logo
Girl, 11, becoming youngest ever MBE ‘never thought this would happen'

Girl, 11, becoming youngest ever MBE ‘never thought this would happen'

Carmela Chillery-Watson, from Dorset, has LMNA congenital muscular dystrophy – a progressive muscle-wasting condition which affects her movement, heart and lungs – and is becoming a Member of the Order of the British Empire in the King's Birthday Honours for services to charitable fundraising.
She was diagnosed with the condition in 2017, aged three, and in recent years has helped charity Muscular Dystrophy UK raise more than £400,000 by doing around 25 fundraising and awareness campaigns.
'I'm just really ecstatic and surprised that I'm receiving the honour,' Carmela told the PA news agency.
'It's incredible.'
The 11-year-old campaigner has undertaken a variety of challenges, including her Wonder Woman Walk where she walked one kilometre a day and then went another nine kilometres a day in her wheelchair for a month in 2020.
Dressed as her favourite superhero Wonder Woman, Carmela travelled across 30 different places in Cornwall, Somerset, Wiltshire and Surrey to complete the 300-kilometre trek.
She has also carried out a 100-mile walking challenge across the Jurassic Coast in Dorset.
'I have to say, I love all of them,' Carmela said of her various fundraising campaigns. 'They are all so fun.'
She also teaches exercises online for an optional small donation to help others with muscular dystrophy and similar physical disabilities who are unable to leave their homes or who don't have access to physiotherapy in their area.
Carmela said people from as far away as Africa and the US have attended her virtual sessions.
She is already an award winner, having been presented with a British Citizen Youth Award Medal of Honour in 2023 for making a positive impact on her community and society more widely.
The Government believes Carmela is the youngest-ever MBE, although it does not hold all the historical data to be able to confirm it.
Tony Hudgell became the youngest person on record to be honoured when he was awarded the British Empire Medal (BEM) at the age of nine in the 2024 New Year Honours.
Carmela will break paralympic swimmer Ellie Simmonds' record of being the youngest person to become an MBE from 2009 when she was 14 years old.
The 11-year-old said she never looked for an award for her campaigning.
'I never thought anything like this would happen,' she said.
'I just want to make a difference to the disability community, to be able to show them: You're strong, you can do whatever you want.'
Carmela's mother Lucy Chillery-Watson said she was 'bursting with pride' over her daughter becoming an MBE.
'Since the moment she was born she showed true resilience and determination – growing up with health conditions, one after the other,' Ms Chillery-Watson said.
'She's making a huge difference in the world.'
She said her daughter does not let her physical disability stop her.
'She's already thought about her next challenge, she wants to go around UK primary schools to spread inclusivity in amongst the schools for physical disabilities, because Carmela has got her own experiences and in society there's still so much that needs to be done.'
Carmela is very excited at the prospect of meeting a royal at an investiture ceremony.
'Potentially meeting King Charles or Queen Camilla – that is amazing,' she said.
'I mean, that is insane.
'Receiving an MBE is incredible but potentially meeting the King or Queen is even better.'
Carmela's next challenge is her so-called 'Poo Plod' on June 23, when she will walk and wheel five miles dressed as a toilet, with her mum dressed as a poo, to raise money to buy specialist toilets for her school in Poole.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Measles death shows nation must ‘redouble' vaccine efforts, Streeting says
Measles death shows nation must ‘redouble' vaccine efforts, Streeting says

North Wales Chronicle

time2 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Measles death shows nation must ‘redouble' vaccine efforts, Streeting says

The Health Secretary stressed that vaccines 'save lives' and said the Government will be carrying out work throughout the remainder of the year to boost uptake. It follows reports over the weekend that a youngster, who was ill with measles and other health problems and was receiving treatment at Alder Hey Children's Hospital, had died. The Health Secretary appeared in front of MPs on Monday as the Health and Social Care Committee scrutinised the Government's 10-year health plan. When asked by Labour MP Danny Beales if the Government is doing enough to increase child vaccination rates, Mr Streeting said: 'Firstly, no child in this country should be dying of measles. 'And I'm extremely sorry to the poor family that's now grieving the loss of a child in those circumstances. 'This is why we have got to redouble our efforts on vaccination, and to make the case – and some of the improvements in the 10-year plan will help, in terms of having digital records of children's health that parents can check into the digital red book – that'll be really good. 'So it means on moments like, over the weekend, where someone's read an awful case in the media, parents can just quickly log on and think actually, did we get that jab? 'Are we up to date on our vaccinations? And we can also proactively invite people to vaccination. 'But we'll be doing a lot more on this throughout the remainder of the year in terms of trying to get vaccination uptakes, it saves lives.' Mr Beales highlighted that additional investment will be needed to increase vaccine uptake 'to get those areas that are 30% below the highest levels of vaccination in the country up to where they should be'. ⚠️Measles can be a serious illness. More than 1 in 10 children haven't had the MMR vaccine and they need 2 doses to get full protection. Find out more. — UK Health Security Agency (@UKHSA) July 14, 2025 Mr Streeting replied: 'And we do have significant resource already attached to public health information campaigns.' He vowed to write to the committee 'given the profile of this at the moment to share the work that we'll be doing to drive our vaccination rates'. Measles is highly infectious and can lead to serious complications. People with this infection have a number of cold and flu-like symptoms and a rash appears a few days after symptoms start. On rare occasions, measles can also lead to meningitis and brain swelling, which can cause long-term disabilities or even death. A statement published by Alder Hey on Sunday said it would not comment on individual cases, but that the hospital is 'concerned about the increasing number of children and young people who are contracting measles'. #Measles is highly contagious and can cause serious complications. 🏥 It's preventable with the #MMR vaccine, so make sure that you and your loved ones are up to date and catch up on any missed doses. ❤️ 🔗 — UK Health Security Agency (@UKHSA) July 14, 2025 Alder Hey said it has treated 17 children since June for the effects and complications of the disease. Since January 1 2025, there have been 529 laboratory confirmed measles cases reported in England, according to UKHSA data which was released on July 3. NHS England figures covering 2023/24 show that not a single vaccine met the target needed to ensure diseases cannot spread among youngsters. The World Health Organisation (WHO) says to achieve herd immunity – which stops illnesses transmitting across the population – at least 95% of children should receive their set of vaccine doses for each illness. Figures shows 91.9% of five-year-olds had received one dose of the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine, the lowest level since 2010/11, while just 83.9% had received both doses, the lowest since 2009/10. Uptake of the first MMR dose at 24 months stood at 88.9% in 2023/24 – again, the lowest since 2009/10. In Liverpool, 73.4% of children received both doses of their MMR vaccine by their fifth birthday. Reacting to reports over the weekend, Dr Ben Kasstan-Dabush, assistant professor of global health and development at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine said: 'The child death in Liverpool is a tragic reminder that measles is not benign and can lead to serious complications including inflammation of the brain and death. 'Since 2023-25 we have been in a cycle of nasty measles outbreaks, indicating that the years of declining coverage are culminating in a new normal that no child needs to live with. 'Liverpool is home to neighbourhoods that are among the most deprived in England. 'Declining coverage in Liverpool and nationwide is happening amidst a relentless cost-of-living crisis, characterised by a generational decline in living standards, continued austerity and unequal pandemic recovery. 'Public health cannot hope for vaccination coverage to improve, it needs sustained resources to offer flexible services that work with parents as they are pushed to the brink by precarity and to fund the communications required to engage with diverse communities.'

Striking resident doctors can earn more than £100k
Striking resident doctors can earn more than £100k

Times

time2 hours ago

  • Times

Striking resident doctors can earn more than £100k

Resident doctors preparing to go on strike could earn more than £100,000 per year, and may pick up an additional £159 per hour for some weekend shifts. The resident doctors — formerly known as junior doctors — have voted to undertake more strike action this summer over pay and conditions. Up to 50,000 doctors will walk out of work for five consecutive days from 7am on July 25 until 7am on July 30, and are demanding the government increase their pay by 29 per cent. The starting rate for junior doctors is a salary of £38,831 after pay increases under Labour, but the highest ranking residents can earn up to £73,993 as a basic rate. For those working one in six weekends and one in eight night shifts, earnings can increase to £101,369 per annum, according to an analysis by The Daily Telegraph.

The NHS model is on its last legs — time to replace it
The NHS model is on its last legs — time to replace it

Times

time3 hours ago

  • Times

The NHS model is on its last legs — time to replace it

At last, the unthinkable is being seriously thought about healthcare in Britain. The NHS is bust. More and more billions are periodically thrown at it, but its waiting lists are horrendous and relative to other comparable countries it does poorly in life expectancy and healthy life chances. Only the US does worse. As the largest employer in Europe, the NHS has some 1.38 million full-time equivalent staff who absorb almost half the budget for day-to-day spending. It's virtually impossible to run efficiently, and examples abound of rotten management and excessive bureaucracy. So says a report by Policy Exchange, which declares that this has to end. From 1955 to 2023, real health expenditure per capita rose by about 850 per cent. At 9 per cent of GDP, government health spending is almost the highest of all developed countries and by some estimates will rise to more than 20 per cent of GDP by 2070. Without radical reform, says the report, other public spending would have to be squeezed or taxation would need to be increased to eye-watering levels. This would damage the economy so badly that 'it simply cannot be allowed to happen'. In his foreword, the former health secretary Sir Sajid Javid says Britain is now at a crossroads. The NHS model can't cope with spiralling demand. It's run entirely by the state and its agencies. By contrast, says Javid, the very best performing healthcare systems combine high levels of state subsidy, mandatory insurance, co-payments, and individual choice. The report accordingly proposes replacing the tax-funded NHS by compulsory insurance, backed up by a publicly funded safety net to cover the poor, plus some element of co-payment to incentivise people to look after themselves. It recommends the model adopted by the Netherlands in 2006 under which people choose their insurance providers, with the state's role reduced to regulating insurers and providing the safety net for those who can't afford to insure themselves. Dutch healthcare costs are now proportionately lower than in the UK, waiting lists are smaller and health outcomes generally better. It has been clear for years that European-style social insurance systems fulfil the moral obligations of the NHS while providing better outcomes. Yet the NHS has been treated by Conservatives and Labour alike as the most sacred of political cows. This is even though it's not just failing to deliver adequate healthcare but the enormous sums it's swallowing are seriously distorting the economy, diverting essential investment from services ranging from education to defence. However, the whole public sector is on its knees for which the NHS is not the principal cause. The criminal justice system, for example, is collapsing through sustained and serious underfunding. The retired senior judge Sir Brian Leveson has now controversially proposed to limit trial by jury to tackle the immense backlog of cases, some of which take years to come to trial and may have to be abandoned because of the passage of time. Limiting jury trial, however, won't solve the problem because the lower courts are also under immense strain, as are the prisons and the police. The essence of the problem is that for decades Britain has been living a lie. It has indulged itself in a welfare state without taking the measures to pay for it. This goes back to the end of the Second World War, when the Attlee government decided that the spirit of the times demanded the building of a brave new world based on collective provision and equality. Far less attention was paid to creating the wealth to pay for this nirvana. It was assumed that redistributing wealth from rich to poor would pay for it all. Society thus moved from making to taking, producing less and less while telling itself that it had a right to welfare provision and that the rich should stump up. No government (other than Margaret Thatcher's) was brave enough to deliver some essential home truths about spending above the country's means. Instead, governments lied that things were getting better and that more was being spent. In fact, the public sector was being salami-sliced to shuffle funds from one service to another; and all were being fleeced to pour more billions into the black hole of the NHS. The ultimate symbol of this irresponsibility, and a principal force behind Britain's slide from making to taking, has been the benefits system. According to the Centre for Social Justice, people claiming universal credit and payments for ill health will soon earn £2,500 more than through the minimum wage. The Office for National Statistics says nearly one in four working-age people are classified as disabled. The NHS Confederation says that in 2021-22, 63,392 people went straight from university on to long-term sickness benefits, with an incredible increase among 25 to 34-year-olds of 69 per cent in five years. Last week, Kemi Badenoch rightly said the UK was 'sitting on a ticking time bomb' of spiralling welfare dependency, spending more on sickness benefits than on defence. The NHS model must be replaced to provide the equitable and efficient provision of healthcare to which politicians pay such dishonest lip service, and to protect the economy from such damaging distortions. But the underlying issue of an unaffordable welfare state can only be tackled by a government brave enough to recreate the work ethic, and an economy that delivers the jobs to inspire it.

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