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      String of killings have put spotlight on adequacy of mental health care in UK

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 19:15

    Hainault attack may be latest incident linked to mental ill-health, at a time when NHS services are struggling

    While the full picture of the Hainault attack is yet to emerge, the early briefings from the Metropolitan police were clear: a key line of inquiry, in terms of possible motive, was whether the suspect has a history of mental ill-health.

    If the police hunches are correct, the tragedy may turn out to be the latest in a series of high-profile killings that have focused public attention on the adequacy of mental health treatment and care.

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      King Charles speaks to cancer patients on first public engagement since diagnosis

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 14:04

    The king spoke about the need for early diagnosis during a visit to University College Hospital in London

    King Charles told patients that he was well during a visit to a London cancer treatment centre where he also spoke of the “shock” of receiving a cancer diagnosis.

    On his first public-facing engagement since his diagnosis, he and the queen met cancer specialists and patients receiving chemotherapy at the University College hospital’s Macmillan cancer centre in a visit aimed at highlighting the importance of early diagnosis.

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      So UK ministers want to fob off disabled people with vouchers? It’s like government by Groupon | Frances Ryan

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 13:56

    What ministers herald as key reform is in fact idiotic and unworkable. The plans would be laughable if they weren’t so harmful

    There is a scene in The Simpsons in which the villainous Mr Burns enlists a team of monkeys to reproduce a Charles Dickens novel on the cheap. Hunched over a row of typewriters, the simians cannot get the job done without a range of bumbling typos.

    I thought of this as I watched Mel Stride, the work and pensions secretary, on Monday set out so-called cost-saving changes to the flagship disability benefit , personal independence payment (Pip), in what he described as “probably the most fundamental reforms in a generation”.

    Frances Ryan is a Guardian columnist

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      I have OCD. Cognitive behavioral therapy techniques made it worse

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 12:00

    Many practitioners consider CBT the gold standard of therapy, but does it work for everyone?

    The first time I learned about cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), I felt the pleasure of recognition and of superiority. I was in high school, and it would be years before I visited a therapist of any kind, but from what I gathered online, CBT consisted of what I was already doing.

    The modality grew from a core belief that irrational thoughts are responsible for emotional suffering, according to Rachael Rosner, a historian writing a biography of Aaron Beck, the father of CBT. It followed that changing these thoughts could alleviate the distress.

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      I spent 22 years as a problem drinker. Here are 10 things I’ve learned since I quit

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 09:00

    Having turned my back on the partying, hangovers and self-destruction, I’ve slowly worked out what was behind them – and how to replace them with something better

    The first alcoholic drink I had was a lemon Hooch in a gay club called the Palm Beach in south London in 1991. For the first time in my life the anxiety and self-consciousness I thought was just my personality melted away. A decades-long whirlwind of partying, hangovers and self-destructive behaviour ensued, all fuelled by trauma and self-loathing. That was until I finally realised too much was enough and that I needed to stop. Ten years ago, after 22 years of problem drinking, I shared a bottle of champagne with a friend and put the bottle and the glasses in the recycling bin. I haven’t had a drink since. These are 10 things I’ve learned in those 10 years of being alcohol-free.

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      First case of walrus dying from bird flu recorded in Arctic

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 05:01


    Virus has already killed other mammals including sea lions and seals, while also taking toll on farm animals

    The first case of a walrus dying from bird flu has been detected on one of Norway’s Arctic islands, a researcher has said.

    The walrus was found last year on Hopen island in the Svalbard archipelago, Christian Lydersen, of the Norwegian Polar Institute, told AFP.

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      Healthy lifestyle may offset genetics by 60% and add five years to life, study says

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 3 days ago - 04:00

    Genetics alone can mean a 21% greater risk of early death, research finds, but people can improve their chances

    A healthy lifestyle may offset the impact of genetics by more than 60% and add another five years to your life, according to the first study of its kind.

    It is well established that some people are genetically predisposed to a shorter lifespan. It is also well known that lifestyle factors, specifically smoking, alcohol consumption, diet and physical activity, can have an impact on longevity.

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      Trans patients to be treated in separate rooms in hospital under Tory plans

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 4 days ago - 23:01

    Ministers accused of dragging NHS into ‘culture wars debate’ with proposal for patient rights update

    Transgender people will be treated in single rooms in hospitals in England under new government plans to update the NHS constitution.

    The proposal follows a pledge last year by the then health secretary Steve Barclay to prevent people who had changed their gender identity from being treated on male-only or female-only wards.

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      “Concerning” spread of bird flu from cows to cats suspected in Texas

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · 4 days ago - 22:41 · 1 minute

    Farm cats drinking from a trough of milk from cows that were just milked.

    Enlarge / Farm cats drinking from a trough of milk from cows that were just milked. (credit: Getty | )

    On March 16, cows on a Texas dairy farm began showing symptoms of a mysterious illness now known to be H5N1 bird flu. Their symptoms were nondescript, but their milk production dramatically dropped and turned thick and creamy yellow. The next day, cats on the farm that had consumed some of the raw milk from the sick cows also became ill. While the cows would go on to largely recover, the cats weren't so lucky. They developed depressed mental states, stiff body movements, loss of coordination, circling, copious discharge from their eyes and noses, and blindness. By March 20, over half of the farm's 24 or so cats died from the flu.

    In a study published today in the journal Emerging Infectious Diseases , researchers in Iowa, Texas, and Kansas found that the cats had H5N1 not just in their lungs but also in their brains, hearts, and eyes. The findings are similar to those seen in cats that were experimentally infected with H5N1 , aka highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (HPAI). But, on the Texas dairy farm, they present an ominous warning of the potential for transmission of this dangerous and evolving virus.

    The contaminated milk was the most likely source of the cat's fatal infections, the study authors concluded. Although it can't be entirely ruled out that the cats got sick from eating infected wild birds, the milk they drank from the sick cows was brimming with virus particles, and genetic data shows almost exact matches between the cows, their milk, and the cats. "Therefore, our findings suggest cross-species mammal-to-mammal transmission of HPAI H5N1 virus and raise new concerns regarding the potential for virus spread within mammal populations," wrote the authors, who are veterinary researchers from Iowa, Texas, and Kansas.

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