01-15-2025, 09:08 AM
Yrnd Move over, lads! How the world turned girly
A local council has a moral and financial duty to house a 10-year-old disabled boy stuck in hospital unnecessarily for 11 months, his MP has insisted, as a charity stanley quencher said 140 other disabled people were in-patients despite being well enough to be discharged.Lucy Powell, the MP for Manchester Central, said she had asked Manchester city council to urgently move the boy, Ahmed, out of Royal Manchester childrens hospital and into a home, after the Guardian highlighted his case.Ahmed has multiple disabilities, is registered blind and use stanley cup s a wheelchair but stanley becher has been well enough to leave an acute ward at the hospital since 12 April last year.However, when he was admitted last March, Ahmed and his family were homeless and sofa surfing in a friends living room, and the council has yet to find them suitable accommodation to which Ahmed can be released.Powell said: Im looking into this case as a matter of urgency. While suitable, adapted housing is an ever more difficult challenge to find, it surely makes moral as well as financial sense to do whatever it takes to move this family from occupying an acute hospital bed into accommodation. Ive already raised this with executive members on the council, who I know are now prioritising the case. Mencap, the learning disability charity, said far too many disabled people were being denied the chance to live in their own homes because of a lack of social care and housing provision in the community.Figures they compiled from NHS Digital last mon Ekqa High court to hear crowdfunded challenge to begging fines
Ex-prisoners stanley cup canada with common mental health problems, such as bipolar disorder, and who misuse drugs and alcohol are more likely to commit violent offences after their release than other former prisoners, according to research.The study from Oxford University treads on highly sensitive ground, raising concerns among some experts that it may lead to assumptions mentally ill people are more prone to violence than others.But the authors say that is the wrong interpretation. They call for better diagnosis and treatment of mental illness for offenders in prison and after release, with the aim of bringing down the reoffending rate. One in seven prisoners has a psychotic illness or major depression and around one in five enters prison with clinically significant substance abuse disorders, said Seena Fazel, lead author of the study and professor of forensic psychiatry at the University of Oxford. As these disorders are common and mostly treatable, better screening and mental health services before and after release are essential to prevent future violence and improve both public health and safety, he said.The study, published in the Lancet Psychiatry journal, suggests that diagnosed psychiatric disorders are responsible for 20% of violent offences committed by male ex-prisoners and 40% of those committed by fe stanley cup male former inmates.Using the records of nearly 48,000 ex-pri stanley mexico soners in Sweden, the researchers were able to link common psychiatric disorders with convictions for violent offences
A local council has a moral and financial duty to house a 10-year-old disabled boy stuck in hospital unnecessarily for 11 months, his MP has insisted, as a charity stanley quencher said 140 other disabled people were in-patients despite being well enough to be discharged.Lucy Powell, the MP for Manchester Central, said she had asked Manchester city council to urgently move the boy, Ahmed, out of Royal Manchester childrens hospital and into a home, after the Guardian highlighted his case.Ahmed has multiple disabilities, is registered blind and use stanley cup s a wheelchair but stanley becher has been well enough to leave an acute ward at the hospital since 12 April last year.However, when he was admitted last March, Ahmed and his family were homeless and sofa surfing in a friends living room, and the council has yet to find them suitable accommodation to which Ahmed can be released.Powell said: Im looking into this case as a matter of urgency. While suitable, adapted housing is an ever more difficult challenge to find, it surely makes moral as well as financial sense to do whatever it takes to move this family from occupying an acute hospital bed into accommodation. Ive already raised this with executive members on the council, who I know are now prioritising the case. Mencap, the learning disability charity, said far too many disabled people were being denied the chance to live in their own homes because of a lack of social care and housing provision in the community.Figures they compiled from NHS Digital last mon Ekqa High court to hear crowdfunded challenge to begging fines
Ex-prisoners stanley cup canada with common mental health problems, such as bipolar disorder, and who misuse drugs and alcohol are more likely to commit violent offences after their release than other former prisoners, according to research.The study from Oxford University treads on highly sensitive ground, raising concerns among some experts that it may lead to assumptions mentally ill people are more prone to violence than others.But the authors say that is the wrong interpretation. They call for better diagnosis and treatment of mental illness for offenders in prison and after release, with the aim of bringing down the reoffending rate. One in seven prisoners has a psychotic illness or major depression and around one in five enters prison with clinically significant substance abuse disorders, said Seena Fazel, lead author of the study and professor of forensic psychiatry at the University of Oxford. As these disorders are common and mostly treatable, better screening and mental health services before and after release are essential to prevent future violence and improve both public health and safety, he said.The study, published in the Lancet Psychiatry journal, suggests that diagnosed psychiatric disorders are responsible for 20% of violent offences committed by male ex-prisoners and 40% of those committed by fe stanley cup male former inmates.Using the records of nearly 48,000 ex-pri stanley mexico soners in Sweden, the researchers were able to link common psychiatric disorders with convictions for violent offences