely given the flu jab.

And, referring to the girl’s misdiagnosis, she said: ‘They had been warned [after Harvey’s case], but it happened again just two days after they’d given me assurances.

‘The vaccine costs just a few pounds, but treating a child in intensive care costs thousands. Harvey was critical for eight days, that must have cost £10,000. They’re trying to cut back and save money, but it’s costing them more in the long run.

‘I don’t think it should be down to the Government to decide whether children should have the flu vaccine at all – it should be up to parents. It’s terrible that previously healthy children like Lana can die.’

Harvey had been taken to the hospital, in Stockport, Greater Manchester, on December 14 on a GP’s advice after struggling to breathe, but was sent home with indigestion medicine. His condition hadn’t improved the next day, so his parents took him back – but again no one realised how seriously ill he was.

Swine flu tragedy: A £6 flu jab could have saved three-year-old Lana Ameen who had no underlying health problems when she caught the illness

Swine flu tragedy: A £6 flu jab could have saved three-year-old Lana Ameen who had no underlying health problems when she caught the illness

Happy family: Lana's father Zana Ameen hit out and told David Cameron to think again about not offering the swine flu jab to under fives

Happy family: Lana's father Zana Ameen hit out and told David Cameron to think again about not offering the swine flu jab to under fives

On the third day they took him to Tameside Hospital, in Ashton-under-Lyne, where swine flu was suspected.

He then spent eight days in intensive care at Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital. On Christmas Eve, when Lana first fell ill, he was allowed home.

From yesterday's Daily Mail

From yesterday's Daily Mail

Miss Dyer claims the head of nursing and midwifery at Stepping Hill assured her the chief executive had reminded A&E staff of the need for vigilance over possible cases. Yet in the early hours of Christmas Day, staff sent home Dr Ameen’s daughter. Lana had a fit later that day, and died on Boxing Day.

This week, Dr Ameen, a registrar, warned that his daughter had died for the sake of a £6 flu jab – for which under-fives are not eligible.

Accusing ministers of restricting the vaccine to save money, he urged them to make it available for youngsters.

Although Harvey would not have been eligible for the vaccine, which is not for children under six months, newborns are protected if their mother received the vaccine while pregnant. But Miss Dyer, a travel agent, says she was never offered it. She and her partner, car salesman Andrew Flanagan, 29, have now been told their three-year-old daughter Amelia can have the jab, however.

This week, experts backed calls for otherwise healthy under-fives to be vaccinated, as happened during last winter’s pandemic.

But the Government’s own medical advisers, who a year ago backed immunisation, continue to say it should be offered only to children with underlying health conditions.

Stepping Hill has insisted Lana received ‘appropriate and timely’ treatment. It has apologised to Harvey’s family and is investigating. It added that the head of nursing did not believe she had given assurances to his parents about extra vigilance for swine flu.

* Flu jabs could be given to under-fives this autumn as part of an overhaul of vaccination policy. Experts are investigating the impact and cost of giving jabs to healthy children and healthy over-50s.

The research is expected to be considered by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation in time for changes next autumn.

If the committee’s advisers recommend an expansion of the seasonal flu programme, health ministers will accept that.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Bah gum! Baby boy born with two perfect front teeth

A baby boy surprised his first-time parents when he was born with two fully-formed FRONT TEETH.

Most babies six months to a year to grow their first teeth but Oliver James had two pearly whites from the start.

His parents Joanne Jones, 31, and Lee, 32, said they have already booked their son's first dentists appointment.

First time parents Joanne and Lee Jones had an extra surprise when their son Oliver was born - he had two front teeth

First time parents Joanne and Lee Jones had an extra surprise when their son Oliver was born - he had two front teeth

The 7lb 12oz youngster has two front incisors in his lower gums and doctors say the teeth may fall out and be replaced or stay in place as the first of his baby teeth.

Mr and Mrs James, from Haverhill, Cambridgeshire have been inundated with friends and family who are keen to see their firstborn's toothy smile.

Mrs James, a carer, said that they were delighted to have a healthy baby boy and added that his teeth were proving popular with visitors.

She said: 'Oliver is a very, very good baby and it was a complete surprise to see his teeth. They are not little stumps, they are proper teeth.

'It is not unknown for babies to be born with teeth, but it is extremely rare.

'It was quite comical in the hospital because everyone wanted to come and see Oliver's teeth when they heard about them.

Mr and Mrs Jones with Oliver. Doctors says that the teeth may fall out and be replaced or they could stay in place as the first of his baby teeth

Mr and Mrs Jones with Oliver. Doctors says that the teeth may fall out and be replaced or they could stay in place as the first of his baby teeth

'He has to go back so that they can keep an eye on them. These may be his proper teeth, or he could get three sets.

'If they get wobbly he will have to have them out, but they seem quite solid.'

THE WHOLE TOOTH

Baby's teeth begin to develop before they are born. However, they don't usually come through until they are aged between six months and one year old.

One in 2,000 babies is born with a tooth or two like Oliver.

The first to come through are usually the incisors - which are the four front teeth at the top and bottom of the jaw used for cutting and chopping food.

Many babies who are teething can be irritable as the teeth can cause pain as they come through.

Most children have a full set of 20 milk teeth by the time they're three years old. These teeth will start to fall out around the five year mark, making way for larger adult teeth.

Oliver was born by caesarean section at the Rosie Maternity Hospital in Cambridge at 3am on December 30.

Perhaps wary of receiving a nasty nick, Joanne decided to feed Oliver by bottle.

Husband Lee, a warehouse worker, told of his surprise when medical staff presented him with his son and pointed out his unusual teeth.

He said: 'As soon as he was born you could see his two front teeth quite clearly, I was quite shocked.'

The couple had been trying to conceive for four years when Joanne fell pregnant with Oliver naturally.

But she spent six weeks of the pregnancy in hospital as she suffered with hyperemesis - or severe morning sickness.

She said: 'I had the worst pregnancy ever, I spent quite a lot of time in hospital on a drip because I was so poorly.

'When I saw Oliver's teeth I thought it must have been because he was teething while he was in there.

'He is just perfect, but we are not planning to have any more. My brother has six children, so he will have plenty of cousins to play with.'

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Harrowing picture of doctor's three-year-old daughter too young for swine flu jab - but old enough to die

  • Devastated parents call on Government to offer flu vaccine to all children

Her parents thought Lana Ameen simply had a cold.

But her doctor father and mother took her to the GP anyway on Christmas Eve – and then to hospital as her condition worsened.

Just two days later she died of swine flu. She was three years old.

Lana, three, in intensive care on Boxing Day, just hours before she died. Her mother, a nurse, is now calling for all children to be vaccinated against the virus

Lana, three, in intensive care on Boxing Day, just hours before she died. Her mother, a nurse, is now calling for all children to be vaccinated against the virus

Yesterday the couple released a photograph of the child on life support hours from death. She had not been eligible for the swine flu vaccine – and they hope this harrowing picture will shame ministers into offering the jab to children.

Currently it is only available to ‘at risk’ groups such as asthma sufferers and pregnant women.

WHO CAN HAVE THE FLU JAB?

The government offers free flu jabs to people in 'at risk groups'. These are:

  • People with chronic heart, lung and other disorders
  • Pregnant women
  • People aged 65 or over
  • People in long stay residential accommodation

It is possible for healthy people to have the vaccine administered privately by pharmacists for between £7 and £12.99.

However, Dr Clare Gerada, chairman of the Royal College of GPs, said the Government should think about banning this practice as it has contributed to vaccine shortages.

And although healthy under-fives were offered the vaccine last winter, Government doctors have advised against offering the jab during the latest outbreak as it is not classed as a pandemic.

But Lana’s mother Gemma told how she believes it is vital that children are vaccinated.

The former healthcare assistant said that their daughter deteriorated so quickly that even with their medical knowledge, they were taken unawares. Other families would have no chance unless their children had been vaccinated, she warned.

‘We had never thought about swine flu, never worried about it – then in less than 24 hours our baby was practically dead.

‘It was terrifying, it all happened so quickly. I want to say to people, to parents, if you can get the vaccine, don’t hesitate. The risk of not having it and the price you might pay is just too high.

‘We have been so shocked by what has happened and we feel very strongly that everyone, particularly children, should have the vaccine. Even financially, surely it makes sense. The swine flu vaccine is inexpensive and has already been bought.’

In contrast, she added: ‘It cost £1,700 just to care for Lana in intensive care for one day.’

Mr and Mrs Ameen with their daughter Lana. The couple lost their beloved three-year-old to the H1N1 virus over Christmas

Mr and Mrs Ameen with their daughter Lana. The couple lost their beloved three-year-old to the H1N1 virus over Christmas

Happy and healthy: Lana loved to sing and dance

Happy and healthy: Lana loved to sing and dance

Mrs Ameen, who is 12 weeks pregnant with their second child, says she was refused the flu jab until after Lana’s death.

Her Kurdish-born husband Zana, 34, is a registrar at Good Hope Hospital in Birmingham, but the couple, who live in Quinton, were spending Christmas with her family in Stockport, Greater Manchester.

They took Lana to a local GP on Christmas Eve fearing she was coming down with a cold, and were given cough medicine. But that night her temperature soared to almost 104f (40c) so they took her to A&E at Stepping Hill Hospital at 2am.

‘We did think it could be swine flu with a temperature that high and wanted them to check with a swab, but they said they don’t do that any more,’ said Mrs Ameen, who, along with her husband, used to work at that hospital.

Blaming an infection, doctors discharged Lana, and she was well enough to open her presents and eat some Christmas dinner before falling asleep.

But when her parents tried to wake her to give her some Calpol she had a fit, and was taken to hospital in an ambulance.

No consultant was initially available to see them, the Ameens say. Lana had three more fits in hospital before being transferred to a special care unit at Alder Hey Hospital, in Liverpool, as there was no place available in Manchester.

But her parents were soon told she was brain-dead. Lana died on Boxing Day.

The bilingual youngster, who loved singing, painting and dancing, was buried with a pink lollipop at her side. ‘Losing Lana is just awful,’ said Mrs Ameen, a full-time mother who is training as a counsellor.

Lana was first treated at Stepping Hill hospital. Her parents, who both used to work there, have complained about her treatment

Lana was first treated at Stepping Hill hospital. Her parents, who both used to work there, have complained about her treatment

‘We just look at different things in the house and see her clothes and toys, the programmes we used to watch, everything reminds me of her. It’s like you can still see her there, it’s like we’re waiting for her to come in.’

Mrs Ameen had requested a flu jab before Christmas but was told she had to wait until she was three months’ pregnant. Her GP only relented after being told of Lana’s death.

DOUBLE DELIGHT AS MOTHER AND SON RECOVER AFTER FLU

A mother suffering from swine flu and her premature baby have both made miraculous recoveries.

Doctors were forced to perform an emergency caesarean on Leonnie Meyers, 24, to save baby Jacob two months before her due date, after she began to struggling to breathe.

Her partner David, 29, could only watch as his girlfriend fought for her life on a ventilator, and their baby boy was whisked away to an incubator.

But both mother and baby have now made a full recovery since the birth on Christmas Day.

Medics are hopeful that the couple will be able to take their new baby back to their home in Derby, within the next few days.

Health experts say expectant mothers are at greater risk from swine flu because their immune system is suppressed and they are more likely to catch it.

The couple, who have started a campaign on Facebook to have vaccination for children resumed, have lodged a complaint about the failure of Stepping Hill to realise how ill Lana was initially.

Last month the hospital was criticised by the parents of a baby who fell critically ill with swine flu, whom staff had initially sent home with medication for indigestion.

Eight-week-old Harvey Flanagan was placed in intensive care but recovered. He is now back home with his parents.

Chief executive Dr Chris Burke said a ‘preliminary review’ had concluded that ‘Lana received appropriate treatment and care in a timely fashion’.

Since the start of this swine flu outbreak, 13 deaths have been reported in under-14s, but the Department for Health said medical advice was that only children with certain underlying conditions need the vaccine.

Five under-fives have died since the start of the outbreak – one in ten of the total figure of 50 deaths.

Professor Andrew Hall, chairman of the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation, said: ‘All children under five were routinely vaccinated during the pandemic flu vaccination programme, but in line with previous years and the current evidence, we did not recommend healthy children under five were vaccinated against flu during the current season.’

Mrs Ameen added: ‘I don’t know how they can say my child wasn’t worth having a few pounds-worth of vaccine that could have ultimately saved her life.’

Friday, January 7, 2011

Poisoned food in shops for THREE WEEKS: Supermarkets clear shelves of cakes and quiches containing contaminated eggs from Germany


British families have been eating food tainted with poisonous toxins for at least three weeks.

Supermarkets are now stripping shelves of the children’s cakes, sponges and quiches made with contaminated German eggs.

But shoppers are confused as to why a recall is necessary when experts say levels of the toxin are too low to pose a risk to health.

Fourteen tons of suspect liquid eggs entered the UK food chain in the run-up to Christmas.

Laboratory worker Ulrike Behringer tests eggs for dioxin contamination in Oldenburg, Germany. Lower Saxony has destroyed 100,000 eggs that failed a dioxin test

Laboratory worker Ulrike Behringer tests eggs for dioxin contamination in Oldenburg, Germany. Lower Saxony has destroyed 100,000 eggs that failed a dioxin test

The dioxin-laden eggs were used by two firms to make own-brand products for Sainsbury’s, Tesco and Morrisons among others.

A by-product of burning waste and industrial processes, dioxins are some of the most toxic and persistent pollutants known to man.

affected products

They accumulate in the body over long periods and have been linked to cancer, infertility and immune problems. Pregnant women are thought to be at particular risk.

A spokesman for the Food Standards Agency said the danger from the contaminated food was extremely low because the German eggs were mixed with regular eggs in Holland before being shipped to the UK.

‘The products that the liquid egg went into were short shelf-life cakes and quiches that have gone to a variety of retailers including most of the high street supermarkets,’ he added. ‘Most will have been sold or eaten by now.’

The scare originated in Germany – possibly as early as March – when 3,000 tons of animal feed contaminated with dioxins was sent to 1,000 pig and poultry farms.

Eggs containing higher than legal levels of dioxins were then exported to the Netherlands and used to make pasteurised liquid egg for food manufacturers.

The liquid egg was sent to two British companies in mid December.

One was Kensey Foods, based in Launceston, Cornwall, which makes chilled desserts and quiches for Tesco, Cadbury, Mrs Beeton’s and Ginsters.

The other was Memory Lane Cakes, based in Cardiff, which makes prepacked cakes for supermarkets.

Sainsbury’s said yesterday it was withdrawing a £5 chocolate caterpillar cake, made by Memory Lane Cakes, ‘as a precaution’. A spokesman said: ‘The FSA have advised that there is no food safety risk from eating these products.

‘The supplier of our caterpillar cake alerted us to a potential issue.

‘As they were unable to confirm whether two batches of this product which had been supplied to us were definitely affected we removed them from our shelves as a precaution.

‘As an additional precaution, and in line with our high standards, we are working closely with our suppliers to establish whether other products may have been affected so that we can take appropriate action if necessary.’

Tesco is removing eight products, all with best before dates before January 15. They include an own-brand caterpillar cake, a coconut sponge, a raspberry sponge, a Victoria sponge and a vanilla party tray bake.

A spokesman said: ‘Tesco is withdrawing a small number of products. We would like to stress to customers that this is a purely precautionary measure and the FSA has stated there is no food safety risk.’

how the international food scare spread

A spokesman for Morrisons said: ‘The Food Standards Agency has advised that there is no food safety risk from eating potentially affected products.

‘However as a precautionary measure to give customers full confidence, Morrisons has withdrawn a small number of products that have potentially been affected.’

Asda is also withdrawing cakes.

A spokesman said: ‘We have full traceability of all ingredients that go into any products manufactured under the Asda brand and those checks showed that a small number of cakes that we take from Memory Lane use the imported liquid egg.

‘As a precautionary measure we have acted quickly to withdraw those products from our shelves.’
Marks & Spencer and Waitrose said they were not affected.

WHAT ARE DIOXINS?

Dioxins are a group of toxic chemicals produced during burning and as by-products in the production of chemical and pesticides.

Environmentalists say they are among the most dangerous pollutants known to mankind.

A small proportion are produced naturally by forest fires and volcanoes. But most are the result of industry or waste incineration.

They are found everywhere - in food, water, soil and the atmosphere - and build up in body fat over months and years.

Around 90 per cent of our exposure to dioxins comes from food.

The main sources are foods high in animal fat such as milk, fish, eggs and meat.

Doctors say they have no immediate impact on health, but can cause problems if they are absorbed into our bodies over long periods at high levels.

High doses over a long period have been linked to cancer, fertility problems and damage to the immune system.

Very high doses can cause yellow spots and blackheads. Other symptoms include liver and heart problems.

There are more than 210 dioxins - including PCDDs and PCDFs.

Tough regulations on pollutants mean most people are exposed to 50 per cent fewer dioxins now than in the early 90s.

Babies who are breastfed are exposed to one to two times higher dioxin levels than adults.

Dioxins accumulate in the fatty tissue for years and can be released from a mother’s body when she breastfeeds.

Doctors say the health advantages of breast milk to babies outweigh any increased exposure to dioxins.

Dioxins are so long lasting, they are found in the bodies of people living in Inuit villages in the Arctic, hundreds of miles from the nearest industry or incinerators.

They are a by-product of smelting, chlorine bleaching of paper pulp and the manufacture of herbicides and pesticides.

In 1999, Belgium banned sales of pork, chicken, beef and eggs after dioxins entered the food chain through animal feed.

Weeks later it banned the sale of Coca-Cola following hundreds of reports of poisoning across the country.

Scientists found no dioxins or toxins in the drink - and later claimed the so-called victims of Coke poisoning were suffering from imaginary, psychosomatic illness.

DAVID DERBYSHIRE

Yesterday the two UK food companies at the centre of the scare said they were working closely with the FSA and supermarkets.

A spokesman for Memory Lane Cakes’ parent company Finsbury Food said: ‘The FSA is advising that there is no risk to health, and the company has had no confirmation that the batch of egg is contaminated with dioxin or at what level.

‘This egg has been used to make a number of products; Finsbury is currently undertaking traceability tests and is working with both customers and the FSA with the ensuing investigation.’

A spokesman for Kensey Foods said: ‘The company can confirm that it was in receipt of a quantity of the batch of pasteurised liquid egg in December that may have been at risk of low level dioxin contamination.

'Kensey Foods reiterates the advice issued by The Food Standards Agency that there is no food safety risk from eating the products produced using the pasteurised egg.’

British food experts said the dioxins in the food posed no risk to health.

Professor Alan Boobis, an expert in experimental medicine and toxicology at Imperial College London, said: ‘It is extremely unlikely that there is any risk here.

‘The dioxins have been diluted by mixing with non-contaminated eggs and as long as the contaminated food is identified in the food chain and removed in reasonable time there is really no risk to human health.’

German prosecutors investigating the company responsible for contaminating animal feed may bring criminal charges, an agriculture ministry spokesman said.

The source of the dioxins has been traced to Harles & Jentzsch, a firm in Schleswig-Holstein where oils intended for use in bio-fuels were sold to 25 animal feed producers in November and December.

Yesterday it emerged that tests at the plant revealed high levels of dioxins since March – nine months longer than previously thought.

‘The first indications point to a high level of illegal activity’ said a spokesman for agriculture minister Ilse Aigner.

Operations at 4,700 German farms have been closed and thousands of hens culled to prevent food supplies becoming contaminated.

More than 8,000 chickens were ordered slaughtered and tainted food fears spread to Germany’s pork industry.

Germany’s agriculture ministry said on Friday it had no immediate reports of health problems connected to the contaminated food,

Frederic Vincent, health spokesman for the European Commission in Brussels, said on Thursday that some eggs from affected farms in Germany had been found to contain up to five times the legal EU limit for dioxin.

He said however that this did not pose a risk to human health.

In Italy in early 2008, worries about the levels of dioxins in the buffalo milk used to make some mozzarella cheese led Japan and South Korea to cancel orders.

There were allegations that waste incineration in the region around Naples might have led to the higher levels of the carcinogens.

Dioxin-contaminated feed was distributed by Harles and Jentzsch GmbH in Uetersen in Germany Dioxin-contaminated feed was distributed by Harles and Jentzsch GmbH in Uetersen in Germany. Their GMP+ certificate, which is a sign they meet quality requirements, has been suspended for a minimum of three
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