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UK food delivery firms step up checks after claims of illegal workers

about 8 hours ago
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The UK’s three largest food delivery companies have announced increased security checks for riders after ministers raised concerns about people working illegally for the firms,Uber Eats, Deliveroo and Just Eat have committed to increasing the use of facial verification checks and fraud detection technology in efforts to ensure only those with registered accounts can work on their platforms,The changes were announced after the firms met Home Office ministers on Monday to discuss people using the platforms to work illegally,Last week the shadow home secretary, Chris Philp, claimed to have found people working illegally for the firms during a visit to a hotel used to house asylum seekers,The new checks will be rolled out in the next 90 days.

Just Eat, which already uses facial recognition checks, will increase them from monthly to daily.Angela Eagle, the minister for border security and asylum, said: “This government will not turn a blind eye to illegal working.It undercuts honest business, hits people’s wages and plays into the hands of the people-smuggling gangs.“I welcome Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats’ pledge to increase facial verification checks following today’s round table.We will keep a close eye on their progress and continue discussions.

”Justin Madders, the employment rights minister, said: “Illegal working opens the door to mistreatment and exploitation, undercutting legal workers in the process by driving down wages and working conditions.“We’re already delivering the biggest upgrade to people’s rights at work in a generation as part of our plan for change, and we will continue to engage with these companies to ensure these rights are enforced, building a fairer labour market.”A Deliveroo spokesperson said: “We take a zero-tolerance approach to anyone abusing our platform, and today’s meeting with industry partners and the Home Office represents progress in our collective efforts to combat illegal working.“The industry-leading measures Deliveroo put in place over the last year have had a positive impact, but criminals continue to seek new ways to abuse the system.Today we have committed to further strengthening our approach, increasing daily facial recognition checks, and we welcome the industry’s commitment to do the same.

”An Uber Eats spokesperson said: “We are committed to tackling illegal working and welcome continued collaboration with industry and the Home Office, which is essential in raising standards and ensuring consistency.We will continue to invest in industry-leading tools to detect illegal work and remove fraudulent accounts.”A Just Eat spokesperson said: “Just Eat fully supports the government’s efforts to tackle illegal working and we are continuing to invest significant resources to protect the integrity of our network.Today, alongside the government and wider industry, we’re committing to further action to strengthen our systems and safeguards in response to these complex and evolving challenges.”
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NHS will use AI in warning system to catch potential safety scandals early

The NHS is to become the first health system in the world to use AI to analyse hospital databases and catch potential safety scandals early, the government has said.The Department of Health and Social Care said the technology will provide an early warning system which could detect patterns or trends and trigger urgent inspections. The scheme is part of the 10-year plan for the NHS that is due to be published by Wes Streeting this week.The government acknowledged the concern surrounding standards of patient care after “a spate of scandals including in mental health and maternity services”.Last week a national investigation into NHS maternity and neonatal services was announced by Streeting

1 day ago
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Britain in 2025: sick man of Europe battling untreated illness crisis

The same 11 young women turn up around the clock at the emergency ward of Furness general hospital in Cumbria. The group are well known to staff, other services – and each other. Aged between 19 and 35, they have all led troubled lives. Some grew up in care, most need mental health support. All have fallen through society’s cracks and now gamble with their lives for a safe place to sleep

1 day ago
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Downing Street’s radical plan for the NHS: shifting it from treatment to prevention

In Lancaster the community nurse Lizzie Holmes knocks on doors to talk to people who are unwell but reluctant to accept NHS help. In Blackpool, “community connectors” help low-income families get their children into healthy habits early in life. Both do necessary, vital, proactive work known as health prevention – stopping illness occurring in the first place and spotting it early when it does. The idea is that this will create a virtuous circle of a healthier population and thus less need for NHS care.But while the initiatives described in a Guardian investigation are imaginative and effective, they are also atypical of the way the NHS works

1 day ago
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Britain’s ‘medieval’ health inequality is devastating NHS, experts say

Britain’s “medieval” levels of health inequality are having a “devastating” effect on the NHS, experts have warned, with the health service estimated to be spending as much as £50bn a year on the effects of deprivation.Rising rates of child poverty have led to a growing burden on hospitals, with the knock-on cost to the NHS comparable to the annual defence budget.One senior NHS figure said they were seeing “medieval” levels of untreated illness in some of Britain’s poorest communities, including people attending A&E “with cancerous lumps bursting through their skin”.Another said hospitals were witnessing a “chilling” trend of vulnerable people, young and old, deliberately self-harming to secure an overnight stay. Concern has also been raised about rising rates of “Dickensian” illnesses, including scabies, rickets and scarlet fever

1 day ago
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Cutting personal independent payments: potentially devastating or justified? | Letters

As predicted (Starmer offers ‘massive concessions’ on welfare bill to Labour rebels, 26 June), an attempt has been made to salvage the welfare bill. Discontented MPs and disabled people alike will welcome the assurance that people currently receiving personal independence payments (Pip) or the health element of universal credit will be protected from changes. But the episode is damaging, has caused thousands of disabled people needless worry, and may come to be seen as pivotal in Keir Starmer’s tenure.There is something deeply invidious about having two classes of benefit recipients – the protected current recipients, and those making future claims. At the same time, it is clear that the benefits system does need reform and, in particular, needs to support people into work rather than taking a punitive and brutal approach to cost saving

1 day ago
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Living with polycystic ovary syndrome can be difficult and lonely | Letters

Thank you for publishing the article about polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) by Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff (I was diagnosed with PCOS – and was soon drowning in misinformation, 22 June). It resonated with my experience of diagnosis and frustration at the complete lack of support. I was first tested in my teens and told my blood test was normal. I was retested at 34 when I went to my GP about weight gain and struggling with exhaustion. When I was confirmed to have PCOS I was warned about the health issues, and told the best thing I could do was lose weight, even though this would be very difficult, and to come back when I was struggling to conceive

1 day ago
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1 July changes: minimum wage, Centrelink payments, parental leave, road fines and everything else coming for the 2025-26 financial year

about 3 hours ago
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UK food delivery firms step up checks after claims of illegal workers

about 8 hours ago
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Gov.uk smartphone app to launch with limited functionality

about 5 hours ago
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China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football match

about 9 hours ago
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Katie Boulter rounds off Britain’s opening day in the sun at Wimbledon

about 4 hours ago
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Wimbledon 2025 day one: Raducanu eases through, Alcaraz survives huge scare – as it happened

about 5 hours ago