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Victoria Lambert's content

The event runs from Monday 21 to Sunday 28 January.


It was started by Jo’s Trust, the only UK charity dedicated to women affected by cervical cancer and cervical abnormalities.


Two women lose their lives to the disease every day and nine women are diagnosed every day.


It is the most common cancer in women aged 35 and under.


The charity have started the social media campaign #SmearForSmear, where women are encouraged to post a selfie with smeared lipstick.


Supermodel Cara Delevingne, Game of Thrones actress Nathalie Emmanauel and Loose Women panellists Nadia Sawalha and Kaye Adams have all previously supported the campaign.


Smear tests prevent in 75% of cervical cancers from developing but still ONE in FOUR women do not go to their appointments.


Visit www.jostrust.org.uk for more information.

Famous faces: Supermodel Cara Delevigne pictured with smeared makeup in support of the cause

by Victoria Lambert

Cervical Cancer Awareness Week begins

The Lincolnshire West Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) has voted to continue with the closure of the Monks Road medical centre. The meeting was held at The Showroom in Lincoln on Wednesday, January 24.

 

The centre, where no-appointment is required, has been open since 2009 and provides care for those with medical issues deemed non-urgent. It has been open form 8am – 8pm.

 

Lincolnshire West CCG had already agreed to close the centre in September last year, but were forced to review the decision after many objections from the public.

 

Opening hours will be reduced to weekends from the start of February and an Out-of-Hours service will be provided from March 1 through to the middle April.

 

The announcement followed a questionnaire in which 94% of participants objected to the closure.

 

Protests were held outside Lincoln County Hospital and along Lincoln High Street. Both the Conservative-led Lincolnshire County Council and the Labour-led Lincoln City Council formally objected to the closure.

 

Lincoln MP Karen Lee had previously written to the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, Jeremy Hunt, to request that the decision be reviewed.

 

Lee said: “As a healthcare professional, I understand that the delivery of health care changes and evolves with the passing of time. However, I am not supportive of the closure of the walk-in centre because it is my belief that its closure is a downgrading of the health provision my constituents will be able to access.

 

“Further to that, I am uncomfortable that the consultation process undertaken does not appear to have been a meaningful one, given that 94% of respondents expressed the wish for the walk-in-centre to remain open and the voice of local people has been ignored.

 

“The walk-in centre’s closure is likely to put A&E under an even greater strain than it already is. I have seen first-hand the pressures the hard-working A&E professionals are already experiencing.”

 

The CCG argued that according to its own research, 95% of walk-in centre patients had medical issues that could be treated elsewhere.

 

The also said a large proportion of visitors were students of the University of Lincoln. But, they later admitted that they made up just a small percentage of the 30,000 visitors each year.

 

The Walk-in Centre will be formally closed at the end of February.

Closure: CCGs finally decided on the fate of the Walk-In Centre on Monks Road, after months of protest from residents and students

by Victoria Lambert

Lincoln Walk-In Centre to close

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Over 15,000 parking tickets have been issued in Lincolnshire between July and December 2017. 

Lincoln had just over 5,000 Penalty Charge Notices (PCNs) in the six months, accounting for a third of tickets issued across the county. 

Almost £500,000 was collected from the fines.

 

Lincolnshire County Council said the money is being used to meet the costs of running the service. 

5.7 percent of the 15,212 tickets that were issued in the county were successfully revoked. 

Figures also revealed that an average of one in three PCNs challenged were revoked in the city.

Fleur Cornthwaite-Smith, a student at the University of Lincoln, was fined £25 for parking 10 metres outside of her designated zone on a street where she rents a house. 

She bought a residents parking permit for £50 to avoid any fines. "The rules were really not clear. I was not aware that my road was split into two different zones. 

"I definitely won't be making the same mistake again."

Expensive: £500,000 has been collected from the fines

Lincolnshire County Council hands out 15,000 parking fines in six months

© 2018 by The Lincoln Standard

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