England suffer late Zak Crawley blow in chase of 374 to win fifth Test and India series
Attacks on prison officers and inmate deaths at record levels in England and Wales
Attacks on prison officers and the number of inmate deaths in England and Wales have soared to record levels, according to official figures.Ministry of Justice statistics released on Thursday show there were 10,568 assaults on staff in jails in the 12 months to March 2025 – up 7% on the previous year.The number of people dying in prison rose by nearly a third after 401 deaths in the 12 months to the end of June 2025. They included 86 prisoners who died in circumstances recorded as “self-inflicted”. An unprecedented seven homicides were recorded over the same period
Staff fear to speak up at NHS hospital trust under police investigation, report says
Staff at a hospital trust where police are investigating at least 90 deaths say they face reprisals and ridicule from bosses if they raise concerns, according to a damning report.Asked to review University Hospitals Sussex, the report’s authors said they “repeatedly heard concerning examples of staff, often at a senior level, being ignored, dismissed and sometimes ridiculed when speaking up”.The report by Niche Health and Social Care Consulting said this fear of reprisals from whistleblowing could be harming patient safety. It also highlighted complaints of misogyny and failures to deal with “unwanted romantic advances”.The review team noted a number of challenges facing the trust, including an investigation by Sussex police into possible corporate and individual manslaughter charges over allegations of medical negligence and cover-up in the general surgery and neurosurgery departments
World’s ‘oldest baby’ born from embryo frozen in 1994
The world’s “oldest baby” has been born in the US from an embryo that was frozen in 1994, it has been reported.Thaddeus Daniel Pierce was born on 26 July in Ohio to Lindsey and Tim Pierce, using an “adopted” embryo from Linda Archerd, 62, from more than 30 years ago.In the early 1990s, Archerd and her then husband decided to try in vitro fertilisation (IVF) after struggling to become pregnant. In 1994 four embryos resulted: one was transferred to Archerd and resulted in the birth of a daughter, who is now 30 and mother to a 10-year-old. The other embryos were cryopreserved and stored
Mother’s instinct not addressed, report on death of boy sent home from Rotherham A&E says
A report into the death of a five-year-old Rotherham boy sent home from A&E has called for national guidance to take into account parents’ intuition that “something feels very wrong” about their child.Yusuf Mahmud Nazir died of pneumonia and sepsis at Sheffield children’s hospital on 23 November 2022, almost a week after his parents first raised concerns that he was unwell.He was seen by numerous clinicians who failed to listen to the concerns of his mother, Soniya Ahmed, that something was seriously wrong with Yusuf, instead relying solely on data that suggested he was not seriously ill.The independent patient safety investigation (IPSI) report, commissioned by NHS England in response to significant concerns raised by Yusuf’s family, recommended that caregivers’ concerns be taken more seriously when assessing children.The report asked healthcare organisations to consider treating parental intuition as a “legitimate and vital form of evidence” and asked: “What becomes possible when the instinct of a mother is given the same attention as a monitor reading?”The report, written by Dr Peter Carter, an independent healthcare consultant and former chief executive and general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, stated: “The system is not designed to capture ‘something feels very wrong’ as an input, and thus a gap opens between family and clinicians
First NHS AI-run physio clinic in England halves back-pain waiting list
The first NHS AI-run physiotherapy clinic has halved the waiting list for back pain and musculoskeletal services, according to the NHS trust where the pilot has taken place.More than 2,500 patients living in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough were able to access Flok Health, a physiotherapy platform run by AI, over a 12-week period starting in February.The platform, which was created using video footage of a human physiotherapist, provides same-day automated video appointments with a digital physiotherapist via an app that responds to information given by a patient in real time.When the clinic was first launched in Cambridgeshire, waiting times for elective community musculoskeletal (MSK) services in the region were about 18 weeks.The waiting times for all MSK conditions decreased by 44% over the course of the 12-week period due to the use of Flok combined with other initiatives such as community assessment days, according to Cambridgeshire Community Services NHS trust (CCS), which deployed the services in those areas of England
The care sector needs migrant workers. Labour’s visa crackdown is a cynical move | Letter
You are right to highlight, in your editorial, the folly of the government’s decision to make it harder for migrant workers to find work as carers in the UK (The Guardian view on Labour’s visa crackdown in social care: another problem for an overstretched system, 22 July).It’s a cynical political move aimed at spiking Reform UK’s guns on immigration, rather than alleviating pressure on the much-maligned care sector. Migrant workers are indispensable in filling roles that have been undervalued, underpaid and unwanted for too long.With thousands more care professionals needed to look after our ageing population, the government needs a joined-up approach if the crisis-ridden sector is to be transformed.While the government’s fair pay agreement is the first step in turning care around, ministers must think again on their approach to foreign help – and, closer to home, announce the funding to make the fair pay agreement a reality
Josh Tongue insists England ‘pretty chilled’ at prospect of big run chase
England endure ugly case of the drops without superego Stokes in the field | Barney Ronay
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Charley Hull surges into Women’s Open contention as leader Yamashita wobbles
England v India: fifth men’s cricket Test, day three – as it happened
England suffer late Zak Crawley blow in chase of 374 to win fifth Test and India series