Councillors Back Home Care Shake-Up
The “biggest change to adult social services” yet was given its final seal of approval yesterday as councillors debated controversial plans to privatise Norfolk’s home care support.
Read MoreThe “biggest change to adult social services” yet was given its final seal of approval yesterday as councillors debated controversial plans to privatise Norfolk’s home care support.
Read MoreCampaigners say elderly people will deteriorate under council proposals to cut home care, say campaigners, writes Martin Croucher. Bromley council is planning to ‘ration’ home health care for the elderly so that only those with the most serious disabilities will have access to services.
Read MoreUp to half of all hospital accident and emergency departments face cuts or closure under plans to improve patient care, presenting Gordon Brown with a massive dilemma as he takes over as Prime Minister.
{mosimage}Ninety-two out of 204 A&E departments are under threat if guidance attributed to the Department of Health by NHS trusts is followed, the Conservatives claimed last night. Some NHS organisations are already using the guidance, which calls for A&E departments to serve a minimum population of 450,000 patients, to justify closures in smaller catchment areas.
The average A&E unit currently serves just under 250,000 people. But the plans are proving hugely unpopular, even though they have been promoted as in the interests of patients and NHS staff.
Mr Brown, aware that the closures would come into force around the time of the next election, said last Friday that he would meet front-line NHS staff and patients to discuss health policy.
Read MoreThe Children’s Workforce Development Council (CWDC) has revealed it will be launching the first set of England wide Standards to support the training and development of Foster Carers.
Read MoreMore children are being locked up in Scotland’s only asylum detention centre. Inspectors found 122 youngsters had been held at the Dungavel House unit in Lanarkshire in the first 11 months of last year, up from 94 in the whole of 2005.
The new administration in East Lothian has ordered an inquiry into the controversial £130,000 redundancy payment promised to the authority’s outgoing chief executive. The SNP and Liberal Democrat coalition has demanded that lawyers investigate the details of the payment to John Lindsay which was agreed by the council’s previous Labour administration.
Read MoreAn Irish priest lavished thousands of pounds on a predatory paedophile to allow him to groom an 11-year-old girl for sex, Liverpool Crown Court was told yesterday. Father Jeremiah McGrath, 62, of Roselea, Co Fermanagh, was a Roman Catholic priest, but a lucrative shares portfolio gave him independent means.
{mosimage}He was also a successful gambler and had befriended William Adams, 38, a convicted paedophile, while he was in his teens.
The priest visited him in prison in Ireland while he served a 12-year sentence for raping an eight-year-old girl.
On his release Adams went to Liverpool, where he used the priest’s money to target a child and buy her gifts. They included a three-week holiday in Blackpool, during which he posed as her father, shared a bedroom with her and repeatedly raped her.
Andrew Menary, QC, for the prosecution, suggested to the jury that the relationship between the priest and paedophile was a physical one. It is alleged that Father McGrath not only knew the nature of Adam’s abusive relationship with the child but abused her himself on one occasion. Mr Menary told the jury:
“Adams worked his way into this girl’s affections. He gave her time, attention and gifts. He gave her money and holidays, all things this little girl had never experienced. He bought her mobile telephones, paid for hairstyling, let her bunk off school and generally encouraged her to believe he was her friend and that he loved her.
Read MoreOne in three people in parts of Northern Ireland have used cocaine, a new report reveals. With men especially lured to the Class A drug, the vast majority are combining it with drinking binges. The startling findings depict cocaine as easier to buy and more readily taken by greater numbers, according to a charity battling to halt its spread.
Read MoreA wide ranging review will be held into whether Northern Ireland should continue to have prescription charges, Health Minister Michael McGimpsey has announced. Mr Gimpsey made the pledge as MLAs urged him to consider following Wales` example of scrapping the fees.
Read MoreA prescription drug has been withdrawn from sale following liver failure in nine people, three of whom died. The osteoarthritis drug Nimesulide, also known as Aulin and Mesulid, was ordered to be taken off the shelves by the Irish Medicines Board.