14/01/2013

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:00:22. > :00:25.We expose the deadly chemicals being sold legally on our streets.

:00:25. > :00:33.Germaine Greer on the woman from Canterbury who set the trend for

:00:33. > :00:36.female writers. I love her because of her ridiculous courage.

:00:36. > :00:45.The Surrey man who returns to Bosnia to commemorate a lost love

:00:45. > :00:52.in a time of war. No reason to think anything might happen that

:00:52. > :00:55.day. It is war, you can never tell. I'm Natalie Graham with untold

:00:55. > :01:05.stories closer to home. From all round London and the South East,

:01:05. > :01:25.

:01:25. > :01:28.Hello, I'm in Canterbury. I'm back later, but first up tonight: Drug

:01:28. > :01:31.abuse is a serious problem, but it's made worse by the fact that

:01:31. > :01:34.new drugs are being invented faster than they can be banned. So-called

:01:34. > :01:37.legal highs are freely available in the South East, and of course much

:01:37. > :01:47.of the supply is routed through London. Mark Jordan now reports

:01:47. > :01:56.

:01:56. > :01:59.from the capital on the chemicals which are one step ahead of the law.

:01:59. > :02:02.Imagine a capital city where, in a single night, thousands are exposed

:02:02. > :02:05.to drugs untested on rats, let alone humans. It happens in London

:02:05. > :02:08.every weekend. The deadly lows of legal highs. The worst I've seen is

:02:08. > :02:11.someone's kidneys stop function. was possessed. I went into Tesco

:02:11. > :02:16.naked and assaulted a police officer. Shouting screaming,

:02:16. > :02:26.hallucinating. We needed four or five people to sedate them. Hester

:02:26. > :02:27.

:02:27. > :02:32.never made it to hospital she just died. Created in labs, new legal

:02:33. > :02:35.highs are emerging every single week. Some are even stronger than

:02:35. > :02:40.the illegal ecstasy, cannabis and cocaine they mimic. But the

:02:40. > :02:43.chemistry keeps these users the right side of the law. Black Mamba,

:02:43. > :02:47.Bliss Bomb, Go E, this has become a highly profitable industry. It is a

:02:47. > :02:50.cat and mouse game as chemists cook up the latest legal high and the

:02:50. > :03:00.law tries to catch up Users buy them and review online and friends

:03:00. > :03:08.

:03:08. > :03:15.The doctors and toxicologists left to identify what's in them are

:03:15. > :03:23.getting scared. We put a urinal in Wardour Street, Soho, and found 60

:03:23. > :03:26.different drugs in that. 60? Yes. With 43 deaths linked to legal

:03:26. > :03:31.highs in just a year, toxicologist Dr Ramsey fears it's just the

:03:31. > :03:36.beginning. These people are the first to take these compounds and

:03:36. > :03:42.they have never been evaluated anywhere in the world before.

:03:42. > :03:46.they lab rats? Yes, they are! They can't possibly know the risks of

:03:46. > :03:53.the compounds they are taking. Nobody does! A weekend's legal

:03:53. > :03:56.highs have just arrived from a single A&E. These are the samples

:03:56. > :03:59.brought by the police, taken from an A&E department. Great big

:03:59. > :04:02.sticker - not for human consumption. It's the only way they can legally

:04:02. > :04:06.be sold. It seems suprising to me that somebody would spend quite a

:04:06. > :04:13.lot of money on that and read not for human consumption and then

:04:13. > :04:16.consume it! Those chemicals are legally sold at Head shops. Have

:04:16. > :04:21.you got Benzo Fury? And there are hundreds of online retailers So,

:04:21. > :04:25.there you are, one pack of Benzo Fury. This is one of the most

:04:25. > :04:31.popular legal highs. Scientists have manipulated the chemistry for

:04:31. > :04:38.the effects of illegal ecstasy. So, what do you get for �10 of legal

:04:38. > :04:46.high? 19-year-old Katie Wilson got more than she ever bargained for.

:04:47. > :04:53.thought I'd try it to have a giggle. I remember happiness, euphoria. I

:04:53. > :04:57.presumed like ecstasy. But then came the psychosis. After the Benzo

:04:57. > :05:01.wore off, in my head I thought I was going to die. I told them to

:05:01. > :05:04.tell my mum I loved her. I smashed the phone, wrecked their flat and

:05:04. > :05:14.just left. I was possessed. It wasn't me in my head. All cars just

:05:14. > :05:14.

:05:14. > :05:18.stopped, like a movie. I saw Tesco. Do you remember walking naked

:05:18. > :05:21.though Tesco? No. To a lot of people its funny that I went in

:05:21. > :05:27.Tesco naked and assaulted a police officer. Because I was kicking and

:05:27. > :05:34.punching they held me on the floor and I'm going proper mental. They

:05:34. > :05:39.asked, are you on heroin, crack or crystal meth? Back at that wrecked

:05:39. > :05:43.home, things were even worse for her friend. He only took a few more

:05:43. > :05:51.than me and had a paramedic come to the house as his lungs were going

:05:51. > :06:01.crazy. He was in a coma. Two weeks later he came round and can only

:06:01. > :06:04.open his eyes. He's brain damaged. In the basement at Chelsea and

:06:04. > :06:11.Westminster Hospital, the Club Drug clinic picks up the pieces and the

:06:11. > :06:14.long-term damage is now emerging. It can be extremely life-changing.

:06:14. > :06:23.We have people who have had to have their bladder removed because of

:06:23. > :06:29.ketamine, psychosis from methadrone and many calls from parents. What's

:06:29. > :06:35.the problem? Ketamine with bladder problems. 300 patients are now in

:06:35. > :06:38.treatment here. The concern I have is that what we will see is, in two

:06:38. > :06:43.to three years, we'll begin to see the consequences of the harm that

:06:43. > :06:50.is going on now. Its actually too early to see it at the moment and

:06:50. > :06:53.so we may just be seeing the tip of the iceburg.

:06:53. > :07:01.Back at St Georges, Dr Ramsey is haunted by an American student's

:07:01. > :07:04.disastrous creation of a legal high for synthetic morphine. This

:07:04. > :07:07.compound was only taken by 20 people, but all developed

:07:07. > :07:14.Parkinson's disease. If it was produced now and widely distributed,

:07:14. > :07:18.we could have a catastrophe. Nobody looking at the structure of that

:07:18. > :07:22.compound could have predicted it would cause those problems. There

:07:23. > :07:25.is a risk we might find something similar. Thalidomide is another

:07:25. > :07:35.good example. We might find something that causes birth

:07:35. > :07:36.

:07:36. > :07:39.defects.These things are made in China, shipped over here. John told

:07:39. > :07:42.me of a disused toxic chemical created in the 1940s. The recipe

:07:42. > :07:47.has been dusted off and now sells for highs and sexual arousal.

:07:47. > :07:54.Unknown risks. Guaranteed profit! You can legally order a kilo for

:07:54. > :07:58.�640 from China. This is how it comes. We've covered the name up to

:07:58. > :08:06.stop copycats. It says causes respiratory problems, harmful if

:08:06. > :08:09.swallowed, may damage unborn child - avoid breathing dust. If exposed

:08:09. > :08:15.call a poison centre, and in clubs across London people are snorting

:08:15. > :08:24.this. Divide it into one gram bags, add a warning sticker and sell for

:08:24. > :08:29.�15. So, �640 for the kilo divided up, put in bags and sold on the

:08:29. > :08:37.internet will bring you �15,000! Legal highs bring a guaranteed

:08:37. > :08:43.smile for dealers. Entirely within the law, Max Mulley

:08:43. > :08:48.owns 10 shops and sells legal highs. They have clear labelling to say

:08:48. > :08:52.what they are not for and people go off and do things. That's basically

:08:52. > :08:58.up to them, I can't control that. What alcohol does to people is far

:08:58. > :09:02.worse than anything we are doing. Current regulation is not fit for

:09:02. > :09:05.purpose. Those picking up the pieces gather here at the Maudsley.

:09:05. > :09:08.The Governemnet has already created powers to outlaw specific highs

:09:08. > :09:14.like Methadrone and ketamine, but even police chiefs wonder how to

:09:14. > :09:18.keep up. The kids are sending round party invites with a link on where

:09:18. > :09:24.to buy your drugs. The Home Office, I'll be very candid, and police

:09:24. > :09:27.find this very hard to get our heads around and we are flat footed.

:09:27. > :09:34.The Metropolitan Police declined to take part in this film. The UK

:09:34. > :09:39.Border Agency also refused. UKBA have great hangers full of little

:09:39. > :09:47.packets of powder, but don't have the technology or recourses. They

:09:48. > :09:54.don't know what's in them! There are kids dying every week. The

:09:54. > :10:01.youngest was 14. Maryon lost 21- year-old Hester to GBL, now a

:10:01. > :10:05.banned substance. She was an absolute delight. Because she was

:10:05. > :10:07.going to be a doctor and wanted to save lives as part of her career, I

:10:08. > :10:11.felt setting up the Angelus Foundation was something I could do

:10:11. > :10:16.to keep her footprint alive. Maryon's foundation teaches the

:10:17. > :10:23.dangers. No easy task when you meet young users. You were 13 and an

:10:23. > :10:27.addict? Yes. Did you ever think this is a chemical never tested?

:10:27. > :10:33.didn't care because the high was so massive and it outweighed all the

:10:33. > :10:36.badness. Then everything started to kick-off. Me getting kicked out of

:10:36. > :10:41.school and my friend trying to kill herself, to throw herself in front

:10:41. > :10:44.of a lorry. Only then did he kick the habit. So, what now? Tell every

:10:44. > :10:47.user they'll die and they'll laugh. Ban every substance and the next

:10:47. > :10:53.chemical could be even more deadly Controlling substances, all it does

:10:53. > :11:03.is spawn the production of the one that isn't controlled. We are

:11:03. > :11:09.

:11:09. > :11:19.damned if you do, damned if you Coming up. Returning to the scene

:11:19. > :11:19.

:11:19. > :11:22.of lost love. It has taken so long Now, books written by women for

:11:22. > :11:28.women are selling by the millions these days but the roots of these

:11:28. > :11:38.kinds of novels go back a lot further than you might think. And

:11:38. > :11:39.

:11:39. > :11:43.Books by female writers take up shelf after shelf in any modern

:11:43. > :11:46.bookshop. From children's stories to controversial adult only fiction.

:11:46. > :11:54.Many of the authors are British and household names, from Jane Austin

:11:54. > :11:58.to JK Rowling. But once upon a time, the world of literature was very

:11:58. > :12:01.much a man's world. In fact, it was unheard of for a woman to be a

:12:01. > :12:03.professional writer. Back in dirty, smelly, poverty-stricken England in

:12:03. > :12:10.the 17th century, even men struggled to make any kind of

:12:10. > :12:14.living from writing and women simply wrote to amuse themselves.

:12:14. > :12:20.Until a debt ridden woman from Kent decided she was going to do devote

:12:20. > :12:24.her life to writing and pleasure. Her name was Aphra Benn and she

:12:24. > :12:29.still has fans today. I love her. I love her because of her ridiculous

:12:29. > :12:33.courage. She is a fascinating woman. She crosses so many boundaries that

:12:33. > :12:35.we do not imagine a woman of the time being able to cross.

:12:35. > :12:43.definitely had lovers, possibly of both sexes. She is a one-off,

:12:43. > :12:47.unique. Aphra Benn wrote plays, poems and one of the very first

:12:47. > :12:52.novels ever written. The story of her life reads just

:12:52. > :12:55.like something straight out of a best seller. The story goes that

:12:55. > :12:59.she was born near Canterbury in 1640 and started writing for a

:12:59. > :13:07.living when she was 30, by which time she had become a widow, served

:13:08. > :13:10.time in prison and been employed by King Charles II to spy on the Dutch.

:13:11. > :13:12.To find out more about her undercover work, I have come to

:13:12. > :13:18.interrogate Professor Jackie Eales of Canterbury Christchurch

:13:18. > :13:22.University. The English were involved with

:13:23. > :13:28.trade wars with the Dutch so there is trade rivalry, naval rivalry.

:13:28. > :13:31.Both countries build up huge navies. Any information you could bring

:13:31. > :13:37.back about the navy and trade, about the movement of ships would

:13:37. > :13:40.be very useful. How common was it for a woman to be spying? It is

:13:40. > :13:45.less usual than men doing it, but during the English Civil Wars,

:13:45. > :13:47.women had got much more involved in spying on both sides. There was a

:13:47. > :13:52.belief that women were actually better at passing themselves off,

:13:52. > :13:57.as been very innocent and not being involved in anything underhand. I

:13:57. > :14:00.think a number of women were used and were continuing to be used.

:14:00. > :14:02.Charles II's reign marked the restoration of the monarchy

:14:02. > :14:09.following a turbulent time of civil war and Oliver Cromwell's short-

:14:09. > :14:11.lived rule as Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England. It was an

:14:12. > :14:19.extraordinary period of our history, a period that fascinates Germaine

:14:19. > :14:28.Greer. It is a strange time in English history because it is being

:14:28. > :14:38.run by some stunningly beautiful and quite immoral woman. They were

:14:38. > :14:43.

:14:43. > :14:46.running the King. They can run the King because they can still

:14:46. > :14:49.interest and excite him. He had been rather bored by the whole

:14:49. > :14:53.business as long as he could remember. The problem for Benn was

:14:53. > :14:56.King Charles II was not very good at paying people. With no one to

:14:56. > :14:59.cover her expenses, she returned to Britain penniless and ended up in

:14:59. > :15:02.debtor's prison. In 1669, she was released from prison. One theory is

:15:02. > :15:05.that she had her debt paid off by an anonymous benefactor. That was

:15:05. > :15:09.when she started writing for a living, presumably she wanted to

:15:09. > :15:12.make enough money to make sure she never had to return to a place like

:15:12. > :15:14.this. And she was remarkably prolific. As well as writing

:15:14. > :15:20.political documents and translating scientific texts, she wrote

:15:20. > :15:23.romantic novels, love poems and bawdy comic plays. The settings for

:15:23. > :15:33.many of her stories and her ability to speak several languages appears

:15:33. > :15:39.

:15:39. > :15:42.to indicate she was very well travelled. Her most celebrated book,

:15:42. > :15:45.Oroonoko, tells the story of an African slave in the South American

:15:45. > :15:48.colony of Suriname, a place she appeared to know well.

:15:48. > :15:51.wonderful thing about it is you have the African prince, you have

:15:51. > :16:00.also got the Caribbean Indians who are hunter-gatherer people. It is

:16:00. > :16:02.an amazing confrontation between the two. It is not about slavery.

:16:02. > :16:05.It is actually about the relationship between the different

:16:05. > :16:08.groups in a colonial society. No way she could have written it

:16:08. > :16:11.without having experienced it. Otherwise, it would not be so

:16:11. > :16:21.numinous. Every time you look at it, you see another thing that you have

:16:21. > :16:23.just learnt about societies with a history of slave ownership.

:16:23. > :16:29.Benn was a pioneer of something called amatory fiction, stories

:16:29. > :16:32.about love, romance and sexual attraction. Kim Simpson, a PhD

:16:32. > :16:38.student at the University of Kent, says her 17th century stories are

:16:38. > :16:43.really where the romantic novel begin. Benn was really the first

:16:43. > :16:48.amatory writer, others include Delarivia Manley, Eliza Haywood. It

:16:48. > :16:54.was writing by women for women. It addresses issues like sex, desire,

:16:54. > :17:01.gender, fantasy. Those sort of things. But it also still engages

:17:01. > :17:06.with the question about power, relationships between men and women.

:17:06. > :17:09.And it is very dramatic stuff. You have got incest, bigamy and all

:17:09. > :17:12.sorts of kind of crazy plot developments and things like that.

:17:12. > :17:17.I think it would make for some quite good TV maybe.

:17:17. > :17:20.Benn also wrote popular comedies for the stage. Kent based

:17:20. > :17:23.playwright Samantha Hall says that while the paying audiences loved

:17:23. > :17:28.them, the critics were often less than kind because they did not

:17:28. > :17:30.think a woman should write such bawdy and outrageous material.

:17:30. > :17:33.There was a horrible double standard which was introduced

:17:33. > :17:42.because restoration comedy is bawdy anyway, but coming from a man that

:17:42. > :17:45.was accepted. But written by a woman, it was seen as an outrage.

:17:46. > :17:48.So you get a lot of poets at the time, her fellow writers, all

:17:49. > :17:58.actually writing poems against her and some of the kind of vindictigve

:17:59. > :18:04.

:18:04. > :18:07.poems are actually really sad to Racy novels and bawdy plays are not

:18:07. > :18:10.the kind of things you would expect to find in the library of

:18:10. > :18:15.Canterbury Cathedral. But this is where some of the oldest surviving

:18:15. > :18:21.examples of her work are stored today. Here you get a sense of

:18:22. > :18:25.Benn's range as a writer. This is a collection of her plays. Over here

:18:25. > :18:28.in the middle, we have a book that would have been her bread and

:18:28. > :18:31.butter, a translation about trees which has her name on the page. And

:18:32. > :18:35.here, this would have been a huge compliment to Benn, one of her

:18:35. > :18:39.novels has been adapted into a play and performed in the Theatre Royal.

:18:39. > :18:46.On paper, Benn looks like she made a successful career as a writer.

:18:46. > :18:49.But she struggled for money all her life, yet she never gave up.

:18:49. > :18:54.Despite great hardship and pain, she kept writing until her death at

:18:54. > :19:03.the age of 48. Before she died, she explained that she had such gout in

:19:03. > :19:07.her hand that she could not hold a pen. So she is probably dictating.

:19:07. > :19:17.She is supposed to have died of want of care in her physician. What

:19:17. > :19:18.

:19:18. > :19:21.that means is that she died of an overdose. Laudanum probably. Or

:19:21. > :19:24.what ever version of opium there were selling in those days which

:19:24. > :19:26.was probably given to her in brandy. But I think she was mercy killed

:19:26. > :19:30.because she could not go on any more.

:19:30. > :19:33.She was buried at Westminster Abbey. But in the centuries after her

:19:33. > :19:43.death, her work was largely forgotten. The Victorians saw her

:19:43. > :20:01.

:20:01. > :20:04.as immoral, the bad woman who wrote bad books. If Benn were alive today,

:20:04. > :20:06.I think she would probably enjoy a very successful career, writing

:20:06. > :20:09.novels and screenplays about relationships and sexuality. But

:20:09. > :20:12.according to Germaine, even Aphra would draw the line somewhere.

:20:12. > :20:22.tell you what she would not write, she would not write 50 Shades of

:20:22. > :20:25.

:20:25. > :20:28.Grey. 20 years ago this year, the war in

:20:28. > :20:31.the former Yugoslavia was making headlines around the world. And one

:20:31. > :20:33.young fireman from Lingfield in Surrey saw the conflict as an

:20:33. > :20:37.opportunity to fulfil his ambition to become a photojournalist. Sean

:20:37. > :20:39.Vatcher went to Bosnia and while he was there he fell in love with an

:20:39. > :20:42.American aid worker. But a passionate love affair went

:20:42. > :20:51.horribly wrong. Two decades later and Sean has gone back and our

:20:51. > :20:56.reporter Mark Norman went with him. Sean Vatcher and Collette became

:20:56. > :21:03.lovers in the middle of a war zone. This was Bosnia in 1993, a country

:21:03. > :21:10.at war in the heart of Europe. But there is no happy ending to this

:21:10. > :21:13.love story and it has taken Sean 20 years to be able to talk about it.

:21:13. > :21:18.She was the first person I can, hand on heart, say that I have been

:21:18. > :21:22.in love with. This was the worst conflict in

:21:23. > :21:26.Europe since World War Two. It brought Sean and Collette together,

:21:26. > :21:36.it also ripped them apart. No reason to think anything might

:21:36. > :21:49.

:21:49. > :21:54.I had first heard about Sean and Collette when I was in Bosnia in

:21:54. > :22:00.the 1990s. Now I am back in the Bosnian city of Mostar to hear him

:22:00. > :22:03.tell a story of one particular day they spent here. We have probably

:22:03. > :22:13.been here a few hours, but Sean remembers this part of the city and

:22:13. > :22:18.

:22:18. > :22:21.Do you think it's safe? I don't care, I am going.

:22:21. > :22:24.It is abandoned and derelict because there is still a risk of

:22:24. > :22:29.mines and booby-traps. But Sean and Collette were on this front line.

:22:29. > :22:32.They picked their way through the trenches and bunkers.

:22:32. > :22:42.This is where we would have crossed into our position on the day and

:22:42. > :22:56.

:22:56. > :22:59.joined up with the other guys. decades ago, Bosnia was all over

:22:59. > :23:02.our TV screens in the same way Afghanistan is today. Sean was a

:23:02. > :23:05.part-time firefighter in Surrey but had ambitions to become a photo

:23:05. > :23:07.journalist. He thought taking pictures in Bosnia would help his

:23:07. > :23:10.career. 4000 miles away in America, Collette Webster made the same

:23:10. > :23:14.decision for different reasons. She had watched the TV news and became

:23:14. > :23:19.convinced she had to go to Bosnia to help refugees as an aid worker.

:23:19. > :23:28.Hello, it is 13th January or 14th. Once Collette arrived in Bosnia,

:23:28. > :23:35.she started recording her thoughts on to tape. What just happened,

:23:35. > :23:39.very confusing. These people in some ways have such a hard life.

:23:39. > :23:42.But you get used to things so quick. Just little things. You get used to

:23:42. > :23:52.being dirty all the time, to not having food or clean water or

:23:52. > :23:55.

:23:55. > :24:00.toilets. Sean and Collette met and quickly became inseparable. It was

:24:00. > :24:02.an immense love. She was that special person to me. I put her on

:24:02. > :24:05.a very high pedestal and still have her there.

:24:05. > :24:07.But within weeks, they were being drawn further into the conflict.

:24:07. > :24:15.Collette increasingly wanted to help where the need was greatest,

:24:15. > :24:18.which meant closer to the fighting. Sean wanted to take photographs as

:24:18. > :24:26.close to the action as possible. They accepted an invitation from a

:24:27. > :24:29.Croatian army soldier to see it first hand. They were taken to the

:24:30. > :24:38.top floor of an abandoned apartment block directly on the front line.

:24:38. > :24:42.It is the building on the left of your picture. It is awful.

:24:42. > :24:45.There are still shells falling. Just awful.

:24:45. > :24:52.Collette and Sean carried on to the apartment block from the front line.

:24:52. > :25:00.It is the same building he is bringing me to today.

:25:00. > :25:09.Exactly as it was. Without the debris.

:25:09. > :25:13.We were not in any major hurry to get up there. A slow amble. Made

:25:13. > :25:17.our way to where the Croatian guy led us to.

:25:17. > :25:20.Collette followed Sean up the 10 flights of stairs to the top floor.

:25:20. > :25:23.The thoughts she recorded on tape tell us she was beginning to

:25:23. > :25:32.realise that local people had no choice but to live through the

:25:32. > :25:36.horror. We can go home any time. These

:25:36. > :25:41.people have to stay here and have to live in this. You do your best.

:25:41. > :25:46.You do your best with what you've got.

:25:46. > :25:53.This is the room we ended up in that day. Saw the muzzle flash come

:25:53. > :26:03.from the boulevard below. A rocket came through between the two of us

:26:03. > :26:05.

:26:05. > :26:11.and exploded on the wall above us here.

:26:11. > :26:15.Collette was seriously injured. Sean tried to get her to a

:26:15. > :26:19.makeshift hospital. But it was too late. She died within a few hours.

:26:19. > :26:23.This is the first time you have been back? The first time in 18

:26:23. > :26:33.years in this room. It doesn't feel good. Does it feel like a bad

:26:33. > :26:42.

:26:42. > :26:45.We tracked down the record of deaths in west Mostar that year.

:26:45. > :26:55.Collette was the 348th victim, but the first American to die in the

:26:55. > :27:15.

:27:15. > :27:18.It's taken so long to get back, I do not know when it is going to

:27:19. > :27:21.happen again. If I put it aside, who else is there really? Outside

:27:21. > :27:24.the apartment building where Collette was killed, there is a run

:27:24. > :27:27.down children's playground. Sean now wants to restore it in her

:27:27. > :27:30.memory. That way he can leave the city a more permanent reminder of

:27:30. > :27:34.the woman he loved. Anyway, I'll see you later. I'll

:27:34. > :27:44.talk to you more. I love you all. I really do. I love you so much. And

:27:44. > :27:52.

:27:52. > :28:02.I miss you. I love you. I'll talk If you want any more information

:28:02. > :28:08.

:28:08. > :28:10.our website. You can watch the show Coming up next week. The biggest

:28:10. > :28:20.reorganisation of the National Health Service. What will it mean

:28:20. > :28:21.

:28:21. > :28:26.for us? You might shop around for care. You would make choices.

:28:26. > :28:33.Will monitoring ourselves at home unlock the beds in hospital?

:28:33. > :28:37.know that it has fantastic potential benefits. It marriages it

:28:37. > :28:47.to reduce premature death as well. And we are living longer which is