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Ultramarathon swimmer sets record pace over 55km in crocodile-filled Australian river

about 18 hours ago
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Andy Donaldson and his team were aware of the dangers that lay ahead, but just in case a reminder was needed, a huge 2,5-metre freshwater crocodile waiting at the start ramp ahead of his longest-ever solo swim put the challenge into stark focus,Donaldson, a British-Australian ultramarathon swimmer, was about to embark on the 55km Dam to Dam Challenge from Lake Argyle to Kununurra in the East Kimberley, hoping to become the first man to complete the gruelling endurance swim,Adding to the difficulty was the fact the Ord River in remote Western Australia is well known for its reptilian inhabitants; the freshwater crocodile population numbers 5,500 – one croc for every 10 metres of his swim,Fortunately for the 35-year-old, freshwater crocodiles are smaller and more timid than their saltwater counterparts – the world’s largest reptiles – and unlikely to approach humans.

Donaldson’s team had done its research beforehand and he never felt threatened by the wildlife surrounding him, which also included eagles, ospreys, kits, cormorants, darters, turtles and big catfish,“It was a bit nerve-racking doing a swim in the open water,” Donaldson said,“There’s always a risk of wildlife,But in the same breath, people use that river every day recreationally,“They say ‘fear is a mile wide and an inch deep’ – the perceived fear is a lot bigger than it actually turns out to be.

“There’s always a bit of a rush with adrenaline if you see anything when you’re in there or if you touch some seagrass or anything, but I didn’t actually see anything during the swim at all.It was a largely by-the-book swim.“As always, safety comes first.We’re not putting ourselves intentionally in harm’s way.If there is anything that looks threatening, we pull the pin because we want to be smart and we want to use these challenges to share positive messages, not negativity and fear.

”Having successfully navigated the course, finishing in front of hundreds of people lining the banks of the river in Kununurra, he posted a record time of 11 hours and 51 minutes, bettering the mark set by Simone Blaser, who was the first person to complete the swim with a time of 16 hours and 13 minutes in 2024 – and was part of Donaldson’s support crew on Tuesday.Donaldson said he was “over the moon” to complete the swim.“It was just magical – swimming through these ancient gorges, the red cliffs, the sunrise was just spectacular out there,” he said.“I’ve had the opportunity to swim in amazing places all around the world, like Hawaii, Greece and Croatia.But I would have to say, hands down, this is the best swim I’ve ever done.

It’s the most beautiful place for swimming I’ve ever experienced.It was just incredible.”Starting in darkness at 5.38am, Donaldson was able to set a good pace in the early hours of his swim, until the searing Kimberley sun pushed the mercury as high as 34C and prompted support boats to try to provide shade for him.A lack of salt – and therefore reduced buoyancy – in the freshwater complicated matters further.

“Especially when you start to fatigue, your hips drop and your body position isn’t as good, so you feel like you’re dragging the legs a lot more,” he said.An unexpected headwind and a section of “dead water” – where there is no current – made things even trickier, but with the support of his sizeable team he made it to Swim Beach, 6km from the township of Kununurra, by 5.29pm.As he neared the finish line, local swimmers joined him in the water for the last 200 metres.“These challenges, they’re never achieved alone,” he said.

“You always have a skipper, a paddler and your coach out there in the water, people that know the river systems well so that you’re in safe hands, you can navigate those challenging sections.“The team, the energy and the encouragement pick you up when you start to falter.These marathons are similar to the marathons of life where, if you want to pursue something, a dream, or go after big goals, you can go a lot further when you have great people around you.”The Scotland-born, Perth-based athlete is considered one of the world’s leading ultramarathon swimmers.He holds a number of world records and in 2023 became the first person to complete the notorious Oceans Seven marathon swim challenge – comprising seven ocean channel swims – in a single year.

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Obesity a key factor for rising cancer rates in young people in England, study finds

Obesity is a key factor for the rising rates of cancer among younger people in England, according to a study.There are 11 types of cancer, including bowel and ovarian cancer, that are increasing among people aged 20 to 49 between 2001 and 2019, according to analysis by researchers from the Institute of Cancer Research and Imperial College London.Obesity is the only known behavioural risk factor that has been increasing in younger adults over this period, while more established risks such as smoking, alcohol, red meat and physical inactivity have all remained stable or in decline in England.This led researchers to conclude that the increase in obesity was a key factor behind the rising rate of cancer cases. Excess weight was associated with 10 of the cancers identified, including thyroid, kidney and pancreatic cancer, with oral cancer being the only exception

about 13 hours ago
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Stress from racism may help explain why black women more likely to die in childbirth, study finds

Stress from racism and deprivation could explain why black women are more likely to die during childbirth, a study has found.Researchers reviewed 44 existing studies that examined three physiological pathways associated with worse pregnancy outcomes: oxidative stress, inflammation, and uteroplacental vascular resistance, and found black women had higher levels of the three metrics.Such physiological differences are not the result of genetic differences, according to the researchers, but rather suggest that socioenvironmental stressors such as systemic racism and deprivation, which are known to have a measurable biological effect, may influence the body’s ability to function healthily during pregnancy.Grace Amedor, of the University of Cambridge, the first author of the peer-reviewed study published in the journal Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism, said: “Pregnancy and childbirth put great stress on a woman’s body. Black women may experience additional strain due to factors including systemic racism, socioeconomic disadvantage and environmental stressors

about 15 hours ago
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Earlier specialised care could prevent 10,000 miscarriages a year, UK study finds

Giving women access to specialised care after their first miscarriage could prevent about 10,000 pregnancy losses a year across the UK, according to a study.Currently, women in England, Wales and Northern Ireland are eligible for specialist care on the NHS for early baby losses after they have had a minimum of three miscarriages.The charity Tommy’s has called for women to be eligible after one miscarriage, stating this could reduce the risk of future miscarriages and improve health outcomes for mothers.The graded model of miscarriage care proposed by Tommy’s is already available in Scotland and the charity is calling for its implementation across the whole of the UK.A study by Tommy’s National Centre for Miscarriage Research and Birmingham women’s hospital involving 406 women found a 4% reduction in the risk of future miscarriage for women on the graded model of care compared with the usual care, which would translate to a reduction of 10,075 miscarriages a year across the UK

about 17 hours ago
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Public toilets: more than a matter of convenience | Letters

In response to your editorial (Public spaces need public conveniences, 24 April), our research has found that one of the biggest barriers preventing the restoration of existing provision or building new provision of public toilets is our wider cultural taboo of bodily functions.Time and again we have found that regeneration documents refer to public toilets as “amenities”, “necessities”, or “facilities”. Our research has also found that while large percentages of the UK population want more public toilets, nearly the same percentage would not use a public toilet, because of the taboo reputation such provision also carries.It is not simply a question of “build them and they will be used”. There is also an education issue, to highlight how important provision is, and shift the sense of a dirty and unloved space that invites negative behaviours such as vandalism

1 day ago
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First teenage suicide linked to domestic abuse recorded in England and Wales

The first teenage girl has been identified as having been driven to kill herself after domestic violence, as police chiefs blamed violent pornography and “toxic” influencers for being behind a rise in teen abuse.Suicides after domestic abuse have outstripped homicides for the third year running, according to the Domestic Homicide Project, which records deaths in England and Wales after domestic abuse.Last year, there were 347 deaths, including 150 from suicide and 125 domestic homicides.Across the five-year dataset, victims were predominantly female (73%), and suspects predominantly male (79%). Over the five years, the project recorded 1,452 deaths in 1,410 incidents – 641 of these were domestic homicides, 553 were suicide after domestic abuse, 131 unexpected deaths, 86 child deaths and 41 deaths classified as “other”

2 days ago
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Call for UK gambling reform after ‘generous and caring’ woman takes her own life

A family is calling for wholesale reform of the gambling industry after an inquest heard details of the life and death of Ellen Mulvey, a “generous and caring” woman with a high-flying City job who also had a secret addiction.Mulvey’s family believe she lost hundreds of thousands of pounds gambling without their knowledge, first via mainstream operators and then on unlicensed platforms.An inquest heard that the 44-year-old took her own life and was declared dead at Macclesfield district general hospital on 7 November. Before she died, Mulvey wrote a note saying: “Addiction is the worst disease ever.”At work, Mulvey was the managing director of a global financial recruitment firm based in London

2 days ago
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US gas prices hit $4.23 high as Hormuz fears drive oil surge

about 3 hours ago
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Jerome Powell says he’ll stay on Fed board after central bank keeps interest rates unchanged in defiance of Trump

about 3 hours ago
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Musk laments being a ‘fool’ for funding OpenAI on day two of court testimony

about 3 hours ago
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Maryland becomes first state to ban surveillance pricing in grocery stores

about 6 hours ago
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Revamped Maroons undergo radical reset to take 2026 State of Origin fight to Blues | Jack Snape

about 6 hours ago
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Sticking with same players for Women’s T20 World Cup leaves England in a twist | Raf Nicholson

about 6 hours ago