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Patients stuck on trolleys for days as packed hospitals struggle to cope

Labour have released new figures showing patients left to wait for over a day on trolleys in packed hospitals.

Jonathan Ashworth, Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary

Jonathan Ashworth, Labour’s Shadow Health SecretaryOne mental health patient at Derby Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust was kept waiting nearly a week while a mental health bed was sources for them outside of the organisation.

Responses to Freedom of Information requests from Labour reveal that in 13 trusts patients were left to wait over 24 hours on a trolley before being admitted to a bed on a ward. The longest wait reported was over six days.

In a similar exercise last year just 3 trusts reported waits over 24 hours. Official NHS data shows that the number of people waiting 12 hours or longer to be admitted to a hospital bed continues to rise, with over 2770 people waiting 12 hours for a bed in 2017.

The situation has continued to deteriorate – with January 2018 the worst ever month on record for 12 hour trolley waits and nine of the ten worst months on record have been since Theresa May became Prime Minister

Jonathan Ashworth, Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary, said: “The Government’s endless squeeze on NHS funding has caused misery for patients and their families. There has been a massive rise in 12 hour trolley waits and now we hear of people stuck on trolleys for nearly a week at a time. These are staggering numbers and we have to remember that every one represents a patient languishing in a hospital corridor because this Government simply hasn’t provided the NHS with the resources it needs. It’s absolutely heart-breaking that in the 70th year of our NHS patients are being let down in this way. Across the country hospitals are at full up, waiting times are rising, and public satisfaction with the NHS is dropping by the year. The message has to go out to Theresa May that the Tory agenda of underfunding, cuts and privatisation must come to end.”

Manchester Pride celebrates acceptance as ‘The Circus Comes To Town’

Charity celebrates acceptance as The Circus Comes To Town for the Manchester Pride parade in August.

The streets of Manchester will be overtaken by troupes of performers, acrobats and wonderful characters as The Circus of Acceptance takes over this year’s Manchester Pride Parade.

The Manchester Pride Parade, which this year takes place on Saturday 25 August, is one of the Festival’s highlights, with thousands of people marching proudly together through the streets of Manchester in front of tens of thousands of cheering supporters.

The Parade features 150 entries, equating to just over 5000 participants, in floats and walking entries from businesses and community groups across the region and will this year be one of the most visual and varied as it takes on the glamour and creativity of the circus.

As with last year the charity’s iconic issue that informs everything it does is ‘Education is the key to equality’. This year’s Parade theme is designed to shine a light on this in a creative way by reminding the people of Manchester and further afield that acceptance is a vital step in the continued progress of equality for all.

Mark Fletcher
Mark Fletcher

Mark Fletcher, CEO for Manchester Pride, said: “The circus is coming to town and all are welcome. This year’s Manchester Pride Parade will be a great opportunity to see many different types of LGBT+ people, each with their own individual quirks, skills, differences and fascinations all walking together in celebration!

“There are many millions of individuals that exist within Greater Manchester. Each different to the other. This is the same within the LGBT+ communities here and around the world. With the Circus of Acceptance as the theme for The Manchester Pride Parade, we’re proudly showcasing and celebrating the richly diverse LGBT+ people of our City and we’re inviting the people of Manchester to join in or come along to be entertained, to be inspired, and to be proud!”

Applications are now open for those who wish to take part. Businesses that have taken part in previous events have included Autotrader, Barclays, Marks and Spencer, John Lewis and The Big Weekend sponsors Thomas Cook Airlines.

For more information, click here:

Jess Glynne and Ella Eyre join Pride Festival Weekend lineup

Drum and bass powerhouse Ella Eyre and sultry power-pop vocalist Jess Glynne have been added to the bill for the Pride Festival Weekend on August 4-5.

Jess Glynne - Ella Eyre
Jess Glynne – Ella Eyre

Having shot to fame when she provided unforgettable guest vocals on Rudimental’s classic Waiting All Night, 23-year-old Ella has since carved a regular place for herself in the charts and gained the recognition she deserves as a force to be reckoned with in British pop. She will appear on the main stage on Saturday, August 4.

The mighty Jess Glynne will treat the crowd to her anthem-filled set of big summer ballads at the LoveBN1Fest on Sunday, August 5.

Making her name with the sultry power-pop vocals to Clean Bandit’s 2014 Grammy Award winning anthem Rather Be, Jess scored another number one earlier that same year on Route 94’s My Love.

The following year, she topped the singles charts five times with the release of her debut album I Cry When I Laugh – making her only the second ever British female solo artist to achieve this feat, after Cheryl. More recently, she teamed up with Tinie Tempah on last year’s chart smash Not Letting Go.

More artist will be announced for both days of the Pride Festival every day this week.

♦ For tickets for Love BN1Fest on Sunday, August 5, click here:

♦ For third release tickets for Brighton & Hove Pride Festival, Saturday, August 4, available March 28 at 9am, click here:
 

Greens call for permanent solution to Brighton’s homeless crisis

Green councillors call for the homeless not to be forgotten as council-run night shelter closes.

 

Cllr David Gibson, Green Party housing spokesperson
Cllr David Gibson, Green Party housing spokesperson

Green Party Councillors in Brighton and Hove are calling for year round support to end rough sleeping as the temporary Brighton Centre Night Shelter closes its doors.

Last January Green Councillors successfully called on the council to use its empty buildings to accommodate rough sleepers. The temporary shelter, which has supported 102 people since opening in December last year was a direct result of that call.

A recent public petition signed by over 5,000 people calling for 365 day provision for rough sleepers gained backing from all political parties.

However, Green Councillors are raising concerns that news on longer term provision for rough sleepers has fallen quiet. Along with the decision of the Council to continue funding for homeless provision from April, Green Councillors are calling for the Council to act with greater urgency to end rough sleeping and to put plans in place for a year-round resource.

Green Party Housing Spokesperson David Gibson, said: “Almost a year after the original proposal from the Greens to open up empty buildings for use as shelters, we heard from the manager of the Brighton Centre shelter at the weekend that “it is possible that we have saved lives this winter.

“For 36 local people, the shelter was a first step towards permanent accommodation and in four cases, recovery. It is great to hear that in such a short time the shelter achieved so much, and is a credit to all those working and volunteering to provide services to end homelessness. However, with the doors closing, what we need now is a clear sense of urgency from the Labour Council to provide similar services on a more permanent basis.

“We demand more action to end the city’s housing scandal. Green budget proposals that focused on ending rough sleeping, such as expanding Housing First and setting up Council-run emergency accommodation were voted against by the other two parties. We are pleased to hear that the night shelter helped so many off the streets, but it took the Council almost a year to get even this provisional shelter in place and then it was forced to move buildings twice.

“Work needs to start now on setting up a long-term facility that helps rough sleepers move on to supported accommodation and we must do this in time for when the budget becomes available in April. With homelessness rising and affordable housing out of reach, the most vulnerable in our city should not have to wait any longer for more permanent provision. The housing scandal is a crisis and it needs to be treated as one.”

BOOK REVIEW: Straight Jacket by Matthew Todd

Straight Jacket

By Matthew Todd

With an interesting foreword by John Grant this is a handbook for the Queers. Todd knows his stuff and his book is as readable as it is eminently sensible. I’d defy any LGBT person to read this book and not have an opportunity to reflect, learn something and give themselves an opportunity to be happier people.

Todd writes from his own experience and also from watching others and experiencing the communities and cultural changes that gay life has gone through over the last twenty years.

Part memoir, part sotto voice rant, he looks beneath the shiny facade of contemporary gay culture and asks if gay people are as happy as they could be – and if not, why not?

He addresses our ‘crisis of shame’ and offers compelling guidance on coping while shining a light on his and our problematic relationships with drugs and alcohol.

This is a courageous and life-affirming book, as engaging as it is challenging and Todd offers invaluable and more importantly practical advice on how to overcome a range of difficult issues.

He states the LGBTQiNB communities need to acknowledge the importance of supporting all young people and suggests it’s time for older people to transform their experience and finally get the lives they really want.

An excellent and timely book. 

For more information or to buy the book, click here:

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