Health

Alf Clausen, Emmy-winning 'Simpsons' composer, dies at 84

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Stocks   来源:TV  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:I'm sitting in the back of an ambulance outside the emergency department at the Grange University Hospital in Cwmbran.

I'm sitting in the back of an ambulance outside the emergency department at the Grange University Hospital in Cwmbran.

He said: "We are oversubscribed last year on our budget and we were oversubscribed this year, and it's not because of a lack of discipline, there is a lot of savings going on, the cost of health requirements are going up exponentially, way above the cost of living."The minister told the scrutiny panel that he would need in "excess of £100m in five years to improve preventative care including women's health, and I want that as additional money. I don't care where that money comes from, even if it's the strategic reserve."

Alf Clausen, Emmy-winning 'Simpsons' composer, dies at 84

Doublet said she was concerned by those remarks.She said: "It is concerning that the strategic reserve fund might be used for health funding, and that's something the panel will be discussing and we will be questioning the minister further on that."A 40-year-old woman who was denied a life-extending cancer drug because it is not available in Wales has died.

Alf Clausen, Emmy-winning 'Simpsons' composer, dies at 84

Rachel Davies, from Swansea, who was diagnosed with secondary breast cancer, which spread to her bones, back, pelvis and neck, announced her death in aShe wrote on Facebook: "If you're reading this, then it means I'm no longer here, I can't say to a better place as that is impossible!"

Alf Clausen, Emmy-winning 'Simpsons' composer, dies at 84

and a Welsh government spokesperson said it relied on independent advice from health assessment body NICE, which called it too expensive for the NHS to fund.

Rachel wrote: "What a life I've had, and surprisingly, since cancer entered my life.He remembered his family being welcomed off the boat in Alderney by the Army and Salvation Army before the family were put up in a hotel.

For him and his twin brother, life on the island was a "big adventure because there were guns on the cliffs that were working, there were trenches and bunkers to be explored".He was speaking clutching a photograph of himself and his brother, which was framed by a German prisoner of war after their return.

"There was a lot of work because the houses were such a mess, there was no glass in the windows and no front door," he said."For me, it was a big adventure, but when you see the other side of what our parents had lost and what they had to do to get back up, I don't think that should ever be forgotten."

copyright © 2025 powered by FolkMusicInsider   sitemap