| It's not too late to 
	enter the religious poem competition and win £250 for your Church! 
	
  
	THIS year the winner's chosen church will receive £250 and 
	10 free books 
	containing the winning poem of a competition run by United Press 
	Publications.  We are told that anyone can submit up to 3 poems for the competition 
	and there's no age limit!  Plus we have been reminded that it is fee to 
	enter! "The poem can be a prayer, words for 
	a hymn, a description of an uplifting moment, a religious experience, about 
	a person or your Church. It can be rhyming or free verse, historic, 
	romantic, factual, or personal; anything you like, as long as there's a 
	religious theme. You can't use Religious Poem as your title." explained United Press Publications 
	Executive, Julie Embury.
 Send up to 3 poems, of no more than 25 lines (including blank lines) and 160 
	words each, by 31 March 2016, to:--
 Religious PoemUnited Press
 Admail 3735
 London
 EC1B 1JB
 You can also send it via email to:-
	Info@UnitedPress.Co.UK!  
	 For more information and rules please visit:-
	
	
	UnitedPress.Co.UK. 
	 Judging will take place early 
	April 2016 and the winner will be announced in April 2016.
 Previous year's winner is Terry Clifford from Shotley Bridge, where he is a 
	member of Our Lady Of The Rosary R C Church. His poem The Temporary Organist 
	has been published in Spiritual Words; an anthology of religious poetry. 
	Terry presented Father Tom McHale with the cheque for £250 to add to church 
	funds. "I was speechless when I was told I had won; the poem I wrote 
	is based on a true story," explained Terry.
 
 Terry submitted his poem for this free competition run by United Press and 
	he received ten free copies of Spiritual Words and the publishers also 
	donated ten copies to the church.
 
 Peter Quinn, one of the judges of the competition said:- "The 
	competition has been so successful that we are repeating it, and again it 
	will be free to enter. All you have to do is email via:- 
	
	info@unitedpress.co.uk or post up to three entries of 25 lines 
	and 160 words maximum to Religious Competition, United Press Ltd, Admail 
	3735, London, EC1B 1JB.  
	We look forward to receiving your entry."
 |  | Nursing lead receives 
	MBE at Palace  
	 LOCAL nursing leader Avril Devaney 
	was personally awarded her MBE by HM Queen Elizabeth II at a recent ceremony 
	at Buckingham Palace. 
 Avril, Director of Nursing, Therapies and Patient Partnership at Cheshire 
	and Wirral Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (CWP), was named in the New 
	Year's Honours List for 'Services to Nursing of People with Mental 
	Health Problems'.  
	Avril said:- "We had an amazing day at the palace. Everyone was 
	helpful and kind and I felt very privileged to stand before the Queen. 
	Working in mental health services has always been much more than a job to me 
	and it was a lovely surprise to have my contribution recognised in this way. 
	I look forward to continuing to work in mental health services in Cheshire 
	and Wirral."
 
 This is the latest in a long line of accolades for Avril, who was first 
	recognised in November 1999 when she received The Queen's Nursing Institute 
	Award for Innovation after establishing a mental health nursing service in 
	police custody suites. She is well known for addressing the harm caused by 
	smoking to people with mental health conditions, and led the work to make CWP the 
	1st smoke free mental health trust in England. She has also led 
	its Challenging Stigma campaign since 2004.
 
 Passionate about person centred care and reducing health inequalities, Avril 
	has been the Trust's link with mental health services at Kisiizi Hospital in 
	Uganda since 2010, and was a founder of the Jamie Devaney Memorial Fund to 
	support mental health services in Uganda and create a lasting legacy for her 
	son Jamie, who died aged four following a short illness during a family 
	holiday and fundraising trip there. She received an honorary MA in 2014 from 
	the University of Chester in recognition of her outstanding contribution to 
	healthcare. In 2015 Avril was also recognised as a Nursing Times Leader. 
	David Eva, CWP chair, said:- "We're all so proud of Avril for being 
	recognised with an MBE, and indeed for her many achievements throughout her 
	career. Avril's unwavering commitment to ensuring that people who use our 
	service receive the highest possible care continues to be a source of 
	inspiration for everyone involved with CWP."
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