Hidden Harm – Three Years On
This new report published today provides an update and overview of the progress made in implementing the 48 recommendations made in the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD)
Read MoreThis new report published today provides an update and overview of the progress made in implementing the 48 recommendations made in the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD)
Read MoreSpending on public sector social care services has risen by ten per cent over the past two years, according to figures released today by The Information Centre for health and social care.
Read MoreThe High Court ruled today that the government did not consult with the medical profession, or follow necessary race relations procedures, before restricting employment opportunities for doctors from outside the European Economic Area (EEA).
Read MoreA more “common sense” approach to human rights laws is needed by public bodies who sometimes misinterpret them, the Lord Chancellor is to say. Lord Falconer has said the importance of the Human Rights Act has been “clouded by nonsense”.
Read MoreA hearing into the conduct of a Registered Social Worker from Loughton will be held on 16 February 2007 by the social care workforce regulator the General Social Care Council (GSCC).
Read MoreParents are set to benefit from a share of £7.5million being invested in better services for parents by the Government. Families Minister Beverley Hughes has explained that far from telling parents what to do, the Government wants parents to have the information and support that they are asking for.
Read MoreSocial workers may be at greater risk of facing sudden and unexpected poverty, according to the latest figures from welfare charity Elizabeth Finn Care. The organisation, which offers financial and emotional support to those whose careers have been interrupted or ended by personal tragedy, reports that social workers make up the seventh largest group helped by the charity.
Read MoreSerious concerns were raised yesterday about an “abortion epidemic” after a leading clinic said it was conducting the most terminations in its 32-year history. Marie Stopes International, a charity, said it had recorded its busiest month for abortions – 6,000 in January alone.
{mosimage}The figure had risen from 5,304 in the same month last year, a rise of 13 per cent. The figures led to alarm from family campaigners and concern about women having multiple abortions. Around two thirds of the agency’s work is for the NHS, which refers women to its clinics and picks up the bill.
In total it conducted 61,983 abortions last year, a figure which anti-abortionists describe as appalling given the number of infertile couples desperate to have children.
Liz Davies, the director of UK operations at Marie Stopes, said it seemed that “we may be seeing the consequences of the festive season, when partying excess and alcohol consumption combine to increase libido and lower inhibition, with the inevitable consequences of unprotected sex resulting in unplanned pregnancies”.
The agency wants a Government campaign, before next Christmas, against unprotected sex and a ministerial emphasis on women storing emergency contraception in their bathroom cupboards.
A spokesman said: “We are not saying ‘ooh go on, get loads of pills and go out and have sex’. But we would like to see a better education campaign around Christmas kick-started by the Government.” She said those presenting themselves at clinics were not just young single women off the party circuit. “We don’t just mean flighty singles. We also see long-term couples. One of the reasons some women want an abortion is that they have three children already and do not have any money for a fourth.”
Read MoreTwo million children went to hospital A&E departments in the United Kingdom last year following accidents – many of which could have been prevented, a joint report by the health and public expenditure watchdogs has found.
Read MoreScientists should be allowed to create human-animal hybrid embryos in the search for treatments for nervous system disorders, a Government advisory body said yesterday. The Human Genetics Commission will give its unanimous backing to the research in a public consultation to be carried out later this year by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority.
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