Sad Days and Glad Days
Dr Nola Ishmael OBE recalls her days working as a trainee nurse, during the formative years of the NHS and heralds the launch of Many Rivers to Cross......
My journey to become a nurse started when one of my school friends Carmeta Catlin, wrote to me in Barbados and told me what a wonderful time she was having in England. She was at a hospital in Lancashire and her letters were vivid and my imagination was beyond control.
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To Read Many Rivers to Cross in full visit: www.manyriverstocross.co.uk
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Jeans for Genes
Sickle cell awareness set to reach new heights as the Sickle Cell Society collaborates with Jeans for Genes in their ‘Denimisation’ of the Nation
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Sickle cell: do you know your genetic history?
One of the most commonly inherited diseases in England, around 240,000 people carry the sickle cell gene and 12,500 people actually live with the disease. Sickle cell and the related disease thalassaemia are inherited so can affect anyone. However they are particularly common among black and minority ethnic groups.
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Many Rivers to Cross
In 1945 World War Two finally ended. In Britain, a Labour government came to power, with a programme of radical social reforms that would create a welfare state for postwar Britain. Central to these reforms was the National Health Service (NHS) – the world’s first comprehensive health service, which provided health care free for every British citizen, according to need rather than means.
Read More To Read Many Rivers to Cross in full visit: www.manyriverstocross.co.uk |