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Ministers vow to spend record £8.4bn on road maintenance in England

about 8 hours ago
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Ministers have pledged to spend record amounts on road maintenance as part of a £27bn five-year investment plan for England’s major roads and motorways.The government said it was aiming to “fix the foundations” with almost a third, £8.4bn, of the spending going on maintenance, including resurfacing a quarter of England’s strategic road network.However, campaigners said the plan – the government’s third road investment strategy, known as RIS3 – was still building needless new roads, with funding approved for 16 schemes.That includes £1.

65bn of initial public funding for the Lower Thames Crossing.The government hopes that the project, Britain’s biggest planned road building scheme for many years, will be largely privately funded but has yet to announce backers.It is intended to ease congestion in the south-east, especially for freight from the Channel ports travelling north of London.The strategy also confirms funding for the long-debated dualling of the A66 between Cumbria and North Yorkshire, which was briefly put on hold by Labour in 2024 after being championed by the former prime minister Rishi Sunak.The transport secretary, Heidi Alexander, said: “For too long this country has failed to tackle and fix our crumbling infrastructure, but this huge £27bn investment in our roads will secure the future of our road network for years to come.

“Not only are we investing in renewing our roads, meaning smoother and faster journeys for drivers, we are getting on with investing into brand new projects and fixing potholes, which will deliver benefits across the country from Norwich to Manchester.”The Department for Transport said the £8.4bn for A-roads and motorways was on top of the £7.3bn pledged in the spending review for local authorities to fix potholes and maintain local roads.It said the 16 funded schemes had been chosen as best value for money and deliverability, on projects that would “deliver growth for left-behind communities”.

However, campaigners from the Transport Action Network said that outdated traffic forecasts meant poor value road schemes were included in the plan, such as new junctions for the A39 in Derby as well as the A66 dualling, that were “more likely to increase congestion than solve it”.Chris Todd, TAN’s director, said: “In the 21st century we really should be doing something better than building bigger roads in urban areas.”He described a new target for road safety – to reduce people killed and seriously injured by 7.5% by 2031 as “woefully unambitious”, adding: “Previously, National Highways had an ambition of reaching zero harm on its network by 2040.At this rate of improvement this won’t be achieved until after 2090, some 50 years later.

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Resident doctors in England to begin six-day strike after rejecting offer in pay dispute

Resident doctors in England will strike for six days after Easter after rejecting what they said was the final offer by the health secretary, Wes Streeting, to end the long-running pay and jobs dispute.The British Medical Association blamed the government for its decision to undertake its longest stoppage so far, from 7am on Tuesday 7 April to 6.59 on Monday 13 April.This will be the 15th industrial action that resident doctors have staged in their campaign for “full pay restoration” and means they will strike for the fourth year running.NHS leaders warned the strike would cost the health service an estimated £300m, lead to appointments being cancelled, and force patients to wait longer for tests, treatment and surgery

1 day ago
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Fifteen new councils to be created in south and east of England

Fifteen new councils will be created in the south and east of England under the latest round of a major local government overhaul, aimed at boosting economic growth and accelerating mass housebuilding plans.The new unitary councils will replace 43 counties and districts across Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex and Hampshire, with hundreds of councillors’ roles axed. A decision on future arrangements for East Sussex and West Sussex has been delayed.Ministers said the new councils, which will come on stream in 2028, will sweep away outdated administrative structures and enable local authorities to focus on government priorities such as building 1.5m new homes by 2029

1 day ago
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Kent meningitis outbreak prompts rush for routine vaccinations in England

School immunisation services and pharmacies are reporting surging demand for routine vaccinations after the Kent meningitis outbreak in which two teenagers died.Thousands of teenagers across England have booked or received jabs in the past fortnight against the A, C, W and Y strains of meningitis (MenACWY), and diphtheria, polio and tetanus (Td/IPV).Experts said the increase in immunisation was a small silver lining to the meningitis B outbreak, which has also left 18 people in hospital. Latest figures show that only 72% of year 9 pupils received the MenACWY or booster Td/IPV inoculations in the 2024-25 academic year, well below the recommended 95%.The Royal College of GPs (RCGP) and the National Pharmacy Association (NPA) have reported burgeoning demand for routine year 9 inoculations across England

1 day ago
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More frequent ejaculations may boost men’s fertility, research suggests

Encouraging men to have more frequent ejaculations may boost their fertility, according to researchers who found that sperm deteriorates over time as it remains in the body.The longer men went without sex, the more their sperm showed signs of DNA damage and oxidative stress, and the more tests rated the sperm as less viable and poorer swimmers.The work has implications for fertility clinics and suggests that if doctors want to collect the best quality sperm, men should probably not abstain from ejaculating for several days as guidelines suggest.“In men, the negative effects we found on sperm DNA damage and oxidative damage were large-ish, so we are confident that this is a biologically meaningful and important effect,” said Dr Krish Sanghvi, a biologist at the University of Oxford and lead author on the study.The findings emerged from a meta-analysis that combined 115 human studies involving nearly 55,000 men, and 56 studies that looked at the impact of sperm storage in 30 non-human species

2 days ago
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Public satisfaction with the NHS rises for first time since 2019

Public satisfaction with the NHS has risen for the first time since 2019, but people remain deeply frustrated with stubbornly long waits to receive GP, A&E or hospital care.The proportion of voters in Great Britain satisfied with the way the NHS runs has increased from the record low of 21% seen last year to 26%. At the same time dissatisfaction with the health service fell 8% – the biggest drop since 1998 – although it remains high at 51%.Wes Streeting hailed the findings as proof that the NHS, which he said was “broken” when Labour won power in July 2024, was now “on the road to recovery”.The health secretary will cite them as evidence of progress in a speech on Wednesday in which he will set out plans to improve care at five badly performing health trusts

2 days ago
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Polyurethane coating reduces implant complications after mastectomy, cancer study finds

Women with breast cancer who have reconstructive surgery after a mastectomy are much less likely to have complications if they have a polyurethane-coated implant, according to research.About 55,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer in the UK every year, of whom about 30% have a mastectomy. Many of these will subsequently have radiotherapy.Many women opt to have reconstructive surgery. But hard, painful scar tissue can form around the implant, especially if they have had radiotherapy

2 days ago
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The Middle East price shock hasn’t hit Next – yet | Nils Pratley

about 5 hours ago
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NS&I chief executive replaced in ‘fresh start’ over missing savings crisis; bad day for markets – as it happened

about 5 hours ago
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New York City hospitals drop Palantir as controversial AI firm expands in UK

about 4 hours ago
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Brussels opens investigation into Snapchat amid concern over children’s safety

about 5 hours ago
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Sinner continues smooth Miami progress with win over Tiafoe as rivals fall

about 3 hours ago
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From Laurel Hubbard to sex testing in five years: why the Olympics U-turned on transgender rules | Sean Ingle

about 4 hours ago