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Doctor guilty of misconduct over case of girl, 13, whose death led to Martha’s rule

Guardian – Society – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 17:41

Panel found Prof Richard Thompson failed to escalate Martha Mills’s treatment to intensive care or to review her condition directly in person

A senior doctor has been found guilty of “misconduct which impairs his fitness to practise” in relation to his treatment of a 13-year-old girl whose death led to the adoption of Martha’s rule.

The disciplinary panel reached its decision having determined that Prof Richard Thompson failed to escalate the treatment of Martha Mills to an intensive care unit or to conduct a direct in-person review and assessment, including of a newly developed rash.

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Categories: National News

Restrict shop-bought baby food, government tells parents

BBC News – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 16:59
Avoid relying on food pouches for everyday meals, says NHS website for first time.
Categories: National News

Six babies with unvaccinated mothers born with measles in Canada

Guardian – Society – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 16:20

Ontario’s chief medical officer of health says infections could have been prevented through routine vaccination

Six babies with unvaccinated mothers have been born with congenital measles in the Canadian province of Ontario since the start of the largest outbreak of the disease in the western hemisphere late last year.

Ontario’s chief medical officer of health, Kieran Moore, said the infants, who were infected with measles in the womb, had all recovered. He said the infections could have been prevented through routine vaccination.

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Categories: National News

‘Run it straight’ competition announces event with $200,000 prize despite warnings about viral challenge’s head trauma risk

Guardian – Society – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 16:00

Liberal MP Moira Deeming and Melbourne Storm forward Nelson Asofa-Solomona reportedly join a concussion expert in expressing concern

The organisers of a “run it straight” competition, in which men deliberately collide with each other, are planning another match despite a neuroscientist and concussion expert’s warning about the social-media-fuelled contest’s dangers.

The RUNIT Championship League promised $200,000 in prize money for the next bout in an Instagram post that was published on its official account on Sunday.

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Categories: National News

One of the last US clinics for later abortions closes just as it’s needed most: ‘There’s a lack of understanding of what people go through’

Guardian – Society – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 12:00

Since Colorado clinic that performed abortions past the second trimester is gone, procedure will be harder to obtain

One Tuesday morning in April, Alicia Moreno and the rest of the staff at Boulder abortion clinic learned that the clinic’s owner, Dr Warren Hern, was closing the clinic on Friday. One of the few abortion clinics in the US that performed abortions past the second trimester would, after 50 years, shutter its doors.

They sprang into action. Suddenly, multiple patients who had been scheduled for abortions had to go somewhere else.

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Categories: National News

'I'm going to outlive our child, there are no words'

BBC News – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 10:18
Jack is one of only 16 children in the world with a genetic condition so rare it doesn't have a name.
Categories: National News

NHS calls for 200,000 new blood donors as supplies run low

BBC News – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 09:51
The health service issued an "amber alert" last year and stocks remain low ever since.
Categories: National News

Nurses to vote on pay deal as potential strike looms

BBC News – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 09:08
The ballot is being billed by representatives as the biggest single vote by the profession in the UK.
Categories: National News

The Way We Talk review – sensitive drama explores deafness via three friends’ infectious warmth

Guardian – Society – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 09:00

Each character uses a different method of communication in Adam Wong’s drama, which benefits from the chemistry of its lead performers

An incisive film-maker with a keen eye for contemporary youth culture, Hong Kong director Adam Wong has returned with another sensitive ensemble drama. The film follows three twentysomething friends as they navigate various degrees of deafness. Alan, played by first-time deaf actor Marco Ng, is a cochlear implant (CI) user. He is also an ambassador for the surgery, which can help restore sound perception for those with hearing loss. Wolf (Neo Yau), his childhood friend, is a staunch user and supporter of sign language, which at one point was prohibited in local deaf schools; such institutions prioritised speech training, then believed to work better for hearing-impaired students. Sophie (Chung Suet Ying) is at a crossroads: she is a CI user who cannot sign, but yearns to learn.

It would, of course, be simplistic to portray these different forms of communication as inherently at odds with one another; instead, Wong’s film emphasises that, whether it is CI surgery or sign language, deaf people must be granted the autonomy to make these decisions on their own. Besides posing these thought-provoking questions, Wong also constructs rich inner worlds for these characters, in which deafness is only one thread of a whole tapestry. Wolf’s passion for the sea, for instance, is felt in the smallest of details, such as the ocean-themed trinkets that line his study desk. It’s the kind of visual attention that renders his dismissal from a diving school due to a lack of sign language interpreters even more heartbreaking.

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Categories: National News

Children in England’s most deprived areas ‘less likely to achieve development goals by age five’

Guardian – Society – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 06:00

Unicef UK found they were over twice as far from target of 75% of pre-schoolers reaching ‘good level of development’

Children in the most deprived areas of England are less likely to achieve good developmental goals by the age of five, according to the aid agency Unicef UK, which has urged ministers to lift the two-child benefit cap.

A report by the UN agency mapped every local authority area across England measuring its level of deprivation and a range of early childhood health and educational outcomes such as oral health, weight and A&E attendance.

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Categories: National News

NHS seeks 200,000 more blood donors in England to avoid threat to safety

Guardian – Society – Health - Mon, 06/09/2025 - 05:00

Health service issued amber alert last year over blood stocks for hospitals and wants to hit target of 1 million donors

The NHS needs to fill a shortfall of more than 200,000 blood donors in England to avoid a threat to public safety, officials have said.

NHS Blood and Transplant (NHSBT) wants to hit a target of 1 million blood donors to meet growing demand as just under 800,000 people – 2% of the population in England – kept the nation’s blood stocks afloat last year.

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Categories: National News

Cuts to UK’s global vaccination funding would risk avoidable child deaths, experts warn

Guardian – Society – Health - Sun, 06/08/2025 - 22:39

Exclusive: Scientists also say any reduction in Foreign Office funding for vaccine alliance Gavi would harm UK’s soft power

Any cut in UK funding to a global vaccination group would damage soft power and could make Britain less resilient to infectious diseases, as well as causing avoidable deaths among children, leading vaccine and aid experts have warned.

Scientists including Sir Andrew Pollard, who led the development of the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid vaccine, said a major cut in money for the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (Gavi) could also make the UK less able to respond to a future pandemic.

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Categories: National News

Resident doctors should vote against strike action | Letters

Guardian – Society – Health - Sun, 06/08/2025 - 18:00

A strike would harm patients and the NHS, write John Oldham, Clare Gerada, David Colin-Thome, Prof James Kingsland, Dr Fiona Cornish and Prof John Ashton

We write about the call for a strike by resident doctors (Report, 22 May). We do so as fellow experienced professionals and potential patients. There was a genuine case that pay for resident doctors had fallen behind, but a 22% increase last year and an above-inflation offer this year seems to us to go a long way to addressing that. It’s certainly far more than many of our colleagues, other professional groups and patients are getting, and it cannot have been easy to persuade the Treasury in such resource-constrained times.

There remain significant problems around working conditions and training. They need firm resolution but this will not be achieved through strikes.

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Categories: National News

Senior medics in England say more resident doctor strikes would be futile

Guardian – Society – Health - Sun, 06/08/2025 - 18:00

Exclusive: Letter from six top figures says more walkouts by junior colleagues would help those who oppose the NHS

Six senior figures in England’s medical profession have criticised potential strikes by resident doctors as “a futile gesture” that will harm patients and help those who oppose the NHS.

The move is the first public evidence of the significant unease many senior doctors feel about the possibility of their junior colleagues staging a new campaign of industrial action in England.

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Categories: National News

Better alcohol regulation will save lives and money | Letters

Guardian – Society – Health - Sun, 06/08/2025 - 17:03

Dr Katherine Severi calls for a national alcohol strategy that adopts Scotland’s minimum pricing and Dr Giota Mitrou highlights the role of alcohol in causing cancer. Plus a letter from Laura Willoughby

You are right to argue that rising alcohol harm must be addressed in the government’s 10-year health plan (The Guardian view on alcohol and public health: the drinks industry must not control the narrative, 1 June). If ministers are “staking their reputation on economic growth”, they need to deal head-on with one of the biggest drivers of premature death and lost productivity, while ignoring spurious claims made by alcohol companies whose profits have for too long trumped public health.

Alcohol harm costs England at least £27bn a year – almost double what the Treasury collects in alcohol duty. These harms aren’t incidental to the alcohol market; they are intrinsic to it. While the industry promotes “moderate drinking”, evidence shows that its profits and growth depend on the heaviest drinkers. It’s no coincidence that Diageo’s CEO recently described moderation as the industry’s “biggest disrupter”.

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Categories: National News

I was enjoying a midnight swim. Then my girlfriend kissed me – and the nightmare began

Guardian – Society – Health - Sun, 06/08/2025 - 11:30

Seventeen years ago Nathan Dunne was locked out of his body, or at least that’s how it felt. He talks about his battle with depersonalisation disorder – and his sudden fear of water

On a cold winter’s night, in a “fit of spontaneity”, Nathan Dunne and his girlfriend went for a midnight swim on Hampstead Heath in London. They had been living together for a few months and, although it was dark and chilly, they “had a summer feeling in that first flush of the relationship”, Dunne says. They shed their clothes and waded into the shallows. After diving into the icy water, Dunne’s girlfriend put her lips to his cheek, and as they pulled apart, his life changed beyond all recognition. “It was like being struck. Like something came down,” he says, slicing the air with his hand. “The flip of a switch.”

Dunne’s transformation sounds like a fairytale in reverse: one kiss, and his life turned into a nightmare. Seventeen years have passed since that night, and he still mostly explains the change in himself in metaphors and similes. His eyes filled with soot. His voice was a robot’s. He felt as if he were locked outside his body, which became a sort of “second body”. Any form of water, from a raindrop to a warm bath, made everything worse. His terror and panic were so great that the next day he smashed a vase and used a shard to cut himself. An “attempt to not live any more”, is how he describes it.

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Categories: National News

Doctors trialling 'poo pills' to flush out dangerous superbugs

BBC News – Health - Sun, 06/08/2025 - 00:00
Can a dose of good bacteria clear superbugs from their hiding place in the bowels?
Categories: National News

NHS to get £30bn boost over three years at expense of other services

Guardian – Society – Health - Sat, 06/07/2025 - 16:05

Policing and local councils among areas facing real-terms cuts in the spending review on Wednesday

The NHS is set to receive a £30bn funding boost in the spending review next week, at the expense of other public services.

The Department of Health is expected to emerge as the biggest winner on Wednesday with a 2.8% increase to its day-to-day spending budget over a three-year period, amounting to a £30bn rise by 2028.

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Categories: National News

Dozens ill from salmonella outbreak linked to eggs from California

Guardian – Society – Health - Sat, 06/07/2025 - 14:39

So far, 79 people have fallen ill from sickness linked to eggs from the August Egg Company

Federal food and health agencies are investigating a multistate outbreak of salmonella infections linked to eggs from a California producer that have sickened 79 people and hospitalized 21.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advised on Friday that organic and cage-free brown eggs from the August Egg Company sold to retailers in Arizona, California, Illinois, Indiana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Nevada, Washington and Wyoming should be discarded or returned to the store where they were purchased.

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Categories: National News

Many Black women consider synthetic braids safe. A study found toxins in all the brands it tested

Guardian – Society – Health - Sat, 06/07/2025 - 12:00

Chemicals found in the braiding hair have been linked to increased cancer risk and organ damage

In recent years, personal care products marketed at Black women have received increased scrutiny for their toxicity, specifically chemical hair straighteners. These perms, also known as “relaxers”, have been condemned for causing severe health problems, including fertility issues, scalp irritations and increased risk of cancer.

In light of this, many Black women have turned to natural hairstyles, including braids, as a way to avoid toxic chemicals. But recent research has revealed that popular brands of synthetic braiding hair, human-made extensions that are used in these protective styles, contain dangerous carcinogens, heavy metals and other toxins. Tested brands included in a recent study from Consumer Reports (CR) were Magic Fingers, The Sassy Collection, Shake-N-Go, Darling, Debut, Hbegant and Sensationnel, all mass producers of synthetic braiding hair.

According to the CR study, all tested samples of braiding hair contained volatile organic compounds (VOCs), human-made chemicals found in paints, industrial solvents and other products. Exposure to VOCs can cause health problems, including respiratory issues, nausea and fatigue. Long-term exposure has been associated with increased cancer risk and organ damage.

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Categories: National News
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