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Kim Leadbeater urges MPs to back palliative care amendment to assisted dying bill

about 19 hours ago
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Kim Leadbeater has urged MPs to back an amendment to the assisted dying bill which would commission a new assessment on the state of palliative care, a move first proposed by the bill’s opponents.In a gesture to MPs who are voting against the bill, the MP sponsoring it said that she understood the concern about the quality of care for terminally ill people and said she believed that improving palliative services should not be in competition with assisted dying.Leadbeater announced her backing for the amendment – which has not yet been chosen by the speaker – after a meeting with the chief executive of Marie Curie.The amendment, which has been proposed for the next reading of the bill this Friday, is authored by the Lib Dem MP Munira Wilson and 21 others who have previously voted against it.It comes amid a race by both sides to persuade MPs to change their mind on the bill – which passed by a majority of 55 in November, and on which MPs have a free vote.

A number of changes were made to the bill during its committee stage, including replacing the approval of a high court judge with that of a panel of experts.Leadbeater said she would urge MPs to back Wilson’s amendment, which is supported by Marie Curie and other palliative care charities.The health secretary, Wes Streeting, who is opposed to the bill, has said in the past he is concerned that the NHS is not fit to cope with the change and that he is worried people would choose to hasten their deaths because of the current state of the healthcare service.The amendment says that the government must undertake “an assessment of the availability, quality and distribution of appropriate health services to persons with palliative and end of life care needs”.It says that should be made at the earliest opportunity in the reporting on the implementation of the legislation.

Leadbeater said that while she could not influence the selection of amendments, she hoped MPs would back that change if they were given the chance.“I agree with Marie Curie that everything possible should be done to strengthen and extend the provision of palliative care services,” she said.“I was happy to confirm in our meeting that I am fully committed to a holistic approach to end-of-life care and choice and that I am determined that if the terminally ill adults (end of life) bill passes, it should be accompanied by improvements to palliative care in England and Wales, as has been the experience in other jurisdictions where assisted dying is already available as an option.”She said Marie Curie had “made the point that the case for improved palliative care is not in competition with the idea of allowing an assisted death in certain, very tightly drawn circumstances and I agree.“While I cannot pre-empt the decision of the speaker about which amendments to select for debate, I would encourage colleagues in parliament to support this amendment, if and when it is put to a vote.

”Marie Curie Chief Executive, Matthew Reed, said: “Marie Curie is firmly neutral on the matter of assisted dying, but we are far from neutral on the urgent need to improve palliative and end of life care,“And while on its own, this amendment would not guarantee any improvements to palliative and end of life care, understanding what provision is currently available, and where, is a crucial step towards the UK and Welsh governments taking action to ensure everyone who needs palliative care is able to access it,”The bill would allow an assisted death for those with a terminal illness with less than six months to live, needing the approval of two doctors and a panel including a specialist lawyer, social worker and psychiatrist,Other amendments proposed by MPs that are gathering support include prohibiting doctors from raising the prospect of an assisted death with patients – a change proposed by the Labour MP Meg Hillier – and a specialist carve-out for eating disorders such as anorexia, which MPs have said they fear could be considered a terminal illness in some cases,
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No smartphone means no cheap bus fares for teens | Brief letters

I am delighted about the campaign to reduce smartphone usage among under-14s (‘The crux of all evil’: what happened to the first city that tried to ban smartphones for under-14s?, 7 May) but in West Yorkshire, where I work, we have run up against structural issues that make this impossible. The cheapest young person’s bus fares are only available via an app, which requires a smartphone. You can buy a monthly bus pass on a smartcard, but only in person and at limited locations. If your child needs a smartphone to get the bus to school, any hopes of not buying them one fall at the first hurdle. Phil SageSkipton, North Yorkshire Regarding children’s appetites increasing after watching junk food ads (11 May), I wonder if there is a similar effect when Saturday Guardian readers look at the Feast supplement

3 days ago
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Australia has been hesitant – but could robots soon be delivering your pizza?

Robots zipping down footpaths may sound futuristic, but they are increasingly being put to work making deliveries around the world – though a legal minefield and cautious approach to new tech means they are largely absent in Australia.Retail and food businesses have been using robots for a variety of reasons, with hazard detection robots popping up in certain Woolworths stores and virtual waiters taking dishes from kitchens in understaffed restaurants to hungry diners in recent years.Overseas, in jurisdictions such as California, robots are far more visible in everyday life. Following on from the first wave of self-driving car trials in cities such as San Francisco, humans now also share footpaths with robots.Likened to lockers on wheels, companies including Serve Robotics and Coco have partnered with Uber Eats and Doordash, which have armies of robots travelling along footpaths in Los Angeles delivering takeaway meals and groceries

3 days ago
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AI firms warned to calculate threat of super intelligence or risk it escaping human control

Artificial intelligence companies have been urged to replicate the safety calculations that underpinned Robert Oppenheimer’s first nuclear test before they release all-powerful systems. Max Tegmark, a leading voice in AI safety, said he had carried out calculations akin to those of the US physicist Arthur Compton before the Trinity test and had found a 90% probability that a highly advanced AI would pose an existential threat. The US government went ahead with Trinity in 1945, after being reassured there was a vanishingly small chance of an atomic bomb igniting the atmosphere and endangering humanity.In a paper published by Tegmark and three of his students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), they recommend calculating the “Compton constant” – defined in the paper as the probability that an all-powerful AI escapes human control. In a 1959 interview with the US writer Pearl Buck, Compton said he had approved the test after calculating the odds of a runaway fusion reaction to be “slightly less” than one in three million

4 days ago
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Paul McCartney and Dua Lipa among artists urging Starmer to rethink AI copyright plans

Hundreds of leading figures and organisations in the UK’s creative industries, including Coldplay, Paul McCartney, Dua Lipa, Ian McKellen and the Royal Shakespeare Company, have urged the prime minister to protect artists’ copyright and not “give our work away” at the behest of big tech.In an open letter to Keir Starmer, a host of major artists claim creatives’ livelihoods are under threat as wrangling continues over a government plan to let artificial intelligence companies use copyright-protected work without permission.Describing copyright as the “lifeblood” of their professions, the letter warns Starmer that the proposed legal change will threaten Britain’s status as a leading creative power.“We will lose an immense growth opportunity if we give our work away at the behest of a handful of powerful overseas tech companies and with it our future income, the UK’s position as a creative powerhouse, and any hope that the technology of daily life will embody the values and laws of the United Kingdom,” the letter says.The letter urges the government to accept an amendment to the data bill proposed by Beeban Kidron, the cross-bench peer and leading campaigner against the copyright proposals

4 days ago
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‘Tone deaf’: US tech company responsible for global IT outage to cut jobs and use AI

The cybersecurity company that became a household name after causing a massive global IT outage last year has announced it will cut 5% of its workforce in part due to “AI efficiency”.In a note to staff earlier this week, released in stock market filings in the US, CrowdStrike’s chief executive, George Kurtz, announced that 500 positions, or 5% of its workforce, would be cut globally, citing AI efficiencies created in the business.“We’re operating in a market and technology inflection point, with AI reshaping every industry, accelerating threats, and evolving customer needs,” he said.Kurtz said AI “flattens our hiring curve, and helps us innovate from idea to product faster”, adding it “drives efficiencies across both the front and back office”.“AI is a force multiplier throughout the business,” he said

5 days ago
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Leave them hanging on the telephone | Brief letters

Regarding dealing with cold callers (Adrian Chiles, 7 May), it’s irritating I know, but if you don’t mind your phone being inaccessible for a few minutes, why not say: “Hang on, I’ll go and get him/her”, and then leave your phone until the caller rings off? At least you will have wasted some of their day.Robert WalkerPerrancoombe, Cornwall Re fostering a love of reading in children (Letters, 6 May), one of my fondest memories of my teaching career was story time in the infant class in a local village school. Most of the children came quite a distance on buses. They adored Michael Rosen’s poetry. There were many afternoons when it was home time and they would shout: “Please read another Michael Rosen one, Mrs Mansfield, the driver won’t mind waiting

6 days ago
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A torrent of special pleas from Thames Water

about 12 hours ago
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Dutch climate campaigners vow to take Shell to court again

about 12 hours ago
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UK government to launch AI tool to speed up public consultations

about 7 hours ago
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ChatGPT may be polite, but it’s not cooperating with you

about 14 hours ago
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Major League Baseball ends lifetime bans for Pete Rose, ‘Shoeless’ Joe Jackson

about 9 hours ago
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Bill Belichick insists girlfriend Jordon Hudson ‘doesn’t have anything to do with football’

about 10 hours ago