Two months after a fire tore through Grenfell Tower, local volunteers on the ground have expressed concerns over "already traumatised" Grenfell survivors receiving their A-level results this week.

Their concerns have led to some urging UCAS to make sure that survivors' conditional university offers are accepted regardless of their results on Thursday morning.

Professor Chris Imafidon, a local resident and volunteer, told BuzzFeed News he is concerned that Grenfell survivors might become more depressed than they already are if they don't get the results they want.

Imafidon told BuzzFeed News that he has also called for UCAS, the UK's university admissions service, to make sure that survivors' conditional offers from universities are not rejected on the account of their grades.

"I've written to some universities and to UCAS to ensure they rely on their predicted grades rather than their actual grades," he said. "If all the universities agree to that then there won't be any problem at all." If UCAS rejected their place at university, he added, then it would be tough for students, as well as their parents.

This is why Imafidon and other volunteers say they want to make sure that every single Grenfell survivor expecting their results tomorrow has an adult with them.

Anoop Panesar, another volunteer, told BuzzFeed News it was not only survivors whose results could be impacted by the tragedy. Many local students stayed up all night to help survivors, despite having exams in the days after.

