was a lot of slippage. and things can slip very, very fast with an eating disorder. joss feared for her own life. she grew increasingly desperate. i sought out my gp s number of her own home, and ijust rang her at her home one evening and kind of put my foot down, and said, look, i m really scared for my life and i really need you to advocate for me, to fight for me, because the services just keep putting me on waiting lists and just keep telling me either your weight s not low enough or we don t have room for you. the charity beat says medical schools need to do a betterjob of teaching doctors about how to treat eating disorders. at the moment, two thirds of people who go to their gp report that they don t get the referral for assessment, that they should get. that the nice guidelines say they should get. so the medical professionals, they want to do a good job, but the system that s letting them down and eating disorders patients down is the medical training establishment because t
they want to do a good job. but the system that is letting them down and eating disorder patients down is the medical training establishment. the general medical council says that eating disorders are a complex, high risk area of practice that should be covered in every doctor s education. we ve asked medical schools to develop a common approach to improve how eating disorders are taught at medical school. joss has turned her life around, she is now working for the nhs as a psychologist. i am very, very proud ofjoss. she has come so far. you know, she has accomplished so much. i don t know how to put it into words, really. we really are enormously proud of her. zoe conway, bbc news. for details of organisations which offer advice and support with eating disorders, go online to bbc.co.uk/actionline.
putting me on waiting lists and just kept telling me your weight is not low enough or we don t have room for you. the charity beat says medical schools need to do a betterjob of training doctors. at the moment, two thirds of people who go to their gp report that they don t get the referral for assessment that they should get, that the nice guidelines say they should get. so the medical professionals, they want to do a good job. but the system that is letting them down and eating disorder patients down is the medical training establishment. the general medical council says that eating disorders are a complex, high risk area of practice that should be covered in every doctor s education. we ve asked medical schools to develop a common approach to improve how eating disorders are taught at medical school. joss has turned her life around, she is now working for the nhs as a psychologist. i am very, very proud ofjoss. she has come so far.
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NEW DELHI: The massive requirement of oxygen availability across the country for COVID-19 patients has acquired the focus of the Indian Air Force (IAF) and the Navy, who have raised the scale of their operations.
Naval warships have been ferrying oxygen-laden containers from friendly foreign countries and Air Force is flying such medical equipment not only to India from abroad but also is distributing it to various locations within the country.
The navy has deployed its nine warships under the Operation Samudra Setu. The deployed ships - INS Talwar, INS Kolkata, INS Airavat, INS Kochi, INS Tabar, INS Trikand, INS Jalashwa and INS Shardul - will ferry oxygen containers/cylinders/concentrators and related equipment from friendly foreign countries.