NHS

On Thursday nights, our streets should stay silent, our lights off and our windows dark, author Ravinder Randhawa writes.
"This does feel very unfair to care workers given that the deaths in care homes now are rising substantially," Yvette Cooper says.
A minute's silence has been held across the UK to commemorate the key workers who have died with coronavirus. More than 100 NHS and care staff have died with the virus, as well as many transport and other key workers since the pandemic began in Britain.
Health secretary Matt Hancock announces life assurance scheme as he revealed 82 NHS and 16 social care staff had lost their lives to the coronavirus.
Stephen Powis warns UK not to lose the benefits of lockdown as data suggests "slight uptick" in walking and driving.
Tens of thousands will be off sick, says the British Medical Association, and existing interventions simply aren't enough to stave off the problem.
Father James Mackay is helping coronavirus patients at their bedside in London's Nightingale Hospital. James has set up a 24-hour chaplaincy service for the seriously ill and their families and says the virus is taking its toll on everyone involved – including his fellow priests.
Captain Tom Moore, the 99-year-old British war veteran who has raised more than £28 million pounds for the NHS is topping the charts with his new charity single, singing alongside the NHS Voice of Care Choir and Michael Ball, singing the 1963 hit ‘You'll Never Walk Alone’.
Since those on the frontline can’t get enough PPE, the general public is not being advised to wear face masks – despite the evidence, writes journalist Sunny Hundal.
At least 100 healthcare workers are thought to have died from coronavirus.