Final Touches as English Village Prepares Four-day Jubilee Party

FILE - In this undated photo issued on Dec. 23, 2021, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II records her annual Christmas broadcast in Windsor Castle, Windsor, England. (Victoria Jones/Pool Photo via AP, File)
FILE - In this undated photo issued on Dec. 23, 2021, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II records her annual Christmas broadcast in Windsor Castle, Windsor, England. (Victoria Jones/Pool Photo via AP, File)
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Final Touches as English Village Prepares Four-day Jubilee Party

FILE - In this undated photo issued on Dec. 23, 2021, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II records her annual Christmas broadcast in Windsor Castle, Windsor, England. (Victoria Jones/Pool Photo via AP, File)
FILE - In this undated photo issued on Dec. 23, 2021, Britain's Queen Elizabeth II records her annual Christmas broadcast in Windsor Castle, Windsor, England. (Victoria Jones/Pool Photo via AP, File)

Next weekend, people across the UK and beyond will celebrate the 96-year-old queen's Platinum Jubilee, marking her 70th year on the throne.

And in the little village of Bidford-on-Avon, everything has to be perfect for the occasion, AFP said.

Here, as in most parts of the UK, Queen Elizabeth II remains extremely popular, and a small team of volunteers are putting in long hours to make sure the event is one to remember.

"I wake up at three or four o'clock in the morning, and I suddenly think of something that we might have forgotten to order," said Suze Meredith, chair of the village's Platinum Jubilee committee.

With just days left before the celebrations start, she is working against the clock to get everything ready on time.

Her role in this pretty village in central England has been "full-time for three months", she told AFP.

That morning, firefighters came with a long ladder to hang red, white and blue bunting along the main street. A few hours later, a group of traditional dancers were to hold a final rehearsal.

Every detail has been attended to for the long weekend from June 2 to 5, over which the celebrations will run.

- Four days of celebrations -
The Platinum Jubilee committee began meeting last summer in Bidford, with its 15th-century stone bridge.

Its program for the four days of celebrations is impressively long: a best-decorated home and garden competition, a fancy-dress contest, a torch run and lighting of a beacon, cricket, tennis, football, bowling, a concert by the local choir as well as exhibitions and talks.

The village is also holding a cake competition and opening a Jubilee garden where several time capsules will be buried -- one to be reopened in 50 years' time -- recording aspects of life in 2022.

The celebrations will culminate Sunday with a street party with a band playing, Irish dancers and Morris men, a children's fairground ride and refreshments.

The streets of neighboring Alcester village are also decked with red-white-and-blue pennants and large portraits of the Queen against a background of Union Jack flags.

Village shops have window displays featuring commemorative mugs and other china, teaspoons from the 1981 wedding of Prince Charles and Diana -- even two little porcelain corgis (the Queen's favorite dogs).

"I know lots of people think we shouldn't have a monarchy any more, but for me, it's part of tradition and it's part of our original identity and culture," said Bidford resident Tabitha Gibson.

She has two young sons now, but she recalls how her grandmother every Christmas would insist on watching the Queen's speech on television.

"I feel that she's somebody that sort of steered the country ... a figurehead for the country and also the leader of the (Anglican) Church. I think that's quite important," she says.

"She's a remarkable woman and really, you know, is a great asset to the country," says another villager, Philomena Hodgetts, 73. She describes the queen as "unflappable" and "someone to look up to".

- Emotional memories-
In the feverish preparations for the Jubilee, some share their memories of the monarch.

Phyllis Losh, whose son fought in the Gulf War, recalls being invited to meet the Queen at a military base.

"I am tiny, and she was on a par with me. She's got the most beautiful, beautiful eyes," she said.

She laughed as she remembered having "to do a curtsy with a cup and saucer and a handbag.

"She is amazing, absolutely amazing," she added. "She does everything with such dignity."

Steve Jackson, a retired local man who has organized the concert of the local Community Choir stresses how much the monarchy has changed during his lifetime.

"We never used to see much of the royal family. They were very private, living in Buckingham Palace. These days they're much more open," he says, citing the 73-year-old heir to the throne, Prince Charles, and even more so his 39-year-old son William, who is next in line.

No one gives much credit to speculation that the Queen, who has cut down on public appearances due to mobility issues, could abdicate, or that the throne could pass directly to her grandson William.

"I don't think she's going to abdicate. Because I think she sees it as a duty to be queen," said Jackson. "And I think Charles will take over because it's tradition.

In the short term at least, Bidford residents are more concerned about the weather forecast, praying that rain will not spoil their party.



Blood Tests Allow 30-year Estimates of Women's Cardio Risks, New Study Says

A woman jogs in a park in Saint-Sebastien-sur-Loire near Nantes, France January 19, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
A woman jogs in a park in Saint-Sebastien-sur-Loire near Nantes, France January 19, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
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Blood Tests Allow 30-year Estimates of Women's Cardio Risks, New Study Says

A woman jogs in a park in Saint-Sebastien-sur-Loire near Nantes, France January 19, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights
A woman jogs in a park in Saint-Sebastien-sur-Loire near Nantes, France January 19, 2024. REUTERS/Stephane Mahe/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

Women’s heart disease risks and their need to start taking preventive medications should be evaluated when they are in their 30s rather than well after menopause as is now the practice, said researchers who published a study on Saturday.

Presenting the findings at the European Society of Cardiology annual meeting in London, they said the study showed for the first time that simple blood tests make it possible to estimate a woman’s risk of cardiovascular disease over the next three decades.

"This is good for patients first and foremost, but it is also important information for (manufacturers of) cholesterol lowering drugs, anti-inflammatory drugs, and lipoprotein(a)lowering drugs - the implications for therapy are broad," said study leader Dr. Paul Ridker of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, Reuters reported.

Current guidelines “suggest to physicians that women should generally not be considered for preventive therapies until their 60s and 70s. These new data... clearly demonstrate that our guidelines need to change,” Ridker said. “We must move beyond discussions of 5 or 10 year risk."

The 27,939 participants in the long-term Women’s Health Initiative study had blood tests between 1992 and 1995 for low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C or “bad cholesterol”), which are already a part of routine care.

They also had tests for high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) - a marker of blood vessel inflammation - and lipoprotein(a), a genetically determined type of fat.

Compared to risks in women with the lowest levels of each marker, risks for major cardiovascular events like heart attacks or strokes over the next 30 years were 36% higher in women with the highest levels of LDL-C, 70% higher in women with the highest levels of hsCRP, and 33% higher in those with the highest levels of lipoprotein(a).

Women in whom all three markers were in the highest range were 2.6 times more likely to have a major cardiovascular event and 3.7 times more likely to have a stroke over the next three decades, according to a report of the study in The New England Journal of Medicine published to coincide with the presentation at the meeting.

“The three biomarkers are fully independent of each other and tell us about different biologic issues each individual woman faces,” Ridker said.

“The therapies we might use in response to an elevation in each biomarker are markedly different, and physicians can now specifically target the individual person’s biologic problem.”

While drugs that lower LDL-C and hsCRP are widely available - including statins and certain pills for high blood pressure and heart failure - drugs that reduce lipoprotein(a) levels are still in development by companies, including Novartis , Amgen , Eli Lilly and London-based Silence Therapeutics.

In some cases, lifestyle changes such as exercising and quitting smoking can be helpful.

Most of the women in the study were white Americans, but the findings would likely “have even greater impact among Black and Hispanic women for whom there is even a higher prevalence of undetected and untreated inflammation,” Ridker said.

“This is a global problem,” he added. “We need universal screening for hsCRP ... and for lipoprotein(a), just as we already have universal screening for cholesterol.”