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Marianne Rigge obituary

about 10 hours ago
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My wife, Marianne Rigge, who has died aged 77, was a passionate public advocate for the interests of NHS patients, and a pioneer in creating ways of giving people easier access to medical and health information.The daughter of a GP, she founded a national charity, the College of Health, with the renowned social entrepreneur Michael Young, in response to their experiences as patients and in the consumer movement.Young was the inspiration behind organisations including the Open University and the Consumers’ Association, which he launched in 1957.Marianne joined the Consumers’ Association in the 1970s, and she and Young set up the College of Health in 1983, with the aim of influencing NHS doctors to put the needs of patients at the centre of treatment and care decisions.She ran the charity as director, from Bethnal Green, east London, for 20 years and it helped thousands of people.

It operated a telephone service with recorded medical information about a range of diseases and conditions, which was considered technologically innovative for its time,Long before hospital treatment waiting times became a way of judging how well the NHS is performing, the College of Health published waiting lists – as a service for patients,At the time, GPs could refer patients to any consultant around the country, if they were prepared to travel to get treatment sooner,Marianne unearthed the lists from the House of Commons library, to publish the annual Guide to Hospital Waiting Lists, which first appeared in 1984,She gave talks to doctors and to medical institutions, telling them of the actual experiences and views of patients – backed by case studies – whom they often saw only briefly on ward rounds.

As a young woman, with a French degree but no medical qualifications, Marianne was at first daunted by the ranks of seasoned, sometimes hostile, practitioners.But she had a gift for writing and speaking, and influenced many with her eloquence.She wrote articles for several publications, including as a columnist for the Health Service Journal.Television news producers frequently called her when they wanted a patient’s view.She was appointed OBE in 2000.

Marianne was the daughter of an Irish doctor, Noel O’Mahony, and his wife, Nora (nee Daly) and was born in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, where her father was working.The family then moved to east London and Marianne first came across patients when driving her father on his rounds in Forest Gate.She had already spent time in hospital as a child, when, at the age of seven, she suffered severe burns when her nightdress caught fire.Educated at St Angela’s Ursuline Convent school in Forest Gate, she then did a year at Marlborough Gate secretarial college, by Hyde Park, before studying at University College London from 1967 to 1970.After graduating, she worked for the Consumers’ Association as project assistant for Which? magazine and part-time personal assistant to the chair, Jennifer Jenkins, wife of the then home secretary, Roy Jenkins.

In 1976 she became Young’s research assistant when he was chair of the National Consumer Council.She married Simon Rigge in 1968 and had two daughters, Katie and Emma, and a son, Thomas, who died of cot death; they separated in 1982 and divorced in 1989.She and I married in 1990.Marianne is survived by me, Katie and Emma, her sister, Jane, and brothers, James and Fergus.
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1 day ago
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3 days ago
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Groundbreaking British Museum show set to challenge samurai myths

A groundbreaking samurai exhibition that promises to challenge “everything we think we know about Japan’s warrior elite” spanning a millennium of myth and reality is to open at the British Museum next year.Titled Samurai, the blockbuster exhibition will reveal a world beyond armour-clad warriors and epic duels, as popularised by the noble, katana-wielding heroes of Akira Kurosawa’s classic action films and PlayStation’s hit video games.Much of the samurai myth – including even the word “samurai” – was invented long after their heyday, a modern phenomenon linked to mass media and pop culture.The exhibition, which opens in February, will also show that, far from being a male warrior cult, samurai women were educated, governed and even fought.Rosina Buckland, the exhibition’s lead curator, told the Guardian: “This is the first exhibition to tackle the myths

4 days ago
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Paul Kelly: ‘Imagine by John Lennon is probably one of the worst songs ever written. I can’t stand it’

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The Guide #216: Celebrity Traitors was a watercooler-moment smash-hit – but how long will audiences stay faithful?

That’s it then. The curiously pristine SUVs are back in the garage, the cloaks are off to the dry cleaners and your favourite hits of the 80s and 90s are safe, for a few months at least, from those absurdly melodramatic cover treatments. Yes, The Celebrity Traitors is over, having served up a finale that had just the right amount of intrigue, double-crossing and slack-jawed looks to camera from the terminally outwitted. We won’t ruin things here for anyone who hasn’t watched it yet, but for a full spoiler-filled debrief you can read Lucy Mangan’s review of last night’s drama here.It was a fitting capstone to a remarkably successful first Celebrity Traitors outing

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Die My Love to Rosalía’s Lux: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

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societySee all
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Peter Archer obituary

about 9 hours ago
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Marianne Rigge obituary

about 10 hours ago
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Abuse by UK’s ‘most prolific sex offender’ was ignored at Medomsley detention centre, report finds

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Experts concerned over health effects of high-dose nicotine pouches as sales soar in UK

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‘I don’t want anyone to suffer like I did’: the intersex campaigners fighting to limit surgery on children

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1 day ago