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Events manager thrown in pool on work trip sues for £250,000

Events manager thrown in pool on work trip sues for £250,000

Times5 days ago

A health brand is being sued for £250,000 after an employee was thrown into a swimming pool at a five-star hotel during a work trip to Mauritius.
Chloe Hewitt, 26, says she landed on broken glass after she was thrown into a pool 'in jest' by intoxicated colleagues who had been enjoying a free bar on the island.
The event was organised by Herbalife, a health drink company often criticised as a 'pyramid scheme', for its salespeople.
Hewitt, of Weybridge, Surrey, emerged from the water bleeding after cutting her foot on the bottom of the pool, sustaining nerve damage that has since required two operations and physiotherapy.
She is suing the company's European arm, Uxbridge-based Herbalife Europe, claiming more than £250,000 in damages on the basis that it had not done enough to ensure the event was safe.

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Make healthy food more appealing, government tells supermarkets
Make healthy food more appealing, government tells supermarkets

BBC News

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  • BBC News

Make healthy food more appealing, government tells supermarkets

Make healthy food more appealing, government tells supermarkets Image source, Getty Images Author, Nick Triggle Role, Health correspondent 8 hours ago Food businesses must make it easier for customers to buy healthy food, under new government plans announced on Sunday. Supermarkets and food manufacturers in England will partner with the government to tackle obesity rates by encouraging people to make their weekly shop healthier. Ministers say it will be up to food retailers to decide how they do that, but it could involve offering promotions on healthy food, tweaking loyalty points to incentivise healthy options, or changing shop layouts. It may also involve changing products to make them healthier. It is hoped the plans will help to make healthy eating more accessible to customers and relieve pressure on the NHS. The policy will see major food retailers report on healthy food sales in a bid to increase accountability - and targets will be agreed in partnership with industry.. The plan is part of a raft of measures aimed at improving the health of the nation that will be included in the 10-year plan for the NHS in England, which is expected to be published next week. "Unless we curb the rising tide of cost and demand, the NHS risks becoming unsustainable," Health Secretary Wes Streeting said. "This government's ambition for kids today is for them to be part of the healthiest generation of children ever. That is within our grasp." The upcoming report will show that more than one in five children are living with obesity by the time they leave primary school, rising to almost one in three in the most deprived areas. A recent report found a basket of healthy food costs more than double that of less healthy options. The Food Foundation reported that 1,000 calories of healthy food such as fruit and veg costs £8.80, compared to £4.30 for the equivalent amount of less healthy food, such as ready meals and processed meats. Andrew Opie of the British Retail Consortium said the news is "really positive" but said "all food businesses" must work together to drive down obesity. "Engaging all food businesses makes a difference," Opie told the BBC. "It can't just be about supermarkets- we consume about a quarter of our calories outside the home, so unless we get all supermarkets, food retailers, and restaurants on board, we won't move the dial on obesity." Opie said that he agreed with the government's flexible approach on the standards, as businesses have "a lot of insights and data" into how we shop for food and what would be best for their customers. Katharine Jenner, director of the Obesity Health Alliance said: "The government has rightly identified the root cause of obesity-related ill health: a food system that makes healthy eating difficult." She said it was encouraging to see the government putting the spotlight on businesses "rather than placing the burden on individuals who are already struggling to get by." Alongside the new partnership, the government said it will also: Offer shopping vouchers to customers in return for being active and eating healthily, via a new app Double the number of spaces on the NHS Digital Weight Management Programme, which supports obese individuals with either diabetes or high blood pressure Introduce stricter rules on advertising alcohol to in line with current regulation on promoting junk food It is hoped the new guidance will reduce people's sugar and calorie intake overall. The government cited research showing that cutting just 50 calories a day would lift 340,000 children and two million adults out of obesity. If everyone who is overweight reduced their calorie intake by just 216 calories a day, which is equivalent to a single bottle of fizzy drink, obesity would be halved, researchers said. This is not the first time the government has sought voluntary partnerships with industry. Over the last 20 years there has been numerous food reformulation programmes aimed at reducing salt, sugar and calories in certain foods. Success has been mixed with a push to reduce sugar in certain foods by 20% between 2015 and 2020 falling well short. Sarah Woolnough, from The King's Fund think tank, said while welcome, the impact of the scheme may be limited. 'A lot of less healthy food and drink is purchased from local convenience shops and takeaways. 'The stark fact remains that unhealthy food is far cheaper and more readily available and so unless this change is part of a wider, comprehensive strategy it will not be enough.'

Farmer buys 'deadliest field in the UK' after discovering poisonous plant which can be mistaken for household vegetable
Farmer buys 'deadliest field in the UK' after discovering poisonous plant which can be mistaken for household vegetable

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Farmer buys 'deadliest field in the UK' after discovering poisonous plant which can be mistaken for household vegetable

A farmer has claimed to have purchased the deadliest field in the UK, after finding it filled with a harmful plant which can be mistaken for a common vegetable. Speaking on his Facebook page, the account Field to Farm shared a video of his field which was covered in Hemlock. The poisonous plant produces clusters of white flowers in summer, which makes it look strikingly similar to wild carrot flowers. Hemlock is often found in damp areas, such as ditches, river beds and waste ground. The plant can be distinguished by the distinctive and unpleasant smell of its foliage and its purple-spotted stems. Its smell means accidental poisonings are uncommon and even most livestock stay away from it. Just a tiny amount of hemlock, if consumed can be enough to kill a human or an animal. The farmer noticed the plants in a field which he had purchased and took to social media to warn his followers about the dangers. He said: 'I have bought a field to live in and I've realised it is full of poison. 'Commonly mistaken for wild carrot, this is hemlock, and, just eating any single part of this plant is enough to kill me. 'And on this part of my land it is absolutely everywhere. 'The amount of this you have to eat to die is realistically quite small. Four or five leaves, done. Game over. A couple of hours later, you're having seizures and you are dying. 'If you are going to mow this stuff down, you are mostly ok, but don't get the sap on your skin because it is going to blister your skin in a similar fashion to giant hogweed. 'You can maybe make out this one is absolutely covered in aphids and it is already going to seed. 'It provides a lot of flowers and sap and stuff for the invertebrates around the farm, but bit of a poison and if you get the sap on you, it is not the best, bit of an irritation, potentially blisters. 'So all in all, if you've got this stuff growing, be careful.' Both hemlock and its equally toxic cousin hemlock water-dropwort are members of the carrot family and so both cause a risk to anyone who attempts to eat them. All parts of Hemlock are acutely toxic and can harm people if they are eaten, breathed in or just touched. Symptoms include dilation of the pupils, dizziness, and trembling followed by slowing of the heartbeat, paralysis of the central nervous system, muscle paralysis, and death due to respiratory failure. They are so poisonous that dead canes remain toxic for up to three years, and people removing the plant have to wear gloves and take frequent breaks. Its' poisonous notoriety can be traced back through history - it was the plant that was given to the famous Greek philosopher Socrates at his execution. Last year, two pensioners in Milton Keynes were furious after the plant was left to grow nearly eight feet. Jean Crussell said she was forced to keep windows and doors closed and her dog shut inside. She added: 'They ignored our concerns for many months. The plant is known to be lethal and could have killed my dog and affected my health.' The tenant, 79, who lives alone with her Labradoodle called Taxi, explained: 'All the residents are naturally very worried as hemlock can be highly poisonous. There's pets and young kids living in the close of 20 homes. 'No one knows how the hemlock got here, it just self seeded and grew, and grew and grew! 'In the spring it was already six feet high.' Ms Crussell, who has lived on the close for 10 years, said the plant first started growing in the close of council homes two years ago after two new houses were added to the road. The authority was finally spurred into action eight months later and removed the deadly plants. Ms Crussell added: 'Two new properties were built two years ago on a former grassy area. It's a nice little close. 'But the hemlock took over! It was just inches from my front door and lounge window and towering up to the roof. 'It shouldn't be residents' responsibility to clear it. These are council homes, many of us are retired and we pay rent and for communal maintenance which went up this year. 'I was so cross I called my local paper, the MK Citizen and they ran an article on Monday. The next day the council finally came around to remove it. 'They whipped it out quite quickly while I was out. They came suited and booted and masked on Tuesday and thankfully got rid of it.

When I started balding in my teens I was so insecure. Then I discovered the hair-loss miracle men whisper about and it changed my life. No, it's NOT a transplant - you'll never guess my secret
When I started balding in my teens I was so insecure. Then I discovered the hair-loss miracle men whisper about and it changed my life. No, it's NOT a transplant - you'll never guess my secret

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

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When I started balding in my teens I was so insecure. Then I discovered the hair-loss miracle men whisper about and it changed my life. No, it's NOT a transplant - you'll never guess my secret

Young men affected by hair loss are increasingly turning to a baldness solution that avoids both drugs and costly transplant surgery. Salons across the UK are offering so-called 'hair systems' – custom-made hairpieces bonded to the scalp and styled to blend seamlessly with existing hair.

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