The first article in a new series on ConHome about how government might be made smaller, taxpayers better off and and society stronger – through strong families, better schools and good jobs.
Those with conditions such as autism and ADHD are sufferingly needlessly for lack of accessible diagnosis and proper support at school and the workplace.
Dealing with mental health issues or traffic violations leaves our forces with less time to tackle the crimes we rightly expect them to solve.
The mental health of children and young people is at breaking point. The effects of the pandemic and the uncertainty that has surrounded its aftermath are pushing many into crisis.
Those who serve our country often have complex needs and are slow to seek aid. They must not be allowed to fall through the cracks.
There have been serious failings at the NHS Foundation Trust for these counties. Why is nobody held to account?
Before the pandemic one in nine young people had a probable mental health condition. That number has now jumped to one in six.
Plus: Why the number of ghost children should worry us. And: the Treasury should target social media companies to protect youngsters.
The public has been subjected to two years of relentless bombardment about disease and death in this dystopian experiment.
Many areas in most need of transformation lack civil society organisations and miss out on the giving which supports them.
Decision-makers are merely trying to appease those who would rather keep schools closed.
This constitutional experiment has failed, not least because there is no such thing as ‘the science’.
There are a number of indications that compliance wouldn’t as be as good as perhaps anticipated.
The tenth article in a new series on ConHome about how government might be made smaller, taxpayers better off and and society stronger – through strong families, better schools and good jobs.