There is help available for anyone in Cambridgeshire with mental health issues.
- Credit: ARCHANT
This week, the Hunts Post launches its third We Need To Talk feature. For the month of January, and beyond, we want to offer support and advice for anyone struggling with their mental health and wellbeing.
There are lots of services available for people in the area and anyone experiencing anxiety, depression and stress is being urged to seek help.
The Cambridgeshire & Peterborough CCG has brought together mental organisations and charities under one umbrella to ensure there is a wide spectrum of support available.
Dr James Clarke, registered clinical psychologist and CPFT PWS service Lead, said: “Mental ill-health will affect one in four people during their lifetime, and it’s also widely known that the effects of Covid-19 have adversely affected mental health and wellbeing so it is important that people know that our service continues to operate and people can get the help the
“We have all worked hard to keep rates of the virus down in the county and so it is disappointing that infections are now rising quickly once again, but news of the variant can perhaps explain why this is happening. The impact this will have on so many of our residents saddens me, as well as the businesses that I know will once again have to close.
“Moving into Tier 4 will have an effect on people’s lives, but on its own it won’t drive down rates. We need people to do even more to break the chain of infection and stop Covid in its tracks.
Brooklyn Man Allegedly Spent Some Of $2 Million PPP Loan On Flashy Bentley And Escalade
arrow Leon Miles posed for an Instagram photo next to one of the luxury cars he allegedly purchased with federal emergency COVID loan money intended for struggling small business owners. Instagram
A Brooklyn man faces up to 20 years in prison after being accused of fraudulently securing $1.9 million in forgivable loans through the Paycheck Protection Program, using a portion of the funds to buy the most recent Bentley and Escalade vehicle, according to federal authorities.
Leon Miles is accused of applying to the loan program, in which funds to small businesses struggling during the pandemic are forgiven if they go towards keeping workers employed. Miles allegedly used a limited liability company under his name 114 Macon LLC, a nod to his home address in Crown Heights to apply for $1.9 million in PPP money in May, and submitted bogus IRS paperwork to back up his false