21 October 2010

Help us support Ipswich Women's Aid this Christmas

Help us support Ipswich Women's Aid this Christmas



This Christmas, the Project PR team will be organising a fantastic Christmas party for the women and children supported by Ipswich Women’s Aid, an organisation which helps families who are experiencing domestic abuse.

We are appealing to local businesses and individuals to kindly donate new Christmas presents for the women and children, to be given out at the party in December.

Any suitable new gifts you are able provide for the children, teenagers and women would be much appreciated. Suggestions include toiletries, cosmetics, toys, CDs and DVDs. We would also be grateful for any gift wrap and labels.

Ipswich Women’s Aid (IWA) is an independent registered charity, affiliated to Women’s Aid Federation England (WAFE), which provides temporary accommodation for women and children fleeing domestic violence. In 2009/10, IWA housed a total of 196 women and children and helped many others recover from the traumatic effects of domestic abuse. IWA currently runs two purpose built refuges in Ipswich.

Project PR is offering its services to IWA free of charge and we hope you will also be able to support this worthy organisation at Christmas.

If you can donate any gifts, no matter how large or small, please call Rachel Cass at Project PR on 01473 326406.












7 October 2010

Eating disorders starting at younger age, warns new survey

6th October 2010: The age at which people develop eating disorders is getting younger, according to a new survey by eating disorders support group Overeaters Anonymous GB.

The poll of more than 250 OA members revealed that more than half (53 per cent) said they first developed a problem with food when they were aged 10 years or younger. A further 29 per cent admitted they were between the age of 10 and 15 years old when their compulsive eating behaviour developed.

Maureen F, spokesperson for Overeaters Anonymous GB, said: “Some might find the results of the survey shocking, but as our members have underlined, it is not uncommon for us to see people who developed an eating disorder before they reached their teens.”

The survey results follow the first memorial service for young people who lost their lives to an eating disorder, held last week (28th September) at Southwark Cathedral. The occasion, organised by eating disorders charity Beat, was attended by more than 100 bereaved familes.

The OA survey also revealed the media may not play the powerful role in encouraging eating disorders we are led to believe. Just three per cent of those polled cited newspaper, magazine and television content as a major reason for developing their illness, while more than half (52%) felt that family problems and life events such as death or abuse had triggered their eating disorder.

OA member Nicky H, explains how her issues with food began before she reached her teens: “When I was about 11 I became aware of my changing body. Although I was slim I had a bit of puppy fat, which isn’t unusual for young girls, but I was paranoid about it and started comparing myself to others, wanting to be slimmer and prettier.

“I was also experiencing the usual adolescent difficulties with emotions and relationships and started dieting as a way of coping with these and to lose weight. I would restrict what I ate for a couple of weeks and exercise obsessively, lose some weight and feel great. But as soon as I ate any ‘forbidden’ food, it would trigger a huge binge and I’d put the weight straight back on, and more. This miserable cycle carried on for years.”

Maureen F concluded: “Eating disorders are complex illnesses and although our survey highlights general trends, every sufferer is different. OA provides members with a safe environment to discuss their feelings and get to the root of their compulsive behaviour and thinking about food, body shape and image, helping them on the road to recovery.”

Overeaters Anonymous GB offers a programme of recovery for anyone suffering from compulsive overeating, anorexia or bulimia, through its network of support meetings across the country. Based around the ‘Twelve Steps’ pioneered by Alcoholics Anonymous, OA uses the same principles to help members improve their disordered relationship with food.

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For more information or for case studies, please contact Helen Rudd or Rachel Cass at Project PR. helen.rudd@projectpr.biz / 01473 326405 or rachel.cass@projectpr.biz / 01473 326406

Notes to editors

1. ‘One of the primary guidelines – or ‘Traditions’ – in Overeaters Anonymous states that members “need always maintain personal anonymity at the level of press, radio, films, television and other public media of communication.’ This means that the personal identity of OA members cannot be revealed in photographs, but they can be photographed if their identities are concealed, i.e. from behind, in shadow, etc. OA members can give interviews, so long as their surnames are not used in any subsequent article or programme.’

2. There are more than 175 organised Overeaters Anonymous groups across Great Britain which hold regular support meetings. Details can be found on the OA website www.oagb.org.uk and new members are welcome at any time.

3. The first OA meeting was held in 1960 in Los Angeles, California. OA now holds approximately 6,500 meetings in over 75 countries.

4. OA is not affiliated with any public or private organisation, political movement, ideology or religious doctrine and takes no position on outside issues. No membership dues or fees are required.

1 October 2010

Spanish company comes to Colchester to take a bite into UK markets

East of England Inward Investment (EEII), the regional body that helps attract and support overseas inward investors to the East of England on behalf of the East of England Development Agency (EEDA), has assisted Biotechnology UK Limited, a scientific development company which manufactures and distributes dental implants, in setting up a headquarters in Colchester.

The company, which is headquartered in Vitoria, Spain, has started operating in Essex in order to expand their business into the UK market. The ability to store products in the UK means that when orders are placed from UK dentists, delivery can be as quick as the next day.

Currently, the company is targeting and supplying dentists across London and Essex, but the firm hopes that through re-location to the UK, they can expand their market and be able to cover the whole country in the next 12-18 months, which will lead to the creation of new jobs for Colchester.

Allen Polley, Country Manager for Biotechnology UK Limited commented: “Locating in Essex was an ideal choice for us as the transport links are so good and also, as a scientific development company, we are involved in research and development activity in the dentistry field, so being so close Cambridge, which is the top R&D location in Europe was another huge selling point. The assistance we have received from our EEII advisor, John Dow, has been very helpful in establishing ourselves in the area.”

The company were assisted in moving to the UK by the UK Trade & Investment team, based at the British Consultate in Spain.

Biotechnology UK Limited are gearing up to exhibit in the dental implant industry’s biggest event in the calendar. Over the 6th – 9th October the company will have a stand at the worldwide EAO congress which this year is being held in Glasgow.

Photo caption: “Allen Polley from BTI and John Dow from East of England Inward Investment open the door to a new business in Colchester”.





ENDS