Latest News for Parents & Carers
Tony Hickmott: Autistic man to be released after 21 years in hospital
An autistic man who has been held in a secure hospital for 21 years has been told he can finally go home. Tony Hickmott, 45, was sectioned after he had a mental health crisis in 2001, and despite a long fight by his family, he has not been released since. Last year, a judge criticised his detention, telling authorities to find a home near his parents, in Brighton.
Deaf representation on TV
Deaf representation on TV is continuing to grow with a deaf contestant on Channel 4’s Handmade: Britain’s Best Woodworker and comedian John Bishop’s new documentary and comedy show – John & Joe Bishop: Life After Deaf – in which he learns about British Sign Language (BSL) and deaf awareness with his son, Joe, who lives with hearing loss, and presents a fully-signed comedy show.
Woman leaves £30k in will for new wildlife hub
A new wildlife hub for children with disabilities has opened, built from funds a woman left in her will. Olwen McPherson gave £30,000 to the Dorothy Clive Garden in Market Drayton, Shropshire, to build the hub for children to connect with wildlife. Ms McPherson was the founder of The AbleChild Trust, a charity that helps children with disabilities.
‘My mum is the only thing keeping me alive’
A woman has credited her mother with keeping her alive, after she quit her job to care for her and her brother. Avneet, 21, and her brother Eeshar, 25, from Derby, have cystinosis, a rare, genetic disease that damages their kidneys and, for which there is no cure.
The ‘accessible queue’ for the Queen ‘was discriminatory and a shambles’
Disabled people who struggled for hours to queue to pay their respects to the Queen at the lying-in-state in Westminster Hall say the government treated them as an “afterthought” and that its “discriminatory” arrangements were “a shambles”. Many disabled people travelled from across the country to reach the Tate Britain art gallery in central London, where they queued for hours for a wristband that only allowed them to join the “accessible queue” to view the Queen’s coffin hours later, and sometimes not until the following day. By the weekend, disabled people were reporting having to queue for up to eight hours (pictured) just to obtain a wristband.
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