logo
Park gate sliced toddler's finger ‘like guillotine', says mother

Park gate sliced toddler's finger ‘like guillotine', says mother

Telegraph27-05-2025
A three-year-old boy had had part of his finger amputated after a park gate sliced it off 'like a guillotine', his mother said.
Tommy Warley was running ahead of his family when his limb got stuck in the entrance to Conduct Gardens in Eastleigh, Hampshire last Tuesday.
Ms Warley said that the gate moved backwards 180 degrees, trapping the three-year-old's finger as his mother, Rose-Marie, looked on in horror.
She said there was 'so much blood' and that her son began screaming as he realised what was happening.
The 34-year-old mother took her son to Southampton General Hospital where more than half of his middle finger on his right hand had to be amputated.
Now, Ms Warley is calling for Eastleigh Borough Council to change the gate to one with a 'safer closing mechanism'.
She said: 'There was so much blood everywhere, and his finger was attached to the gate.
'A neighbour had to wrap it in a tea towel and give it to us so we could take it to the hospital.
'Tommy was screaming, and we took him to Southampton General Hospital.
'[The gate] is a guillotine, and should have a stopping mechanism or a slow closure in place.
'I want the council to change the gates, and when they will do that, I don't know.'
'Things will be more difficult for him'
The mother added that her son is currently struggling to carry out activities before the shocking accident and it will have a 'long-term impact' on the young child.
'He loves playing with cars, being in sand and water, and playing football, and those things will be more difficult for him especially as he is right-handed,' she said.
'Having all your fingers helps with co-ordination and grip, but that is restricted for him now.
'Tommy also has special educational needs (SEND), so this will impact him in the long-term.'
'Very upsetting'
The council has since launched an investigation into the incident and said they were 'very sorry' to hear about the incident.
A spokesperson said: 'We're very sorry to hear that a young child was hurt at Conduct Gardens and understand this must be very upsetting for the family.
'We're in touch with them and are looking into exactly what happened.
'Council staff visited the site straight away and have made sure that the area is safe.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The ten ways  cardiologists avoid heart disease
The ten ways  cardiologists avoid heart disease

Times

time16 minutes ago

  • Times

The ten ways  cardiologists avoid heart disease

Coronary heart disease (CHD) remains one of the biggest killers in the UK, responsible for more than 66,000 deaths a year, with one person dying every eight minutes from the condition. It is the single biggest killer disease for men — one in eight dying from CHD — but the mistaken perception that heart attacks are not a big risk for women costs lives. According to the British Heart Foundation (BHF), heart disease kills more women each year than breast cancer, with signs from studies that cases are rising among women under the age of 65. The BHF forecasts there could be one million more people living with heart disease in the UK by 2030. We are all aware of basic matters of the heart, that its normal healthy functioning can be harmed by big risk factors such as smoking and drinking, being overweight and underactive, making poor dietary choices and having high blood pressure. Over time, one or more of these can contribute to the narrowing of the arteries as fatty materials (called atheroma) such as cholesterol accumulate inside them. It is when arteries become narrowed by plaque to the extent that blood flow to the heart and brain is restricted that heart disease is diagnosed. • How to protect your heart — the cardiologist's guide Yet most cases — about 70 per cent according to the BHF — are preventable and cardiologists are convinced that if more of us were aware of the simple steps we can take to reduce our risk, the death toll would fall. 'By managing their lifestyle risk factors and keeping tabs on health, people can dramatically reduce their risk of heart disease,' says Oliver Guttman, consultant cardiologist at the HCA Wellington Hospital in London. 'This is true even for those who currently feel well, as early metabolic changes often occur silently.' So, what are the rules for heart disease prevention? Here, Guttman and Hannah Douglas, consultant cardiologist at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, spell out their evidence-based recommendations for warding off CHD. Blood pressure is one of the most important controllable risk factors for cardiovascular disease, yet hypertension is ignored or remains undiagnosed. A normal or ideal adult blood pressure is considered to be between 90/60mmHg and 120/80mmHg. 'Blood pressure is critically important and is truly a 'silent killer',' Douglas says. 'High blood pressure puts the entire vascular system under constant pressure and is a very significant risk factor for heart disease.' Having your blood pressure checked by your local pharmacy free of charge is the first step to take. Also investing in a home DIY monitor is an option and the BHF has a list of approved devices Blood pressure does ebb and flow, so a one-off high reading is usually nothing to worry about, but if it remains high for two or three weeks, see your doctor or nurse. 'Weight management and regular exercise are two of the easiest lifestyle methods that we know help to manage blood pressure,' Douglas says. 'But sustained high blood pressure should always be treated to reduce risk.' Wearable devices such as smartwatches with ECG features, such as the Apple Watch and Fitbit, can be useful for detecting atrial fibrillation (AFib), an irregular heart rhythm that increases the risk of stroke and can contribute to heart failure. 'For people over 65 or those with symptoms such as palpitations or dizziness, these tools may help flag episodes of AFib early,' Guttman says. 'Do be aware that they can also give false positives, so any alerts should be followed up with proper clinical assessment.' Routine monitoring for most under-65s is not necessary, he says, but if you are concerned about AFib speak to your GP. 'These trackers are best thought of as screening tools, not diagnostic devices, and their usefulness increases with age,' Guttman says. Measuring cholesterol and blood triglycerides — or your lipid profile — should be done every 4 to 6 years and considered at low risk of CHD, Guttman says. 'You will need to have it checked more often if your lipid profile is abnormal, you are genetically at a high risk of raised cholesterol or if you are on medication,' he says. • Read more expert advice on healthy living, fitness and wellbeing Finger-prick cholesterol checks can be carried out by your GP or your local pharmacy, or as part of the NHS health check in England. According to the BHF, below 4mmol/L (below 2.6mmol/L if you have had a heart attack) is a healthy level of non-HDL, bad cholesterol, the type that builds up in your arteries. Above 1mmol/L is a healthy level of good HDL cholesterol for men and above 1.2mmol/L is a healthy level for women. Healthy total cholesterol levels are below 5mmol/L, (4mmol/L if you've had a heart attack). 'Chronic inflammation is one of the key drivers of atherosclerosis, the plaque build-up in arteries,' Guttman says. 'A diet rich in anti-inflammatory, whole foods is ideal for helping to prevent this and is not only heart-protective but supports gut health, brain function, and long-term weight management.' He recommends a Mediterranean-style diet with plenty of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, healthy fats, particularly extra virgin olive oil, and nuts, and a regular consumption of fish and seafood, which are high in heart-healthy omega-3 fats. A review of clinical evidence in the journal Nutrients showed the approach is beneficial in reducing inflammation that is a risk factor for CHD. 'By also reducing or eliminating ultraprocessed, pre-packaged foods such as ready meals from the diet, we instead use more whole ingredients to cook at home, so it is an important step to take,' Douglas says. 'Whole food ingredients are going to be largely anti-inflammatory provided we balance the food groups and take care with not adding too much extra fat and salt.' Given its benefits for muscles, bones and the waistline, there is a trend for favouring weight training over cardiovascular exercise among the over-50s. But Douglas stresses that one is not necessarily better than the other for the heart. 'I tend to advise a 50:50 mix of cardio and light weight training for optimum cardiovascular health,' Douglas says. 'Weight training has many benefits for blood pressure, general vascular health and bone density, but keeping active with cardiovascular, or aerobic, exercise is amazing for heart rate and blood pressure optimisation, weight management and has the secondary benefits of reducing the risk of other conditions such as type 2 diabetes which, in itself, is closely linked with poor heart health.' Guttman says that, as a minimum, we should aim for the government targets of at least 150 minutes of moderate aerobic activity per week, and muscle-strengthening activities on two or more days per week. 'A mix of the two offers the best protection for cardiovascular and overall health,' he says. Being overweight is a risk factor for CHD, but central adiposity — fat around the middle — is generally more telling than the scales. Getting a tape measure out every 4-6 weeks is the best approach. 'The body mass index [BMI] is still commonly used, but it doesn't reflect body composition or fat distribution,' Guttman says. 'For most people, keeping an eye on waist circumference is the easiest and most reliable way to monitor central fat, which is metabolically harmful and strongly linked to CHD risk.' High-risk waist measurements are over 102cm (40in) for men and over 88cm (35in) for women, although the numbers shouldn't be taken in isolation. 'We are all built so differently with different compositions of body fat and muscle,' Douglas says. 'We know that waist circumference has been linked with cardiovascular risk, so is definitely a useful gauge, but for those at higher risk of CHD an approach agreed between you and your clinician is best.' Sleep is a key component in managing general health. 'There are very few conditions, medical, physical and psychological, that aren't worsened by poor sleep,' Douglas says. 'And this definitely includes heart disease.' Poor or insufficient sleep is associated with high blood pressure, obesity, type 2 diabetes and irregular heart rhythm, all of which are risk factors for CHD. 'Sleep apnoea, which causes pauses in breathing during sleep, is another serious and underdiagnosed condition that significantly raises cardiovascular risk,' Guttman says. 'Most adults need 7 to 9 hours of good-quality sleep per night and prioritising a regular sleep schedule, reducing evening screen time, and managing stress can all help improve your sleep and consequently support heart health.' Smoking remains one of the most powerful preventable risk factors for heart disease. 'It damages the arteries, increases blood pressure, promotes blood clotting, and accelerates plaque build-up,' Guttman says. 'Even light or occasional 'social' smoking and passive smoking increase CHD risk.' There is no safe form of smoking. Research presented to the American Heart Association by cardiologists at the University of Wisconsin reported significant negative heart health impacts after vaping and smoking cigarettes. • Heart disease — the six things to consider to protect yourself Immediately after vaping or smoking, increases in blood pressure, heart rate and blood vessel constriction were identified, and people who used e-cigarettes consistently performed worse than non-nicotine users on treadmill exercise tests used to predict CHD risk. 'I do worry about the long-term effects of vaping,' Douglas says. 'Although easier said than done, all smokers need to work their hardest to become ex-smokers, with any support available.' The heart benefits of quitting begin within days, and over time, the risk of CHD can fall to near that of a non-smoker. Most CHD risk comes from a combination of genes and lifestyle. If you have a family history of heart disease, Guttman says you should always discuss with your GP or cardiologist whether additional testing is appropriate for you. 'Genetic testing can be helpful, especially in cases of strong family history of premature heart disease [heart attack or stroke before age 55 in men or 65 in women],' he says. 'Certain inherited conditions, such as familial hypercholesterolaemia, which is characterised by very high levels of non-HDL cholesterol in the blood, greatly increase heart disease risk and often go undiagnosed without testing.' However, routine genetic screening is not recommended. 'In asymptomatic patients it often raises more questions than it answers unfortunately,' Douglas says. And even if you do have a genetic predisposition, there is no escaping the truth that healthy behaviours — not smoking, regular exercise, a balanced diet — will significantly reduce your CHD risk. 'Always discuss concerns with your GP or cardiologist, who will help to determine whether testing is appropriate for you,' Douglas says. Women — be extra aware of symptoms around the menopause Menopause is a key window for reassessing heart health and 'it's an ideal time for women to get their blood pressure, cholesterol, and glucose checked to ensure they're on track for the years ahead,' Guttman says. Some of the symptoms associated with the perimenopause and menopause, including sweating, palpitations, breathlessness, intolerance of exercise and panic attacks, are also symptoms of heart disease and, as such, can get overlooked. 'Understanding signs that can be associated with fluctuating hormone levels is key to recognising the difference between perimenopause and, for example, a cardiac arrhythmia,' Douglas says. 'Women should always seek medical help for worrying symptoms early. And if not satisfied with the outcome, seek a second opinion.' HRT isn't prescribed to prevent CHD, but it may play a helpful role in managing menopausal symptoms in some women. For some of those under 60 or within 10 years of their menopause who are otherwise healthy, it might improve quality of life as well as improving some metabolic risk factors. 'I am a proponent of HRT for many peri and post-menopausal women for whom benefit outweighs risk,' Douglas says. However, HRT is not suitable for everyone, particularly women with a history of stroke, blood clots, or known CHD. 'Decisions about HRT should be personalised, weighing the risks and benefits with a healthcare professional,' Guttman says.

Uh-oh, he's back in the news — it's Prince Andrew, the duke of hazard
Uh-oh, he's back in the news — it's Prince Andrew, the duke of hazard

Times

time16 minutes ago

  • Times

Uh-oh, he's back in the news — it's Prince Andrew, the duke of hazard

For a man who hardly goes anywhere or sees anyone, the Duke of York has a very unfortunate habit of finding himself in the spotlight. He is the subject of a new book full of extraordinary allegations, which, as so often with the older of the King's brothers, can be divided into two broad categories: claims that are concerning and serious, and those that are slightly less concerning but further burnish his hard-earned and unimpeachable reputation for oafishness. • Jeffrey Epstein sold Prince Andrew's secrets, new book claims In his book the historian Andrew Lownie writes that Prince Andrew's friendship with Jeffrey Epstein, which was the source of so many of his problems, may have been even more perilous than previously expected. The 'rattlesnake' Epstein sold Andrew's 'most intimate secrets' to foreign intelligence agencies, it is claimed. And Epstein is alleged by sources to have been an 'agent of influence' for President Putin. Lownie wrote: 'The Prince was a useful idiot who gave him respectability, access to political leaders and business opportunities. He found him easy to exploit.' Epstein died in his prison cell in New York in 2019 while awaiting trial for child sex trafficking offences, but the prospect that he had links to intelligence agencies who may not have the best interests of Andrew or the royal family at heart is not entirely reassuring. Rather less surprising are claims in the book, Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, that Andrew can be rude to staff. One painful vignette features a head of the household at Hillsborough Castle in Northern Ireland reporting damage to a tree planted by Andrew's grandmother. He referred to her as the Queen Mother, rather than her full title, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother. This ignited the fury of Andrew, who allegedly called him a 'f***ing imbecile' and ordered him out. • Prince Andrew, the King and the 'siege of Royal Lodge' Andrew turned 65 in February. If his parents' genes are anything to go by, he could be living the strange life of a semi-detached royal for decades to come. Last year The Times reported that, shorn of an official role, he spends long days at Royal Lodge watching television in a darkened room and venturing out on horseback into the Windsor estate's 40 hectares three times a week. Meanwhile, anxious courtiers wait for the duke's past to trigger its next unwelcome detonation. The day Andrew cannot escape is one back in 2001 when a camera captured him at the Belgravia home of Ghislaine Maxwell with his arm round the waist of young Virginia Giuffre. The photograph has been disputed and he claimed that he could not recall meeting her. But Giuffre, who said she was recruited as a masseuse for Epstein by Maxwell, claimed she was forced to have sex with the duke when she was a teenager. In 2022 he reportedly settled a lawsuit brought by her for £12 million without admitting liability. He had been forced to retreat from public long before that. His boneheaded refusal to express regret for his friendship with Epstein in his notorious 2019 interview with Emily Maitlis on Newsnight, and his failure to convincingly answer questions put to him about Giuffre, caused a public outcry and ended his royal career. His alibis included that he had been at Pizza Express in Woking on the night that it was claimed he danced with her at Tramp nightclub, and that he could not have sweated on the dancefloor, as was vividly claimed, because a peculiar medical condition meant he did not perspire. Within days it was announced that he was stepping back from public duties. When he attempted a comeback in 2021, Prince Charles headed him off, with a source saying 'a way back for the duke is demonstrably not possible' and that it was an unsolvable problem because 'the spectre of this [accusation] raises its head with hideous regularity'. Not one but two streaming service dramas about the Newsnight interview kept the Epstein mess firmly in the public eye in the UK and around the world. Then in April this year Giuffre's sad story ended in tragedy as she took her own life in Australia. • Prince Andrew 'called staff member an imbecile over Queen Mother' With Epstein and the conspiracy theories around him entangling President Trump, this is a miserable mire in which Andrew is stuck. Just last week his one-time friend Maxwell, for whom he once threw a birthday party at Sandringham with Epstein in attendance, was moved to a minimum-security prison in Texas. She is serving 20 years for her role in Epstein's sex trafficking network but recently spoke to a top US Justice Department official about what she knows. One of her lawyers said they had not talked to the president about a pardon 'just yet'. Another big embarrassment for the royal family emerged last year when the prince was named as an associate of an alleged Chinese spy. A court named him as a confidant of Yang Tengbo, an alleged agent. During the case it emerged that a senior aide to Andrew had written to Yang, a Chinese businessman, telling him he was 'at the very top of a tree' of the duke's contacts. This prompted Stella Rimington, the former director of MI5, to wonder: 'Maybe he's just the weakest link.' The news led to him abandoning plans to join the King at the traditional family Christmas at Sandringham. The previous year he was invited to Sandringham with Sarah, the Duchess of York, his former wife, in a sign that they might be being gradually rehabilitated. His close family have stood by him, especially his former wife. In an intriguing arrangement they have continued to live under the same roof, despite divorcing in 1996. She has called him 'a great man' and in an interview with The Sunday Times about her experience of mental health problems with men she talked about caring for her late father. 'I was left to look after a sad man, which is sort of what I'm doing now,' she said, possibly referring to her relationship with Andrew. In an interview in The Times at the start of this year she talked about going to some 'dark places' after she had two forms of cancer diagnosed within months of each other. 'My family have been an immense support to me through this period. I've used meditation and mindfulness to help stay positive and balanced,' she said. • Sarah Ferguson: I will not let Andrew down Ferguson is said to have been regarded by the King as a helpful conduit to his brother during a period when relations between them have been strained, culminating in the 'siege of Royal Lodge'. The King had said he would cut his scandal-hit sibling off financially if he continued to stay in the 30-room home in Windsor Great Park, instead of moving to the more modest accommodation at Frogmore Cottage, the former home of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. Andrew has a lease on Royal Lodge, which the Queen Mother turned into a comfortable family home, until 2078, but Charles was no longer prepared to pay for his security. The home is outside the main Windsor security cordon. In a surprise development last year Andrew raised the funds to stay from legitimate sources. The duke's finances have long been a matter of speculation, including when it emerged that Ferguson once had a debt paid off by Epstein. It is known that he sold his former marital home, Sunninghill Park, a wedding present from Queen Elizabeth, for £15 million, £3 million above the asking price. He also sold a ski chalet in Switzerland in 2022. Andrew and 'Fergie' now have the welcome distraction of four grandchildren: Princess Beatrice's daughters Sienna, aged three, and Athena Mapelli Mozzi, six months, and Princess Eugenie's sons August, four, and Ernest Brooksbank, two. And at Easter he made a surprise appearance at the royal family's Easter service in St George's Chapel, Windsor. Sources have made it clear that he will still be welcome at such 'family events'. But minor indignities continue to be visited upon the prince. A school named after him on the island of St Helena was reported to be looking for a more 'neutral' name (will the title 'Duke of York' be retired once he relinquishes it?). Among the old anecdotes that continue to be thrown up, one that seemed especially absurd involved an employee being moved to other duties because the prince objected to him wearing a nylon tie. What then to do with a problem like Prince Andrew? The writer AN Wilson wondered in The Times last year if Andrew could not be sent to govern the Falkland Islands, where the one heroic episode of his life is recorded: piloting helicopters during the war against General Galtieri's invading forces. He quickly, regretfully answered his own question: 'It would be a neat solution but, given his extreme stupidity and his ability to attract dodgy friends, it would not be politically feasible to entrust him with such a role.' The King may dream of his brother being somewhere trouble can't find him, but at least when he's in Windsor he can keep a close eye on him and perhaps get an early warning when this never-ending saga next explodes back into life.

How would Reform fix ‘lawless Britain'?
How would Reform fix ‘lawless Britain'?

Times

time30 minutes ago

  • Times

How would Reform fix ‘lawless Britain'?

Every week is now crime week for Reform UK. As MPs have retreated to their constituencies over the summer to tend to grassroots campaigning, Nigel Farage is filling the void with a run of announcements on his new favourite theme: crime and the rising levels of antisocial behaviour. His pitch, bleakly entitled 'Britain is lawless', seeks to capitalise on general unease about rising criminality and a sense that offences are not being pursued or prosecuted with sufficient vigour. Mr Farage ramped up his rhetoric yesterday by calling for the ethnicity of suspects charged with rape and sexual assaults to be made public. Citing the wave of protests at hotels housing asylum seekers, he said there was 'rising public anger' over the issue. He also spoke of a 'cover-up', citing the controversy over Warwickshire police's ­decision not to release the immigration status of two men arrested for the alleged rape of a girl in Nuneaton. Reform's leader said the illegal ­asylum problem was no longer only about fairness for taxpayers but the 'safety of women and children'. Mr Farage has a point on data. It is troubling that there has been a five-fold increase in convictions in which ethnicity has not been recorded. Police may feel squeamish about publishing such data but failing to do so will encourage the belief, happily promoted by the far right, that there is something to hide. Neil O'Brien, the Conservative MP, has warned that this culture of secrecy also makes it harder to join the dots in tackling crime. Equal candour is needed in disclosing how many criminals have been born abroad and how many have entered illegally. Voters are entitled to know. As part of its push on crime Reform has appointed Vanessa Frake, a former prison governor, as the party's new adviser on criminal justice. Ms Frake promoted 'super-max' prisons, inspired by institutions in America for prisoners who are considered incapable of rehabilitation. She claimed these tougher institutions would 'restore law and order' and end the 'sorry tale' that is Britain's crumbling penal system. Yet, as is often the case within Reform, Ms Frake has found herself immediately at odds with the party's leadership. She ­believes, wrongly, there should be no blanket ban on trans women in female prisons, preferring for prisoners to be assessed individually. This fracas highlights a continuing problem within Reform. While it — or rather, Mr Farage — is adept at tapping into the public mood, fully thought-through solutions are lacking. In his understanding of public sentiment outside the Westminster bubble, Mr Farage has sensibly heeded the advice of Jonathan Swift: 'It is the folly of too many to mistake the echo of a London coffee-house for the voice of the kingdom.' Mr Farage was one of the first to sound the alarm over small boats and on the mark when it came to the excesses of net zero. The same is true of his focus on tackling the likes of shoplifting and muggings. Crime is fertile territory for ­Reform. Both ­Conservative and Labour administrations have failed to concentrate sufficiently on combating crime, ignoring the public's deep disquiet about the issue. The problem is Mr Farage's persistent failure to equip rhetoric with costings. His plans to recruit 30,000 more police officers, send prisoners overseas and construct five new prisons are as yet unfunded but likely to cost some £17.4 billion. Mr Farage says Britain cannot afford not to act. Many will agree, but he needs to submit the invoice.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store