Cyprus Today

Our guide to the best movies on TV

From sniffing out cancer, to transformi­ng the lives of people with chronic conditions, dogs really are a force for better health. Lisa Salmon finds out more.

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Peterloo (2018) PPPP (Channel 4, 10.00pm) Premiere A young soldier called Joseph (David Moorst) staggers home from Waterloo. The lad is deeply scarred by his experience­s as loved ones including his mother Nellie (Maxine Peake) cluck around him. Joseph recuperate­s as his father Joshua (Pearce Quigley) joins the throng of disgruntle­d voices, who are enraged that Parliament under the control of Prime Minister Lord Liverpool (Robert Wilfort) and home secretary Lord Sidmouth (Karl Johnson) has refused to extend voting rights to workers. Thousands plan to march on August 16, 1819, to St Peter’s Field to listen to famed orator Henry Hunt (Rory Kinnear) plead their case. Mike Leigh’s film builds with sickening inevitabil­ity to the massacre of protesters, which the writerdire­ctor recreates with all the sound and fury he can muster.

Welcome to Sudden Death (2020) PPP (Sky Cinema Premiere, 12.10pm & 8.05pm) Premiere A security guard, who is also a former member of the Special Forces, brings his two kids to work at a basketball arena. Unfortunat­ely, they aren’t the only visitors – the governor, mayor, thousands of other spectators and eight terrorists also happen to be attending. If the plot sounds familiar, that’s because it’s essentiall­y a remake of the JeanClaude Van Damme film Sudden Death – although that took place in an ice hockey arena. The presence of Michael Jai White, who was terrific in the cult blaxploita­tion parody Black Dynamite, may lead some viewers to expect an action spoof, but while there is some mindless fun to be had, this is largely a routine action thriller.

THERE’S no doubt that cuddling your dog can make you feel better – but it’s not just a feeling. It’s scientific fact that owning a dog can improve both your mental and physical health.

And we’re not just talking about the obvious benefits of taking your dog for regular walks, or the mental comfort of having canine company. Several studies show you’re at much less risk of dying from anything if you own dog. For example, a 2019 University of Toronto study found dog owners have a 24 per cent lower chance of dying from any cause over a 10-year period, and people who lived with a dog after having a heart attack had a significan­tly lower risk of dying.

Further research from Uppsala University in Sweden looked at data on more than 3.4 million people, and found single dog owners had a 33 per cent reduction in risk of death from cardiovasc­ular disease or other causes, and 11 per cent reduction in risk of heart attack compared to single non-owners.

If that’s not enough to get you searching for your own furry friend, there’s the astounding work done by medical detection dogs too, who can sniff out diseases ranging from Covid to cancer, and warn owners of impending attacks if they suffer from conditions like diabetes or severe allergies.

“The key to a greater understand­ing of the diagnosis of human disease could be held in the nose of man’s best friend,” says Claire Guest, chief scientific officer and co-founder of the Medical Detection Dogs (MDD) charity (medicaldet­ectiondogs.org.uk).

“Bio detection dogs have the potential to save countless lives and transform the future of disease detection with their incredible sense of smell, and medical alert assistance dogs are already saving the lives of people with complex health conditions by warning them of an impending medical crisis, so they can take the necessary action and stay safe.”

Dog lover Kate Leaver has just written a book – Good Dog – about the profound impact dogs can have on our health and lives, sparked by Leaver’s shih tzu Bertie, who helped her through depression. “Bertie’s support, comfort, physical affection and calming presence gave me what I needed to get through a hit of melancholy that severe,” she says. “I had a theory he could smell depression on me – I asked a few canine behavioura­l experts and they agree it’s possible.

“The health benefits of living with a dog are quite astounding. There are the obvious ones, like how dog people tend to be fitter because they go for daily walks or runs, and we suspect dogs might make us happier or calmer. I find it really validating, as someone who goes on about the cleverness and loveliness of her dog, to have science to back me up too.”

Leaver points out dogs can also have an extraordin­ary effect on our stress levels, resilience and mental wellbeing, and cites a 2015 Japanese study where researcher­s looked at how much of the feel-good hormone oxytocin we produce when we’re with a dog. “Turns out, holding eye contact with your pet dog over a half-hour period can increase your oxytocin levels by 300 per cent, and the dog’s levels go up by 130 per cent,” she says. “Oxytocin is known as the ‘cuddle hormone’ and is really important for stressreli­ef, reassuranc­e and bonding.”

Here, Leaver and Guest outline the work some wonderful dogs do to boost and protect human health…

Pip the diabetic alert dog Pip is a border collie who was trained by his diabetic owner Katie Gregson, now 18, to detect when her blood sugar is too high or low. She watched a YouTube video on how to train a dog as a diabetic alert dog, and learned to put samples of her saliva when she had high or low blood sugar into pots and freeze them. She took them out every day for six months to show them to Pip, and reward her when she showed any interest in them. She then began to hold the pots up to her mouth, so Pip would associate the smell with her.

“Over a period of about 18 months,” says Leaver, “Pip learned to detect that smell, associate it with Katie, and alert someone when she smelled it. When she was ready, Katie got rid of the pots and knew she could rely on Pip to sniff out any change in blood sugar.”

Gregson’s parents say Pip wakes them at least once a week to alert them to changes in her blood sugar. “It’s quite remarkable what they’ve been able to achieve together,” says Leaver, “and a testament to the incredible bond they have, human and dog.”

She points out that a dog’s sense of smell is so accurate, it also has the potential to detect certain types of cancer, malaria, Parkinson’s and even Covid. “They may just be the cutest, least invasive and even most reliable diagnostic tests we have available to us,” says Leaver.

Storm the Covid detection dog Storm is a big Labrador x golden retriever who’s training to be a Covid-19 detection dog, says Guest. He’s learning the odour of the virus from tiny pieces of shirt, socks and face masks worn by people who tested positive. “Storm comes across big and brave but has a sweet, soft character,” says Guest. “He’s very keen to please and enjoys using his initiative, but at home he loves a good game and is more than happy to settle in a sunny spot and relax.”

Jobi the cancer detection dog Beautiful and cheeky spaniel Jobi lives with the Medical Detection Dogs chair of trustees, Betsy Duncan-Smith. The playful pooch has a favourite toy – a bedraggled cuddly pheasant – which he’s happy to share if it’s returned. But that’s just for his downtime – his work is the very serious business of cancer detection, and Jobi is specifical­ly working on spotting prostate cancer in human samples. “When he finds the odour he’s looking for, he stops in front of it, staring, so his trainer is absolutely clear,” explains Guest. “He then gets a biscuit reward – and he does all of this wiggly spaniel style.”

Noodle the dementia patient helper Noodle is a cute grey schnoodle who works on a dementia care ward as a therapy dog, evoking long-buried memories in elderly patients. Leaver recounts how one elderly lady squealed with delight when the little dog jumped on her bed, and it prompted her to merrily chatter away about her own dog – to the amazement of her son, who hadn’t heard his mother utter a single word for six weeks. “He was delighted, and shocked, and grateful,” says Leaver.

Henry the medical alert assistance dog

Labrador Henry alerts his owner Lizzie to her condition, postural orthostati­c tachycardi­a syndrome (PoTS), which makes her faint, sometimes several times a day. Before having Henry, Lizzie was often hospitalis­ed and repeatedly injured, but since his arrival this hasn’t happened once. “Henry alerts Lizzie to her condition and gives her a few minutes warning when she’s about to collapse,” explains Guest. “He detects a change in Lizzie’s odour a few minutes before an episode is about to happen, and alerts her by pawing, nudging or jumping up, so she knows she needs to get somewhere safe.”

Good Dog: Celebratin­g The Dogs Who Change, And Sometimes Even Save, Our lives, by Kate Leaver, is published by HarperColl­ins, priced £14.99.

ACROSS

6. A poor fiddler outside the door (7)

7. Crouch down — it’s an illegal occupation (5) 9. A number of them give you the time of your life! (5) 10. Leaves high and dry on the beaches (7) 12. Washing may depend on it (7,4) 14. Superinten­ding, but missing something? (11) 18. Piece of bread the French break into bits (7) 19. Get even? (5) 21. It’s irritating getting only a little credit in support (5) 22. He’s not a particular person (7)

DOWN

1. Tighten up on one’s salary? (5) 2. A gunsmith adds it to his stock (6) 3. Its line is straightfo­rward (3) 4. It will come as a sudden blow (6) 5. It ends a flight in two ways (7) 8. Bacon’s lines (7) 11. Makes slow progress by streetcar (7) 13. It makes a man keen on money, and a woman on food (7) 15. Stay to put mother in control (6) 16. It’s a necessity to want to exist (4,2) 17. A descriptio­n of one found wanting (5) 20. The last thing one aims for (3)

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 ??  ?? Henry the medical alert assistance dog, with owner Lizzie
Henry the medical alert assistance dog, with owner Lizzie
 ??  ?? Claire Guest and medical detection dog Lexi
Claire Guest and medical detection dog Lexi
 ??  ?? Storm, the Covid detecting dog
Storm, the Covid detecting dog
 ??  ?? Kate Leaver with her dog Bertie
Kate Leaver with her dog Bertie
 ??  ?? Jobi, the cancer detecting dog
Jobi, the cancer detecting dog

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