- Видео 83
- Просмотров 149 366
Martin Sarsfield
Добавлен 26 дек 2013
Видео
Various, Airshow, London - Tape 4
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.28 дней назад
Footage captured from 8mm Camcorder Tape
£2 bus man plans journey around England and Wales
Просмотров 1115 месяцев назад
A man who used the government's £2 bus fare scheme to travel hundreds of miles across the country is preparing for a new challenge. Andrew Cowell, 47, has previously travelled by buses alone to Whitby, Penzance and Poland, from Derby. He now plans to spend 13 days travelling on a total of 84 service buses and one ferry around the coast of England and Wales. Mr Cowell estimates he will spend nin...
Swimmers to take on water marathon for Leicestershire boy, 1, with rare 'butterfly skin'
Просмотров 25Год назад
ITV News Central reporter Rajiv Popat caught up with the open water swimmers in their final training session. A group of open water swimmers are preparing for a wild water marathon to raise money for a Leicestershire boy with an incurable and painful disease. One-year-old Leo Statham from Hinckley, was born with Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB), also known as 'butterfly skin". It's a genetic conditio...
'Buses tend to be a bit undervalued in this country'
Просмотров 30Год назад
Andrew Cowell has travelled from Derby to Cornwall taking advantage of £2 bus fares and was interviewed on BBC Radio Cornwall by James Churchfield to talk about his adventure by bus.
Derby bus man Andrew Cowell completes three-day journey to Poland
Просмотров 25Год назад
A man has completed his 1,148-mile (1,847km) journey to Poland in three days using just buses and coaches. Andrew Cowell, 47, set off from his home in Derby on Wednesday morning. He took seven buses and two international coaches before arriving in Krakow at about 19:00 BST on Friday. Mr Cowell has previously found fame by completing a series of journeys around England using the government's £2 ...
Andrew Cowell: £2 bus man sets off on journey to Poland
Просмотров 29Год назад
A man planning to travel to Poland using just buses and coaches has set off on his international trip. Andrew Cowell, 47, started his 1,148-mile (1,847km) journey from his home in Derby on Wednesday morning and hoped to arrive in Krakow on Friday evening. He has already used the government's £2 bus fare cap scheme to travel hundreds of miles across England. He said this trip would be a differen...
Egypt Nile Cruise 2010
Просмотров 49Год назад
This video is some highlights of a Nile cruise in Egypt filmed in 2010. The footage includes boat trips in Aswan, shopping in Aswan market, trip to Abu Simbel, trip to the Nubian village and the Nubian dancers providing entertainment on the boat. Aswan High Dam, Philae temple, visit to a perfume shop, and more entertainment on the boat including the Galabeya Party! Karnak Temple, Luxor Temple, ...
Man who completed three-day bus journey from Derby to Penzance...
Просмотров 89Год назад
Andrew Cowell's bus journey is featured in the Headlines round of the BBC Show "Have I got news for you"
Nottinghamshire Guided Walks - BBC Radio Nottingham - 28th April 2023
Просмотров 13Год назад
Interview on BBC Radio Nottingham Friday 28th April 2023. Featured on the Making A Difference section of the show with Andy Whittaker to promote Nottinghamshire Guided Walks booklet and website and national walking month. #WALKTHISMAY
Man completes 320-mile bus journey from Derby to Penzance
Просмотров 103Год назад
Man completes 320-mile bus journey from Derby to Penzance
Man begins 320-mile journey from Derby to Cornwall on buses
Просмотров 322Год назад
Man begins 320-mile journey from Derby to Cornwall on buses
Kevin Duala looks at an e-scooter pilot scheme run by Voi in Bristol
Просмотров 835Год назад
Kevin Duala looks at an e-scooter pilot scheme run by Voi in Bristol
Max Power Live 2002 Birmingham NEC - 14.07.2002
Просмотров 3952 года назад
Max Power Live 2002 Birmingham NEC - 14.07.2002
Alton Towers Firework Display and rides at night - 3.11.2002
Просмотров 7332 года назад
Alton Towers Firework Display and rides at night - 3.11.2002
Nigel Rally Experience Day at Silverstone - 22.03.02
Просмотров 492 года назад
Nigel Rally Experience Day at Silverstone - 22.03.02
Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal - East Midlands Today 15.03.22
Просмотров 312 года назад
Ukraine Humanitarian Appeal - East Midlands Today 15.03.22
Boa Vista Part 3 - Boa Vista Sunset Dinner
Просмотров 3772 года назад
Boa Vista Part 3 - Boa Vista Sunset Dinner
Boa Vista Part 2 - Beautiful beaches & Museu dos Naufragos
Просмотров 512 года назад
Boa Vista Part 2 - Beautiful beaches & Museu dos Naufragos
Red light runner on the ring road 07-08-21
Просмотров 893 года назад
Red light runner on the ring road 07-08-21
Lucky Tails Alpacas - Walking Alpacas 15.7.21
Просмотров 6143 года назад
Lucky Tails Alpacas - Walking Alpacas 15.7.21
Wow nice unboxing i needed this vid for some footage of some one getting a 1998 furby
She is incredible!
Wow, all the technology my family ever had and we just didn't take any videos back then. These days everyone is recording everything.
Great stuff! Awesome to see the Jag and Tornado again
I worked in a mental hospital in the early seventies and I can honestly say it was one of the best times of my life. The patients. Staff, everyone was always happy. It was great.
It was all very well Thatcher moving people out into the community in the 80s. The lack of funding to support and monitor people was almost as cruel as the institutions. People were abandoned. Stop taking meds. Self medicated with alcohol and drugs. Homelessness etc. Terrible way to abandon those in need of care.
Horrible. As a mental health nurse I'm saddened. But with psychotropic medication and care in the community policies, we've come some way but there's still more to do.
They treated mentally ill people like shit then with electric shock treatment
Dr Milner who was the chief psychiatrist at Aston hall was mentioned in two book written by women who were sent to Aston hall as children and were abused by this doctor Milner while undergoing so called treatment. Years later other people came forward to say they had been abused at Aston hall .
So proud to see my mum on the news during this hard time😁
Nuttier than a squirrels fart the lot of em
The rooms are cold,drop ceiling? Totally disreguarded by......
" CURED " 😠 😡 👿 😤
Mapperley Hospital in Nottingham has been closed down for several years. As far as I know the building is derelict.
is That Kevin From Blue's Clues in the UK Version right?
Yes
Such an utter travesty that this amazing building (first skyscraper) has fallen into disrepair. No idea why nothing is being done with it!
"Promosm" 😱
What a wonderful actress!!
Shame I can't find anything like this for Coppice Hospital! Very little on it from what I can find.
Where is Mr moseley now I wonder... 🤔🤔 Miss him
Many thanks Martin I’ve been looking for footage of this event for a long time.
Thank you for the old film here-most interesting it is too. Well done!!
Tx: 21 April 1969
Conifers get nasty and collect dust. I never liked them in a home garden. Thanks for de-firring this property.
In my small county there were 2 large mental hospitals, one was for psychiatrist patients the other was for those mentally handicapped, the largest one the psychiatric hospital had a huge amount of land, they grew all their vegetables and had a pig farm as well, those deemed capable of working were employed to work in the grounds, there were many locked wards for the more unstable a c dangerous patients. When Thatcher started closing these hospitals many were put into the community and were unable to take proper care off themselves and short term wards in other hospitals couldn't take them, many suffered abuse by people who took advantage of them. Worse was the closure of the other hospital, many of the patients who were put into the community had severe learning difficulties and every day these ex patients went to the hospital walking outside the wall, its some times kinder to have some of these people in institutions because alone they cannot cope with the rigours of daily life
Note much has changed has it
Unbelievable
Cruel. Archaic, Callous. Cold.Uncaring. Demeaning.
They're Coming to Take me Away, Ha-ha! ruclips.net/video/C0rgeQ0QD-o/видео.html
By today's standards, yes....but the attitudes were quite forward for the times
These "patients" from history look better than "normals" walking the streets today. Tik tok!
I call It Thick Tok?
Why didn’t the doctors have to wear ridiculous hats?
It was for the patient’s,I believe
My great aunt, Gertrude Harrison spent about 30 years in Mapperley. Cruel life
Was it any better than other typical mental hospitals?
@@EchosNarcissis I wouldn't know. I wasn't a patient
The 80’s had a lot to answer for!
This footage is heartbreaking. The way mental health was managed in those days was awful. I am so thankful for the breakthroughs and changes to the management of the illnesses that we have these days!
I assure you it’s pretty much the same
It’s still hell today
I was an inpatient for 6 months in the 1960s. A large psychiatric hospital in Lincoln was where I was sent after a total breakdown. Apparently for the first month I never communicated and was totally 'inward' despite trying various medications; so the next step was ECT (electric shock treatment) - which worked! It jolted me back to awareness of my surroundings and I started to engage with the professionals - although I took an instant dislike for the main psychiatrist and refused to talk to him? Slowly I was introduced to activities during the day, like boxing up spring bulbs or making cuddly toys, which occupied my mind and stopped me thinking about 'me' all the time. We were moved from ward to ward as we started to get better and my husband was even allowed to take me into town when he visited. It is easy to disparage 'those days' but they never sent you home unless they thought you were well enough to cope. Many years later I managed a supported accommodation house run by a wonderful charity and had some residents with severe mental health issues. The difference, to me, was staggering. Pills were the only answer to everything - and were increased each time there was a setback! Psychiatrist was seen once a month if they were lucky and their CPN (community psychiatric nurse) visited only if they were made aware of a problem. Actually being admitted into a psychiatric facility was impossible unless they thought you were either about to kill yourself or someone else - and even that you had to tell them. The lucky ones who were taken onto a ward were released within weeks at the most but usually days. Nothing is set up to get you well enough to come off the medication and there are no therapy activities at all. I actually feel lucky that my mental health issue happened back then! This film seems to be only about elderly patients - probably some suffering from dementia or those sectioned by family many many years before because they had sex before marriage! I was 21 years old when I was a patient.
Sadly we have gone completely the other way now. There has been good progress in terms of treatments for anxiety and depression etc - although it all depends where you live and waiting lists. However with severe mental illness is still pretty terrible, you wont go to hospital unless you literally are about to kill yourself or are severely psychotic in hospital you’ll just get given drugs until ‘stable’ then discharged. Community teams are so underfunded its hard for them to keep up with everyone who needs it. Some people do have good experiences - but lack of money and staff mean you often get left. Its OK if you have a family and care and have money and you are able to learn yourself to manage your own mental health, what you need to do to stay well etc. But many people cant do this, don’t have the resources or are too poorly to do it - so they get lost and forgotten. This is where something like this would help - places where people can learn that despite problems they can live a good life and get on, and learn many skills that its OK. But hospitals and day centres are filled with the most poorly people. I work for a mental health recovery and I see daily people who have been very ill go onto recover and live brilliant lives, often better than before they got ill. But they need the space and time to learn to heal, learn the tools and skills they need - this is what is lacking today. Medication can be helpful but that is just one piece of the pie other things are just as important.
@@SadeWorldwide ... if not worse!
Todos los videos que veo de esta clase desdé USA son iguales, todos cortan y podan árboles y arbustos sin ningún miramiento ARRASAN con todo.... Jamás pero jamás los he visto plantar un árbol o podar una planta sin destrozarla..... Son un horror nunca los dejaría entrar en mí jardín... ORRIBLEEEEEE 😭😭
👍👍👍👍👍
Music please!
Now what ???
May you grow from strength to strength 💪💪💪💪 in your Profession. Liked and Subbed. 🙏👌👍🙏👌👍🙏👌👍🙏👌👍
Hello, who plays the music please? Very nice tune,
That music! I kept expecting the news to start.
👍👍
Olà 👍 très beau travail, j'ai une p'tite chaîne en Algarve au sud du Portugal 🇵🇹 viens voir aussi mes vidéos si tu veux...😉 Bon WE ☮️💞 et à bientôt j'espère 🥀💃
Fishing them with drugs and leaving patients to sit for hours without stimulation and without a y form of companionship was the norm in Somerset's hospitals
Where is this hospital located @ ?
Now closed as a hospital it is now the Headquarters for Nottinghamshire Healthcare Mental Health Trust located in Mapperley, Nottingham, NG3 6AA.
Great vid, very entertaining.
The ONLY thing I can think of I cannot agree with Ronald Reagan about was his policy of defunding Mental facilities, which flooded the Country with Mentally ill Patients which may have precipitated the Homeless crisis here in the U.S..
We had the same devolution in Australia. Now they live with "scraps from our table"and often alone. The "wonders" of modern medicine
It didn’t happen with Reagan. The left really has destroyed history. This began in about 1962. All of the doctors tried valiantly to educate the public about what this would lead to. Homelessness. Government scooped that money up right away. Now they want money to fight what they created
same here in Canada; it happened around the 80 s the so called desinstitutionalisation and yes, we see the results today......
Oh, I can disagree with many things that Reagan did, but defunding mental facilities was among his worst. What was needed was a variety of mental health services. Some people could function by living in a group home with support services. One of the Scandanavian countries set up a small facility for dementia patients. Besides living quarters, it has a restaurant and a store. Residents are not medicated and use the restaurant and make purchases at the store. They actually do not pay for these because their government pension goes into the funding of the facilities. Residents move about so much more that those who live in places where they are kept medicated and do not move about. You have failed to count the loss of affordable housing in the United States as a major factor in homelessness. Some of the homeless still work, but can't afford an apartment anymore. There are seniors in California who are working and living in vans. At night, they park in church parking lots where they are welcome. All homeless are not mentally ill. My strongest opposition to Ronald Reagan as California governor was his siding with the growers to break the unionizing efforts of the UFW.
Yeap , thay closed the mental hospitals and built more prison's...why?... because prison's are cheaper!!!.🤔💕🇺🇸
I have been through a period of mental illness and what folk don`t generally realise is that it can happen in much the same way as getting measles say. The normal reaction is "your not right in the head" and then being written off as a loony, it`s not like that.
V