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NHS trusts declare critical incidents due to ‘exceptionally high demands’ in A&E
A number of NHS trusts have declared critical incidents due to “exceptionally high demands” in emergency departments, with a patient at one hospital forced to wait 50 hours to be admitted to a ward. Hospitals in Birmingham, Cornwall, Hampshire, Liverpool, Northamptonshire and Plymouth have declared critical incidents. East Sussex hospitals trust announced it is temporarily limiting visiting to one visitor per patient per day to reduce the impact of flu. It said in a statement: “This includes those accompanying people waiting in our emergency department. “Exemptions apply to end-of-life care, our special care baby unit and when visiting children under 16
Watchdog criticises ex-bosses of king’s charity over donor dealings
Former bosses of King Charles’s charity, including the monarch’s former personal aide, Michael Fawcett, have been criticised by a charity watchdog over their handling of a series of controversial dealings with wealthy donors.The Scottish Charity Regulator said the trustee board overseeing the Prince’s Foundation (now the King’s Foundation) “had not always been up to the standard required” during a period of eight years up to 2021.The foundation came under scrutiny in 2021 over its involvement in cash-for-honours allegations involving wealthy businessmen who made cash donations to the charity and, in one case, loaned it what were later reported to be forged paintings.The allegations resulted in a Metropolitan police investigation launched in 2022 into suggestions Fawcett, the foundation’s former chief executive, offered to help wealthy British and foreign donors to the charity secure honours and British citizenship.Fawcett resigned, receiving a £60,000 pay off, after an internal review by the foundation after media reports of the allegations
So much for the dream of buying a family home | Letters
Kirsty Major (Meet the young families stuck in their starter homes thanks to the UK housing crisis, 3 January) describes a financialised housing market in which a decade and a half of interest rates close to zero, along with George Osborne’s outrageous help-to-buy policy, pushed prices from a mortgageable three or four times average earnings to more than nine times. It is now one where those with inherited property wealth or the Bank of Mum and Dad (the UK’s sixth largest lender) might compete, but those without mostly cannot. And so the social divide widens.But then Keir Starmer says he will back “the builders not the blockers”, implying that supply will fix affordability. That would need developers to increase it to the point where they had to drop prices and then keep building – and incurring losses – while prices continued to fall
An age-old problem for Hollywood stars | Brief letters
A caveat to any good news about roles for older women (Demi, Jodie and Nicole: is Hollywood finally ready to recognise complex female characters over 40?, 6 January), the Golden Globes were a depressing line-up of emaciated women with plastic faces. How can we celebrate a 50-year-old actor if she is not allowed to look 50?Helen CluttonBristol I can’t think of a better place to be incarcerated than Tan Hill Inn (‘It makes you feel like a kid again’: snowed in at Britain’s highest pub, 5 January). I’ve happy memories of taking refreshments there when walking the Pennine Way. I got locked in my local leisure centre on Saturday. It could have been serious – the snack machine was out of order
Home Office may reclassify ketamine in response to record levels of use
Ketamine, the anaesthetic taken by Elon Musk to control his moods, could be reclassified as a class A drug by the Home Office after illegal use reached record levels.Currently controlled as a class B substance, ministers are seeking “expert advice” on reclassification after an estimated 299,000 people reported use of the drug in 2023.The billionaire owner of X, who this week has been embroiled in a row over grooming gangs with Keir Starmer, has described using small amounts of ketamine “once every other week” to manage the “chemical tides” that cause depression.Dame Diana Johnson, the policing minister, will write to the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) asking whether its classification should be changed and “carefully consider” its findings.Recent reports cited by the Home Office suggest the substance is often found in “pink cocaine”, a synthetic cocktail of drugs, as it announced the decision
More breast cancer cases found when AI used in screenings, study finds
The use of artificial intelligence in breast cancer screening increases the chance of the disease being detected, researchers have found, in what they say is the first real-world test of the approach.Numerous studies have suggested AI could help medical professionals spot cancer, whether it is identifying abnormal growths in CT scans or signs of breast cancer in mammograms.However, many studies are retrospective – meaning AI is not involved at the outset – while trials taking the opposite approach often have small sample sizes. Important, larger studies do not necessarily reflect real-world use.Now researchers say they have tested AI in a nationwide screening programme for the first time, revealing it offers benefits in a real-world setting
Elon Musk knows ‘absolutely nothing’ about women and girls’ safety, says Jess Phillips
Tory MPs contact Badenoch to raise concerns about Jenrick’s comments
Nigel Farage paid £189,000 last year by gold company to work part-time
Nigel Farage paid £189,000 for part-time job as ‘brand ambassador’ for gold bullion firm– as it happened
Investigators in Bangladesh demand Tulip Siddiq’s bank account details
Lib Dems call for Kemi Badenoch to sack Robert Jenrick over ‘divisive comments’