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The Grange

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About The Grange


The Grange is a suburb of Edinburgh, about one and a half miles south of the city centre, with Morningside and Greenhill to the west, Newington to the east, and Marchmont to the north. It is a conservation area characterised by large late Victorian stone-built villas, often with very large gardens.

Pregnancy loss: Woman distressed by scan reminder after miscarriage

Pregnancy loss: Woman distressed by scan reminder after miscarriage
Nov 17,2023 8:41 pm

... Emma said while she was on the gynaecological ward at The Grange University Hospital in Cwmbran following treatment, she heard a woman screaming while giving birth...

NHS Wales: Patient in hospital for weeks due to social care backlog

NHS Wales: Patient in hospital for weeks due to social care backlog
Feb 15,2023 10:31 pm

... At The Grange University Hospital in Cwmbran, six miles north of the Royal Gwent, I witness the impact in one of the busiest emergency departments in Wales...

Can we make the internet less power-thirsty?

Can we make the internet less power-thirsty?
Feb 9,2023 9:41 pm

... But The Grange Castle arrangement is claimed to be the first time a live, dynamic relationship has been established between a data centre and a national grid...

NHS Wales: Man carries grandad into hospital amid ambulance shortage

NHS Wales: Man carries grandad into hospital amid ambulance shortage
Jan 4,2023 2:31 pm

... In desperation, Mr Parsons drove and then carried the 83-year-old, who had suffered a cardiac arrest, into The Grange Hospital near Cwmbran, Torfaen...

A& E wait: Frustration over disabled man's 48-hour ordeal

A& E wait: Frustration over disabled man's 48-hour ordeal
Dec 30,2022 12:01 am

... One of David Williams clients, who has severe epilepsy, had been taken to The Grange Hospital near Cwmbran, Torfaen complaining of chest pain...

WhatsApp groups help get food to those who need it

WhatsApp groups help get food to those who need it
Nov 17,2022 8:51 pm

... For each of the communities she is plugged into, she runs a WhatsApp group, such as the one she set up in 2018 for dozens of people who live on The Grange Farm Estate in Harrow, north-west London...

Train tracks fall woman looks for her lifesaver

Train tracks fall woman looks for her lifesaver
Jul 21,2022 6:10 pm

... " Tegan, who works at The Grange University Hospital in Cwmbran, has taken time off work to recover and has had anxiety and panic attacks...

Avondale Grange: Life in a 'left behind' England neighbourhood

Avondale Grange: Life in a 'left behind' England neighbourhood
Jul 14,2022 5:40 am

... The ward included Avondale and The Grange estates, which straddle a busy road heading towards the town centre...

WhatsApp groups help get food to those who need it

Apr 16,2022 9:15 am

By Chris BaraniukTechnology of Business reporter

" Hey everyone, there's a food delivery today at 3pm. " " Thanks for the curry, it was amazing! " " I made pickles This Week . " " Should we all have an outing somewhere soon? "

These are the kind of messages that fly back and forth, pretty much constantly, on Rachel Diamond's phone.

Ms Diamond is The Founder of My Yard, a charity. For each of the communities she is plugged into, She Runs a WhatsApp group, Such as The One she Set Up in 2018 for dozens of people who live on The Grange Farm Estate in Harrow, north-west London.

" It not only feeds people, it brings the community together, " explains Ms Diamond.

Many residents on The Estate are among The Who are currently experiencing food insecurity.

The cost of living crisis has sent. You'll have heard of food banks but food aid takes many different forms. Some are less visible than others and, around the country, many people are now quietly organising the sharing and redistribution of food themselves.

Often, it starts with a WhatsApp group for friends and neighbours.

When she first started working with The Grange Farm Estate community, Ms Diamond found that using a messaging app allowed her to organise deliveries of food donated by supermarkets and local businesses at The Residents ' convenience.

" It was a stigma-free way of people accessing food and getting to know each other, " she says. " For me, it's really, really special. "

Now she has about 20 groups that are swapping messages about food.

It has helped her keep In Touch with those who have dietary requirements or particular preferences. Some of the elderly people find that The Price of Spam has gone up a lot lately, so she gets dented tins unwanted by shops.

Everyone is different, she stresses, asking me to imagine freezing a supermarket In Time and having a look inside every shopper's basket: " I bet you'd never find two baskets with the same things in. That is people's lives. "

She aims to supply a diverse variety of food that suits everyone. But due to inflation, the overall need is growing. " It's devastating, " says Ms Diamond, referring to the cost of living crisis.

On one recent delivery, a van arrived packed with pallets of food including fresh fruit and vegetables, breads and yoghurt, among other items. Everything went in about ten minutes, she says. It used to take noticeably longer.

While Ms Diamond has been running WhatsApp groups for communities for years, new ones are springing up all The Time elsewhere.

Last November, Camille Desprez, founder of Food Next Door , launched a group for The Residents of her block of flats in Brixton so that they could share surplus food with one another and cut down on waste.

" [It's] working super well. We Are able to save food almost every week, " she says.

Ms Desprez has since developed the idea into the Food Next Door project, which has More Than 100 members and which is establishing WhatsApp groups across More Than a dozen neighbourhoods in London and Paris.

One benefit, she adds, is that people can save money on food, noting that among those currently taking part are some refugees.

Zero Waste initiatives that help people in poverty are a " positive side-effect" of The Movement , says Zero Waste consultant Rachelle Strauss.

" People are genuinely very frightened and very scared about their future, " she adds, noting the seriousness of the current situation.

While WhatsApp, being so widely used, has its benefits, it also has downsides, says Prof Reem Talhouk at Northumbria University . The messaging app sometimes goes down for hours at a time. This could be significant for anyone depending on the app for aid or their livelihood.

Alternative apps include Telegram and Signal. Volunteers for the Foodshare Allotment at Nottingham Trent University stay In Touch via Microsoft Teams chat. Some food from their allotment goes to food banks, community kitchens and local families.

And plenty of people share food without much need for the latest Technology - Such as Ursula Juta, Senior Project officer at the Norfolk Rivers Trust, who puts a basket full of surplus veg from her allotment on her Garden Wall . People in her village can enjoy the produce for free.

Another issue with WhatsApp and other Social Media platforms raised by Prof Talhouk is that they can sometimes be used for, scamming and.

" That's always something that we need to consider, " she says.

And yet the potential power of messaging apps is hard to overstate. Another food aid provider who uses WhatsApp is Emily Connally, Managing Director of Cherwell Collective, a non-profit in Oxford.

" We can mobilise 200 people with one text, " she says, noting how she doesn't Get As immediate a response on Facebook as she does via her WhatsApp group. This matters because she sometimes receives a donation of food that is near to its use by date, meaning it must be distributed very quickly.

The Local Pret a Manger recently donated a surplus of 165 sandwiches. A message went out to the WhatsApp group and people had collected all the sandwiches within an hour, says Dr Connally.

Hundreds of locals rely on the food aid that she and her colleagues provide. " We've seen a pretty dramatic increase and I think it will get much, much worse, " she says, referring to rising food prices.

Cherwell Collective was founded during the pandemic. Prof Talhouk suggests that local community groups that respond to crises might need support, for example from local authorities, to continue their work long-term.

Back at My Yard, Rachel Diamond stresses that the impact of the groups She Runs is not restricted to food aid. People help each other out with other problems, too. They confront loneliness and strengthen social bonds.

" I find it absolutely fascinating, " she says, " watching people grow in their friendships - and their hope".



Source of news: bbc.com

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