There are a number of indications that compliance wouldn’t as be as good as perhaps anticipated.
By using sugar tax funds, it could greatly alleviate some of the difficulties in schools across the country.
Henry Hill argues that those making rules for the nation have a duty to ensure they’re followed in their own place of work.
We have a tendency to idolise our European counterparts on Covid strategy. But we should think about our own legacy.
This secondary option – should the NHS struggle during winter – is in no way as strict as the ones before.
At least they know how to identify, assess and prepare for risks – unlike ministers, it seems.
If a fresh wave puts severe pressure on the NHS, the Government will surely buckle. We have no way of knowing how.
It’s absurd to demand the right to force Scotland into lockdown when you need the British Treasury to pay for it.
Having been so focused on Covid health outcomes, we have lost sight of our nation’s terrible rate of drug-related deaths.
There’s plenty of evidence that this will boost productivity, increase diversity in the workforce and help our wellbeing.
Easing restrictions when schools ‘are going back’ is a bigger gamble than the Prime Minister made, he claims.
This is not something to dismiss lightly, and we must take this as a clarion call to action.
The Prime Minister’s refusal to rule out a further lockdown is concerning for society and particularly for my patients.
It would be better to move diagnosis and treatment of healthcare problems away from hospitals, among other steps.
In 2019/20 contributions to good causes rose by 0.31 per cent despite a 14.32 per cent increase in profits for Camelot.