People who stop taking weight-loss jabs regain weight in under two years, study reveals


Jim Thomas obituary
My father, Jim Thomas, who has died of cancer aged 61, started out on his career in health and social care as a community nurse in East Anglia in 1986, and worked his way up to be head of workforce capacity and transformation at the charity Skills for Care, where he was employed from 2007 to 2022. Throughout his career, Jim fought for people to have more control over their care, and he had a deep suspicion of authority and rules for the sake of rules. He was a lateral thinker who cut through the jargon and asked: what do people actually need?As a young nurse, he was asked to convince an elderly man to move into sheltered housing. But he quickly realised that this man enjoyed living in his isolated countryside home with many cats, a long-drop toilet and a water supply from a nearby stream. To keep the authorities at bay, Jim persuaded the man to connect the house to mains water and get a flushable toilet and litter trays

Guardian readers raise more than £850,000 as charity appeal enters final days
The Guardian’s Hope appeal has so far raised more than £850,000 thanks to generous readers’ continuing support for our five inspirational charity partners, whose work aims to tackle division, racism and hatred.The 2025 Guardian appeal is raising funds for five charities: Citizens UK, the Linking Network, Locality, Hope Unlimited Charitable Trust and Who is Your Neighbour?.The Hope appeal, entering its final few days, is aiming to raise £1m for grassroots voluntary organisations campaigning against extremism, violence and harassment, anti-migrant rhetoric, and the re-emergence of “1970s-style racism”.The appeal has struck a chord with thousands of readers. One emailed us to say: “I am so worried about the division being sown between people in the UK

Hospital patients collapsing while out of sight on corridors, NHS watchdog says
Patients are collapsing in hospitals unseen by staff because overcrowding means they are stranded out of sight on corridors, the NHS’s safety watchdog has revealed.Using corridors, storerooms and gyms as extra care areas poses serious risks to patients, including falls, infections and a lack of oxygen, the Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) said.NHS staff told investigators that some patients who end up on a trolley or bed in overflow areas have not been assessed or started treatment “and so may be at increased risk of deterioration, which may go unnoticed or be detected late in a temporary care environment,” HSSIB’s report said.It highlighted that patients in these areas are at risk of not getting prompt attention if they deteriorate and suffer a medical emergency.“Several nurses shared a patient safety concern around calling for help and responding to a medical emergency in temporary care environments,” the report said

People who stop taking weight-loss jabs regain weight in under two years, study reveals
People who stop taking weight loss jabs regain all the weight originally lost in under two years, significantly faster than those on any other weight loss plan, according to a landmark study.Weight loss medications, known as GLP-1 agonists, were originally developed as treatment for diabetes and work by mimicking the glucagon-like peptide (GLP) 1 hormone which helps people feel full.The study, led by academics at the University of Oxford and published in the BMJ, included a review of 37 existing studies regarding weight loss medication, involving 9,341 participants. The average duration of weight loss treatment being 39 weeks while the average follow up period was 32 weeks.On average, weight was regained at a rate of 0

Our fragile society needs compassion | Letter
Elif Shafak’s image of shattered glass lingers because it names something we often avoid: fragility is not a failure, but a condition that requires care (A polycrisis has shattered our world this year. But with care, we can put it back together, 31 December).The deeper danger she identifies is not crisis itself, but numbness. We have built systems that reward speed, certainty and outrage, and then wonder why compassion struggles to survive inside them. This is evident not only in geopolitics and media, but in our institutions, workplaces and public services

Don’t blame GPs for patients going to A&E with coughs and other minor ailments | Letters
GPs are not to blame for A&E attendances (Huge rise in number of people in England’s A&Es for coughs or hiccups, 31 December).England’s general practice meets unsustainable pressures with record productivity: 250,000 additional GP practice appointments are being delivered a day compared with 2019. It is the fall in the number of inpatient beds gumming up the A&E system, not a fall in GPs’ capacity to treat patients.With that said, we have thousands of GPs looking for NHS work across England right now. Just 65 more GPs could have delivered the 1

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Ashes talking points: searching questions raised by Australia’s series victory | Martin Pegan