Colors: Purple Color
Colors: Purple Color

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.

A groundbreaking partnership launched to help Birmingham's growing army of carers has won national recognition at the Third Sector 2016 Business Charity Awards. Forward Carers was commended for the work of Birmingham Carers Hub - an innovative service which offers thousands of family carers access to free support, emergency aid, respite breaks, essential training and wellbeing events.

Victoria Rawnsley from Great Barr is on her third visit to John Taylor Hospice after meeting the In-Patient Unit team for the first time in January. The 45-year-old had been feeling really low and wasn’t sure what to expect. By the time she went home, Victoria said her mood had lifted considerably and she felt more confident.

John Taylor Hospice’s Louise Stone helped the family through a difficult time after mum Zaihda Parveen was diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease (MND) in 2009. As neuro clinical nurse specialist at the hospice, Louise visited their family home in Ward End throughout Zaihda’s illness. Ghulam Fallee and his brothers Talib and Irfan are so grateful for Louise’s help that they have nominated her for a Birmingham Mail Pride of Nursing Award.

New research reveals that motorists who need glasses or contact lenses but don’t wear them whilst driving, increase their chance of an accident four-fold. One in six drivers have had an accident in the past two years but this increases to 67 per cent for those who need glasses or contacts but don’t always wear them.

The Department of Health and NHS England are starting to make progress with the actions needed to implement access and waiting time standards for people with mental health conditions, but much remains to be done, according to the National Audit Office. The report from the spending watchdog is the first in a planned programme of work on mental health.

A life-saving Birmingham organisation – born out of NHS cuts during its last re-organisation – has been recognised in the Queen’s Awards for Enterprise for its excellence in innovation. The Perinatal Institute, members of Greater Birmingham Chambers of Commerce, was founded by Professor Jason Gardosi in 2013 and has received the coveted award for developing a safer method of monitoring the growth of babies during pregnancy.

When you look in the mirror, how youthful is the face staring back? Proving that age really is nothing but a number, in recent years there has been a growing focus on what our biological age, rather than our chronological age, can tell us about our overall health and longevity. Determined by lifestyle approaches to stress, diet, exercise and sleep; recent studies reveal that one in five people in the UK were found to have a biological age more than eight years older than their chronological age, effectively losing almost a decade of their life.

Modern day living is busy so to help people find time to think about their health, One You, with the help of Dr Hilary, is taking to a bus stop in Trinity Street, Coventry, to ask people how they really are. This is one of nine state-of-the-art interactive bus stops which are now live across England as part of Public Health England’s (PHE’s) One You campaign, to encourage adults to make simple changes to improve their health.

Shellie Taylor-Joyce swapped her text books in the West Midlands for the sub-zero temperatures of the Arctic during Easter – all in the name of John Taylor Hospice. Together with four friends, the 44-year-old teaching assistant from Castle Vale endured cold winds and treacherous trails to travel by dog sled from Oteren in Norway to Jukkasjärvi in Sweden – a distance of more than 250km.

Two of Birmingham’s leading charities – Ladies Fighting Breast Cancer (LFBC) and Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham (QEHB) Charity – are improving Breast Cancer services in the city, with the arrival of their jointly-funded mobile mammogram unit. Purchased by the two charities as part of their £1 Million Appeal, which was launched by Lord Digby Jones in 2013, the new mobile mammogram unit has arrived at Broad Meadow Heath Centre in Kings Norton.