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Karnataka to hold first-ever survey of persons with disabilities

Karnataka to hold first-ever survey of persons with disabilities

Deccan Herald08-05-2025
Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities Act Das Suryavamshi said that a letter had been written to the chief minister and chief secretary to the government in this regard nine months ago. The data from the census will help in taking up programmes for empowerment of disabled persons, he said.
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Craig Gordon reveals extent of ongoing injury after Hearts vs Sunderland testimonial
Craig Gordon reveals extent of ongoing injury after Hearts vs Sunderland testimonial

Scotsman

timea few seconds ago

  • Scotsman

Craig Gordon reveals extent of ongoing injury after Hearts vs Sunderland testimonial

It was an emotional afternoon at Tynecastle for the Hearts stopper who unfortunately could not feature properly in the match. Sign up to our Hearts newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Craig Gordon has revealed that he will not be fit in time for Hearts' Scottish Premiership opener against Aberdeen next week and will likely miss a decent chunk of the early stages of the new campaign. The 42-year old was honoured at Tynecastle with a testimonial match as the Jambos comfortably saw of English Premier League side Sunderland 3-0. Gordon, the man of the moment, started the game but immediately booted the ball out of play and was subbed off for Zander Clark. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad After the match, he revealed the extent of his ongoing injury problem, saying: 'I was desperate to try and play longer in the game, but it became too difficult. The medical team didn't want me to do it. It was too dangerous for them to allow me to play any longer than that, so it became the decision that I would start the game, but I have to come off.' Craig Gordon to miss Hearts vs Aberdeen Scottish Premiership opener and more He continued: 'It's more than a few weeks away, so it's not anything that's that close at the moment, but I need to keep working away. Everything this week was geared towards this game, but now it's finished. 'I'll get back into the rehab this week and keep pushing to see how quickly I can get back. There's no real time limit on it. It's very difficult to say how long I'll be out for, but I'll just get back in the gym and work as hard as I can to make that as short a time as possible. 'I had a disc problem in my neck and it's caused a nerve problem down my arm. I'm not in any pain. The nerve causes a bit of tingling down my arm and it's caused a little bit of weakness in my arm. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Basically, if I can get rid of the weakness and get the strength back, then I'm good to go. Everything else feels really good. I can do everything else in training, but the strength just isn't there at the moment to be able to deal with a full game. 'That's the focus over the next few weeks, to try and build that up. It's not going to be straightforward, but it's something that I'm working on. It's just a rehab. For me, it's about trying to get back as quickly as possible, get myself out on the training pitch and join in with the boys and start trying to push to get back in the team.' Asked if it could require surgery, Gordon said: 'I wouldn't have thought so. I've seen the specialists and it doesn't look like it, but it will take a bit of time.' Special afternoon for Hearts' hero Craig Gordon as home and away fans show appreciation Despite not being able to play the way he wanted to, Gordon was still full of appreciation for the almost 18,000 supporters that showed up at Tynecastle. Both sets of fans let him know just how much they appreciated his contribution to their clubs. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Today has been brilliant,' said Gordon. 'Right from the very beginning, I was here three or four hours kick-off and seeing the lounges, seeing as many people as I could. 'I was out in the plaza for a bit with all the activities going on out there, signing autographs, taking pictures and just trying to see as many of the fans as I could. Thank everybody for coming. It's been a huge turnout. 'One of the best friendly attendances or testimonial attendances I can ever remember at Hearts. That is very just shows what the Hearts fans can do. We get semi-finals, finals, they turn up their numbers, they sell out their allocation and today they've proved that to me once again by turning up huge numbers for this. How special a fan they really are. 'I've had messages from other players that I've played with this morning wishing me all the best and former coaches. All those things, it's been a crazy day. There's been so much. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'We're going home for a rest now but the amount of messages from everybody, fans, former teammates, coaches, it's been totally overwhelming. It's been a fantastic day, one I'll never forget. I mean everybody's just wishing me well and hoping that the day goes well. Asking if I was playing, everybody wanting to know how I was getting on with the injury.'

Mum died for 17 minutes before being diagnosed with ultra rare heart disease
Mum died for 17 minutes before being diagnosed with ultra rare heart disease

Daily Record

timea few seconds ago

  • Daily Record

Mum died for 17 minutes before being diagnosed with ultra rare heart disease

Victoria Thomas died for 17 minutes but her heart miraculously sprang back to life. Now mum to a healthy baby boy, she is due to compete in both volleyball and basketball at the World Transplant Games A mum has shared her story after she dropped dead for 17 minutes after a gym session which eventually led to an ultra rare diagnosis. ‌ Victoria Thomas was in the middle of boot camp at the gym when her heart stopped netball-loving sports enthusiast had started to feel exhausted after a weightlifting session. ‌ The 35-year-old accountant had gone into cardiac arrest. An ambulance arrived within minutes and paramedics started CPR– but as the clock ticked on with no result, fears rose that Victoria's heart had stopped for good. ‌ She told the Mirror: 'I said to my friend that I didn't feel like I had any power or energy, like it had just drained from my body. I was also feeling slightly dizzy. I'd only just said it when I suddenly collapsed on the floor.' 'When it happened, it went black and there was nothing, then I became aware of looking down on my body. "I was floating near the roof and was looking down at myself on the gym floor. My first thought was that my legs looked really fat.'And when I looked at a photo of myself taken just minutes before I collapsed, I could see that my legs were actually swollen. ‌ 'I didn't see a light, or feel peaceful, I was just watching myself, and I could see some yellow machines around me.' Eventually, after 17 minutes, Victoria's heart sprang back into life. Now 41, she says: 'They never gave up on me. The minutes ticked by, but they refused to stop trying. I was so young, fit and healthy and it had come completely out of the blue.' ‌ Victoria was taken to Bristol Royal Infirmary, where she spent three days in a coma. Again, she pulled through and doctors fitted her with a defibrillator to restart her heart in the event her body went into cardiac arrest again. Victoria, who has no family history of heart problems, was allowed home, but over the next few months her heart stopped on several occasions, with the defibrillator shocking it back into rhythm each time. She says: 'I went back to playing netball three weeks after it happened, with my defibrillator. It was a shock whenever it went off, but it allowed me to carry on living my normal life, which I was so grateful for.' ‌ And in February 2021, Victoria discovered she was expecting a baby. She says: 'Being pregnant was wonderful, but it put pressure on my heart and I started going into cardiac arrest regularly – although the pacemaker would kick in.'Victoria was 24 weeks pregnant when she was given a reason for the repeated cardiac arrests. Specialists had diagnosed Danon disease – a rare genetic disorder,thought to affect fewer than a million people is caused by a problem with the LAMP 2 gene, which produces anenzyme that is responsible for a process that keeps cells clean and healthy. ‌ Victoria is the first person in her family to have Danon disease. She says: 'When I read the letter from the genetics team telling me what I had, I was 24 weeks pregnant with Tommy and I was so shocked, I couldn't take it in. 'The doctors wanted to deliver Tommy at just 24 weeks, but I persuaded them to let me hang on a few more weeks. If he had been born at 24 weeks then he may not have survived. 'But by the time I was 30 weeks I couldn't breathe properly because of the fluid build up around my body, so I had to have an emergency caesarean.' ‌ Thankfully, newborn Tommy was fine. Victoria says: 'It was so amazing to be a mum and to hold Tommy in my arms after everything.'But Victoria, who is now a single parent after splitting up with her boy's dad, discovered her heart had been damaged further by the pregnancy. By the time Tommy was six months, she was so breathless that even getting up the stairs was a massive April 2022, a hospital check-up found her heart was functioning at just 11%,meaning she was experiencing end-of-life heart failure. She says: 'I asked the doctors how long I had left and they told me I had just another couple of months.'It was devastating. All I could think of was Tommy. I vowed I wouldn't leave him.' ‌ Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community! Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today. You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland. No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team. All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in! If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. Victoria was put on the urgent donor register. She says: 'I had to stay in hospital, and when my sisters brought him in to see me I would cuddle him and cherish every moment I had with him. 'Time was running out for me,and I had to pray that they were going to find me a heart in time. Two hearts were found – but further tests revealed they weren't suitable." ‌ Victoria, who lives in Gloucester, says: 'It was devastating. Each time I'd get my hopes up thinking this was it, that I was going to be saved. "And then I was told that the operation couldn't go ahead. I didn't know if they were ever going to find a heart in time.I'd given up all hope.' But in April 2023, finally a suitable and usable heart was had the transplant at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham. The surgery was a success and she was allowed home that May. She says: 'I'd been in hospital since Tommy's first birthday in October and now I was finally home with him. I couldn't believe it.' Apart from a few episodes of initial rejection, Victoria is now back to full strength. Tommy is now three, and tests have shown he does not have Danon disease. Checks have also put Victoria's other relatives in the clear.

Graffard ‘never had any doubts', as Calandagan shows his true colours
Graffard ‘never had any doubts', as Calandagan shows his true colours

The Herald Scotland

timea few seconds ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Graffard ‘never had any doubts', as Calandagan shows his true colours

Francis-Henri Graffard never had any doubts and although relief may have been the overriding emotion when Calandagan opened his Group One account in the Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud last month, this was a moment of sweet vindication for the Aga Khan team who have stood steadfast behind their star middle-distance performer. 'I never had any doubts about his willingness to win and every time he has been beaten he has had excuses,' said Graffard. 'He was really far back in the Juddmonte International and he quickened really strongly, just too late, and in Dubai he again finished strongly when beaten by a very good horse. At Epsom, I had plenty of excuses, but I could never say it was because he didn't want to try. 'Mickael (Barzalona) knows him better now and he loves good ground and the mile-and-a-half distance. I think there can't be any more doubt about his willingness to win.' Having caused a 25-1 shock with Goliath 12 months ago, Graffard this time had the 11-10 favourite on his side and a horse who could quite rightfully class Ascot as his second home. A regular at British passport control, he once again displayed his liking for crossing the Channel, this time around taking home £850,650 after Barzalona delivered his mount with precision to deny Andrew Balding's top-class filly. Graffard added: 'I thought the filly might have got away and when she quickened I thought 'oh my god, I'm going to be beaten a neck again'. 'But Mickael said he was waiting and he really helped him to balance. He said the last 200 metres are long here and he knew he was going to catch her. 'The way he can quicken is very impressive, he's a very good horse and now we know whatever tactics the opposition have we can be competitive in these top races.' For Graffard, a second win in one of the season's key contests cements his position as one of the leading trainers in the world. Having shown himself to be a powerhouse on home soil, he is now proving it on the global stage, again displaying his willingness to venture into enemy territory and make a daring raid on the spoils. 'I love the sport and competition and when you have a top horse in good form, I think it is important to challenge yourself against the best possible opposition,' said Graffard. 'That is how you can really level-up the quality of your horses and English racing is so strong. I came to Royal Ascot with a really strong team of horses and left disappointed, so it is not easy. When you win, it makes it even more joyful. 'The season has been very strong for me so far, we're just starting the second half now and I've just had a week off to recharge and the stats have been very strong for the stable, so we need to keep bringing the winners and we are working very hard.' By emulating the achievement of countryman Maurice Zilber – trainer of 1973 and 1974 winner Dahlia – he has now done what many of his contemporaries, including even the great Andre Fabre, have so far failed to achieve. Dahlia and Zilber were of course thwarted in 'the race of the century' when seeking a King George hat-trick 50 years ago. But on the day next year's Ascot feature was boosted to a swelling £2million prize-pot, the lure of one of the sport's greatest races is sure to prove a tempting proposition once again. 'Hopefully. It's an amazing race and I'm not sure why it is not on the agenda for more horses and stables,' said Graffard when asked about seeking a third win in the race. 'It's a fantastic race and of course you don't just come for the prize-money. If my horses are in good form I would definitely come back again.'

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