Ban on veggie ‘burgers’: plant-based products may lose meaty names in UK under EU law


Pam Zinkin obituary
My mother, Pamela Zinkin, who has died aged 94, was a consultant paediatrician credited with saving the lives of children all over the world. She was also a lifelong campaigner for the NHS.In 1977, by then a single parent with two young sons, Pam moved to newly independent Mozambique to work as a senior paediatrician, then head of paediatrics, at Maputo central hospital. The country’s healthcare was in a precarious state, with 80% of its doctors having left after independence in 1975. Within five years, Pam and her team had reduced mortality among the 8,000 annual child admissions from 25% to 4%

Are resident doctors right to strike over pay? | Letters
I totally support the resident doctors’ strike (Why the NHS doctors’ strikes look set to continue, 14 October). I am a retired consultant anaesthetist who worked in the NHS for 40 years. Throughout my career, I felt that I was totally underpaid for my work.As a junior doctor in the 1970s and up until my consultant appointment in 1991, I was paid a pittance for working excessive, unsafe hours – often 80 to 100 hours a week. Accommodation and catering were minimal

Labour is privatising the NHS in plain sight | Letter
Gaby Hinsliff is right to ask if the government’s reorganisation of the National Health Service will be the final nail in its coffin (Wes Streeting’s gamble with the NHS is greater than any play for Downing Street, 14 November). Such large‑scale redundancies are bound to create problems.There are other threats to the delivery of NHS services too. The privatisation of the NHS is happening in plain sight. Last month, the government proudly announced that “A total of 6

Krysty was diagnosed with breast cancer months after getting the all-clear. New Australian guidelines aim to help women like her
When Krysty Sullivan had a routine mammogram in 2019, she was given the all-clear.Eleven months later, she felt a lump.Doctors discovered two tumours, each more than 2cm in size. Sullivan, then 48 years old, was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer, a type that can be challenging to treat as the cancer cells do not respond to typical targeted treatments.“It’s always a shock to hear that you have breast cancer, but to learn that I had it months after I had a clear mammogram … it was like the Earth shifted,” Sullivan said

Mahmood and Lammy breached human rights law over segregation of prisoner, judge finds
Shabana Mahmood and David Lammy have been found to have breached a prohibition on inhuman or degrading treatment with respect to a prisoner who spent months segregated from other inmates, in what is believed to be a legal first.Sahayb Abu was confined to his cell at HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes, for 22 hours a day and prevented from associating with other prisoners for more than four months after Hashem Abedi, the brother of the Manchester Arena bomber, allegedly attacked prison officers at HMP Frankland.Abu, a convicted terrorist serving a life sentence, was already being held in a separation centre for prisoners believed to be at risk or radicalising others, which has also been described as small group isolation, but was moved to even more restrictive conditions following the attack by Abedi in April.In what is believed to the the first instance of ministers being found in breach of article 3 of the European convention on human rights, Mr Justice Sheldon found that Lammy, the justice secretary, and Mahmood, his predecessor, should have considered Abu’s existing mental health issues before he was moved.In his written judgment, the judge said: “In the context of a prisoner who has a history of trauma and where there was a failure to obtain an assessment of his needs even though he was known to have mental health issues, and a failure to provide him with any therapeutic treatment to address his trauma, a contravention of article 3 is made out, notwithstanding the importance of the aim behind the segregation regime

Coroners’ advice on maternal deaths in England and Wales routinely ignored, study finds
The advice given by coroners in England and Wales to help prevent maternal deaths is not being acted upon, research suggests.Academics at King’s College London looked at prevention of future deaths (PFD) reports issued by coroners in cases of pregnant women and new mothers who died between 2013 and 2023. They found these reports were not being “systematically used nationally”.The study, published in the BMJ Gynecology and Obstetrics Clinical Medicine, identified 29 PFDs involving maternal deaths, but found that nearly two-thirds of these reports were ignored.Two-thirds of deaths occurred in hospitals, with more than half of the women dying after giving birth

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