Charlie Gard: A case that changed everything?
- 29 July 2017
- From the section Health

Few British legal cases in recent years have proved as controversial or emotionally charged as that over the fate of Charlie Gard, the 11-month-old baby who died on Friday after a lengthy battle over his medical treatment.
During the many hours of legal debate in court, Katie Gollop QC, who led Great Ormond Street's legal team, described the case as "sad", but not "exceptional".
She was wrong. The case, which saw Charlie's parents take on the world-renowned hospital in the courts, was one of those rare cases that transcend the cut-and-thrust of legal argument.
Its impact reverberated around the country and the rest of the world, prompting protests on the streets, a mass outpouring of emotion on social media, the vilification of one of the most famous hospitals in the world and the intervention of both the Vatican and US president.
In doing so, it made us question the role of the parent, the motives of doctors and - as always in this digital age - wonder about the ever-growing influence of the internet. How did it come to this? And what does it tell us about society?
The tarnishing of a famous hospital
Read full article Charlie Gard: A case that changed everything?
Pub smoking ban: 10 charts that show the impact
- 1 July 2017
- From the section Health

It's 10 years since smoking was banned in enclosed workplaces in England, following similar moves in the rest of the UK. But how has the "pub smoking ban" changed the country?
Do you remember the time when pubs were full of smoke? When you could light up after a meal at a restaurant? Or when smokers didn't have to congregate on the street outside offices?
Read full article Pub smoking ban: 10 charts that show the impact
Conservative manifesto: Why many will pay more for care
- 18 May 2017
- From the section Health

What the Conservatives have proposed for elderly care in England is complex.
They are changing certain thresholds as well as what can be defined as assets and how long you wait before you have to pay your bill.
Read full article Conservative manifesto: Why many will pay more for care
Are Britons falling out of love with booze?
- 3 May 2017
- From the section Health

Britain has always been known as a nation that loves a tipple. But the latest Office for National Statistics lifestyle survey suggests this may be coming to an end.
The 2016 poll of nearly 8,000 Britons found just under 60% had had a drink in the past week - the lowest rate since the survey began in 2005.
Read full article Are Britons falling out of love with booze?
NHS confusing public by using 'gobbledygook'
- 29 March 2017
- From the section Health

Imagine the scene. Up and down the country, local NHS leaders are crowded into meeting rooms discussing information transfers and ambulatory care, when someone jumps up and shouts "I've had enough of sticky toffee puddings".
Confused? You're not the only one. The language being used by the health service is simply gobbledygook, says the Plain English Campaign (PEC).
Read full article NHS confusing public by using 'gobbledygook'
Will the Budget help ailing grandparents?
- 8 March 2017
- From the section Health

The chancellor has announced a £2bn rescue package for the social care sector in England.
Philip Hammond says the extra money - to be phased in over three years - will help support a system that is "clearly under pressure".
10 charts that show what’s gone wrong with social care
- 24 February 2017
- From the section Health

Ministers in England have said they are looking for a solution to the problems in social care. That has raised hope that next month's Budget could include measures to tackle what many describe as the crisis facing the sector.
But what exactly has gone wrong? And who's affected?
Read full article 10 charts that show what’s gone wrong with social care
10 charts that show why the NHS is in trouble
- 8 February 2017
- From the section Health

The NHS faces unrelenting pressure despite funding rising. Why?
The sheer scale of the NHS can take the breath away. Every 24 hours it sees one million patients, and with 1.7 million staff it's the fifth biggest employer in the world.
Read full article 10 charts that show why the NHS is in trouble
Why the NHS is performing miracles
- 18 January 2017
- From the section Health

It has been a remarkable few weeks for the health service hasn't it? The worst waiting times in A&E for over a decade. Patients left for hours on trolleys. Vital cancer operations being cancelled. Hospitals across the country declaring major alerts. A humanitarian crisis in the making, says the Red Cross.
But amid all this what we haven't heard is just how well the health service is coping. Given what it is facing, the NHS and, in particular, hospitals are performing miracles.
Is the NHS going to break in 2017?
- 29 December 2016
- From the section Health

The past few months - if not the whole year - have seen a constant stream of warnings about impending Armageddon in the health service.
We have heard how the system has reached various levels of crisis from "tipping point" and "breaking point" to "on the brink of collapse".