Colors: Purple Color
Colors: Purple Color

People in Wolverhampton can now get dementia help and support at the touch of a button thanks to the launch of high tech "smart posters". They feature Near Field Communication (NFC) technology, enabling people with smartphones to either tap the NFC icon or scan a QR code and be instantly linked to websites packed with useful information about dementia.

One brave patient put aside his treatment to get all wrapped up and proudly launch Birmingham Children’s Hospital Charity’s fourth annual summer fundraiser – The Big Bandage. Three-year-old Noah Dixey, from Leicestershire, who has a condition called Alagille Syndrome– a rare genetic disorder that affects his liver, heart, kidneys and skin – went bonkers in bandages to encourage others to join in on Friday 8 July and make a donation, just like him.

The UK’s leading dementia research charity Alzheimer’s Research UK and parkrun UK have just launched an inspiring new challenge called Running Down Dementia. Running Down Dementia challenges participants to run 100km over summer 2016 and raise £100 for Alzheimer’s Research UK. The charity launched the challenge on Saturday 14 May with parkrun, which offers free timed 5km runs across the country, as the organisation’s official charity partner.

A canine-crazy Cannock couple has embarked on a 10-week cycling challenge with their two-year-old pup in a bid to raise £10,000 for Birmingham Children’s Hospital Charity’s Star Appeal. Richard Buka and Holly Necchi are setting off on Barney’s Big Bike Ride – a 2,000 mile fundraiser from the Arctic Circle to the Alps with Barney their King Charles Cavalier-Bichon Frise aboard his very own dog trailer.

Broadcaster Adrian Chiles and former footballer and blood cancer survivor Geoff Thomas joined patients, nurses, clinicians, fundraisers and major local businessmen in celebrating the 10th Anniversary of The Centre for Clinical Haematology (CCH) at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham.   Blood cancer charity Cure Leukaemia helps fund the CCH and has used this milestone as a springboard for its £3million capital fundraising campaign to help establish the Birmingham Institute of Haematology (BIH).

Cafés across Wolverhampton are serving up help, support and of course a cuppa or two for people living with dementia and their carers – including two during this year’s Dementia Awareness Week. The regular cafés enable people to share their experiences of dementia and find out more about the services available to them in the city. They are run by the Alzheimer's Society in partnership with the City of Wolverhampton Council.

Clarke Willmott LLP, which has offices in Birmingham, has become a formal corporate supporter of the Encephalitis Society, which raises awareness of the condition. Whilst Alzheimer’s and meningitis justifiably receive significant amounts of media attention, encephalitis is an illness much less in the public spot light. With up to 6,000 cases of encephalitis in the UK each year and hundreds of thousands more worldwide, the lack of public awareness of the condition is perhaps surprising.

More than just a fad diet, eating gluten free is in fact vital to individuals suffering from a condition called coeliac disease. A lifelong autoimmune disease in which the small intestine reacts with hypersensitivity to gluten, this reaction leads to difficulty in digesting food. According to Coeliac.org.uk, this disease is affecting approximately 1 in 100 people with over 80% of this number remaining undiagnosed.

People across Wolverhampton are being encouraged to don Denim for Dementia and raise vital funds for the Alzheimer's Society. Schools, workplaces and families are being urged to wear items of denim during this year's Dementia Awareness Week, which runs from 15-21 May, 2016. The City of Wolverhampton Council is among those taking part, and will be asking staff to don denim on Wednesday 18 May in return for a donation to the Wolverhampton branch of the charity.

QEHB Charity will hold its third annual free Community Fun Day on Sunday 29 May, in celebration of Her Majesty’s Armed Forces. The day will be returning to the fantastic hosts of Warwickshire County Cricket Club, based at Edgbaston Cricket Ground, Birmingham.  It is set to be a huge event, with exciting fairground rides, food and craft stalls, a spectacular parachute performance from the Red Devils, a challenging military assault course, a vintage car display, and a T20 cricket match between the tri-service military cricket team and the Warwickshire Legends.

Diabetes UK, the charity that campaigns on behalf of people living with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes recently  started a nationwide recruitment drive to appoint 1000 Community Champions from the Black and Minority Ethnic (BAME) community in Britain. There are not many of these ethnic groups involved in engaging with others about diabetes and yet all the statistics, empirical data and research point to the fact that they are the ones more prone or at risk of developing Type 2 diabetes at an earlier age than their white counterparts or actually have the condition.

People are being encouraged to become a Dementia Friend as Wolverhampton prepares to mark Dementia Awareness Week, which runs from Sunday 15 May to Saturday 21 May, 2016. The Dementia Friends programme, run by the Alzheimer’s Society, is the biggest ever initiative to alter people’s perceptions of dementia. It aims to get people change the way they think, talk and act about the condition by learning more dementia and the small ways they can help someone living with it.

Death is often a taboo subject but for the first time a group of local citizens, community organisations, undertakers, doctors and hospices has joined forces to raise awareness about the importance of talking about dying, death and bereavement. Under the name BrumYODO (giving a local spin to the national Dying Matters coalition strapline ‘You only die once’) the community collective aims to positively change attitudes and behaviours around talking about and planning for death, and the need for good end of life care for all.