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سبتمبرWayne Carey throws his support behind Melbourne's India Fashion Week
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'Mr Carey is prescribed anti-inflammatories and pain killing medicine to help manage the significant pain caused by debilitating football injuries - including a shoulder that needs replacing and a neck injury that requires three discs to be replaced,' he said upon taking up the Carey case.
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Carey, who has been scrubbed from TV after being caught in Perth with a bag of white powder, will attend the event alongside Kevin Sheedy, Anthony Koutoufides, Dustin Fletcher, Trent Croad, Kate Jesaulenko and Matthew Richardson.
It would cost more than £8,000 to fill a ten-year gap, but it would result in a £55,000 boost over a 20-year retirement, according to Quilter.
Check your NI record at: gov.uk/check- national-insurance-record.
Sarah Duffy, 34, from Manchester, rolled over on her ankle aged 26, and began to suffer from weak and brittle bones which led to her diagnosis of osteoporosis, which normally affects people aged 80 and over.
Speaking at a press conference on Wednesday, Dr Kirkup said the inquiry had heard 'harrowing' accounts from families receiving 'suboptimal' care, with mothers ignored by staff and shut out from their own care.
More than 200 families gave evidence to the review which exposes a catalogue of serious failings including how newborns died needlessly due to poor care planning over several years, while parents' concerns were ignored.
Speaking at a press conference at Leas Cliff Hall in Folkestone, Danielle Clark, mother to Noah described the difficult labour and birth she went through at QEQM: 'I had a son in 2013, I was induced but the reason I was induced was never communicated.
He said: 'While there have been some positive changes in leadership including your appointment as chair and the appointment of a new chief executive, there remains a cancer at the top of the organisation.
Dr Bill Kirkup published a report into maternity services at East Kent Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, which runs hospitals including QEQM Hospital in Margate and the William Harvey Hospital in Ashford.
Helen Gittos lost her newborn daughter Harriet at The Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother Hospital in Margate in 2014, one of the hospitals being probed as part of the independent review, set to be published this morning.
'He ended up in special care, in resuscitation. At eight weeks old he had to have emergency surgery because things had been missed, stem programs near me he wasn't gaining weight, he was dying in front of our eyes basically.'
'The induction then took three days, I should have been offered an emergency C-section, but instead they gave me too much induction gel, over the Nice (National Institute for Health and Care Excellence) guidelines.
'I want to say sorry and apologise unreservedly for the harm and suffering that has been experienced by the women and babies who were within our care, together with their families, as described in today's report,' she said.
She said: 'We are committed to preventing families from going through the same pain in future and are working closely with the NHS to continue improving the quality of care for mothers and babies with support teams for trusts, backed by £127 million to grow the workforce and improve neonatal care.
Following the release of the report, Health Minister Dr Caroline Johnson said she was 'deeply sorry to all the families that have suffered and continue to suffer from the tragedies detailed in Dr Bill Kirkup's review'.
Meanwhile, in 17 cases of brain damage, 12 (72% of cases) could have had a different outcome if good care had been given, of which nine should reasonably have been expected to have had a different outcome.
'An overriding theme, raised us with time and time again, is the failure of the trust's staff to take notice of women when they raised concerns, when they questioned their care, and when they challenged the decisions that were made about their care,' the report said.
Speaking ahead of the report's publication on Wednesday, Dr Kirkup said an expert panel investigating maternity care at East Kent Hospitals University NHS Foundation Trust heard a lot of 'harrowing accounts' from families during their work.
He said: 'When I reported on Morecambe Bay maternity services in 2015, I did not imagine for one moment that I would be back in seven years' time talking about a rather similar set of circumstances and that there would have been another two large, high-profile maturity failures as well on top of that.