NHS Doctors Challenge High Drugs Prices
British doctors are to rebel against high prices set by pharmaceutical companies for their products by giving patients a cheap but unlicensed drug that prevents blindness, the Guardian has learned.
Read MoreBritish doctors are to rebel against high prices set by pharmaceutical companies for their products by giving patients a cheap but unlicensed drug that prevents blindness, the Guardian has learned.
Read MoreEvery patient will have their own room and bathroom at a new NHS hospital in a drive to stop the spread of superbugs.
Read MoreA woman of 103 has been served with an eviction notice by a nursing home because she can’t afford to pay an extra £100 a week. Esme Collins requires round-the-clock nursing but could be removed from her home within 28 days. Her 84-year-old daughter claims she is being used as a pawn by the home in its battle for funding from the local authority.
{mosimage}Esme Simpson wept as she spoke of fears that her mother would not survive the upheaval of being shunted to another home.
“Moving her will be a death sentence,” she said.”She is an old lady who has worked hard all her life and never claimed a penny off the state. She should be allowed a bit of dignity in her final few years.”
Mrs Collins, a great-great-grandmother who retired when she was 75 to become a volunteer for ‘meals on wheels’, moved into Abbeymoor nursing home in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, due to illness.
She suffers from severe osteoporosis and is bed-ridden. Yet officials at the county council claim her needs do not meet the criteria set down for financial support. As a result, the home called her daughter in for a meeting and said they had no alternative but to increase her weekly fees to cover the additional cost for her care.
“I don’t understand where they draw the line,” said Mrs Simpson, who lives nearby and visits her mother daily. “How much worse does she have to be? She has broken just about every bone in her body. They don’t even bother repairing the fractures any more because her bones are like chalk.”
Read MoreFears that filthy water from Britain’s floods could trigger a health crisis are largely unfounded, experts say. Flood water may contain dangerous bacteria like cholera from mixing with raw human sewage, but this is unlikely to trigger disease outbreaks, they say.
Read MoreThe biggest ever campaign in England to combat the stigma of mental illness has been launched. The Big Lottery Fund is pumping £16m into a campaign which will include anti-stigma television advertisements. Comic Relief is providing £2m.
Read MorePeople with mental health problems are having to wait up to three-and-a-half years for psychological therapy. Latest figures from Derbyshire Mental Health Trust show there are 428 patients waiting up to 186 weeks for counselling in Derby and south Derbyshire.
Read MoreRacist attitudes by teachers may be condemning black schoolchildren to an inferior education, according to a Government backed study. Black Caribbean pupils are more likely to be expelled from school and less likely to be put in the top set compared to white British children, it said.
Read MoreChildren’s surgery in England and Wales is being undermined by lack of funding and training, warn medics. The Royal College of Surgeons says “strong action” is needed to make sure routine operations can be done locally.
Read MoreBy 2050, it’s predicted that four times as many people will need social care as today*, which will result in a major resourcing crisis for the care sector.
Read MoreOne in ten children in the UK has a mental disorder, according to Office of National Statistics figures. The figures come as the number of prescriptions for depression has quadrupled among under-16s in the past ten years, with over half a million in the last year.
Read More