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on (#4DYF)
A consultation has been launched by the government to end what it calls "the horror of families feeling they aren't listened to", as Nikki Fox reports.
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BBC News
| Link | https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health |
| Feed | http://feeds.bbci.co.uk/news/health/rss.xml |
| Copyright | Copyright: (C) British Broadcasting Corporation, see https://www.bbc.co.uk/usingthebbc/terms-of-use/#15metadataandrssfeeds for terms and conditions of reuse. |
| Updated | 2026-05-04 09:46 |
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on (#4DD9)
MPs are to debate a Green Party call to reverse key elements of the governments health reforms.
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on (#4DAJ)
A low-fat, rather than a low-carb, diet leads to a greater loss of body fat, according to experiments carried out by scientists at the US National Institutes of Health.
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on (#4CCR)
Proposals to give more rights to people with learning disabilities, autism and mental health conditions are unveiled by the government.
on (#4D94)
The cost of translating at NHS hospitals in Nottingham has nearly tripled in four years, BBC Inside Out learns.
on (#4CCQ)
Common chemicals that disrupt hormones could cost more than €150bn a year in damage to health in Europe, studies claim.
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on (#4D5K)
Could Greater Manchester's plans be the answer to NHS problems?
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on (#4CCS)
Ruben Reuter has Down's syndrome and has secured a main role in a new show for CBBC.
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on (#4CCV)
The four-hour waiting time target for NHS accident and emergency units across the UK should be downgraded as it is distorting priorities, experts say.
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on (#4BZP)
A new trial on the London Underground is designed to help blind and partially-sighted people get around independently using wireless technology.
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on (#4BSJ)
The technology helping visually impaired with Tube travel
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on (#4BJF)
Prison guards and inmates could face prosecution for flouting smoking ban laws in communal prison areas after a High Court ruling.
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on (#4AVH)
Liberia has released its last Ebola patient after going a week without any new cases for the first time since May 2014, according to health officials.
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on (#4AY9)
The parents of a girl who lost part of her limbs after catching Meningitis B are supporting a campaign to speed up introduction of a vaccine against the disease.
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on (#4A6A)
Plumbers and heating engineers should join with GPs and care staff in tackling problems caused by cold homes, health experts say.
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on (#4AFJ)
More than 900 patients in the West of England had surgery cancelled for non-medical reasons in the first two weeks of the year, figures show.
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on (#4A68)
Billions of people have untreated tooth decay across the globe, an international study has found.
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on (#485P)
The Lib Dem election manifesto will include a pledge to hand drugs policy from the Home Office to the Department of Health, Nick Clegg says.
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on (#494P)
An MP who lost his father, mother and sister to cancer questions the prime minister about cancer referral targets.
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on (#494R)
There is growing concern about the future of an orphanage run by a British charity in Sierra Leone, after one member of staff died last week from Ebola.
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on (#494T)
Journalist James Delingpole on who should pay for the health care of people who are overweight.
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on (#48WB)
The number of old people killing themselves has fallen. Why?
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on (#47Z7)
Adults catch real flu about once every five years, while children get it every other year, scientists calculate, based on a field study in China.
on (#47Z8)
Just one in seven councils in the UK is paying a "fair" price for home care for the elderly, according to a survey.
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on (#47XR)
In 1946, Dr Benjamin Spock published his parenting guide 'Baby and Childcare'
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on (#47NC)
Video games firm Ubisoft is working on a title that it believes can treat lazy eye, a condition that can result in reduced vision.
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on (#479Z)
BBC News asks whether coffee really is healthy after a study appeared to show that moderate consumption may help people avoid heart disease.
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on (#4791)
NHS staff have voted to accept a government pay offer, Unison has announced.
on (#46CT)
Liberia's president calls for an aid package for the Ebola-affected countries of West Africa along the lines of the post-WWII Marshall Plan.
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on (#46Y8)
Northern Ireland's health minister has formally accepted proposals for a single, all-Ireland children's heart surgery centre, based in Dublin.
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on (#45J2)
A "lethal mix" of failures at a Cumbrian hospital led to the unnecessary deaths of 11 babies and one mother, an inquiry rules.
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on (#4713)
The costs of sending special administrators into the troubled Mid Staffordshire NHS trust rose to almost £19.5m, a health watchdog reveals.
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on (#46DF)
Scotland's A&E departments treated 87% of people within the Scottish government's target of four hours in January, NHS statistics show.
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on (#46Y6)
Bereaved parents' persistence led to hospital failings being exposed
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on (#46DE)
A cancer patient describes his battle for a potential life-extending drug as "degrading" as he is forced to move to England to get treatment.
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on (#44VN)
The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has killed almost 10,000 people, but it appears the number of people dying from the virus is finally slowing down.
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on (#436X)
New regulations aimed at stamping out drug driving, including the first legal limits on cannabis and cocaine, come into force in England and Wales.
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on (#43G5)
GPs are to have more time to focus on caring for the most vulnerable patients under a new contract with the Welsh government.
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on (#436V)
Measures to protect children's health should be put at the forefront of the general election, say doctors.
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on (#41D0)
Some websites offering treatment for gonorrhoea are putting patients at risk by failing to follow national guidelines, BBC 5 Live Investigates finds.
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on (#43HH)
The vice-president of Sierra Leone puts himself into quarantine after one of his bodyguards dies from the Ebola virus.
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on (#3ZJE)
Scientists say they have found distinct changes in the immune systems of patients with ME or chronic fatigue syndrome, which could lead to better diagnosis and treatment.