PPE for unpaid carers

Do you look after a friend or relative who  otherwise couldn’t manage without your help?

This may be because of illness, frailty, disability, a mental health need or an addiction.  And it may be someone who you live with or someone who lives in a different household.

Leeds City Council are taking part in a 2 month pilot with the Department of Health and Social Care to provide unpaid carers with PPE.

The pilot will help the Department of Health and Social Care to better understand likely demand from unpaid carers for PPE and how best to distribute it, as well as informing decisions as to whether the pilot continues beyond the initial two months.

If you care for someone and the PPE would help you, please contact Caring Together and we can help to submit an order for this

Once the order form has been received, you will be contacted to discuss the order.  Delivery will then be within 72 hours.

The PPE will be free of charge

Shared Moments: ‘Quizzes’ written by Oliver Cross

I like quizzes, especially during lockdowns, which is a word I didn’t expect to see pluralised because I was given to understand that The Lockdown would be a one-off way a way to banish Covid-19, just The War was a one-off way to banish Nazis.

Still, if we have to live through recurrent periods of social isolation and taking up unviable hobbies, TV quizzes may be a way forward. They are little more than a pleasurable way of wasting time but can be plausibly disguised as challenging intellectual exercises essential to our mental health.

This works better in quizzes which have brainy contestants, such as Mastermind or University Challenge, because, even if you are only able to answer a couple of questions, you have a chance of outwitting the combined forces of Brasenose College, Oxford, or the sort of Mastermind contestant who, despite knowing almost everything, has never heard of Ed Sheeran.

Lynne and I have taken to watching, as a diversion from the  lockdown wilderness, the early evening BBC1 show Pointless, in which couples of all sorts (mainly spouses, friends, colleagues and relatives) compete for a basic prize of £1,000, which wouldn’t be life-changing for most of them because they tend to be comfortably retired or working in jobs with titles I don’t understand but sound very important, which is one of my unfulfilled career ambitions.

This makes them very gracious losers, just like departing President Trump isn’t, and the mood of the show is as amiable as our other favourite teatime viewing, Richard Osman’s House of Games  (BBC2).

Osman, who also co-hosts Pointless, looks like someone who enjoys quizzing not for the fame or money but for its own sake, which is a very important, although far from universal, quality in quizmasters – Jeremy Paxman, for example, has yet to master it, despite doing it for so long that his hair has turned white and he has to wear glasses all the time, which I’ve only recently noticed because, before lockdown, I didn’t arrange my life around watching TV game shows.

Now Mondays finds me in a kind of voluntary lockdown because, after watching the two Osman shows, we have a short break to sharpen our wits (usually wasted because our toolbox doesn’t contain a wit-sharpener or, if it does, we’ve no idea what it looks like) and then we watch, in turn, Mastermind, Only Connect and University Challenge.

Only Connect (BBC2), which is one of our lockdown revelations, isn’t really a quiz show; it deals more in puzzles which only people with good general knowledge can solve. The contestants remind me somehow of the contestants on the Robert Robinson  BBC show Ask The Family, which ran – later under Alan Titchmarsh – from 1967 to 2005.

Both shows have a kinship because they involve quick thinking and high intelligence and produce a similar look among the participants; a disregard for the glamour of being on telly, and an impression that they are less concerned with getting their hair of clothes right than with the sheer joy of quizzing, which is as it should be.

Thank you so much for this Oliver, until next time…..

Lunchtime Talk: Online event – Magic & Sparkle: M&S at Christmas

Join the M&S Archive for some festive nostalgia as they trace the story of M&S Christmas food and merchandise through the archive collection, from the first mince pies to all-time favourite stocking fillers.

Online event - Magic & Sparkle: M&S at Christmas

Online Event

This is a pre-recorded talk featuring original archive images introduced by our Archivist, who will be available to respond to questions during and following the talk.

Friday 11th December 12.45-1.15pm

Running time – 30 minutes.

Booking Details

Advance booking is essential, you’ll receive full details of how to join the event with your booking confirmation email.

Click here to book your free place.

Covid Scam Alert – Christmas Edition

The latest Monthly alert outlines trending fraud patterns during the current COVID-19 pandemic and what we can do to stay protected. There have been further reports of scams, doorstep Crime and business complaints all relating to the COVID-19 pandemic here in West Yorkshire.

This news alert will give you an indication of the current situation here in West Yorkshire.

This edition also includes Christmas Shopping tips and advice to help you keep safe from seasonal scams

covid19 scam alert issue 21

Poetry Corner: ‘A Yorkshire poem’ by Lynda Goodwin

A Yorkshire poem by Lynda Goodwin

Alf’s Big Surprise! 😳

It wer a baking bank ‘oliday weekend,
an Alf ad nowt to do,
id sent their lass up tahn tot shops,
it being er birthday too.

So nah is on is tod all day –
e thought it through and through,
e drummed is fingers on is knees
an giv is pipe a chew.

“Ah know” e said, a gret big smile
spread slowly cross is chops,
“Al put misen to some good use
while shis spendin dahn at shops.

“Al build a pond int garden –
al mek it big an wide,
so shick’n sit wit glass int and
ont deckchair by it’s side.”

E went n fetched a pick n spade,
a rusty ammer too,
a crowbar juster prize aht rocks –
thes barned to bi a few!

Alf huffed n puffed an dug all day
tilt sweat dripped offer is noowas,
it trickled dahn is achin back
an sooaked is mucky cloowas.

E pushed is foot ont spade once moor –
but t’spade it wouldn’t budge,
id it a box deep dahn int soil
all covered up wi sludge.

“Av farned sum treasure!” Alf did gasp
an plonked dahn ontot grass,
“Dunt think al oppen it misen,
al leave it for ah lass!”

Alf dug no more, just smiled and grinned,
by gum, ow well id done!
not just a pond – but jewels fer er,
an stretched aht undert sun.

Id nodded off when she gor ome –
Shi froze n stared in shock –
then marched up to is side n glared
at tin set out ont rock.

“It’s all fer you!” Alf blinked is eyes
an beamed from ear to ear,
“A thought that thad bi overt moon,
look warrav found thi ere!”

“Ye can’t” she wailed, “wot ave yer done?”
“Ey lass dunt speyk in riddles”
“Am not!” she cried “just purrit back –
that’s weer wi buried Tiddles!!”

“Oh well” thought Alf to imsen, “thell be other birthdays.”

sourced: i yorkshire. com

Covid Vaccine comes to Leeds

Leeds is one of  50 places in the country that can offer the Pfizer vaccine this week.  The first phase of vaccinations will be taking place within hospitals but GPs are expected to be able to start administering these vaccines from next week.  You will be contacted once you are eligible to make arrangements to receive the vaccine.  
There is a lot of conflicting information out there so please discuss any concerns you may have with your GP or trusted health professional.
More details on the vaccine & initial roll out nationally nhs.uk/covidvaccine
Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust said:

“Our amazing teams across the NHS in Leeds and Leeds City Council are proud to be part of the first wave of the national NHS vaccination programme.

On Tuesday, we will be starting to vaccinate people across Leeds in the groups identified as a priority by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) – patients over 80, care home staff and NHS staff who are at risk from coronavirus.
At first, we will be arranging appointments directly with people eligible to receive the vaccination. Watch this space for news about wider access to the vaccine, as soon as it can be made available.
Our Chief Medical Officer, Dr Phil Wood, said today: “Our incredible staff have been at the forefront of the response to the Coronavirus pandemic, supporting each other, saving lives, leading vaccine research, and holding hands with patients in isolation who sadly never recovered to return to their loved ones.
“We have worked committedly, with compassion and with hope towards the day we could begin vaccinating people to help prevent further tragedy. We know the struggle is not yet over but reaching this momentous point is a tremendous achievement.”

Staff from across health and care organisations in Leeds are working together to put in place plans to deliver this national vaccination programme to everyone in our community who would like to have the vaccine.”

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Foodbank Donation Drive – Thank you to all who helped

 From Cllrs Pryor, Walshaw & Garthwaite:
Thank you so much to everyone who’s helped with our Christmas foodbank donation drive today, it’s easily been the biggest one yet!
🎉 We’re so grateful to everyone who donated and everyone who hosted a donation station for us. Together we can make a huge difference to our community

‘Monday Mind Workout’ – answers for Monday 7th December 2020

Yesterday’s Monday Mind Workout was based on 60s music – see the answers below:

1.True or false: Penny Lane is named after a real street in London – False, it’s street is in Liverpool
2. Who is the lead singer of The Who? Roger Doltrey
3.It’s Now or Never was the first 60s number one for which musical icon? Elvis Presley
4.Who sang the title track of 60s Bond film Thunderball? Tom Jones
5.Which Daydream Believer band initially began as a fictional band on a sitcom? The Monkees

6.Peter, Paul and Mary famously sang Leaving on a Jet Plane – but who wrote and sang the original version? John Denver
7.What is the best selling single of the 1960s in the UK? She Loves you by the Beatles
8.Which UK comedian had the best-selling UK single of 1965? Ken Dodd with Tears
9.The Animals formed in which UK city? Newcastle
10.What was the name of Tom Jones’ first number one in 1965, later popularised by Carlton in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air? It’s Not unusual
11.Which iconic BBC music show premiered on 1st January 1964? Top of the Pops
12. Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polkadot Bikini was a 1990 hit for Bombalurina, but who sang the 1960 original? Brian Hyland
13. Which band were recording their first album at Abbey Road while The Beatles were recording Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Band? Pink Floyd
14. How many number one albums did Cilla Black have in the 60s? None, her first number one album was in 2015
15.Which American rocker was the final performer at Woodstock festival in 1969? Jimi Hendrix
16.Jim Morrison was the lead singer of which controversial band? The Doors
17.Name the song: “All the leaves are brown, And the sky is grey…” California Dreamin by The Mamas and The Papas

18.How many number ones did The Beatles have during the 1960s in the UK? 17

19.Gimme Shelter and Paint It Black were hits for which legendary British band? The Rolling Stones

20.Which blonde bombshell became the face of country music in the 60s? Dolly Parton

Christmas Music by Candlelight (The Shows Must Go On)

The Shows Must Go On brings us Ex Cathedra’s Christmas By Candlelight from 7pm tonight and then available all through December.

In the deep, still darkness, only candles pierce the winter gloom. And then, upon the silence, comes the luminous sound of a choir in harmony. With a sequence of Christmas music old and new, this concert is a uniquely magical way to begin your festive season

Ex Cathedra is a leading UK choir and Early Music ensemble with a repertoire that reaches from the 12th to the 21st centuries.   More information on Ex Cathedra Singing Medicine: www.singingmedicine.co.uk