Menu
Harrison & Hetherington have chosen Great North Air Ambulance Service as their chosen charity at this year s Agri Expo on October 29
GNAAS LEADING livestock event, the Borderway Agri Expo, will be supporting the critical work of the Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS). Harrison & Hetherington have announced they have selected the Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS) as their chosen charity to support at this year’s Borderway Agri Expo event. One such person who was helped by the charity is Judy Dodd, from Temple Sowerby, Penrith, who was hurt in a freak accident on her husband’s farm. The accident occurred when a pigeon flew low and spooked one of the Limousin cows which then, in its fright, attacked Judy as she was shutting the gate to the field. After managing to get away from the cow, Judy made it home with painful bruising across her hip and shoulder.
A LEADING livestock event is supporting the critical work of the Great North Air Ambulance Service. Harrison & Hetherington has announced that it has selected the Great North Air Ambulance Service as its chosen charity to support at this year’s Borderway Agri Expo event in Carlisle. As Harrison & Hetherington work across the North of England, they view the charity as a vital service for the people of Cumbria and the North East. The registered charity, despite giving pioneering pre-hospital treatment to patients, is not NHS funded and relies entirely on donations in order to operate. Using a mix of helicopters and rapid response cars, GNAAS use specialist training to deliver world-class care to their patients, often offering lifesaving treatment in doing so. In 2020 the team responded to 1,262 callouts.
Why men are queuing up for ‘back to work’ Botox
The return to the office has seen a huge rise in men booking anti-ageing tweakments – from jawline fillers to tear trough reduction
Frank Rees, 48, before and after having Teoxane filler, administered by Dr Wassim Taktouk
Credit: Andrea Zvadova
Tucked away in a backstreet of Knightsbridge in London is the Taktouk Clinic, run by the 44-year-old ex A&E doctor Wassim Taktouk. Dr Taktouk has earned a reputation for subtly enhancing tweakments for men and women. Since opening his own clinic in April, he estimates 35 per cent of his clientele are now male – a rise from 20 per cent pre-lockdown. As many of his clients work in the City, he puts much of this rise down to the pressure to look well-rested ahead of a return to the office, where there may be fewer chances of promotion and the threat of redundancy post-pandemic.