Breaking Down Barriers: How Compounding Inequalities Impact Access to Digital Health Services

A third of people who are offline find that the NHS is one of the most difficult organisations to interact with (Lloyds, 2022). In addition, those who are offline are twice as likely to indicate a health condition compared to those who are online (Lloyds, 2023).

These statistics tell us that not only do those who are digitally excluded struggle to interact with health services, they are also more likely to need to.

This overlap between digital exclusion and access to health-care has been well researched by member organisations within the VCSE (Voluntary, Community and Social Enterprise) Health and Wellbeing Alliance, a partnership between voluntary sector representatives and the health and care system focused on improving services for communities. Our recent ‘Designing For Digital Inclusion in Healthcare’ seminar series was a project supported by the alliance, with the aim of drawing together this research and learning, to help reduce barriers to accessing health care.https://www.goodthingsfoundation.org/what-we-do/news/compounding-inequalities-in-accessing-digital-health-services/?fbclid=IwAR1jF9yfb9ziCsQ4XTuv0s8C43TVfMm8mBcFu-kc5zcnFw5804XrUbrKwr8

The Beach Boys Surfer Girl From 1963.

I love this song by The Beach Boys. I love listening to it in my music library on my iPhone when I am out and about walking and when I am on the metro on my way to NTDF and when I am on my way back from NTDF on my AirPods headphones and when I am out for a walk. I also love listening to the song in my bedroom on my ibox when I am getting ready for the shower. It came out and was released on the 16th September 1963 in the mid 60’s the back end of 63 before I was born the song is called Surfer Girl.

Sir Henry Dukes MI6 officer in WW1

 (10 February 1889 – 27 August 1967) was a British MI6 officer and author.

Early life and family

Paul Henry Dukes was born the third of five children on 10 February 1889 in BridgwaterSomerset, England. He was the son of the Congregationalist clergyman, Rev. Edwin Joshua Dukes (1847-1930), of Kingsland, London, and his wife, the former Edith Mary Pope (1863-1898), of Sandford, Devon. Edith was an academically gifted woman, the daughter of a schoolteacher, who obtained her Bachelor of Arts degree by correspondence course at the age of 20. In 1884, she married Edwin, who had returned from missionary work in China. She died from a disease of the thyroid gland, and in 1907, Edwin remarried to a 40-year-old widow named Harriet Rouse.

Paul’s siblings included the playwright Ashley Dukes (1885-1959) and the renowned physician Cuthbert Dukes (1890-1977). He had an elder sister, Irene Catherine Dukes (1887-1950), who led a life plagued by illness, and yet another, younger brother, Marcus Braden Dukes (1893-1936), who died in Kuala Lumpur while working as a government official. His sister-in-law was the renowned ballet dancer Marie Rambert. Paul Dukes was also the great-uncle of poet Aidan Andrew Dun, who is the grandson of his brother Ashley.

Paul was educated at Caterham School before going on to pursue a career in music at the Petrograd Conservatoire in Russia.

Career

As a young man he took a position as a language teacher in RigaLatvia. He later moved to St. Petersburg, having been recruited personally by Mansfield Smith-Cumming, the first “C” of MI6 (SIS), to act as a secret agent in Imperial Russia, relying on his fluency in the Russian language. At the time, he was employed at the Petrograd Conservatoire as a concert pianist and deputy conductor to Albert Coates. In his new capacity as sole British agent in Russia, he set up elaborate plans to help prominent White Russians escape from the Gulag and smuggled hundreds of them into Finland.

Known as the “Man of a Hundred Faces,” Dukes continued his use of disguises, which aided him in assuming a number of identities and gained him access to numerous Bolshevik organizations. He successfully infiltrated the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the Comintern, and even the political police, or CHEKA. Dukes also learned of the inner workings of the Politburo, and passed the information to British intelligence.

He returned to Britain a distinguished hero, and in 1920 was knighted by King George V, who called Dukes the “greatest of all soldiers.” To this day, Dukes is the only person knighted based entirely on his exploits in espionage.

He briefly returned to active service in 1939, helping to locate a prominent Czech businessman who had disappeared after the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia. He referred to the businessman as Alfred Obry in his later book about the search, entitled An Epic of the Gestapo. According to A History of the British Secret Service (1969), “Paul Dukes was always a meticulous agent in paying attention to detail. He combed all the Czech papers and in one found this paragraph: ‘A thirteen-year-old boy found on the railway line to Tuschkau the completely unrecognizable corpse of a man. The body was mutilated beyond recognition and the right hand was missing. The police pronounced a verdict of suicide. From papers found on the body it appeared the person was Friedrich Sweiger, a tailor of Prague.’ Dukes immediately suspected Sweiger was in fact Obry, especially since this was the route Obry was to have taken on his escape. He built up a strong case against the Gestapo of murdering Obry and not only demanded exhumation of the body but succeeded in persuading the Germans to do this. The corpse was undoubtedly that of Obry.”

Dukes was also a leading figure in introducing yoga to the Western World.

Writing

His book Red Dusk and the Morrow chronicles the rise and fall of Bolshevism and he toured the world extensively giving lectures pertaining to this subject. Dukes’ other books are listed below.

Personal life

In 1922,Dukes was first married to Margaret Stuyvesant Rutherfurd (1891–1976), former wife of Ogden Livingston Mills, the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury. Margaret was the daughter of Anne Harriman, the second wife of William Kissam Vanderbilt, and her second husband, Lewis Morris Rutherfurd, Jr., son of the astronomer Lewis Morris Rutherfurd. They divorced in 1929, and Dukes later married Diana Fitzgerald in 1959.

He died on 27 August 1967 in Cape Town, South Africa, aged 78.

Mastodon Social Media – A Challenge to X (Formerly Twitter

Mastodon is free and open-source software for running self-hosted social networking

services. It has microblogging features similar to Twitter, which are offered by a large

number of independently run nodes, known as instances or servers, each with its

own code of conduct, terms of service, privacy policy, privacy options, and content

moderation policies.

Each user is a member of a specific Mastodon server that can interact seamlessly

with users in any other server. This is intended to give users the flexibility to select a

server whose policies they prefer but keep access to a larger federated social

network. Mastodon is powered by the ActivityPub protocol, making it part of the

Fediverse ensemble of services such as Lemmy, Pixelfed, Friendica, PeerTube, and

Threads.

Mastodon was created by Eugen Rochko and announced on Hacker News in

October 2016.[9] It gained significant adoption in 2022 in the wake of Twitter’s

acquisition by Elon Musk. The project is maintained by the German non-profit Mastodon gGmbH. Mastodon

development is crowdfunded, and the code does not support advertisements.

Functionality and features

Mastodon servers run social networking software that is capable of communicating

using W3C’s ActivityPub standard, which has been implemented since version

1.6.[14] A Mastodon user can therefore interact with users on any other server in the

Fediverse that supports ActivityPub.

Since version 2.9.0, Mastodon has offered a single-column mode for new users by

default.[15] In advanced mode, Mastodon approximates the microblogging user

experience of TweetDeck. Users post short-form status messages, historically known

as “toots”,[16] for others to see. On a standard Mastodon instance, these messages

can include up to 500 text-based characters, greater than Twitter’s 280-character

limit. Some instances support even longer messages.

Users join a specific Mastodon server, rather than a single centralized website or

application. The servers are connected as nodes in a network, and each server can

administer its own rules, account privileges, and whether to share messages to and

from other servers. Many servers have a theme based on a specific interest. It is

also common for servers to be based around a particular locality, region, ethnicity, or

country.

Mastodon includes several specific privacy features. Each message has a variety of

privacy options available, and users can choose whether the message is public or

private. Public messages display on a global feed, known as a timeline, and private

messages are only shared on the timelines of the user’s followers. Messages can

also be marked as unlisted from timelines or direct between users. Users can also

mark their accounts as completely private. In the timeline, messages can display

with an optional content warning feature, which requires readers to click on the

hidden main body of the message to reveal it. Mastodon servers have used this

feature to hide spoilers, trigger warnings, and not safe for work (NSFW) content,

though some accounts use the feature to hide links and thoughts others might not

want to read.

Mastodon aggregates messages in local and federated timelines in real time. The

local timeline shows messages from users on a singular server, while the federated

timeline shows messages across all participating Mastodon servers. Users can

communicate across connected Mastodon servers with usernames similar in format

to full email addresses.

Here is a link for update: https://joinmastodon.org/