The experience influenced her future husband's bestselling 2016 memoir Hillbilly Elegy, about his childhood in the white working-class US Rust Belt. It became a 2020 movie directed by Ron Howard.
In that respect the report argues "Wales should aspire to have the leading healthcare system in the world".Representatives from Wales' five most prominent political parties went head-to-head in a heated BBC debate on Friday night.
Welsh Labour leader and Wales' first minister Vaughan Gething, Conservative David TC Davies, Plaid Cymru leader Rhun ap Iorwerth, Jane Dodds for the Lib Dems and Oliver Lewis for Reform UK traded blows and took questions from a live studio audience.With less than two weeks to go until polling day, here is what we learnt.The amount of money in everyone's pockets was hot on the agenda, after a member of the audience asked what each politician would do to help with the cost-of-living crisis.
Mr Davies blamed the crisis on the war in Ukraine and said the UK government had taken "difficult decisions" to bringBut Mr Gething argued the country was still "paying the price" of Liz Truss' mini budget.
Ms Dodds challenged both Labour and the Conservatives to abolish the two-child benefit cap which she said was "making families poorer", while Mr ap Iorwerth said his party would increase child benefit by £20 a week.
Mr Lewis accused the other parties of "whataboutery" and said his party would bring utility companies back into public ownership."I had to have three drains in for a week and a half following my surgery and the bras even had space to facilitate these," she said.
"They are great and I am really glad all women will now be provided with two."Cyril Barrett, chair of the 5/344 Transport and General Workers Union Benevolent Fund, said the donation was the latest in a long line.
"We have been supporting breast care services at New Cross since the late 80s and are very proud to do so," he said.A hospice has launched a scheme to collect and recycle Christmas trees in exchange for a donation.