Showing posts with label Crohn's and Colitis UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crohn's and Colitis UK. Show all posts

Monday, 23 June 2014

Junk Food and IBD... The Power of Social Media

A report for BBC Radio’s Newsbeat programme linking eating junk food with developing Crohn’s Disease has been described as ‘distressing’ and not backed up by hard evidence. We explain how the charity's members reacted and what we did behind the scenes to remedy the situation. You can also read a write up by Rachel Flint, who appeared in the interview on BBC's Breakfast programme here.


If you missed it, here is the original proramme:


The broadcast last week was then followed up by articles and broadcasts in the national media, even though there has been no definitive scientific link made to any particular diet or food additive as being a sole cause of the disease.
On our Facebook page and Twitter, hundreds of Crohn's and Colitis UK members and supporters voiced their concern and upset over the damage caused by the report.
The Charity was quick to respond to all the inaccuracies.
We ensured these misleading statements were corrected in the Daily Telegraph and Daily Mail, arranged for Professor Chris Probert from our Clinical Advisers team to appear on BBC News 24, ensured there was a change to the BBC website report, and took part in numerous regional radio interviews in addition to Radio 2’s Jeremy Vine show.
Professor Probert on BBC News 24:


A jointly-written letter published in The Times by David Barker, Chief Executive of Crohn’s and Colitis UK, and Dr Ian Forgacs, President of the British Society of Gastroenterology, explained why headlines such as the newspaper’s “Junk food diet to blame as number of youngsters with Crohn's disease soars” were simply wrong.
This statement is not supported either by scientific data or mainstream medical opinion,” says the letter.
The implication that thousands of young people with Crohn's Disease have somehow brought that exceptionally unpleasant condition on themselves is proving most distressing to them and their families. It is true that Crohn's disease is becoming more common which is only serving to make more urgent the already considerable research effort. The cause remains unknown yet it is plausible that environmental factors play a part and a number of theories have been proposed.
The letter goes on to say that while eating junk food ‘may not be wise’, there is no data to support the view that eating crisps, burgers, and pizzas predisposes anybody to developing Crohn's Disease.

To tell young people that they may have played a part in giving themselves an exceptionally unpleasant, potentially lifelong and quite incurable condition such as Crohn's Disease needs to be backed by hard evidence and that evidence is just not there,” it concludes.
We will continue to work hard on this issue and will update members in the next issue of NEWS. For more information on this subject, our booklet Food and IBD is available to download from our website or by post.


Wednesday, 25 December 2013

Merry Christmas One and All

Just a quick festive note to say thank you to all our readers and subscribers.

We've had a fantastic year in 2013, raising awareness of Inflammatory Bowel Disease amongst the general public - with a big media campaign launched in May by X Factor and Big Brother star Rylan Clark (whose mum has Crohn's) and Crohn's and Colitis UK media volunteer Amber Gamble on Sky Sunrise and 150 radio stations across the UK.

We have seen a sharp increase in visitors to the Me and IBD main website, which hopefully means we've been successful in encouraging the newly diagnosed IBDers (a staggering 10,000 young people a year) to seek support and information from Crohn's and Colitis UK.

We hope that you all have a wonderful Christmas, wherever you are in the world (we have a lot of overseas visitors). Bring good cheer to you and yours.






Saturday, 14 December 2013

Office staff wear Christmas jumpers and raise funds for Save the Children

xmas-jumper-day-icon.png (Preview)Following the success of our ‘Wear it Pink’ day in October, staff at Crohn’s and Colitis UK decided to get involved in Save the Children’s ‘Christmas Jumper Day’.


The festive jumpers have helped everyone get into the Christmas spirit, along with lunchtime Christmas carols, mulled wine (non-alcoholic of course), Christmas cupcakes and ginger cake.

While we’ve been having fun, we have also been able to support a charity who save children’s lives in some of the toughest parts of the world – from Syria to Liberia, Haiti to Bangladesh.
With huge thanks to everyone who took part and made Friday the 13th a day worth getting out of bed for.
xmas jumper-day


Thursday, 31 October 2013

IBD Standards 2013 Update Launch

Revised Standards setting out the requirements of good care for people with IBD, have been launched by Crohn’s and Colitis UK and a range of other professional organisations.

ibd-standards.png (Preview)The Standards for the Healthcare of People who have Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD Standards) were developed by the charity, the British Society of Gastroenterology, Primary Care Society of Gastroenterology, the Royal College of Nursing Gastrointestinal Nursing Forum and other leading organisations.
The IBD Standards aim to inform NHS Managers and commissioning organisations of the six essential components of a quality IBD service – high quality care, locally delivered care, a patient-centred service, patient education and support, IT and Audit and evidence- based practice and research.
In 2009, Crohn’s and Colitis UK and other organisations launched the original version of the UK IBD Standards. Since then, the UK IBD Audit has demonstrated a significant improvement in the quality of care for people with IBD. This includes improved access to IBD nurse specialists, more patient involvement in the development of IBD services and a rise in the number of services with a database of their patients.
The launch of the revised document was marked by a reception in the House of Lords, bringing together Parliamentarians, clinicians and people with the conditions, to reflect on the success of the original 2009 IBD Standards, the need for further improvement and to look ahead to a new Quality Standard from NICE in 2014.

More information



Monday, 5 August 2013

Congrats and Thank You To Carrie and David Grant

Congratulations to Carrie Grant and her husband David, for appearing on the ITV Celebrity Gameshow 'All Star Mr and Mrs' and winning £5,000 for our charity.
Here's a clip:

The TV show was originally broadcast on Sunday 4th August, but is still available online for a limited time.

Thursday, 6 June 2013

Guest Writer - Lindsay "Me and My Gremlin"


Since August 2005, I’ve had a little friend that goes everywhere with me.

Even writing that statement makes me feel a bit mental. And you probably think I am too. But, please, stick with me on this one.

So this friend. I call him my Crohn’s Gremlin.  I haven’t gone as far as giving him a real name, because that would absolutely be taking this too far, but I have him. And every time I go to do something, whether it’s book a three-month-long trip to the USA or grab a particularly spicy curry from the supermarket refrigeration aisle, he’s in my ear hissing, ‘Are you sure you should do that?’

Sometimes, I listen to him. The curry always gets put back. The three-month-long trip to the States, however, went ahead. Twice. 75% of the time, I’d say my gremlin doesn’t know what he’s talking about. The other 25%? He’s totally spot on.

Oh hey! Did you have plans today?
If you have an IBD, you probably recognise this feeling. The part fear, part ‘oh right, I should be sensible’ that comes with having a bowel condition. The rest of the population would say, ‘That is the craziest thing I’ve ever heard. How bad can a bit of tummy trouble be?’

And there’s the thing. It’s not just a bit of tummy trouble. It’s everything. It’s getting woken up in the middle of the night with a searing stomach pain and constant urge to go. It’s juggling your studies, your work, your social life with regular medication to get it all done. It’s lying in a ball on the bathroom floor when you’ve eaten something you shouldn’t have (a day when the gremlin just wasn’t loud enough). It’s hours on the toilet. It’s vomiting as soon as you eat mid-flare. It’s the worst pain you can imagine – worse than IBS like your pal’s Auntie Kath has, and 100 times worse than a dodgy kebab. It’s pain so violent you can hardly breathe – literally, your breath catches in your throat, morphs into a panic attack and you genuinely believe for a moment that you might die. It’s not having any clothes that fit because you keep on losing weight, and you really don’t want to. It’s cancelling plans and becoming the flaky friend but you just don’t have the energy. It’s being anxious about even going out in case ‘things go wrong’. And, God – it’s embarrassing. “Hi, I’m 18 years old and I have a bowel condition.”

Because that was me. 18 years old, standing on the edge of the rest of my life, with uni and hot uni boys and uni nights out and more hot uni boys (and an exciting media career once I’d got all of that out of my system) stretching out in front of me. Then it was all pulled away from under my feet when I was told that all of that? The pain and the cancelled plans and all that quality time on the loo? That’s Crohn’s disease. And you’ve got it forever.


Being in hospital, hooked up to drips of steroids and antibiotics and regular morphine injections while your mates are in the pub, is not really the dream, let’s face it. It’s probably as far away from the dream as it gets. For me, in that hospital room, surrounded by grapes and cards and soft toys (does anyone else have an abundance of soft toys from hospital stays?), I thought life was over. I hung up any hope of going to uni or having a social life, I gave up on the notion of being a journalist, of falling in love, of having babies, of being normal. And I accepted the fact that I was going to be the Girl with the Knackered Bowel forevermore.

It’s dark, having a bowel condition. And people will roll their eyes and tut at that, because, God, how melodramatic can you get? But it is. It’s lonely. Accepting that things are going to be different from now on is really, really tough, especially when you’re young. It’s accepting that you’re not going to be like your mates all the time. It’s accepting that you’ll spend a lot of time in your bathroom – to the point that you’re familiar with the pattern on each tile at eye level and you’re considering getting a magazine rack for beside the loo. 

It’s accepting that you’ll spend a lot of time at your doctor’s and in the local pharmacy. It’s accepting that you might have to research the menu before you go out for dinner, or scout out where the loos are whenever you go somewhere new. It’s accepting that, when dating, there will come a point when you have to explain that you have a really attractive bowel problem. It’s accepting a new you.

After a few months of more drugs than I even knew existed, actually starting uni, battling with people not understanding IBD at uni, missing lectures because of flare ups, dropping out of uni, dealing with crippling anxiety, very dark days, a bowel resection and having a Good Long Look at myself, I decided – d’you know what? I don’t want to be the Girl With the Knackered Bowel. I just want to be me.
"A scar does not form on the dying.
A scar means, I survived
"
Chris Cleave

And my health started to improve. The resection worked, the drugs started to kick in and, very quietly, I was ready to give it all another go. So I went back to uni, I got a degree, bagged a problem page in a Scottish national newspaper, spent two summers working at a summer camp in New York, did loads of work experience, worked weekends in retail, went on drunken holidays with my friends and, just after finishing up a journalism postgrad at university, I got offered a job with a small magazine publishers based in Glasgow. I now work full-time as the assistant editor for a range of free magazines, including disability title Enable and student magazine Source. I am busy all the time and absolutely thrilled to say I am a proper journalist – I’ve got to do some incredible things over the last couple of years.

Sure, there are bad days when I’m knocking back painkillers at my desk, going for investigative colonoscopies, woken in the middle of the night by the pain, strolling around the house with a hot water bottle clutched to my stomach and having constant battles with my gremlin, but overall? I’m good. My Crohn’s is – she says, touching every bit of wood in sight – under control. My life is under control. And there was a time when I, the Girl With the Knackered Bowel, thought I’d never get to be here.

I don’t let Crohn’s define me. I am completely open about having it – something that freaks a lot of people out because, heaven forbid, we’re British and absolutely do not talk about poo – but I don’t let it hold me back. OK, sometimes I will listen to my gremlin. Usually when it comes to ordering carbonara in restaurants or knocking back another glass of wine. But everything else? Sorry Crohn’s Gremlin, I’m absolutely going to give it a go and I’m going to try and do it well. 

And I think you should too.





Wednesday, 15 May 2013

World IBD Day - Celebrate in York

World IBD Day is the 19th May. Which is a Sunday - so give yourselves the day off to celebrate (!). People all over the globe will be doing things to celebrate, raise funds and awareness.


If you're in York, then you can celebrate by taking part in the York Walk (video below):



Starting and ending at Museum Gardens, York.
We are very excited about this year's York Walk - so dig out those walking shoes and join in the fun! Lots of people bring their families, friends and even dogs! You can Register as a walker or Register as a helper

WalkersFrom 10.30am
To warm you up for the main event, a fun-filled morning of family activities is laid on. Turn up early for music, children's entertainment, face painting and dancing at Museum Gardens.

From 12.00pm
The Walk sets off at 12.00pm, following a scenic route around York's historic city centre, including the Millennium Bridge and York Minster. We also offer a shorter and more accessible route for those who choose it.

WalkersFrom 1.00pm
After all that walking, you are invited to rest your tired legs and enjoy a family picnic. You bring the food, we'll provide the entertainment!

And finally
We are very lucky to have a team of fantastic volunteers without whom this event would not be possible. If you would like to help at the start and finish point, on the check-in desk or marshalling on the route, or in any other way - suggestions welcome - please register to join the volunteer team.  Click here to volunteer to help at this walk

Watch the video:

Be Brave Too

A wise man said yesterday ... in reference to Angelina Jolie's brave decision to have a double mastectomy and go public with the news to raise awareness... that 20 years ago, breast cancer was a taboo. Inflammatory Bowel Disease (given its sensitive nature) is today's taboo. Let's hope that through initiatives like Me and IBD we will get our generation to be open and honest about bowels. First breasts, then bowels!

Coming up soon is a guest blog from Lindsay, who will be talking about Standing Up and Speaking Out









Tuesday, 23 April 2013

Why Not Share Your Real Stories of Life with IBD?

There's nothing better than hearing from others who are going through the same thing as you - whether it's practical problems, emotions or worries. The same goes for living with IBD (Crohn's and Colitis). For that reason, we're featuring guest blogs from young people who have got something to tell you about their lives. So far we've heard from Vicky and Sadie and we've got others coming up for you.


Is there something you'd like to share with other IBDers? Perhaps you'd like to reassure someone who's just been diagnosed or are just going through the diagnosis process yourself and want to share your experiences? Maybe you've lived with IBD for some time now and would like to offer some guidance on the day-to-day things that help you? Or maybe you want to share a funny story?!



                                                                           sad                  
                                                                              happy
                                     worried
                                                                             Real Stories         
                                                                        Tips            
                                                                Strategies
                                                         positive
                                             Questions
                                 Humour

Whatever you'd like to share, we'd like to hear from you. Get in touch to find out more or to send in a guest blog post: crohnsandcolitisukpress@yahoo.co.uk  We will link back to your blog if you have one.



Tuesday, 2 April 2013

What's all this about then?


The Me and IBD microsite is brought to you by leading charity Crohn's and Colitis UK and has been set up with young people with IBD in mind. We've tried to get as much as information in one place as possible - without bombarding you with too much at once! 

You might have just been diagnosed, or have been living with IBD for a while and just want a bit more information. Maybe things are changing in your life and you want to understand how IBD might affect your next steps? Can you cope with Crohn's disease at University? Can you go travelling with ulcerative colitis? If you're taking your first career move and not sure if you have to tell your boss about your IBD? We've got information on how to deal with these things and more. Go to the Your Questions pages for more...

The microsite forms a part of the main Crohn's and Colitis UK website, but really focuses on what it's like to be a young person with Crohn's or colitis. It really hones in on the things that are important to you.

So check it out, have an explore and if there's anything you think is missing - let us know! It's all about you... what you need and expect out of life.