H
sport
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
societySee all
A picture

Overseas-trained doctors leaving the UK in record numbers

Record numbers of overseas-trained doctors are quitting the UK, leaving the NHS at risk of huge gaps in its workforce, with hostility towards migrants blamed for the exodus.In all, 4,880 doctors who qualified in another country left the UK during 2024 – a rise of 26% on the 3,869 who did so the year before – figures from the General Medical Council reveal.NHS leaders, senior doctors and the GMC warned that the increased denigration of and abuse directed at migrants in the UK was a significant reason for the rise in foreign medics leaving.“It’s really worrying that so many highly skilled and highly valued international doctors the NHS just can’t afford to lose are leaving in their droves,” said Daniel Elkeles, the chief executive of the hospitals group NHS Providers.“We wouldn’t have an NHS if we hadn’t for many years recruited talented and valued people from all around the world

1 day ago
A picture

Prozac ‘no better than placebo’ for treating children with depression, experts say

Clinical guidelines should no longer recommend Prozac for children, according to experts, after research showed it had no clinical benefit for treating depression in children and adolescents.Globally one in seven 10- to 19-year-olds have a mental health condition, according to the World Health Organization. In the UK, about a quarter of older teenagers and up to a fifth of younger children have anxiety, depression or other mental health problems.In the UK, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) guidance says under-18s with moderate to severe depression can be prescribed antidepressants alongside therapy.But a new review of trial data by academics in Austria and the UK concluded that fluoxetine, sold under the brand name of Prozac among others, is clinically no better than placebo drugs in treating depression in children, and should therefore no longer be prescribed to them

1 day ago
A picture

Councils in north of England and Midlands to get more funding in shake-up

Deprived towns and cities in the Midlands and the north of England are the big winners in a shake-up of local authority funding that will redirect cash from affluent rural areas to urban councils hit hardest by austerity.Ministers said the changes put in place a fairer system that recognised the extra needs and weaker council tax-raising powers of councils in so-called “left behind” areas. It guarantees them real-terms funding increases for the next three years.“People living in the places that suffered most from austerity will finally see their areas turned around,” the local government minister, Alison McGovern, said in a parliamentary statement.The changes, which will be introduced from April, before critical local elections in May, could see funding boosts for Reform-led councils in the north with high levels of deprivation, such as Durham and Lancashire, as well as in Kent, Reform’s flagship council

1 day ago
A picture

Keeping youths in care out of trouble | Letter

Diverting young people in care from the youth justice system and the associated criminalisation may help their future careers (Children in care who lash out may no longer face automatic arrest under UK review, 17 November). However, international research studies have shown that reducing the chances of young people being involved in crime to begin with are more effective.These include: stable family foster care placements; doing well at school; extending foster care placements beyond 18 years of age; having positive birth family, extended family, partner and social relationships; being settled in accommodation on leaving care; and being supported by leaving-care teams providing personal, careers, housing and financial support.For too many young people these opportunities are lacking or inconsistent, even in the face of substantial evidence detailing their unnecessary involvement in the criminal justice system, very poor outcomes and the associated costs to young people and society – see In Care, Out of Trouble, the report of Lord Laming’s review, published by the Prison Reform Trust in 2016.Prof Mike SteinUniversity of York Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section

1 day ago
A picture

How prohibition-based policies caused a cannabis problem | Letters

Your article correctly raised concerns about the harms of higher-strength cannabis on people vulnerable to psychosis (‘I’d run down the road thinking I was God’: a day at the cannabis psychosis clinic, 16 November). However, it didn’t explain how previous prohibition‑based policies designed to reduce cannabis use have driven up the strength of street cannabis, the source of most cannabis for people with psychosis, thus making the problem worse.Furthermore, growing data from the Drug Science T21 project and other prescription databases globally shows that medical cannabis can alleviate a range of psychiatric and neurological disorders, without inducing psychosis. Any suggestion that rates of cannabis-related psychosis could be reduced by limiting medical cannabis access is flawed and is likely to harm patients currently benefiting from it.Prof D Nutt and Prof Ilana CromeDrug Science Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section

1 day ago
A picture

Musical comfort at the end of your life | Brief letters

Readers who were moved by the article on Kate Munger’s Threshold Choirs (‘It was the last time Mum smiled at me’: the choirs singing to the dying in three-part harmony, 17 November) may like to know that similarly, in the UK, Companion Voices sings for people at the end of life, creating a gentle supportive soundscape. Founded by Judith Silver 12 years ago, more than a dozen groups now offer this voluntary service across England, with more planned.Kay AshtonWallingford, Oxfordshire John Crace’s analysis of Keir Starmer’s hapless, hopeless Labour government (‘I thought the grownups were back in charge!’: John Crace on how Labour shattered his expectations, 19 November) was, as usual, witty and shrewd – apart from his observation that the government’s right hand doesn’t know what the left hand is doing. Actually, it’s worse than that: the right hand doesn’t even know what the right hand is doing.Prof Chris WalshHawarden, Flintshire Zoe Williams’ reflection on the naming of storms (I keep trying to name storms

1 day ago
cultureSee all
A picture

Seth Meyers on Epstein files: ‘It’s obvious why Trump fought so hard to stop this bill from passing’

1 day ago
A picture

My cultural awakening: I moved across the world after watching a Billy Connolly documentary

1 day ago
A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Epstein files congressional vote: ‘Make no mistake – this isn’t over’

2 days ago
A picture

British Museum ends ‘deeply troubling’ sponsorship from Japanese tobacco firm

3 days ago
A picture

Why don’t Conservatives get credit for culture funding? | Letter

3 days ago
A picture

Jon Stewart on Trump’s Epstein files flip-flop: ‘This dude is flailing’

4 days ago

Wounded Wallabies on brink of unwanted 67-year record as French test awaits

about 14 hours ago
A picture


As recently as August, the Wallabies humiliated rugby’s No 1 side, back-to-back world champions South Africa, in Johannesburg.They then smashed the pride of the northern hemisphere, the British & Irish Lions, in Sydney.By going all-in and not settling for a draw with Argentina, they won that Test – and with it, a nation’s heart.“The Wallabies are back”, we proclaimed.And indeed they are – back in the doldrums.

Australia have now lost six of their last seven Tests,Their latest abysmal showing, a 46-19 demolition by Ireland, follows a humiliating loss to world No 10 Italy and a toothless 25-7 defeat by England earlier this month,If the men in gold lose again to France this weekend it will be Australian rugby’s first winless tour of Europe in 67 years,Defeat there will see them finish 2025 with a win-loss record of 5-10 and a winning percentage of 33,3%, making them, statistically, the worst Wallabies side in history.

Worse, the slump could cost them a top-six seeding at the 2027 Rugby World Cup hosted by Australia, a potentially mortal blow to a code struggling for relevance and audience.With one game before the World Cup draw on 3 December, there is a tiny twinkle of hope.If the Wallabies can rediscover their mojo and wallop Les Bleus by 16 points or more, the boilover will lift their rating by 2.86 points to 84.45 and sink France’s to 84.

32, vaulting them into sixth spot and consigning the 2023 finalists to seventh place.The worldbeaters of August might have been a chance.But this woebegone rabble? Much depends on coach Joe Schmidt.The 60-year-old blooded 19 new players in 2024 and duly made the Wallabies competitive again.But Rugby Australia’s decision to extend his contract beyond the 2025 Rugby Championship has backfired horribly.

Staying on has come at great personal sacrifice for Schmidt too, but as home fires have sputtered so have tactics and selections.The coach blames injuries, lack of depth, fatigue.But the trophy cabinet is empty and the team is going backwards.With the AFL launching State of Origin in 2026 and the NRL’s expansion accelerating, RA must act.Rugby chiefs talked of an “orderly transfer” from Schmidt to Les Kiss in mid-2026, halfway through the inaugural Nations Championship.

But scrum guru Mike Cron and lineout chief Geoff Parling have left already (the set-piece has imploded since) and it’s time to reset.With R360 scouts scouting, the Kiss Army must assemble sooner.But first the French.No team can hurt the Wallabies more than Fabien Galthié’s kick-crazy side whose ability to exploit vulnerability under the high ball won them the 2025 Six Nations.That spells trouble for Schmidt’s beleaguered troops whose buttery fingers and aerial ineptitude on this tour has embodied their recent decline.

A wallaby who can’t jump? It’s like a sick joke,Australia’s forwards lost six lineouts against Ireland with errant leaps and their backs spilled multiple kicks in general play,No game in the world demands more jumping and catching than Australian rules yet Australia’s rugby players still can’t seem to find a way to mark a ball while in motion,“A lot of it is players going up one-handed and just looking to create a bit of chaos,” said Schmidt after the debacle in Dublin,“It’s a scramble, a mad scramble… you’ve just got to try to get into the contest really effectively and then get players around the contest to make sure you get the best chance of getting anything that’s left over.

”Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionMaybe in New Zealand, where Schmidt was born.Or Ireland, where he used to coach.For Australians it should be second nature to run, leap and catch a ball cleanly.What made Schmidt’s confusion hurt was he had Collingwood coach Craig McRae visit camp that week “just observing and chatting” rather than teaching his men to mark.For too long, Australian rugby has blamed the popularity of league and Australian rules for eroding their fanbase and gobbling up elite athletes at the grassroots.

Instead of whining they should be busy cross-pollinating between codes, teaching their brethren’s skills to engineer mongrel footballers that are distinctly Australian,Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii should have been the footy Frankenstein at the vanguard of this hybrid revolution, having represented NSW in league, AFL, union and basketball and also set high jump records before he was 13,Wallaby great Tim Horan saw it: “Joseph tackles like a leaguie, leaps like a basketballer and marks like an AFL player,”Alas, since soaring over England in his celebrated Test debut last November, Suaalii’s airborne assault has been largely MIA – even if he has this week been short-listed for World Rugby’s men’s breakthrough player of the year,When he and his teammates do chase a kick, it’s not to pluck a speccy on the fly but instead tap the ball back to a chasing pack.

Even when that works, the Wallaby mob usually late to arrive and the chance is lost.This squandering of Suaalii’s talent falls on Schmidt.He should be the Australian archetype: a warrior who can soar, seize and create havoc.Instead, he just tackles, the rugby equivalent of flagging down a Ferrari to drag your bullock cart out of the mud.It’s why Schmidt’s Wallabies are stuck, wheels spinning, and sinking fast.