A doctor at Harrogate District Hospital has set up a service to “debunk the myth” of penicillin allergy.
One in 10 people are currently diagnosed with a penicillin allergy but Dr Mike Wakefield, a respiratory consultant, said the true figure was thought to be closer to one in 100.
This meant people often received less effective antibiotics with greater side effects, he said.
Dr Wakefield said people diagnosed as penicillin allergic were more likely to die in the next year, require repeat prescriptions for antibiotics and contract superbugs. He said:
“Penicillin drugs which are used to kill bacteria are a vital part of the antimicrobial armoury.
“I’ve set up a service in the district to start challenging this by finding out more about why people have gained a label of penicillin allergic and when suitable given them a dose of penicillin under close observation.”
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Dr Wakefield said many people were told they were allergic to penicillin in childhood and never challenged this. Sometimes this was because they experienced side effects when taking penicillin but side effects are common with all drugs and don’t necessarily indicate allergic reactions.
He added GPs sometimes found it safer to prescribe alternatives. Also, many people grow out of childhood allergies.
Dr Wakefield said his service aimed to debunk the myth that penicillin allergies were widespread.
Since starting in Harrogate a year ago he has completed a pilot study of de-labelling patients branded penicillin allergic.
He has given supervised amoxicillin or flucloxacillin penicillin tablets to patients with frequent chest infections whose medical history indicated they might not have a real penicillin allergy.
If patients didn’t have a reaction, he said they could take penicillin-based antibiotics for future infections.
Dr Wakefield said a combination of supervised tests and clinical tests meant the likeliness of a true allergy could be understood.
Besides his ad hoc trials at the hospital, Dr Wakefield provides a penicillin service at the Duchy Hospital in Harrogate. People can either be referred by their GP or book appointments.
The Harrogate open water swimmer set to take on the English Channel
Harrogate’s Millie Bell is addicted to swimming.
The 24-year-old open water swimmer has represented Great Britain at major competitions and now has her sights set on bigger achievements.
Next year, she will take on the English Channel – one of the major endurance tests for swimmers which spans 21 miles.
For Millie, the feat will be a big task, but it is also one that she feels she needs to do.
Starting out
Millie did not start out as an open water swimmer.
Instead, she used to run triathlon while studying at the University of York.
But, soon she was bitten by the swimming bug and never looked back.
The move was organic rather than by design. In 2018, the 24-year-old went to a beginners course at Blue Lagoon in Pontefract to test the waters.
She soon found the open water swimming addictive.
“I was pretty scared when I got in, but I soon got used to it.
“That was the start of everything. I fell in love with open water swimming, the community and everything that came with it.”

Millie swimming from Jersey to France as part of her English Channel training.
Races in open water swimming can range from one mile to marathon lengths of 10 miles.
The competitions are feats of endurance which test the patience and stamina of those who participate.
Millie competes in marathon races and her biggest feat has been Windermere Lake, which stretches for 10 miles and took her five hours to complete.
When asked why the lengths are so enticing for her, Millie said it boils down to her urge to test herself and push her body to the limit.
“I’ve always wanted to challenge myself and see what I’m capable of.”
Winning bronze
Millie’s development as a swimmer has been dramatic.
In January this year, she competed with Great Britain at the World Ice Swimming Championships in the French Alps.
She won a bronze medal in each of her three events.
“Going into it, I didn’t think I stood a chance of getting a medal.
“I swam my first race and I was really happy with my time. When I saw my results and that I’ve got a bronze, I was really quite emotional. I never thought that I would get to compete internationally, never mind get a podium.”
But, for Millie, the next challenge was always around the corner.
In fact, the set piece event is in August 2024 when she will take on the English Channel.
Taking on the channel
The idea to swim the channel has always been there for Millie.
She describes it as an “itch”, but did not fully explore the idea until 2021.
“I remember one day I bought this book about it. I was reading this book and it was about this crazy woman who swam through winter and swam for hours upon hours on end.
“I read a chapter of it and I went: ‘No, that’s crazy. I’m not doing that.’
“A couple of months later, I was looking on Facebook and there was this channel relay looking for people to join. I applied and thought that I wouldn’t get on. But then I got on and it started from there.”
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Millie completed the channel relay, which sees swimmers compete in a team and swim for an hour at a time on the English Channel.
But she realised that she wanted to take on the full swim solo.
Last month, she went to Jersey as part of her training which saw her swim from the island to France which is 14 miles and took her seven hours and 22 minutes to finish.
“The distance for me was not too much of a problem. I knew I was capable of doing it because I had swam Windermere a couple of times and that’s 10 and a half miles.”

Millie swimming the channel relay in 2021.
The build up to the swim will test Millie’s body, but also her mind.
Much like other athletes who compete at the highest level, Millie has been working with a sports psychologist to help get her in correct mental state to swim the channel.
“For me, I doubt myself quite a lot.
“Sometimes when you get in the middle of a swim and you’re in the middle of the sea, you start to doubt yourself and you start to panic.
“He [the psychologist] helps me with ways to keep my focus. It’s really important is the mental side. It’s only this year that I have started to realise how important it is.”
She added that the mind can also wander during extended hours of swimming, including being bored.
“When you’re swimming for six or seven hours, what do you think about?
“If I can get my brain so that it doesn’t think about anything then that is absolutely perfect. But when you’re bored, you start to think about everything don’t you? You start to think: ‘Did I say this wrong earlier in the week?’
“Being bored makes me really anxious. Some people get really bored and just want to get out. So boredom can be a bit of an issue. But, for me, panicking is more of an issue.”
The list of channel swimmers stretches back as far as 1875, when Matthew Webb, an English swimmer and stuntman, became the first recorded person to complete it.
In 10 months time, Millie could join that list.
For her, completing the task would be an itch she could finally scratch.
“It’s probably one of the biggest things that I will do in my life.”
If you have any local sporting heroes who you think should be featured in Sporting Spotlight, contact calvin@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Nine rapes reported at Harrogate Army Foundation College in 13 monthsNine allegations of rape at Harrogate’s Army Foundation College have been reported to police in the last 13 months.
The figures were revealed in a Freedom of Information response from North Yorkshire Police.
According to the data, nine rapes, two incidents of voyeurism and two sexual assaults were reported to civilian police between July 2022 and August 2023.
No details have been given as to whether the incidents involved recruits or staff at the college.
It comes after the college on Penny Pot Lane, which trains junior soldiers aged 16 and 17, was hit by allegations of abuse and bullying in 2021.
However, ministers defended the organisation and said it had a “much improved climate”.
Baroness Goldie, a Ministry of Defence minister, told the House of Lords in May this year that the college had taken steps to improve and that this was reflected by an Ofsted report in 2021.
However, the new figures raise questions over further allegations of sexual assault and abuse.
Jim Wyke, of the Child Rights International Network, which campaigns for the raising of the military age, said the government should look again at the recruitment age.
He said:
“Ministers must look seriously at making the transition to an all-adult armed forces, recruiting for the armed forces at 18 is the settled consensus in most of the world.”
In response to the figure, a British Army spokesperson said:
“The army is committed to rooting out all forms of inappropriate behaviour and we have a zero-tolerance policy on sexual offences – any personnel convicted of a sexual offence will be dismissed.
“We have very strong safeguarding mechanisms at AFC(H) to ensure junior soldiers have the right support structures. This includes multiple methods of accessing welfare support, including confidential support lines.
“It would be inappropriate to comment on investigations which may be ongoing”
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Handmade rug showroom opens in Harrogate tomorrow
A new handmade rugs showroom is set to open in Harrogate.
Emma Mellor Handmade Rugs will welcome its first customers on Albert Street tomorrow (October 7).
The store, which is based in the former Dizzy Duck unit, will sell a range of rugs from Afghan to Scandinavian designs.
Emma Mellor, who owns the venture and has a showroom in York, said she chose to open in Harrogate after initially visiting to buy some paint and noticed the vacant unit.
She said:
“I’ve always loved Harrogate. My grandma used to bring me here when I was little for a treat.
“I’ve always wanted a showroom here and I’ve always really liked this street. But it’s weird, because I actually came here for a tin of paint and it just snowballed.
“I came for a tin of paint and left with a shop.”

The showroom on Albert Street in Harrogate.
Ms Mellor, who took an interest in textiles after working in a rug shop herself, took over the Albert Street unit three weeks ago.
She said that it felt like a natural choice to open a new showroom in Harrogate.
Ms Mellor said:
“I really wanted to have a shop here, it seems like a natural place. I work with a lot of interior designers who are based around this area.”
The showroom will be open Tuesday to Saturday from 10.30am until 4.30pm.
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Call to spend Harrogate Station Gateway money in Skipton if scheme falls through
A councillor has said funding intended for Harrogate’s £11.2m Station Gateway should be spent in Skipton if the scheme falls through.
Last month, senior Conservative councillors in Northallerton agreed to consider different options to rescue Harrogate’s troubled transport project.
The most likely option for North Yorkshire Council is to focus on its less controversial aspects, which might include public realm improvements at Station Square and One Arch, in an attempt to deliver the scheme in some form.
But alternative options could also fail to win support and the council may decide to scrap it altogether.

Station Square
Rather than handing money back to government, Andy Brown, the Green Party councillor for Aire Valley told the council’s Skipton and Ripon planning committee this week the Harrogate money could be used to improve Skipton’s own £7.8m Station Gateway scheme.
Like Harrogate, it’s being paid for through the government’s Transforming Cities Fund but has proved far less controversial with the public than across the A59.
The planning committee met on Tuesday afternoon in Skipton to consider replacing a footbridge over the Leeds and Liverpool canal, which forms part of the Skipton Gateway proposals.
Councillors approved the replacement bridge but its design was strongly criticised as it does not offer ramped disabled access.
Cllr Brown queried if Harrogate Transforming Cities Fund money could be spent on the bridge to improve accessibility.
He said:
“We should be sending a message [to the council] that they seek every alternative source, including if the Harrogate scheme falls through, to achieve disabled access”.
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A report prepared for the council’s Conservative-run executive in September confirmed that funding would be able to be transferred from the Harrogate scheme to Skipton or Selby with approval from the government.
It said:
“In principle, this funding may be able to be reallocated to either or both the Selby and Skipton Transforming Cities Fund projects in North Yorkshire. Written approval from the funder would be required which would be requested should this be necessary.
“The full business cases for these projects would have to justify any proposed reallocation in addition to agreement from the funder.”
North Yorkshire Council has said it will put forward its next steps for the Harrogate Station Gateway before November.
Harrogate Music Weekender: line-up revealedThe line-up has been revealed for the first Harrogate Music Weekender, which begins in seven days.
Thirty events will take place from Friday, October 13 to Sunday, October 15 and feature everything from rock and acoustic to Ibiza anthems and throwback hits.
Fifteen venues including Manahatta, Husk Beer Emporium, Artizan Café, Piccolino, The Den and Foundry Project will take part in the music extravaganza.
Harrogate Business Improvement District, which is funded by local businesses to increase the number of town centre visitors, has organised the event.
It hopes the event, along with next week’s Visit Harrogate Restaurant Week and the ongoing Harrogate Comedy Festival will provide a town centre boost in the pre-Christmas lull.
DJ Mark Green will kick off the weekend at the Yorkshire Hotel at 6pm on the Friday night with an Ibiza-themed closing party.
As well as the events across the weekend, Harrogate BID will have a walking DJ booth and street performers in the town.
Matthew Chapman, Harrogate BID manager said:
“We are looking forward to making this a successful annual offer in the Harrogate events calendar and hopefully bring people from far and wide into the town to experience the vibrant live music offer that we have.”
Here is the line-up.
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Friday, October 13
Opening event – 6 – 8PM – The Yorkshire Hotel Sky Bar – DJ Mark Green
5:30pm – 7:30pm – Foundry Project – Robbie Miller
7pm – 9pm – Doubletree by Hilton Majestic Hotel & Spa – DJ in Fredericks Lounge
7pm – 11pm – West Park Hotel – DJ & Sax
7:30pm – 9:30pm – Artizan Café – Musical Empowerment, a local inclusive band
8pm – 10pm – Piccolino – DJ
8pm – 10pm – Manahatta – North Road live band
8pm – 10pm – Husk – Biz & Jason band
8pm – 10pm – The Yorkshire Hotel – DJ Dean Snowdon
8pm – midnight – Doubletree by Hilton Majestic Hotel & Spa – Abba Tribute Night (ticketed)
8pm – late – Foundry Project – DJ Patrick Wood
10pm – midnight – The Den – The Robbie Miller Band
Saturday, October 14
2pm – 4pm – HMV, Victoria Shopping Centre – Ade Payne
2pm – 6pm – Harrogate Theatre – Ember and Matt Edgington
3pm – 5pm – The Den – Biz Denton
3pm – late – West Park Hotel
Opening event – 6pm – 8pm – The Crown Hotel – Singo Bingo
7:45pm – 9:15pm – The Den – The Henri Gaston Experience Nigel Clark
8pm – late – Revolucion De Cuba – Mariachi Band and DJ
7pm – late – Manahatta – DJ Max Czernik
8pm – late – Foundry Project – DJ
8pm – late – Piccolino – DJ Josh Farcas
9:45pm – 10:45pm – The Den – Jonny Skinner
11pm – 12:30am – The Den – Nigel Clark (90’s front man from Dodgy)
Sunday, October 15
12pm – 4pm – Husk – Husk’s Sunday Wax – Bring Your Own Vinyl and we’ll play at least 1 side!
1pm – 5pm – Cedar Court Hotel Tipi on The Stray – Nathan – So ‘n’ So Music
4pm – 7pm – Banyan – North Road lead singer and drummer double act
4pm – 11pm – Husk – Harrogate’s Indie’s Block Party DJ Takeover featuring Pizza Social, Husk, Lillypad & Mabgate Bleach on the decks
7pm – 8:45pm – The Den – Jake Pattinson
9pm – 11pm – The Den – Hobo Chic
Polish shop in Harrogate moves to bigger premises as demand grows
A Polish deli in Harrogate will relaunch in new town centre premises at the weekend.
Cracovia, which used to occupy a small shop on King’s Road, will reopen on Saturday in a larger unit on Bower Street.
Owner Maciek Bujakowski told the Stray Ferret:
“Our little shop on King’s Road had become slightly too small, so we’re moving to a bigger shop where we’ll have more space. The uniqueness of our home-made products, such as pâtés, meatloaves and sausages, gives us a strength over other shops, so we’ve become quite popular.
“If you come along on Saturday between 9am and 6pm, you’ll be able to taste different kinds of Polish food and drink, and everybody’s welcome.”

The new shop on Bower Street in Harrogate.
Maciek and wife Kasia not only own the Harrogate shop, but also a restaurant in Chapel Allerton and shops in Armley in Leeds, Acomb in York and Hessle in Hull. In total, they employ 15 people, including four in the new Bower Street shop.
Originally from Krakow in southern Poland, Maciek began his career with a four-year catering degree and represented his country in international food competitions.

Kasia and Maciek Bujakowski.
He came to England in 2004, moving around the country for various chef positions, culminating in being made executive chef of the Kimberley Hotel in Harrogate. He opened his first shop, Magic Meat – a wordplay on his first name – on King’s Road in 2015 to cater to the town’s then-growing Polish community.
He said:
“When we opened our first shop eight years ago, about 80% of our customers were Eastern European and only 20% English, but now the balance is about 50/50.
“With Polish food it’s exactly the same as with other kinds of foreign food. People come here from other places, local people try our food and like it, and it becomes more popular. I wouldn’t be surprised if in 30 years’ time, you would see Polish restaurants like you see Indian and Chinese restaurants now. It’s just the evolution of knowledge of food, and it’s changing all the time.”
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GALLERY: Rachel Daly returns to Harrogate’s Rossett School
England footballer Rachel Daly returned to Rossett School in Harrogate today to rename a 3G sports pitch in her honour.
Rossett’s most famous former student brought the place to a standstill as pupils and teachers turned out to cheer her.
Headteacher Tim Milburn greeted the Aston Villa striker at 10am before she was whisked away to meet staff and tour the building.
When she re-emerged about half an hour later, pupils formed a guard of honour as she walked from the school buildings, accompanied by her dog Dexy, to the pitch.
When they got there, Rachel — wearing white trainers and clothes by her street fashion brand sponsor Hera — joked about how much Dexy loved the attention and thought it was for her.
Dexy was certainly a hit but Rachel, who was accompanied by her family, was the undoubted star on a rare return to the school she left in 2010.
After a short speech from Mr Milburn, Rachel removed a black blanket to reveal a sign for the newly named Rachel Daly 3G Pitch. Behind her, a group of girls played football on the pitch. She said:
“It’s an honour for me to be here and have this named after me.
“It’s great seeing the young girls out here today and having them on a pitch that’s named after me. It’s a feeling I don’t think I’ll ever get used to.”
Rachel, the current PFA Players’ Player of the Year, spoke about coming home with sand burns after playing on the old astroturf pitch and how Rossett and Harrogate held a “special place in my heart”.
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Mr Milburn described Rachel, who started out at Killinghall Nomads Junior Football Club, as an inspiration not only for Rossett pupils but also for anyone who uses the sports facilities. He added:
“She’s not just a Rossett hero, or a Killinghall hero, she’s a town hero. Why wouldn’t we want to honour her?”
Although the school has been quick to honour Rachel, North Yorkshire Council has yet to indicate whether it will support a call from Killinghall Nomads, supported by the Stray Ferret, for Rachel to receive civic recognition.
The Conservative-controlled council said two months ago it was urgently considering a policy on how to recognise achievements by local people.
The Stray Ferret asked Cllr Simon Myers, whose portfolio oversees such matters, what progress had been made since then but has not received a response.
Here are some images from Rachel’s return to Rossett today.

Headteacher Tim Milburn welcomes Rachel Daly to the school.

Pupils form a guard of honour.

Dexy the dog was never far from Rachel’s side.

Rachel Daly, alongside the Rachel Daly 3G Pitch.

The Rossett Lioness and the sign she unveiled.

Current Rossett footballers look on as Rachel talks to her family.

With current footballers on the 3G pitch.

Dexy takes centre stage again.
North Yorkshire Police has cordoned off a road in the centre of Harrogate.
Petergate, which is a narrow route at the back of James Street, was sealed off at lunchtime. The little-used highway contains industrial bins used by businesses.
Two police officers were stationed alongside one cordon at the junction of Petergate and Market Place.

A police officer at the cordon just off Cambridge Street.
Two others were stood at separate cordons further along Petergate and just off Cambridge Street. None would reveal what had taken place.
The Stray Ferret has contacted North Yorkshire Police for further information but has not yet had a response.
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Plan to install electric vehicle charging bays at Harrogate M&S approved
A plan to install eight electric vehicle charging points in the car park at Marks and Spencer’s food hall at Oatlands in Harrogate has been approved.
BP Pulse, which is BP’s electric vehicle charging business, applied to North Yorkshire Council for the scheme in August this year.
The company has an agreement to install high-speed electric vehicle charge points at about 70 M&S stores.
Officers at North Yorkshire Council have now approved the proposal for the Harrogate Oatlands site.
A planning statement by Manchester planning consultants Rapleys LLP on behalf of BP Pulse said the charging points would be located to the north of the store, next to Hookstone Road.
The statement says six of the spaces have their own dedicated charger, and two spaces would share a hyper charger, which is an ultra-fast DC to DC charger that can fully charge batteries in a a few minutes.
One of the spaces would be a disabled bay.
The developer added in its statement:
“Whilst the proposal would be visible within the existing car park, the proposal is minimal in nature and comprises a small element of electrical equipment only.
“Further, the use and appearance of the EV charging pillars and the associated electrical cabinet is consistent with the sites existing use as a car park.”
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