Friday, July 11, 2014

Ambulance crew picks up hitch-hikers

10 June 2014 Last updated at 14:14 Glenn Buscombe Patient Glenn Buscombe was being treated for a blood-clot when the ambulance picked up the hitch-hikers An ambulance crew taking a man to hospital stopped to pick up two hitch-hikers on route.


The crew carrying 60-year-old blood-clot patient Glenn Buscombe stopped on the A38 near Carkeel roundabout in Cornwall to pick up the woman and man.


Confirming what happened, South Western Ambulance Service said it was because the pair were on a "dangerous" road and they were "doing the right thing".


Mr Buscombe has since made an official complaint to the ambulance service.


The vehicle had been taking the patient from his home in Polperro to Derriford Hospital in Plymouth.

Mr Buscombe said: "My wife called the doctor because my right leg was really swollen and I was in a lot of pain."


He said he was "pretty shocked" when the ambulance pulled up to pick up the hitch-hikers.


"I said to the paramedic 'What's going on?' And he said he did not know what the driver was playing at."


Mr Buscombe added: "I would be the first to pick up a damsel in distress but it was an emergency.


"I made the complaint because someone else could be in a more serious condition."


An ambulance service spokesman said the crew "thought they had a duty of care to the couple because the road is pretty dangerous".

Carkeel Roundabout The ambulance crew picked up the hitch-hikers near Carkeel roundabout 'Safer place'

He added that the ambulance was not on an emergency run, but had been asked by a doctor to take Mr Buscombe to the hospital for treatment to a blood clot.


The couple were dropped off at a service station about a mile down the road .


"The driver thought, 'Do I leave them or do I drop them off at a safer place?'," the spokesman said.


"The journey was 1.2 miles and added maybe a couple of minutes extra to the journey.


"They were just doing the right thing."

Thorough investigations

The ambulance trust said in a statement: "The trust has received a complaint from Mr Buscombe relating to a routine transfer from his home address to Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, in the early hours of Sunday, April 6.


"The trust takes all complaints seriously and has started an investigation to establish exactly what happened during the transfer."


Debbie Pritchard, chief executive of Healthwatch Cornwall, said: "We would be saddened to learn the ambulance crew did this while transporting a patient and hope the investigations taking place will be thorough.


"We hope the gentleman concerned in this instance is recovering well and he receives a response very soon."


Nganh dieu duong

Thursday, July 10, 2014

How do you feed very sick babies?

5 June 2014 Last updated at 13:20 A premature baby in a neonatal unit Babies born months early will be cared for in a neonatal unit in hospital A bacterium called Bacillus cereus has been identified as the cause of one premature baby's death and blood poisoning in 15 other babies. Two other cases are likely to be confirmed.


A special intravenous liquid feed given to some premature babies is thought to have been contaminated by the bacterium.


Babies at nine hospitals in England have been affected.


Public Health England said the cases were "strongly linked" with certain batches of an intravenous liquid made by ITH Pharma.


The company has launched a product recall and the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) has alerted all hospitals.

line break Why are babies fed this way? Drip in a premature baby's foot

If babies are born very early, they tend to be small, weak and unwell, and may not be able to be fed by mouth.


Babies born before 26 or 27 weeks are likely to need something called total parenteral nutrition (TPN), a specially-prepared liquid feed which is gently pumped into their bloodstream, to help them grow.


The access point is normally through a large central vein. A very thin feeding line is then inserted into the vein to allow the liquid nutrition to enter the baby's body.


These babies tend to be particularly vulnerable to infection.


It is difficult to know how many babies are fed this way in the UK. It can vary from just a two or three babies a week in smaller units to many more in larger hospitals.

line break What's normally in the feed? Nurse preparing an intravenous drip It is vital to keep everything as sterile as possible when feeding very premature babies

These special feed bags contain sugar, vitamins and amino acids, all vital for a baby's growth.


Fatty acids are also given to them, but in a separate syringe.


Premature babies need this form of food because breast milk is often not nutritious enough to support them, and some are simply unable to digest it.


The feeds can be made up in the hospital or may arrive in packs from the manufacturers, in which case they should be sterile and ready to use.

line break Where are the feeds made? A nurse holds the hand of a premature baby Babies born before 27 weeks usually need to be fed using total parenteral nutrition into their bloodstream

The liquid feeds are manufactured by a number of companies around the country. They are often made to order and sent to hospitals when they are needed.


A company based in London called ITH Pharma Limited has been linked to the feeds used in this incident.


It is now helping the MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency) with its investigation.


Public Health England says a possible point when contamination entered the products has been identified.

line break What is the bacteria that made the babies ill? Bacillus cereus bacterium up close The Bacillus cereus bacterium has been linked to the feed contamination cases

Bacillus cereus bacterium, which is thought to have been present in the feed bags, is widespread.


It can be found in soil, dust, plants and some food such as reheated rice.


High temperatures or powerful disinfectants are needed to get rid of the spores formed by the bacterium, which can survive for long periods on surfaces and materials.


It is often present in food production environments.

line break What has happened to the babies who were infected? Bacillus cereus bacterium under a microscope The bacterium can cause serious complications in sick babies

One baby has died and 18 are ill with blood poisoning. Most were premature and were being cared for in neonatal intensive care units.


The infection can cause fever, problems with breathing and vomiting, among other symptoms.


In sick, premature babies a serious infection like this can kill them because they have virtually no immune system to protect them.


The hospitals affected by the contaminated feeds stopped using the product immediately and switched to using a different supplier.


In this way, babies who need intravenous feeding will not go without food for a prolonged period.


Nganh dieu duong, nganh ke toan doanh nghiep

Why is Glasgow the UK’s sickest city?

Babies born in Glasgow are expected to live the shortest lives of any in Britain. One in four Glaswegian men won't reach their 65th birthday. What is behind the "Glasgow Effect" and can it be prevented?


The pool is full on Sunday afternoon in the Glasgow suburb of Easterhouse. Children are splashing around and shooting down water slides while a man with heavily tattooed arms swims a rhythmic front crawl up and down one of the lanes.


It is a picture of vigour and health in the city, which is hosting the 2014 Commonwealth Games this summer.


Glasgow is internationally renowned for its thriving arts scene and top universities. It boasts handsome Victorian architecture, smart designer shops, fashionable bars and restaurants.


At the same time, this dynamic city also has an unenviable reputation for poor health. Obesity rates are among the highest in the world. Research conducted in 2007 found that nearly one in five potential workers was on incapacity benefit and that Glasgow has a much larger number and a higher proportion of the population claiming sickness-related benefit than any other city in Britain.

Continue reading the main story What is worse, the city has an alarmingly high mortality rate. A 2011 study compared it with Liverpool and Manchester, which have roughly equal levels of unemployment, deprivation and inequality. It found that residents of Glasgow are about 30% more likely to die young, and 60% of those excess deaths are triggered by just four things - drugs, alcohol, suicide and violence.


Moreover the Glasgow Effect is relatively new. "These causes of death have emerged really since the 1990s," says Harry Burns, professor of public health at Strathclyde University. "And they emerged more dramatically in one particular sector of the population - men and women between the ages of 15 and 45. So it's a very specific pattern affecting people in their most productive years."

Continue reading the main story

Lucy Ash's report, The Mystery of Glasgow's Health Problems, can be heard on Assignment, on BBC World Service on Thursday 5 June.

Walter Brown, a man with a lined face and cropped grey hair, says he has had a lucky escape. As he sits nursing a cup of coffee in the cafe next to the swimming pool, he describes his agonising battle with alcohol. "The thought of giving up terrified me," he says. "Because what else do you do? Everybody I knew drank or took drugs."


He adds: "It allowed me to wear a mask - I was Jack the Lad, the tough guy full of bravado. Before I went out I would drink a quarter of a bottle of whisky and two cans of lager just to become the person people thought I was by the time I walked into the pub."


Walter suffered alcoholic seizures, temporary paralysis and cirrhosis of the liver. His doctor warned that even another litre of drink could cause permanent brain damage and even death. But that didn't put him off. "Somehow I didn't think it would happen to me," he says. "And I thought we're all going to die young anyway - we all eat rubbish and [the] government isn't going to give the likes of me a job."

Graphic

Eventually, at his daughters' insistence, Walter did stop drinking and now has a job running a club for recovering addicts which meets at The Bridge centre on Sundays. Some go for a swim, others take part in music workshops or simply hang out in the café.


Over the past decade, Walter says he has heard of eight cases of suicide in the housing scheme where he used to live in Glasgow's impoverished East End. "One was a friend - I never suspected that he was somebody who could do that. He just went home and hung himself. And there were others - guys you've seen in the pub. You'd ask them - how you doing? Then all of a sudden, they're gone - their lives ended."

Graph

Homicide rates in Glasgow have come down by nearly 40% since 2007 - partly believed to be the result of an innovative police project tackling knife crime. Yet per head of population, the city still has twice as many murders as London. Drug abuse is also rife.


What explains so much self-destructive behaviour? Psychologists, epidemiologists, sociologists and others have long puzzled over what it is about Glasgow that fatally undermines health and wellbeing.

line Glasgow's East End Moira's story

Moira lives in Glasgow's East End, in an area ravaged by drugs and her own family has paid a heavy price. She had two daughters. The elder one lost custody of her children thanks to her addiction. The younger one lost her life. Moira, who is overweight, and suffers from emphysema and mobility problems, has brought up her two grandchildren virtually single-handed. Her husband couldn't help her - he died of a sudden heart attack just after his 50th birthday. Her eldest daughter got pregnant at 18 and had a violent drug-addicted, partner who was eventually jailed for attempting to murder her.


"She could no longer look after the kids because, as you can understand, she was in a terrible state," says Moira. Then Kirsty, Moira's second daughter, died of an overdose. "When we got the toxicology report, she'd taken something from her husband's drawer. I don't know what she thought she'd taken but it killed her. She was my rock you know and I dearly miss her." Stephanie, Moira's 20-year-old granddaughter, admits she is worried by her family history. "It kind of makes you think what if that turns out to be me in the future? So I try and stay away from it all," she says. "But it's hard. Because living in the east end of Glasgow, it's alcohol and drugs everywhere you go."

line

Harry Burns, who until recently was the country's chief medical officer, has his own theory. He raised a few eyebrows when he compared Glaswegians to Australia's Aboriginal people. Yet he believes deindustrialisation in a city where tens of thousands once worked in the factories and the shipyards has deeply wounded local pride. As a result, people here have much in common with demoralised indigenous communities.

Shipyard welder

"Being a welder in a shipyard was a cold and difficult and dangerous job," he says. "But it gave you cultural identity in the same way as native peoples in Australia once had a very intense history and tradition."


He scoffs at the cliches about people suffering coronary attacks after eating those infamous deep fried Mars Bars. "No one is saying that Glaswegians are models of healthy behaviour but the evidence that we are where we are because we eat vast amounts of fat or smoke vast amounts of cigarettes just isn't there. That's not the explanation."


Instead he is convinced that the social and economic problems that Glasgow has experienced over the past few decades have come together in what he calls "a perfect storm of adversity". Burns points to a succession of graphs which show Scots do not smoke more than other Europeans nor do they suffer more heart disease. In fact, under his stewardship, Scotland was the first part of Britain to ban smoking in public places.

line No Mean City The Gorbals, an area south of the river Clyde, was once a byword for downtrodden, overcrowded slums. The 1935 novel No Mean City helped give the area its notorietyThe story of urban decay breeding violence features Johnnie Stark, who becomes the unchallenged Razor King of a Gorbals gangThe novel enraged many in the city, with The Glasgow Evening Times arguing that it had branded the city "a collection of thugs and harlots" and was the "worst possible advertisement Glasgow can have when the city is striving to live down its evil and undeserved reputation"The vision of the Gorbals depicted by author Alexander McArthur has long since disappeared line

"Where traditional communities lose their traditional cultural anchors," he says, "They all find the same things happening - increasing mortality from alcohol, drugs, violence. The answer is not conventional health promotion. Where you lose a sense of control over your life there's very little incentive to stop smoking or to stop drinking or whatever. The answer is to rediscover a sense of purpose and self-esteem."


Some do rediscover that sense of purpose - in a Govan workshop hammering and chiselling wood. The Galgael Trust provides men and women with a 12-week joinery course to help counter addictions and other health problems. This community carpentry, its proponents say, is really about fostering friendship and rebuilding confidence.


Tam McGarvy, the heritage and culture worker at Galgael shows off boats made by trainees and intricate wooden sculptures of animals. The charity aims to create a sense of wellbeing in people who have been broken by society. "This used to be one of the biggest shipbuilding centres in the world for 150 years then we had the big legacy with several generations ending up unemployed," he says.


"What we try to do is a kind of alchemy. People have been put on the scrapheap as wasted, rotten metal and we like to turn that base metal into gold again."

Buchanan Street

Jock, a man in his late 20s, is carving Celtic dragons on to a strip of wood. He was referred to Galgael by his doctor after suffering palpitations, panic attacks and acute agoraphobia. "About a year and a half ago I just completely switched off - I locked my door and didn't leave," he says. "Coming here I got used to being around people again - it just gave me an outlet to be social."


The Glasgow Effect might well be alleviated by social integration projects. But its roots are, according to some, so deep that you also have to go further back for an explanation.


A few miles from Galgael, in the affluent West End, there is a woman with her own theory - one which is also tied up with the history of this city. Author Carol Craig says to understand Glasgow's early deaths you should look not to the end of the shipyards and factories but instead to their beginning.

Galgael carpenter at work Galgael Journey On participants at the work benches

In the early 18th Century, Glasgow was described by the author Daniel Defoe as "the cleanest and beautifullest and best built city in Britain". But when the Industrial Revolution drew thousands of people from Ireland, the Lowlands and Highlands, the population exploded and for many it became a living hell.


"I was so struck by the very nasty and aggressive relationship between men and women historically in Glasgow," Craig says. "And that was partly as a result of the terrible overcrowding - it was worse than England. Having a front room or parlour was practically unheard of."


She explains that in 1891 the London County Council defined overcrowding in terms of two or more person in a room. In the metropolis one third fell below this standard but in Glasgow two thirds - or twice London's number - of residents lived in overcrowded accommodation.

Glasgow 1860

Enforced proximity, she argues, forced men out of their homes and into the pub. "It was a kind of survival mechanism," she says. "In the old Glasgow on a Friday when men got paid, you would see women queuing outside workplaces and pubs to retrieve any of the money. This was very much a city where men suited themselves."


In her 2010 book, The Tears That Made the Clyde, Craig suggests that rapid industrialisation in Glasgow produced a toxic masculinity which destroyed family life.


According to the Glasgow and Clyde Health Board, in just two years almost half of all homes in the city will be single-adult households.


"There is a failure of personal relationships in Glasgow that no one is facing up to," says Craig. "This is significant because what is the single most important thing for men's health? It's being married - it can account for as much as seven years of life expectancy. So if we want to find out why health in Glasgow is so poor I think one of the things that we should ask about is relationships."


Burns agrees that relationships are key. He talks about the need to build "social capital" so individuals can offer each other friendship and mutual support. He is also heavily influenced by the Israeli-American sociologist Aaron Antonovsky, who coined the term "salutogenesis" to describe an approach which focuses on a positive view of wellbeing rather than a negative view of disease.


During his lectures, Burns has a favourite slide which shows the molecular biology of a hug. "When you hug a baby you make them happy," he says. "Happiness is associated with the production of neurotransmitters in the brain. One of these neurotransmitters has an effect on a particular gene which activates the production of a protein that allows the brain to suppress the stress response. Failure to nurture a baby - failure to do something as simple as hug a child - interferes with that process."


Burns believes in early intervention and there are many organisations now devoted to this. Lickety Spit, a pioneering theatre company, creates plays for three and four-year-olds in the most deprived parts of Scotland. It fires children's imaginations but even more crucially perhaps it encourages parents to get down on their hands and knees and bond with their offspring.

Lickety Spit Lickety Spit aims to spark the imaginations of young children

It has taken decades to create Glasgow's current problems. It will take decades to fix them. And some do not like the term Glasgow Effect.


One of the academics who wrote the original research - Investigating a Glasgow Effect - now hates the term and describes it as "deeply unhelpful". David Walsh of the Glasgow Centre for Population Health believes some have misunderstood or trivialised the dilemma facing the city. "Some journalists are excited by it as if it were some kind of Scooby Doo mystery but let's not forget that we are talking about people who have died."


The excess mortality phenomenon is a "horribly complicated" set of factors affecting different parts of the population in different ways so it's pointless searching for a "silver bullet" to solve it, he believes. Walsh says that he originally identified 17 different factors.


Some blame the cold, rainy weather and say a lack of sunlight has caused chronic vitamin D deficiency. There are theories ranging from Glaswegians' penchant for burning the candle at both ends to a culture of pessimism. Some think sectarianism between Catholics and Protestants could be responsible. Scotland's health minister Alex Neil accused Margaret Thatcher of driving the Scots to drink and drugs by destroying heavy industry back in the 1980s. Local Conservatives described the claim as preposterous and said alcoholism was too important to be treated as a political football.


What's certain is that there are no easy answers. Even in the better off neighbourhoods, mortality rates are 15% higher than in similar districts of other big cities. Burns is perplexed by this but suggests hidden influences upon the genes could be responsible.


"A lot of those middle-class people will have been very poor somewhere in their family tree," he says. "And this takes us into the field of epigenetics - the business of genes being switched on or off depending on the environment you were brought up in. There is an epigenetic impact of the diet that your parents or grandparents were exposed to. Now we can easily find scientific explanations for this - we just haven't proved it yet."


The idea that the lifestyle of your grandparents - the air they breathed, the food they ate - can directly affect you, decades later, is disorientating. Many would argue it smacks of fatalism. What is the point of trying to be healthy if you are doomed by your ancestors' bad habits?


The epigenetic notion goes against conventional views that DNA carries all our heritable information and that nothing an individual does in their lifetime will be biologically passed to their children. But when it comes to the Glasgow Effect perhaps no theory can yet be discounted.


Lucy Ash's report, The Mystery of Glasgow's Health Problems, can be heard on Assignment, on BBC World Service on Thursday 5 June. See the schedule for broadcast times or catch up on BBC iPlayer


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Nganh dieu duong, nganh ke toan doanh nghiep

The country that's hooked on tobacco

4 June 2014 Last updated at 21:36 By Peter Taylor Presenter, Burning Desire Man smoking at political rally in East Timor, 2007 East Timor has one of the highest smoking rates in the world, with nearly two-thirds of its men hooked on the habit. Why is one of South East Asia's poorest nations so addicted to tobacco?


Tobacco is part of the fabric of East Timor - walking through the dark alleyways of market stalls, the air is sweet with the smell of raw tobacco on sale among the neatly stacked piles of tomatoes, potatoes, squashes and beans.


Most cigarettes cost less than $1 (60p) a packet. They are stacked under large sun umbrellas bearing the logos of various brands, such as L.A. and Vinte e Tres.


All carry health warnings but these are effectively meaningless to many smokers - about half the adult population can't read.


In the capital, Dili, the iconic Marlboro cowboy still rides the range on posters above shops, despite having ridden into the sunset in most other countries where advertising is banned or restricted.

Shop front in East Timor

According to figures from the Journal of the American Medical Association, 33% of East Timor's population smoke every day. The figure for men stands at 61% - the highest in the world.


"Young people are smoking more and more each year, especially young boys," says Dr Jorge Luna, The World Health Organisation's local representative. "It is a very serious problem."


Almost half the population is under 15 and increasingly the demand, especially among the young, is for Western-type cigarettes, often sold singly from packets displayed invitingly along the roadside.


"One cigarette is 10 cents, if you buy two it's 20 cents, if you buy four it will be 25 cents," says Luna. Tobacco grown by small-scale farmers for roll-your-own cigarettes is even cheaper than the named brands that are often imported from neighbouring Indonesia.

Continue reading the main story KiribatiMacedoniaPapua New GuineaBulgariaTongaEast Timor

Figures for 2012. Source: Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, published by JAMA

East Timor's schools have virtually no health education with regard to smoking. "I've witnessed first-hand teachers who smoke while teaching [while] they're there on the blackboard writing," says Luc Sabot, East Timor's director of the Adventist Development and Relief Agency.


"The whole school system has absolutely no regulation on tobacco use in school."


Near one school, I watch a young man, cigarette in hand, sitting astride a motorbike with a Marlboro logo, casually chatting to a young woman.


The scene reminds me of a controversial advertising campaign for Vinte e Tres that ran in the capital last year, depicting a cool looking young man, clad in black, on a black motorbike.


The slogan read defiantly "Proud of Yourself". Initially the posters contained no health warnings, and after protests from health campaigners they were taken down.


They were then put back up again, this time with a small warning at the bottom. When the campaign had run its course, some of the banners became improvised wall coverings for tin-roofed shacks.

Shack with cigarette advertising, East Timor

And in East Timor you can smoke anywhere. The air in bars, restaurants, hotel lobbies and cafes is invariably full of smoke.


There's only one exception - a sparkling new shopping mall owned by a passionate anti-smoker where smoking is prohibited.

Even the prime minister is a heavy smoker. Xanana Gusmao was one of the guerrilla leaders who fought the Indonesians after they had annexed East Timor in 1975 and before the country achieved its independence in 2002.


He was captured and sentenced to life imprisonment before his release prior to independence.


He says that cigarettes kept him and his comrades going when they were fighting in the bush and that an Indonesian bullet was far more dangerous than smoking.


He admits he's an addict, having tried unsuccessfully to give up three times, and admits he's not a good role model.


When I ask him about banning cigarette advertising, he repeats what is tantamount to the tobacco industry's line.


"The law, banning this, banning that, will not be so effective. It needs education [and] it will take time but I believe that the more people are aware of the diseases that it can cause, the more they are able to stop by themselves."


But the prime minister's feisty Australian wife, Kirsty Sword Gusmao, is a committed anti-cancer campaigner,


She had breast cancer herself, and is concerned about the increasing number of young smokers.


"Tobacco companies in Indonesia and elsewhere are targeting very much young people who are conscious of image, conscious of 'the cool factor'," she says.


Some, she says, were as young as 10 and 11.


The tobacco industry, however, always vehemently denies it targets children.


As yet, East Timor's hospitals are not overrun with patients suffering from smoking related diseases as the young have not been smoking cigarettes long enough to incubate them.

Map showing East Timor, Indonesia and Australia

At the moment the big killer is tuberculosis but Dr Dan Murphy, a Canadian who's been running a local hospital and clinic in Dili for 20 years, is worried about the future.


Some 80% of the world's smokers live in developing countries and "young people are learning that what they're supposed to do to be Western and advanced is to smoke cigarettes," he says.


"Now we have to change their whole way of thinking and start worrying about tomorrow. I'm afraid we're going to have to go through a phase of learning the hard lesson that's been seen throughout poor countries."


He isn't convinced that the government is serious about tackling the problem - the tobacco lobby, he says, is powerful.


"They can make it seem like [smoking] is something that's a pleasure, something that adds to your life and puts meaning on your life. You're up against a propaganda machine - for cigarettes, smoking and the image. And that's a tough battle."

Watch Burning Desire on BBC Two at 21:30 BST on Thursday.


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Nganh dieu duong

The Korean grandmothers who sell sex

10 June 2014 Last updated at 00:06 By Lucy Williamson BBC News, Seoul Women in snow Koreans could once be sure that their children would look after them in their old age, but no longer - many of those who worked hard to transform the country's economy find the next generation has other spending priorities. As a result, some elderly women are turning to prostitution.


Kim Eun-ja sits on the steps at Seoul's Jongno-3 subway station, scanning the scene in front of her. The 71-year-old's bright lipstick and shiny red coat stand out against her papery skin.


Beside her is a large bag, from which comes the clink of glass bottles as she shifts on the cold concrete.


Mrs Kim is one of South Korea's "Bacchus Ladies" - older women who make a living by selling tiny bottles of the popular Bacchus energy drink to male customers.


But often that's not all they're selling. At an age when Korean grandmothers are supposed to be venerated as matriarchs, some are selling sex.

Continue reading the main story
I can't trust my children to help - they're in deep trouble because they have to start preparing for their old age”

End Quote Mr Kim "You see those Bacchus Ladies standing over there?" she asks me. "Those ladies sell more than Bacchus. They sometimes go out with the grandpas and earn money from them. But I don't make a living like that.


"Men do proposition me when I'm standing in the alleyway," she adds. "But I always say, 'No.'"


Mrs Kim says she makes about 5,000 Won ($5, or £3) a day selling the drinks. "Drink up fast," she says. "The police are always watching me. They don't differentiate."


The centre of this underground sex trade is a nearby park in the heart of Seoul. Jongmyo Park is a place where elderly men come to while away their sunset years with a little chess and some local gossip.

Men playing board game in Jongmyo park

It's built around a temple to Confucius, whose ideas on venerating elders have shaped Korean culture for centuries. But under the budding trees outside, the fumbling transactions of its elderly men and women tell the real story of Korean society in the 21st Century.


Women in their 50s, 60, even their 70s, stand around the edges of the park, offering drinks to the men. Buy one, and it's the first step in a lonely journey that ends in a cheap motel nearby.


The men in the park are more willing to talk to me than the women.

Standing around a game of Korean chess, a group of grandfathers watch the match intently. About half the men here use the Bacchus Ladies, they say.


"We're men, so we're curious about women," says 60-year-old Mr Kim.


"We have a drink, and slip a bit of money into their hands, and things happen!" he cackles. "Men like to have women around - whether they're old or not, sexually active or not. That's just male psychology."


Another man, 81 years old, excitedly showed me his spending money for the day. "It's for drinking with my friends," he said. "We can find girlfriends here, too - from those women standing over there. They'll ask us to play with them. They say, 'Oh, I don't have any money,' and then they glue on to us. Sex with them costs 20,000 to 30,000 Won (£11-17), but sometimes they'll give you a discount if they know you."


South Korea's grandparents are victims of their country's economic success.


As they worked to create Korea's economic miracle, they invested their savings in the next generation. In a Confucian society, successful children are the best form of pension.


But attitudes here have changed just as fast as living standards, and now many young people say they can't afford to support themselves and their parents in Korea's fast-paced, highly competitive society.

Woman and ad for Korean smartphone

The government, caught out by this rapid change, is scrambling to provide a welfare system that works. In the meantime, the men and women in Jongmyo Park have no savings, no realistic pension, and no family to rely on. They've become invisible - foreigners in their own land.

Continue reading the main story
One Bacchus woman said to me 'I'm hungry, I don't need respect, I don't need honour, I just want three meals a day'”

End Quote Dr Lee Ho-Sun "Those who rely on their children are stupid," says Mr Kim. "Our generation was submissive to our parents. We respected them. The current generation is more educated and experienced, so they don't listen to us.


"I'm 60 years old and I don't have any money. I can't trust my children to help. They're in deep trouble because they have to start preparing for their old age. Almost all of the old folks here are in the same situation."


Most Bacchus women have only started selling sex later in life, as a result of this new kind of old-age poverty, according to Dr Lee Ho-Sun, who is perhaps the only researcher to have studied them in detail.


One woman she interviewed first turned to prostitution at the age of 68. About 400 women work in the park, she says, all of whom will have been taught as children that respect and honour were worth more than anything.


"One Bacchus woman said to me 'I'm hungry, I don't need respect, I don't need honour, I just want three meals a day," Lee says.


Police, who routinely patrol the area but are rarely able to make an arrest, privately say this problem will never be solved by crackdowns, that senior citizens need an outlet for stress and sexual desire, and that policy needs to change.


But law-enforcement isn't the only problem.

Graffiti on the street showing an elderly couple kissing Graffiti on a street on Seoul

Inside those bags the Bacchus Ladies carry is the source of a hidden epidemic: a special injection supposed to help older men achieve erections - delivered directly into the vein. Dr Lee confirms that the needles aren't disposed of afterwards, but used again - 10 or 20 times.


The results, she says, can be seen in one local survey, which found that almost 40% of the men tested had a sexually transmitted disease¬ despite the fact that some of the most common diseases weren't included in the test. With most sex education classes aimed at teenagers, this has the makings of a real problem. Some local governments have now begun offering sex education clinics especially for seniors.


Hidden in a dingy warren of alleyways in central Seoul, is the place where these lonely journeys end - the narrow corridors of a "love motel" and one of the grey rooms which open off them.


Inside, a large bed takes up most of the space, its thin mattress and single pillow hardly inviting a long night's sleep. On the bed-head is a sticker: for room service press zero; for pornography press three; and if you want the electric blanket, you'll find the wire on the far side of the bed.


So here you have food, sex, and even a little warmth all at the touch of a button. If only it were that simple outside the motel room, in South Korea's rich, hi-tech society.


But for the grandparents who built its fearsome economy, food is expensive, sex is cheap, and human warmth rarely available at any price.


Listen to Lucy Williamson's report for Assignment on the BBC World Service on Thursday - or catch up later on the BBC iPlayer


Follow @BBCNewsMagazine on Twitter and on Facebook


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Recession 'led to 10,000 suicides'

12 June 2014 Last updated at 01:09 People queuing for jobs People queuing for jobs in the US as youth unemployment soared The economic crisis in Europe and North America led to more than 10,000 extra suicides, according to figures from UK researchers.


A study, published in the British Journal of Psychiatry, showed "suicides have risen markedly".


The research group said some deaths may have been avoidable as some countries showed no increase in suicide rate.


Campaign groups said the findings showed how important good mental health services were.


The study by the University of Oxford and the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine analysed data from 24 EU countries, the US and Canada.

Unemployment, repossessions and debt

It said suicides had been declining in Europe until 2007. By 2009 there was a 6.5% increase, a level that was sustained until 2011.


It was the equivalent of 7,950 more suicides than would have been expected if previous trends continued, the research group said.


Deaths by suicide were also falling in Canada, but there was a marked increase when the recession took hold in 2008, leading to 240 more suicides.


The number of people taking their own life was already increasing in the US, but the rate "accelerated" with the economic crisis, leading to 4,750 additional deaths.


The report said losing a job, having a home repossessed and being in debt were the main risk factors.


However, some countries bucked the trend. Sweden, Finland and Austria all avoided increases in the suicide rate during the recession.


One of the researchers, Dr Aaron Reeves, of the University of Oxford, said: "A critical question for policy and psychiatric practice is whether suicide rises are inevitable."

'Policy potentially matters'

He told the BBC: "There's a lot of good evidence showing recessions lead to rising suicides, but what is surprising is this hasn't happened everywhere - Austria, Sweden and Finland.


"It shows policy potentially matters. One of the features of these countries is they invest in schemes that help people return to work, such as training, advice and even subsidised wages.


"There are always hard choices to make in a recession, but for me one of the things government does is provide support and protection for vulnerable groups - these services help people who are bearing the brunt of an economic crisis."


Andy Bell, of the Centre for Mental Health, said: "The study says what we feared for some time: that unemployment, job insecurity and many other factors associated with the recession are associated with poor mental health and suicide.


"It reminds us how important it is to respond to that need and take preventative action where we can, and that primary care is properly resourced and able to identify people who are at risk."


Beth Murphy, of the charity Mind, said: "Since 2008, we've seen an increasing number of people contact the Mind Infoline concerned about the impact of money and unemployment on their mental health.


"Redundancy and other life circumstances brought about by the recession can trigger depression, anxiety and suicidal thoughts for anyone, whether they have previously experienced a mental health problem or not.


"For some people, these factors can become so difficult to cope with that suicide may feel like the only option."


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Does female fertility 'drop off a cliff'?

7 June 2014 Last updated at 09:56 By Philippa Roxby Health reporter, BBC News Booties for babies The female fertility window can start closing from the age of 35 TV presenter Kirstie Allsopp has urged women to put off higher education and a career in favour of having children because their "fertility falls off a cliff".


In a recent interview with Jeremy Paxman on BBC Newsnight, Ms Allsopp, who met her husband when she was 32 and then had two children, said: "Nature is not with you and I. Nature is not a feminist."


She also encouraged women to be "more honest" with one another about their biological clock, saying the topic was still "taboo".

Continue reading the main story
It is tempting to want a black and white answer, but biology doesn't work that way”

End Quote Mr Yacoub Khalaf Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital So what is the truth about the female fertility window?


Guidance from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), which was updated in 2013, is pretty encouraging.


It says that "over 80% of couples in the general population will conceive within one year if the woman is aged under 40 years", if they have regular sexual intercourse and do not use contraception.


NICE guidelines go on to state that "of those who do not conceive in the first year, about half will do so in the second year".


That leaves around 10% of women - the percentage said to be affected by infertility in the UK.

Kirstie Allsopp Kirstie Allsopp questioned whether women should prioritise further education and work before their fertility

We know, of course, that female fertility declines with age, but is there really a dramatic drop-off at a certain point?

No rule

Mr Yacoub Khalaf, head of assisted reproduction at Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital in London, says it is not quite as simple as that.


"It is tempting to want a black and white answer, but biology doesn't work that way.


"Some women find it difficult to conceive in their late 20s, while others don't have a problem into their 40s."

Continue reading the main story

Infertility is when a couple cannot conceive despite having regular unprotected sex.


It can be caused by a range of disorders and lifestyle factors.


However, fertility problems cannot be explained in around a third of cases.

So there is no rule, but science tells us that a woman's body does gradually change and there is nothing that can be done to alter that process.


Mr Khalaf explains that from the age of 35, the rate of depletion of the follicles in the ovaries speeds up, and from the age of 40 they start to deplete even faster.


These follicles are important because they house the eggs which will develop and mature before finally being released during ovulation.


Hence, the quality and quantity of a women's eggs also begins declining sharply from around the age of 35 onwards.

Disappearing eggs

It is a very different story at birth. Baby girls are born with a finite number of eggs, which can number around one million.


By the time of their first period, however, only 400,000 eggs will be left and they continue to decline in number throughout adulthood at a rate of approximately 1,000 eggs each month.

Continue reading the main story
We tend to always talk about IVF success rates - but we don't say it's unsuccessful for most women”

End Quote Alison McTavish University of Aberdeen "They are much more accessible in the early years," Mr Khalaf says, referring to women's eggs in their mid-20s.


"I would rather have women trying for a baby as soon as they can because they will have healthy eggs, a healthy pregnancy and the energy to enjoy their baby."


But he recognises that the realities of life mean this is not often possible.


Higher education, career, finding Mr Right - all mean that women may not start thinking about having children until well into their 30s.


By that time, it is possible they may run into problems.

Seek help

Infertility Network UK advises women and their partners not to be complacent about fertility problems and to seek help from their GP.


This is because there may be gynaecological disorders which women are unaware of which could come to light.


These include polyps or fibroids, endometriosis or pelvic adhesions, which can be treated to maximise fertility.

Working women thinking about having a baby Careers often come before children for many women

As women reach their 40s, their risk of miscarrying increases to nearly a third of all pregnancies. The chance of giving birth to a baby with Down's Syndrome also rises significantly.


Alison McTavish, nurse manager at the University of Aberdeen's assisted reproduction unit, says when women are already on the "slippery slope" between 30 and 34 years old they mistakenly look to IVF as being a solution.


"This sometimes gives them false hope - we're not that good though.


"We tend to always talk about IVF success rates, but we don't say it's unsuccessful for most women."


After 40, there is a 5% chance of a woman becoming pregnant without IVF, increasing to 10% with the help of IVF, she says.


Fertility experts agree that the female fertility window has not changed much over the decades. The menopause still occurs in the same age range as it did for our mothers and grandmothers.


What has changed though is the male sperm count, which has been decreasing over the years.


The reasons for this are not known, although there are theories, so perhaps women should remember to keep check on their partner's fertility as well as their own.


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