Huddersfield Daily Examiner

I owe my life to the A&E – so let’s hope it stays open

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I WAS glad to see that the A&E at Huddersfie­ld Royal Infirmary will stop open a while longer due to campaigner­s and the Examiner, as Health chief Jeremy Hunt orders new plans for HRI.

One night last August I was and pneumonia.

I was on the ward for three weeks on antibiotic­s. Without these marvellous services and people I would not be here today. £40m into research.

GcMAF, the body’s way of treating cancer without sideeffect­s, has 300 scientists behind it and 70 of the 180 scientific research papers are on the American National Library of Medicine (search GcMAF on PubMed).

Ten thousand people were recently treated with this human protein, apparently largely successful­ly. I READ with interest the article about West Yorkshire Police unlawfully charging for the removal and storage of stolen vehicles.

Well done Geoff Broadhead for pointing this out.

It is quite clear that the charges are wrong and I would suggest that Paula Rogers, the West Yorkshire Police Vehicle Recovery Manager, should sit down with a solicitor who can show her that she and the police are quite wrong in charging owners who have not left their vehicles where recovered but were left by the thief or other third party. It is no good Ms Rogers saying the insurance will pay, that the police can’t afford. That is not the point.

I would suggest that anyone who has paid charges for vehicles recovered after being stolen should ask for the money back from the police.

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