The Guardian – ‘GPs may stop monitoring millions of patients due to jab drive’
Summary of Today's Paper
Lead Story
The Guardian – ‘GPs may stop monitoring millions of patients due to jab drive’
GPs could be allowed to cease monitoring some patients with underlying health problems in a bid to free them up for the booster jab drive, The Guardian reports.
Today's Headlines
Head of government’s new value for money office to be paid £950 a day
Head of government’s new value for money office to be paid £950 a day David Goldstone to advise chancellor and chief secretary to the Treasury on ways to cut public spending. David Goldstone, the government’s new value for money chair, will receive a daily salary rate of £950, it has been reported. The position was announced by the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, as part of Wednesday’s budget statement. She said Goldstone, who will be in post
Rachel Reeves’s big tax-and-spend budget dissected – podcast
Rachel Reeves’s big tax-and-spend budget dissected – podcast The Guardian’s special correspondent Heather Stewart analyses Labour’s first budget in government for more than 14 years. On Wednesday the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, set out the Labour government’s debut budget in parliament. She told the House of Commons that Labour would “rebuild Britain”, promising more money for the NHS, schools and public transport.“In 1945 it was the Labour party that rebuilt our country from the rubble of
Nuclear submarine shipyard fire at Barrow-in-Furness leaves two in hospital
Nuclear submarine shipyard fire at Barrow-in-Furness leaves two in hospital Residents told to stay indoors with doors and windows closed as emergency services say there is no nuclear risk from ongoing fire at BAE Systems complex. Two people were taken to hospital after a fire broke out at BAE Systems’ Barrow-in-Furness shipyard in Cumbria where British nuclear submarines are built, police said. Cumbria constabulary said the fire at the nuclear submarine shipyard broke out at
AI images, child sexual abuse and a ‘first prosecution of its kind’ – podcast
AI images, child sexual abuse and a ‘first prosecution of its kind’ – podcast The Guardian’s North of England correspondent Hannah Al-Othman recounts the case of Hugh Nelson, sentenced to 18 years in prison this week for creating child abuse images with AI. Prof Clare McGlynn charts the rise of this material on the web and discusses what can be done to stop it. At Bolton crown court on Monday, Hugh Nelson was sentenced to
Researchers study treatment for chronic pain in childhood cancer survivors
Researchers study treatment for chronic pain in childhood cancer survivors Team at Nottingham Trent University is investigating how chemotherapy in early life could damage nerve cellsTreatments that could help alleviate the chronic pain experienced by thousands of childhood cancer survivors are being investigated by scientists and researchers in the UK. About eight out of 10 children survive their cancer for 10 years or more but more than half of them report delayed and ongoing pain
Reeves’s radical change to fiscal rules could go further – New Zealand shows how
Reeves’s radical change to fiscal rules could go further – New Zealand shows how Nation follows net worth rules which count liabilities such as debt but also assets, including land, roads, hospitals and schools. Rachel Reeves will this week change the way the UK government’s debt rules are calculated to unlock billions of pounds in additional headroom for spending on long-term infrastructure projects. In what could be the most radical step in Labour’s first budget