Lowlands Reserve Forces and Cadets Association (RFCA)
The RFCA for the Lowlands of Scotland supports reserves, cadets and the wider military through our partnerships with employers, defence and civic communities.
From: Contents
RFCA Crown Copyright.
Caitlin Fitzsimmons used first aid skills, she learned with the Army Cadet Force, to help her partner’s mother when she stopped breathing and went into anaphylactic shock. Read the fully story at Cadet Force adult volunteer saves woman’s life thanks to army cadet first aid training.
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Lowland
RFCA advises and assists the Defence Council on issues involving the Sea Cadet Corps (SCC), Army Cadet Force (ACF) and RAF Air Cadets (RAFAC) across the Lowlands of Scotland.
Cadet Force adult volunteer saves woman’s life thanks to army cadet first aid training
Caitlin Fitzsimmons used first aid skills, she learned with the Army Cadet Force, to help her partner’s mother when she stopped breathing and went into anaphylactic shock.
From: Caitlin Fitzimmons. Lowland RFCA Crown Copyright.
A Cadet Force Adult Volunteer has been hailed a hero after saving a woman’s life with the first aid skills she gained with the Army Cadet Force.
Caitlin Fitzsimmons was able to effectively support her partner’s mother, Mary-Ann Shankland, who went into an anaphylactic shock after digesting honeycomb-flavoured ice cream.
âToo many think silence is consentâ: Victim says rape âendemicâ in eastern suburbs
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A young woman from the eastern suburbs who secured a conviction against a former friend who raped her at a party says the court process is traumatising and Australia still has a culture of blaming the victim.
In a week where the national focus was on former political staffer Brittany Higgins, who was allegedly raped by a colleague at Parliament House two years ago, Elena Brown (not her real name) was reliving her own ordeal after it was reported in the media last weekend.
There’s a strong case to supplement our current testing arrangements with rapid antigen testing in key risk areas, detecting and isolating COVID-19 infections even earlier in the process.
Sydneysiders voting with their feet and opting for sea or tree change
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Julian and Amanda Rosenberg had talked about moving out of Sydney for years but it was the COVID-19 pandemic that finally made it possible.
The couple, along with their two-year-old son Hunter, are just three of the thousands of Sydneysiders who fled the city for the country in the past year. The family moved from Castle Cove near Chatswood to the Byron Bay area at the end of November.
Amanda and Julian Rosenberg with their son Hunter and dog Nala have moved from Sydney to Byron Bay in recent months.