H
society
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page
cultureSee all
A picture

R&B star Jill Scott: ‘I like mystery – I love Sade but I don’t know what she had for breakfast’

The neo-soul singer and actor answers your questions on being taken to a go-go club as a child, training as an English teacher and getting mistaken for footballer Jill ScottIn a recent interview you gave an invaluable life lesson which involved a go-go bar and your mother’s love. What are your tips for living life between adversities? Integrity411My mother’s ex-husband was a questionable man and after he picked me up from elementary school he used to take me to a go-go bar where ladies were dancing in their panties. I was a child, so I thought: how nice for them, I hate getting dressed too! They dance all day and then some nice people put money in their panties. The ladies would give me milk or Coca-Cola and give me a dollar, so I wanted to be a go-go dancer when I grew up. At that age I didn’t know there was anything wrong with me going there and I learned not to judge people so quickly

2 days ago
A picture

Letter: Colin Ford obituary

Colin Ford was a most supportive critic. In 2006 I was invited to speak about Virginia Woolf and Photography at the Women’s Library in London. Part of my paper was about Julia Margaret Cameron, Woolf’s great aunt, and her many influences on Woolf’s writing and photography.Already then the world expert on Cameron, Colin was in the audience, having trekked all the way to Whitechapel on a wet weekday evening. Terrified that I might misconstrue or misrepresent Cameron in front of him, I fumbled the slide projector

3 days ago
A picture

Museums must reach all parts of UK, says Nandy as £1.5bn of arts funding announced

London-based museums need to ensure they reach every part of the country, according to Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, who on Wednesday announced a landmark £1.5bn funding package for the arts meant to restore national pride.National museums including the British Museum and the National Portrait Gallery will be handed a £600m package but the culture secretary has urged them to look outside the capital to extend their sphere of influence.“Almost all of our national institutions are based in London, which means they need to work harder to make sure that they are genuinely national institutions [by] opening opportunities for young people from every part of our country,” she said.Nandy praised the outreach work of the Royal Shakespeare Company as an example of how national institutions could engage visitors across the country

3 days ago
A picture

Stephen Colbert on Trump’s first year back: ‘Today’s maniacal criminality distracts us from yesterday’s maniac crimes’

Late-night hosts acknowledged one full, maniacal year of Donald Trump’s second term as president of the United States.Tuesday 20 January, marked one full year of Trump’s second presidency, and “during that time, he has monopolized our attention every second of every minute of every hour of every day,” said Stephen Colbert on The Late Show. “Which is sad. Because today we’re not focusing on the real meaning of January 20: it’s Penguin Awareness Day.”On a more serious note, “a lot has happened in a short time”, the host noted

3 days ago
A picture

‘We played to 8,000 Mexicans who knew every word’: how the Whitest Boy Alive conquered the world

He lit up Europe with bands ranging from Peachfuzz to Kings of Convenience. But it was the Whitest Boy Alive that sent Erlend Øye stratospheric. As they return, the soft-singing, country-hopping sensation looks backIf you were to imagine the recent evolution of music in Europe as a series of scenes from a Where’s Wally?-style puzzle book, one bespectacled, lanky figure would pop up on almost every page. There he is in mid-90s London, handing out flyers for his first band Peachfuzz. Here he is in NME at the dawn of the new millennium, fronting folk duo Kings of Convenience and spearheading the new acoustic movement

3 days ago
A picture

Sally Tallant appointed as new director of London’s Hayward Gallery

Sally Tallant, the former boss of the Liverpool Biennial, has been announced as the new director of the Hayward Gallery and visual arts at London’s Southbank Centre.Tallant, who is currently in charge of the Queens Museum in New York, will return to the UK to take over from Ralph Rugoff, who will step down after two decades in charge of the institution, which celebrates its 75th anniversary this year.The Leeds-born Tallant has been in the US since 2019 after an eight-year stint in charge of the Liverpool Biennial and more than a decade working at the Serpentine Gallery, where she was head of programmes until 2011.She said she was delighted to be returning to London and excited to build on the “outstanding legacy” of Rugoff, who also took charge of the Venice Biennale in 2019. She said she was looking forward to “shaping the next chapter of this vital cultural destination and civic institution”

3 days ago
trendingSee all
A picture

Is the supreme court ready to stand up to Trump over Federal Reserve attack?

about 14 hours ago
A picture

Customer complaints over water bills surge by 50% in England and Wales

about 14 hours ago
A picture

Latest ChatGPT model uses Elon Musk’s Grokipedia as source, tests reveal

about 12 hours ago
A picture

Young will suffer most when AI ‘tsunami’ hits jobs, says head of IMF

1 day ago
A picture

‘I feel like I’ll never be cold again’: How tennis stars coped with Melbourne heat | Tumaini Carayol

about 8 hours ago
A picture

Heward earns win for Bristol against Exeter with rain stopping open play

about 8 hours ago

ADHD waiting lists ‘clogged by patients returning from private care to NHS’

2 days ago
A picture


Waiting lists for people with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in England are being clogged by patients returning to NHS care after difficulties with private assessments, a trust has warned.The major NHS trust said people referred by GPs to private clinics using health service funding were increasingly asking to be transferred back after care stalled.These include cases where private clinics are able to diagnose ADHD but their assessments do not always comply with guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, or where providers lack staff with the appropriate qualifications to support continued prescribing.The consequences for patients can be severe.Some are facing prescription costs of more than £200 a month after GPs said they could no longer work with private clinics under shared care agreements.

The father of one man whose shared care agreement was withdrawn after three years said: “With no warning, the GP practice announced they would stop prescribing within six months because the provider was ‘out of area’.They’ve referred my son to the local NHS service, MPFT [Midlands partnership university NHS foundation trust], but waiting times exceed six months – guaranteeing a treatment gap.“My son holds down a responsible job and has bought his own home.None of this would have been possible without medication.Without it, he struggles to focus at work, can’t manage daily organisation and experiences overwhelming anxiety.

His consultant has warned of ‘predictable harms’ if treatment stops,”In a letter shared with the Guardian, MPFT acknowledged it was struggling to cope with the growing number of patients being sent back to the trust from private clinics,It said the trend was contributing to long waiting lists, reduced capacity for new and complex cases, and increasing risks of delays and gaps in care,The warning comes after the Guardian revealed that in England, the NHS is overspending by £164m a year on ADHD services, with a growing proportion of that spending going to poorly regulated private assessments,Demand for assessments has reached record levels as awareness of the condition has increased.

NHS services have become overstretched, with more than 500,000 people now waiting to be assessed,On Thursday morning Wes Streeting, the health secretary, admitted the government was failing to cope with the number of referrals for autism and ADHD during an interview with BBC Radio Oxford,To cope with demand, the NHS is paying private providers to carry out assessments and, in some cases, provide treatment through prescribing,This is often done via the “right to choose” pathway, which allows patients in England to select a private provider for assessment, diagnosis and initial treatment,Patients can then apply for a shared-care agreement, under which their GP continues prescribing alongside the private provider.

However, the system is often fragmented and lacks clear clinical standards,The letter from the MPFT, written in December 2025 by a customer service facilitator at the trust was based on comments from a senior mental health practitioner at the MPFT,It was sent in response to a patient whose shared care agreement had been withdrawn after several years of treatment,The patient’s GP said they could no longer continue prescribing and pulled out of the arrangement,MPFT acknowledged the sudden withdrawal of prescribing had caused significant distress and raised concerns about the risk of destabilisation after years of treatment.

Despite the provider having been chosen through the right to choose pathway, the letter said: “This specific provider was selected by [the patient], but unfortunately, they are only able to provide a diagnosis and cannot prescribe medication.This situation highlights the challenges and limitations associated with the right to choose for ADHD services.”The letter added: “There is limited regulation surrounding private ADHD providers, and this case highlights the issues we often encounter.Private providers can establish services and request to be providers of ADHD diagnoses.However, it has been found that at times their assessments do not comply with Nice guidelines, and there may be challenges in ensuring the availability of appropriately skilled staff to support prescribing.

”It said the local integrated care board had introduced a right to choose vetting service in response to these concerns.A spokesperson for NHS Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent ICB, said it was “committed to ensuring that patients receive the care and medication they need”, adding: “We are working with our partners to review this case and our wider processes for working with private providers.” This article was amended on 23 January 2026 to remove from personal information.