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'I want to empower whoever is in my chair'

by Olivia May 25, 2025
written by Olivia

Jade said her friends and family had been telling her to apply to Glow Up for "years".

"I never wanted to put myself out there, I didn't think I had what it took," she said.

But when one of the casting team reached out to her, she said she just thought "why not?".

She takes her inspiration from Asian bridal make up, and found some of the show's creative briefs took her out of her comfort zone.

"I'm very much a perfectionist," she said. "I found it very stressful."

But she said the show had also taught her a lot, adding: "Sometimes it doesn't work."

"You might need to adapt it to the model's features, or might just be having an off day or nerves get the better of you," she said.

"But I think that's the whole process and learning curve of being an artist under pressure.

"It's all about being adaptable."

May 25, 2025 0 comments
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Innovation

Brain injury in young athletes examined in new study

by Owen May 24, 2025
written by Owen

Volunteers are being recruited into a two-year study exploring the impact of head injuries on the developing brains of 11 to 18-year-olds.

Researchers at the University of Oxford will use cutting-edge MRI scans to uncover why some children have worse outcomes than others after suffering a head injury during sport.

The advanced imaging techniques will help identify key signs of brain damage that might be missed by a standard CT scan.

Scientists believe it will enable doctors, parents and coaches to predict how well a child will recover after a head injury.

'Long-lasting problems'

Each year, 1.4 million people attend emergency departments in England and Wales with a recent head injury.

Between 33% and 50% of these are children aged under 15 years old.

"The problem at the moment is that when a young person has had a head injury some recover really well and are back to normal within days to weeks," said Izabelle Lovgren, a doctoral student and one of the trial's researchers.

"However, a substantial proportion do end up with long-lasting problems such as impaired mental health, difficulties in concentrating and learning new things and also challenges with activity participation."

It is estimated that up to 30% of children who have suffered a mild traumatic brain injury go on to experience medium or long term symptoms.

However, research in this area remains limited, in particular due to a lack of data concerning head injuries sustained by children and adolescents.

Researcher Izabelle Lovgren is using advanced MRI techniques to identify subtle signs of brain injury in children

Over the next two years, researchers hope to scan a total of 120 volunteers, aged 11 to 18, who regularly take part in sports.

Half will have experienced a past or recent head injury.

The sophisticated MRI scans will be combined with cognitive tests and questionnaires about the sustained injury.

Oxford United apprentice Jameson, 17, suffered a concussion during a match two years ago and agreed to take part in the trial.

"I just tripped over, my head collided with a boot, straight away I had the effects of feeling dizzy, light headed and physios came on and brought me off," he said.

"After the game I had to do a test called a SCAT5 test and I got deemed to have a concussion so I was sidelined for 21 days."

The Football Association (FA) has specific guidelines for children in football, such as the immediate removal from play for anyone suspected of having a concussion.

The guidelines also include a staged return to play and a ban on heading the ball for children under the age of 12.

"At the moment heading is an important part of the game," said Sam Coleman, Head of Academy Sports Science and Medicine at Oxford United.

"But I think the research that we're involved in here is really important to try and understand what the actual long-term risks are of heading, that's why we're happy to participate."

According to Alzheimer's Research UK, research shows that Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) increases the risk of developing dementia, especially in men or those affected at a younger age.

University of Oxford
Volunteers will undergo two MRI scans six months apart and complete cognitive tests

What is Traumatic Brain Injury?

Most research into how head injuries influence our risk of developing dementia focusses on a type of head injury called Traumatic Brain Injury, otherwise known as TBI.

Not all head injuries cause the condition, which only occurs when a head injury disrupts how the brain normally functions.

It can lead to:

  • Loss of, or decreased, consciousness
  • Disorientation
  • Loss of memory before or after the injury occurred

There are three different types of TBI – mild, moderate and severe.

Mild TBI, also known as a concussion, is a brief change in consciousness or mental state.

Severe TBI, however, causes extended periods of unconsciousness, coma and can sometimes be fatal.

(Source: Alzheimer's Research UK)

Consultant paediatrician Tim Lawrence is one of the study's lead researchers

The Oxford study aims to identify signs of injury in children's brains that could lead to a greater risk of developing long-term conditions such as dementia.

It is seen as a stepping stone to larger trials that will be required to further understand the complex relationship between head injuries and dementia risk.

Tim Lawrence, consultant paediatric neurosurgeon and one of the study's lead researchers, said: "With growing concern regarding a potential link between mild or repetitive traumatic brain injury and long-term cognitive difficulties or even early dementia, there is a pressing need to identify the types of traumatic injuries that may pose a risk.

"Our study is a step towards better understanding of the mechanisms that underpin damage to the brains of children and adolescents suffering injury."

The study is a collaboration between the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences and the Podium Institute for Sports Medicine and Technology.

May 24, 2025 0 comments
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Industry

Photographer over the moon with lunar mountain shot

by Noah May 23, 2025
written by Noah

Photographer Tony Harnett has said he is "over the moon" with his latest picture which has taken years to successfully capture.

His photograph showing people seemingly being guided by moonlight over the summit of Yr Wyddfa, or Snowdon, has been attracting mountains of praise on social media.

But it's a photograph Tony said he had tried and failed to capture several times in the past five years.

The father-of-four used his camera lens to bring the Moon and Wales' highest peak into the same sphere after identifying the perfect vantage point.

May 23, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

Norton and Adlington finish endurance swim

by Angela May 23, 2025
written by Angela

Olympic gold medallist Rebecca Adlington and actor James Norton have taken part in a sea swimming endurance challenge in Kent.

Both were participants in a 10-hour relay at Joss Bay in Broadstairs on Friday in aid of the Blue Marine Foundation conservation charity.

Adlington, who won her medals swimming freestyle, said she "always felt a deep connection to water" so supporting coastal restoration "just felt like a natural fit".

The event sponsor said it would donate £150 to for every kilometre participants swam at the event to the charity.

According to organisers, 36 swimmers swam a total of 29.4km.

Adlington added: "I hope people see this event as more than just a challenge, it's a call to action."

The UK has seen a 92% reduction in seagrass meadows and a 95% decline in native oyster reefs over the last century, according to a report published by Blue Marine Foundation in 2024.

Happy Valley actor Norton said his family goes by the mantra "you'll never regret a swim" but admitted he had never been involved with this level of endurance swimming.

"Like everyone, I'm in awe of the ocean. It's wild, powerful, and under threat," he said.

"Taking a stand is about protecting biodiversity and ensuring future generations can experience the magic of healthy seas."

May 23, 2025 0 comments
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Tech

Cycle festival returns after six years

by Elijah May 21, 2025
written by Elijah

A cycling festival event is to return to the calendar for the first time in six years.

Consett Cycle Festival attracted more than 10,000 people to the County Durham town in 2019, but the Covid pandemic put a stop to the event.

Organisers are now bringing the festival back on 22 June with a men's and women's Tour de Reservoir race starting and finishing in the town centre.

John O'Connor, who helps organise the event, said: "The people embraced it and it would've been a tragedy that we didn't repeat it, because it was so successful."

Mr O'Connor, chair of the Project Genesis Trust, said the festival aims to celebrate the resilience of the town and highlight it as a cycling hub.

There are also plans to run the event in 2026 and 2027

The festival was set to return in 2020 and mark the 40th anniversary of the closure of Consett Steelworks.

"We wanted to paint a positive picture of how the town came back from that great impact," Mr O'Connor said.

"In 1980, the unemployment rate in the Consett area was over 40%.

"We wanted to try to put an event on that demonstrated how the resilience of the Consett people had fought back against that."

The pandemic meant it could not go ahead and British Cycling events need to be scheduled two years in advance, which contributed to the delay.

It is now hoped to repeat the festival in 2026 and 2027.

May 21, 2025 0 comments
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Innovation

Oldest servicewoman, 107, on 'sheer joy' of VE Day

by Charles May 19, 2025
written by Charles

As the country prepares to celebrate VE Day, the nation's oldest servicewoman has shared her memories.

Joan Harrison, born in Portsmouth but now living in Cornwall, joined the women's regiment the Auxiliary Territorial Service when war broke out.

The now 107-year-old then trained to become an ambulance driver, a role she described as "the best time of her life".

Now living at a care home, she is frail and nearly blind and deaf – yet she retains a remarkably sharp mind and continues to follow current affairs, according to the Women's Royal Army Corps Association.

'The war's over'

Eighty years ago, "Brownie", as she was known, was serving as an ambulance driver and was on duty when victory in Europe was declared.

"I was sitting quietly in the driver's seat at around six o'clock in the evening and everything was still," she recalled.

"Then, all of a sudden, he came running down the concrete path to the ambulance and said, 'Brownie, the war's over!'

"I said, 'You're kidding?' and he said, 'No, the war's over'.

"I jumped out – I don't think I even locked it, which was a crime, and ran with him into the Navy, Army and Air Force Institutes where everyone was gathering."

'Hats were flying'

She said the celebrations "got a bit boisterous" as they got swept up in the emotion.

"Hats were flying in the air, it was all men," she said.

"It got a bit boisterous, and some officers came down and called order.

"The men calmed down, saying, 'You're still in the army, you know, get to your beds'

"But they couldn't do much about the sheer joy of the moment."

May 19, 2025 0 comments
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Market

Man rescued after car plunges into sea from pier

by Ivy May 18, 2025
written by Ivy

A man is being treated in hospital after the car he was in plunged into the sea and overturned at Scarborough's South Bay, police have said.

Emergency crews were called at about 19:20 BST on Thursday to reports that a car had entered the sea from Vincent's Pier, near Scarborough Lighthouse.

A man in the driver's seat, believed to have been the only occupant of the submerged vehicle, was rescued and taken to hospital, according to North Yorkshire Police.

Coastguard Rescue Teams from Scarborough, Filey and Ravenscar had all attended the scene, alongside Scarborough's inshore and all-weather lifeboats, the Maritime and Coastguard Agency confirmed.

Police said the pier had been temporarily closed while investigations continued.

Anyone who saw what happened, or who had footage from the scene at the time of the incident, was asked to get in touch with officers.

The family of the man involved had been informed and was receiving support, a North Yorkshire Police spokesperson added.

May 18, 2025 0 comments
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Market

Fox rescued from flood of oil in derelict building

by Ethan May 16, 2025
written by Ethan

A fox that was trapped in a flood of heating oil under a derelict building has been rescued in what one RSPCA worker called the "worst case" of its kind they had ever seen.

Inspectors were called after a member of the public spotted two eyes looking out from the tar-like substance in the basement of the building in Leicester and realised an animal was stuck.

RSPCA inspector Helen Smith then managed to attach a grasper around the animal's neck and pull him free.

He has since been thoroughly cleaned and will go through a process of rehabilitation in the hope he can then be released back into the wild.

RSPCA
RSPCA centre manager Lee Stewart said it was the "worst oil case" he had ever seen

The fox was trapped in an observation pit under the building in Friday Street, which had flooded with heating oil leaking from a vandalised storage tank.

Ms Smith, who was called to the scene on Thursday 27 March, said: "This poor fox was totally stuck in the thick, tar-like substance and couldn't move.

"We have no idea how long he had been there. It's a miracle he was spotted."

RSPCA
The fox had to be sedated to have the oil cleaned from its fur

She added: "Only the fox's ears, eyes and nose were above the oil line but his body was completely stuck.

"With some effort, I managed to pull the fox from the pit and took him straight to a local vets where the mammal was sedated and the huge clean-up job began.

"I've never seen anything like it.

"The fox was covered in oil from head to toe and it was so thick that it was a big job to clean it all off."

The fox was then taken to the RSPCA Stapeley Grange Wildlife Centre in Cheshire for further cleaning and rehabilitation.

RSPCA
It is hoped the fox will be released back into the wild this week

Video footage released by the RSPCA shows rescuers massaging washing up liquid into the fox's fur to break down and remove the oil while the animal was sedated.

Lee Stewart, centre manger, said: "This is the worst oil case I have ever seen.

"The poor fox had to be sedated to be washed by the team, so at each wash we had three staff washing and a vet and vet nurse on standby."

It is hoped the fox will be released back into the wild this week.

May 16, 2025 0 comments
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