
Alethea Farline
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
dailymail.co.uk | Katherine Lawton |Alethea Farline
A nurse who was falsely accused of carrying a psychiatric patient's baby has spoken of her ordeal for the first time after winning £25,000 at an employment tribunal. Jessica Thorpe, 31, was forced to leave the profession after the male in her care made up the bizarre allegation about her being pregnant with his child. Despite there being absolutely no truth in the claim, the former nurse - who is now a successful influencer - was immediately suspended from her job in April 2020.
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1 month ago |
thesun.co.uk | Graeme Culliford |Alethea Farline
SCHOOL children are consuming so many addictive high-caffeine energy drinks they are “bouncing off the walls” and unteachable in class, The Sun on Sunday can reveal. A new report has shown that 15 per cent of people in Britain now have the fizzy beverages with breakfast — and experts say a proposed ban on selling them to under-16s must be brought in as a matter of urgency.
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1 month ago |
thesun.co.uk | Alethea Farline |Alley Einstein
MARRIED couples across Britain are ditching monogamy for threesomes and playing away – and claim they are just as happy as those in regular romances. It was traditionally thought that relationships with just two partners were happier and more committed. But a study of 25,000 people for The Journal Of Sex Research found monogamous and non-monogamous unions have the same level of satisfaction in their relationships and sex lives.
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2 months ago |
dailymail.co.uk | Alethea Farline |Tom Bedford |Adam Dutton |Rory Tingle
Locals in Britain's asylum seeker hotspots have complained of feeling scared for their safety and 'taken advantage of' by the government. Each asylum seeker who lodges a claim for protection is sent to a different part of the UK under the Home Office's 'dispersal policy'. While the system is intended to ensure fairness, some towns and cities have ended up taking in more asylum seekers as a proportion of their population than others.
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2 months ago |
thesun.co.uk | Lynsey Hope |Alethea Farline
EXPERTS say the addition of glycerol to some slushie drinks may be an unintended result of manufacturers trying to dodge the sugar tax. And some shops have now banned their sale to under-fives, The Sun on Sunday can also reveal. It comes after some of the brightly-coloured drinks — which are designed to appeal to children — were linked to the hospitalisation of 21 children aged two to seven.
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