Archive for November, 2009
Easy Fundraising
We’ve signed up to Easy Fundraising so that you can give to Uveitis Information Group (Birdshot Uveitis Society’s affiliated charity) simply by shopping on-line via Easy Fundraising’s website or using their search engine.
Easy Fund-Raising
This is an easy on-line way to help raise money for Uveitis Information Group. Retailers such as Amazon, Next, Argos, John Lewis, Comet, iTunes, eBay or HMV, give money when you shop-online via Easy-Fundraising. All you need to do is to sign up for free to raise money while you shop!Have you heard about easyfundraising yet? It’s the easiest way to help raise money for Uveitis Information Group. › Continue reading
The Giving Machine
We have recently signed up to the Giving Machine so that you can make donations on-line while you shop. Its easy – you just have to register and choose Uveitis Information Group as the charity that you support.
You can now generate free cash donations for Uveitis Information Group (BUS’s affiliated charity) every time you shop online.
The Giving Machine
It will not cost you anything extra – the online shop pays the donation on your behalf. Just go to www.TheGivingMachine.co.uk :
- JOIN as a shopper/giver
- CHOOSE to support Uveitis Information Group
- REMEMBER to shop at TheGivingMachine every time you buy online
TheGivingMachine™ You Shop, They Give.
You are Invited To Attend
On 24 March 2010 at 6.00 p.m. at the Museum of London, Dr Stephen Foster will be talking about Inflammatory Eye Diseases. This is part of a series of lectures about the eye that is being given by Professor William Ayliffe (ophthalmologist) at Gresham College in London. Entrance is free and these lectures are designed for the general public. › Continue reading
Raising the profile for Birdshot
BUS believes that it is important to raise the profile of uveitis in general, and Birdshot Chorioretinopathy in particular so that it is better researched and understood. › Continue reading
Rea’s story – Birdshot troubles
Isn’t it interesting how, when life is absolutely perfect and you couldn’t want for anything more – along comes something that you definitely don’t want just so you can experience a bit of angst!
So, there I was, aged 51, back in 2005, in the perfect job (Director of Social Services) – the one I had spent my whole life dreaming about – and living an amazing life with my weeks being spent in Winchester, one of the most beautiful cities in the UK, and my weekends in London.
I had a little cottage in Hampshire with its back garden running straight down to the river – breakfasts spent communing with the ducks and days spent in my office in the castle, working with amazing Hampshire people and ensuring that we delivered the best possible social care to all those in need.
Back in my home town, London, for the weekend, I took advantage of the wonderful cultural life and saw a play at the Shakespeare globe, followed by a meal. Shortly after the meal, I started to feel very strange, aching bones, dizziness, pounding headache and a feeling that I might just be sick! So I made my excuses and went home, straight to bed. What a Saturday night – was woken halfway through the night with violent vomiting, a headache so bad I thought I was dying and at some stage, I passed out. Woke up several hours later with a huge bruise on my face and feeling very delicate. Spent Sunday in bed and went to work in Winchester on Monday, still feeling very fragile. Recovered by Wednesday. › Continue reading
Cheap Glasses
I am not at all sure we should be advertising supermarkets like Asda particularly as they will help put high street optometrists out of business but I recently read about this price war they started . Could be useful if, because of your eye problems, you are going through a phase of having to change your glasses frequently, or if like me you have a habit of losing glasses.
The newspaper reported that the supermarket giant Asda has started a price war with high street opticians by launching an ‘all-round’ price for spectacles, regardless of the complexity of the prescription. They will cost £50 for standard frames and £70 for designer frames.
