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  • PRESS RELEASE : Education Secretary appoints new chair of Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Education Secretary appoints new chair of Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel [April 2025]

    The press release issued by the Department for Education on 28 April 2025.

    Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson has appointed Sir David Holmes as the new Chair of the Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel.

    The independent panel of experts provides national leadership and learning on child protection and safeguarding. Established in July 2018 to review serious child safeguarding incidents, when children have died or suffered serious harm due to abuse or neglect, the panel aims to improve the safeguarding system by identifying national learning from these tragedies.

    David Holmes has 19 years’ experience in the development and provision of high-quality services for children and families as a CEO in the voluntary sector, currently as CEO of Family Action – a frontline charity which supports families through change, challenge or crisis. Prior to that he served as a Deputy Director of Children’s Services in local government, a senior civil servant in the Department of Health and Department for Education, and as a practising solicitor. He will serve a 4-year term from 23 June 2025.

    This appointment builds on the announcement that the panel will form the foundation from which to build the Child Protection Authority (CPA) in England. The CPA will be established to make the child protection system clearer and more unified, and ensure ongoing improvement for child and youth victims of abuse and neglect through effective, evidence-based support for practitioners.

    Under Sir David’s leadership, work to expand the role of the panel by increasing its analytical capacity and to provide high-quality material for practitioners will begin immediately. Later this year, the government will develop a roadmap to establishing the CPA and launch a consultation on the development of the new CPA.

    Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson said:

    Sir David Holmes’ track record in working on the ground with children and families, supporting them through the toughest times, makes him well-placed to help us build a system where background does not determine destiny.

    I am grateful to Annie Hudson for her stewardship of the panel, bringing forth ambitious recommendations that are now informing our work to improve child protection across England and deliver our Plan for Change.

    As we move towards creating a new Child Protection Authority, I look forward to working with Sir David Holmes in a shared ambition to protect and defend the most vulnerable children in our society.

    Incoming chair of the panel, Sir David Holmes, said:

    I am honoured to have been chosen to undertake this role. No child should suffer harm, abuse or neglect and the panel’s role in working with the whole safeguarding system to review practice, identify learning and encourage and enable improvement is crucial.

    I look forward to working with everyone to improve the safeguarding of children and I will do everything I possibly can to make a positive difference in this role.

    Outgoing chair of the panel, Annie Hudson, said:

    I feel immensely privileged to have served as Chair of the Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel for the past 5 years.

    The panel has worked hard to ensure that, as a nation and as safeguarding professionals, we learn from tragic incidents where children have died or been seriously harmed because of abuse and neglect.

    There is much important work to do over the coming period to improve how agencies work together to help and protect children. With his wealth of experience, I know that Sir David Holmes is very well placed to lead the panel in taking forward plans to create a stronger, evidence-based system that puts children’s needs at the heart of all we do.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Universal Periodic Review 49 – UK Statement on Kyrgyzstan [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Universal Periodic Review 49 – UK Statement on Kyrgyzstan [April 2025]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 April 2025.

    Statement by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley, at Kyrgyzstan’s Universal Periodic Review at the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

    Let me welcome the Minister and his delegation, and salute his government’s efforts to implement the recommendations from its last review. Not least, we commend its efforts on gender equality and welcome their constructive role on this Council.

    Let me also urge his Government to uphold its obligations under the ICCPR and the commitments accepted at its last review.

    We recommend that the Kyrgyz Republic:

    1. Ensure the treatment of NGOS is in line with international human rights obligations, and that it removes regulations for NGOS to provide information not stipulated by the ‘Law on Non-Commercial Organisations’.
    2. Maintain the National Centre for the Prevention of Torture as an independent and separate National Preventative Mechanism and provide adequate resources to the Centre to continue to effectively carry out its mandate.
    3. Adhere to the principles enshrined in the Kyrgyz Constitution by amending the Code of Offences to decriminalise defamation and insult, and instead use civil litigation in line with international human rights obligations.

    Thank you, Mr President.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Change of British High Commissioner to Malta – Victoria Busby [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Change of British High Commissioner to Malta – Victoria Busby [April 2025]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 April 2025.

    Mrs Victoria Busby OBE has been appointed British High Commissioner to the Republic of Malta in succession to Ms Katherine Ward LVO OBE who will be transferring to another Diplomatic Service appointment. Mrs Busby will take up her appointment during September 2025.

    Curriculum vitae

    Full name: Victoria Alice Markland Busby

    Year Role
    2020 to present FCDO, Director of Protocol and Vice-Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps
    2019 to 2020 Cabinet Office, Chief Operating Officer, COP26
    2012 to 2019 No10, Deputy Director, Events and Visits
    2010 to 2012 DCMS, Head of Communication, Government Olympic Executive
    2009 to 2010 Home Office, Senior Communications Manager, Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism
    2008 to 2009 Ministry of Defence, Senior PR Manager
    2006 to 2008 Department for Work and Pensions, Marketing Manager
    2006 Joined Civil Service
    2005 to 2006 Head London (communications consultancy), Account Manager
    2003 to 2005 Christie’s (auction house), Proposals Writer
  • PRESS RELEASE : Reappointment of a Non-Judicial Member of the Sentencing Council [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Reappointment of a Non-Judicial Member of the Sentencing Council [April 2025]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 28 April 2025.

    The Lord Chancellor has approved the reappointment of Richard Wright KC as a non-judicial member of the Sentencing Council with special expertise in criminal defence.

    The reappointment is for 3 years from 1 August 2025 to 31 July 2028.

    The Sentencing Council for England and Wales was set up in April 2010 to promote greater transparency and consistency in sentencing, while maintaining the independence of the judiciary.

    The primary role of the council is to issue guidelines on sentencing, which the courts must follow unless it is in the interests of justice not to do so. The council consists of judicial and non-judicial members with specialist knowledge of particular aspects of the criminal justice system.

    The appointment of non-judicial members of the Sentencing Council is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments and recruitment processes comply with the Cabinet Office Governance Code on Public Appointments.

    Biography

    Richard Wright was called to the Bar in 1998 and took silk in 2013. He has practised from 6 Park Square in Leeds since, 1998, where he has been Head of Chambers since 2013.

    Specialising in murder and manslaughter cases, Richard has prosecuted and defended in some of the highest profile cases across the North of England.

    Since 2020 he has been Leader of the North Eastern Circuit; leading the professions’ response to the Covid-19 emergency and, in 2022, he was invited to join the legal team of the UK Covid-19 Inquiry.

    Richard Wright was appointed Deputy District Judge (Magistrates’ Courts) in 2006, Recorder of the Crown Court in 2012 and Deputy High Court Judge in January 2023. He has been a non-judicial member of the Sentencing Council since 1 August 2022 with experience of criminal defence.

  • NEWS STORY : Events Director William Blenkarn Sentenced for £100,000 COVID Loan Fraud

    NEWS STORY : Events Director William Blenkarn Sentenced for £100,000 COVID Loan Fraud

    STORY

    William Blenkarn, a 48-year-old events company director from Buckinghamshire, has been sentenced for fraudulently obtaining £100,000 in COVID-19 support funds. He secured two £50,000 Bounce Back Loans for his company, MJB Events Limited, despite the scheme permitting only one loan per business. Subsequently, he transferred £41,000 to a newly established company, MJB Entertainment Group Ltd. ​

    At Aylesbury Crown Court on 24 April, Blenkarn, now residing in Spain, received a two-year prison sentence, suspended for 18 months, and was ordered to complete 200 hours of unpaid work. The Insolvency Service is pursuing recovery of the misappropriated funds under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. ​

    David Snasdell, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, stated:​

    “William Blenkarn’s company received double the amount of public money it deserved due to his false declaration when applying for a second Bounce Back Loan. This was taxpayers’ money and Blenkarn made matters worse by moving a significant proportion of the loan over to his new company which had only been trading for a few months.” ​

    Blenkarn’s actions not only violated the terms of the Bounce Back Loan scheme but also breached his duties as a director by failing to provide necessary accounting records during the liquidation process. The fraudulent activities left MJB Events’ account overdrawn by approximately £25,000, depriving creditors of funds.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Buckinghamshire events director sentenced for Covid fraud [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Buckinghamshire events director sentenced for Covid fraud [April 2025]

    The press release issued by the Insolvency Service on 28 April 2025.

    Bounce Back Loan fraudster convicted following Insolvency Service investigations.

    • William Blenkarn claimed he did not know he was not entitled to a second Bounce Back Loan for MJB Events Limited
    • Blenkarn obtained double the amount of Covid support his company was entitled to as a result of his fraudulent declaration
    • Money from the loan was then transferred to a new company Blenkarn had set up just weeks into the pandemic

    The owner of two Buckinghamshire-based events companies has been handed a suspended sentence after receiving £100,000 in Covid support funds when he was only entitled to half that figure.

    William Blenkarn secured two Bounce Back Loans worth £50,000 each for his MJB Events Limited company, breaking the rules of the scheme which specifically stated that businesses could only have a single loan.

    The 48-year-old then transferred £41,000 from the company’s bank account to his second business – MJB Entertainment Group Ltd – which had only been set up weeks before his fraudulent application.

    Blenkarn, formerly of London End, Beaconsfield, but now living in Spain, was sentenced to two years in prison, suspended for 18 months, at Aylesbury Crown Court on Thursday 24 April.

    He was also ordered to complete 200 hours of unpaid work.

    David Snasdell, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, said:

    William Blenkarn’s company received double the amount of public money it deserved due to his false declaration when applying for a second Bounce Back Loan.

    This was taxpayers’ money and Blenkarn made matters worse by moving a significant proportion of the loan over to his new company which had only been trading for a few months.

    MJB Events was incorporated in January 2016 and was described as an events company. MJB Entertainment Group was set up in early April 2020.

    Blenkarn told the Insolvency Service that MJB Entertainment Group was created to manage and book artists but developed into organising a range of charity events.

    The company also described itself as providing additional services such as marquee design and wedding planning.

    Blenkarn applied to two different banks for £50,000 Bounce Back Loans – the maximum allowed under the scheme – on behalf of MJB Events in May 2020.

    For his second application, Blenkarn ticked the online declaration to certify that this was the only application made on behalf of the business.

    Despite this, Blenkarn claimed he did not know that he could only apply for one loan for each company.

    Two payments of £25,000 and £16,000 were then made to MJB Entertainment Group from the bank account belonging to MJB Events in July 2020.

    These transactions left the MJB Events account overdrawn by around £25,000 at the time liquidators were appointed in June 2021, depriving creditors of the funds.

    Blenkarn also breached his duties as a director by failing to deliver accounting records for MJB Events to the liquidator as he was required to do by law.

    The Insolvency Service is seeking to recover the fraudulently obtained funds under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002.

    Further information

  • PRESS RELEASE : Millions of people and businesses protected against debanking [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Millions of people and businesses protected against debanking [April 2025]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 28 April 2025.

    Protections will support small businesses to grow, putting more money into people’s pockets through the Plan for Change.

    • New rules will require banks to give customers 90 days’ notice before closing accounts and provide a clear explanation.
    • Changes will prevent banks closing accounts without a clear reason, while giving people and businesses the time and information needed to challenge decisions.

    Millions of people and small business owners will be better protected against their bank account being closed, as the government goes further and faster to drive growth and delivers security for working people through the Plan for Change.

    Banks and other payment service providers will be required to give customers at least 90 days’ notice before closing their account or terminating a payment service – an increase from the two months currently required – under new rules expected to come into force for relevant new contracts from April 2026.

    Banks will also need to provide a clear explanation to customers in writing, so people can challenge decisions, such as through the Financial Ombudsman Service.

    The new rules will give customers more time to challenge decisions they disagree with and find a new bank if their account is closed. This will support small businesses which have complained about their account being closed without reason at short notice – leaving them no time to complain or find a replacement bank.

    Economic Secretary to the Treasury, Emma Reynolds, said:

    Delivering economic security for working people is at the heart of our Plan for Change and strengthening protections against debanking will protect people’s and businesses’ access to banking services.

    Under the new rules, customers will receive more notice of account closures, be entitled to an explanation as to why their account has been closed and have more opportunity to challenge such decisions.

    The nine largest personal current account providers in the UK are already legally required to offer basic personal bank accounts to people who legally reside in the UK who do not have or are not eligible for an account. The new rules will help to ensure continued access to basic banking services for the most vulnerable.

    The legislation will support existing protections, including those which prohibit a bank from discriminating against a UK consumer based on political opinions or beliefs when accessing a payment account.

    By ensuring a more predictable access to banking and other payment services, the government is reinforcing its commitment to the millions of individuals and businesses across the UK who rely on these vital services.


    More information

    The new legislation being brought forward subject to Parliamentary approval would apply to all payment service providers who decide to terminate payment service contracts without a definite expiry date, including bank account closures. They will apply to contracts agreed from and including 28th April 2026, when the legislation is expected to come into force.

    The measures will be subject to certain exceptions, for example, to enable payment service providers to comply with their obligations under financial crime law.

    The new rules will also apply to the termination of basic personal bank accounts from and including 28th April 2026.

     

  • PRESS RELEASE : Greater protection for domestic abuse victims in North Wales [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Greater protection for domestic abuse victims in North Wales [April 2025]

    The press release issued by the Ministry of Justice on 28 April 2025.

    Survivors of domestic abuse across North Wales will be better protected due to the further expansion of Domestic Abuse Protection Orders.

    • Clamp down on domestic abuse extended to North Wales
    • Hundreds more victims to benefit from stronger protections from cowardly abusers
    • Government reiterates commitment to halve violence against women and girls in a decade as part of its Plan for Change

    From today, victims in North Wales – as well as their friends, families or support workers – can apply for Domestic Abuse Protection Orders (DAPO) in the family court at Caernarfon, Prestatyn or Wrexham. Police can also apply on their behalf in the magistrates’ court for protection against abusers. This comes as the Government reiterates its commitment to halve violence against women and girls in a decade as part of its Plan for Change.

    Domestic Abuse Protection Orders build on existing police powers, providing stronger protection for victims including forcing perpetrators to stick to strict exclusion zones wearing GPS tags and attending substance misuse or mental health interventions.

    Unlike current schemes, these orders cover all types of domestic abuse – including physical, controlling, or coercive behaviour, economic abuse and stalking – and can be issued by all courts. There will also be no maximum duration for these orders, compared to the 28-days current protection orders offer.

    In the year to March 2024, North Wales Police granted 462 Domestic Violence Protection Notices and made over 350 applications under Clare’s Law to help protect victims of domestic abuse. These figures show why more flexible, streamlined tools like Domestic Abuse Protection Orders will further help victims.

    Today marks the second expansion after the successful launch in Greater Manchester, three London boroughs (Croydon, Bromley and Sutton) and with the British Transport Police in November 2024 – with orders also rolled out across Cleveland in March. Between 27 November and 31 March, over 100 Domestic Abuse Protection Orders have been secured in Greater Manchester alone, with the police dealing with 45 breaches and jail time handed down to some of those who breached the order.

    Since then, there have been multiple convictions for breach of an order with some perpetrators already behind bars. A maximum sentence for a breach of a Domestic Abuse Protection Orders is five years in prison.

    Minister for Victims and Violence Against Women and Girls, Alex Davies-Jones, said:

    The pilot of DAPOs is already helping a number of victims across England, ending the cycle of abuse trapping them in their own homes. I am now pleased to be expanding this to selected areas in my home country of Wales.

    Launching initially in North Wales, the rollout will continue to protect even more victims, and this helps to contribute to our Plan for Change.

    These orders work, and it’s imperative that victims – predominantly women – in pilot areas know where and how to access them. If you’re experiencing abuse, contact your local family court, police, or your support worker today to help access a DAPO for the safety you deserve.

    Minister for Safeguarding and Violence Against Women and Girls, Jess Phillips, said:

    Time and time again, victims of domestic abuse tell me their safety has been compromised by a system that fails to protect them properly. That’s why these new domestic abuse protection orders are not paper promises – they are real, practical tools that track abusers through electronic tagging, creating exclusion zones, and mandating attendance at behaviour change programmes.

    Rolling out these orders to North Wales marks an important step in gathering more valuable insight as we work towards wider expansion across the country. This is how we’ll deliver on our mission to halve violence against women and girls within a decade – through concrete actions that truly protect victims and hold perpetrators to account.

    Secretary of State for Wales Jo Stevens said:

    The UK Government is working to make our communities safer, and it is vital that we reduce violence against women and girls to achieve this goal.

    These new orders provide stronger protection for victims of domestic abuse, simplify their access to help and ensure court powers are more stringent than ever before.

    We are delivering change for people across the country and victims of appalling violence across North Wales will now have the protection they deserve.

    Jenny Hopkins, Chief Crown Prosecutor for Cymru-Wales, said:

    Domestic Abuse Protection Orders are another vital way for our prosecutors to protect victims of these terrible crimes.

    We can ask the court for an order if someone is convicted, or if they are acquitted, and will be looking to prosecute anybody who breaches that order.

    Background information

    • Domestic Abuse Protection Orders were launched in November 2024 across Greater Manchester, three London boroughs (Croydon, Bromley and Sutton) and with the British Transport Police.
    • In March 2025 they were extended to Cleveland.
    • The DAPO is a joint policy shared between the Ministry of Justice and the Home Office and was legislated for in Domestic Abuse Act 2021.
    • Tagging can be imposed for up to 12 months at a time.
  • PRESS RELEASE : Major NHS App expansion cuts waiting times [April 2025]

    PRESS RELEASE : Major NHS App expansion cuts waiting times [April 2025]

    The press release issued by the Department of Health and Social Care on 28 April 2025.

    • Reform of NHS App stops 1.5 million hospital appointments being missed, saving 5.7 million staff hours since July 2024
    • Push to get patients seen quicker is part of government’s Plan for Change to end hospital backlogs and shift NHS services from analogue to digital
    • 87% of hospitals now offering services through NHS App – up nearly 20% since July 2024 and exceeding government target

    Millions of patients are benefiting from greater choice and flexibility in the way they access healthcare as the Prime Minister welcomes a major milestone in the rollout of the NHS App today (28 April 2025).

    Latest data shows 1.5 million appointments have been saved thanks to the government’s accelerated rollout of the NHS App, which helps patients access treatment more conveniently so that it fits around their lives, rather than the other way round.

    Making sure patients get greater power over how and when they can book their treatments and appointments is at the heart of the government’s plans to end hospital backlogs and improve care through the Plan for Change.

    Users can manage appointments, view prescriptions, access their GP health record and receive notifications at the touch of a button, reducing stress on healthcare services and providing easier access to information and services.

    The government has exceeded its first target under the plan, to increase the number of hospitals allowing patients to view appointment information on the app up to 85% by the end of March 2025 – reaching 87%, up from 68% in July 2024.

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer said:

    Our NHS has been stuck in the dark ages – held back by old fashioned systems where patients are struggling for appointments and unable to access their own data.

    We saw during the pandemic how apps can totally transform everyday access to health services. So there’s no excuse for the lack of progress in the NHS we’ve inherited.

    NHS reform has to come through better use of tech – it’s the fuel we need to power change.

    As we deliver our Plan for Change to end hospital backlogs, I want to see more and more people having the option to use the app, so that everyone benefits from more control and choice over their treatment.

    Measures to expand the use of the app were set out earlier this year in the government’s elective reform plan, which set out how patients will be offered a wider choice of providers and an easier, quicker way to book appointments.

    The move comes as the government steps up the use of health data to accelerate the discovery of life-saving drugs and improve patient care. Earlier this month, the Prime Minister announced an investment alongside the Wellcome Trust of up to £600 million to create a new health data research service. This will transform access to NHS data by providing a secure single access point to national-scale data sets, slashing red tape for researchers and boosting the UK’s world-leading life sciences sector.

    Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting said:

    This government is determined to get our NHS fixed and fit for the future – and this is just one of the innovative ways through the Plan for Change that we’re helping patients, cutting waiting lists and saving taxpayers’ money all at the same time.

    By putting the latest technology into the hands of patients so they can access services quicker, we’re freeing up more time for doctors and nurses to focus on treating people and getting waiting lists down.

    This government is doing things differently. Every missed appointment and wasted staff hour saved means another patient getting the care they need as we drive a digital NHS revolution through our Plan for Change.

    Since July 2024, the increased use of existing app features has saved almost 5.7 million hours of staff time, including 1.26 million clinical hours across care settings – together with the 1.5 million missed appointments avoided, the NHS App has helped save the equivalent of £622 million.

    The app has spared staff from tasks such as managing appointments, completing questionnaires, ordering repeat prescriptions and taking patient details, freeing up frontline staff to focus directly on patient care and treatment.

    And new analysis shows patients are getting faster treatment, with trusts that offer services through the app and patient online systems cutting waiting times for more elective care patients than those who do not.

    Trusts who use the app’s key features saw a 3 percentage point increase in the number waiting less than 18 weeks in November 2024. This would equate to up to 211,000 more treatments meeting the 18-week target over the same time period if expanded to all hospitals across the country.

    With more patients able to access correspondence digitally through the app, almost 12 million fewer paper letters have been sent by hospitals since July 2024 – saving £5.2 million in postage costs. Forecasts for this year show the use of in-app notifications for planned care will prevent the need for 15.7 million SMS messages – saving the NHS a further £985,000.

    To assist elderly and more vulnerable patients, the NHS is now offering the public support in how to access online health services including the NHS App at 1,400 libraries across England.

    Dr Vin Diwakar, NHS National Clinical Transformation Director, said:

    The NHS App is leading the way in switching from analogue to digital services, empowering over 37 million users with faster access to information and slashing waiting times.

    With services now live in 87% of hospitals it is also boosting NHS productivity, cutting the number of missed appointments and freeing up almost 5.7 million staff hours since July alone.

    Saffron Cordery, interim Chief Executive of NHS Providers, said:

    Any innovations that give patients more control over their care, reduce the risk of missed appointments and free up valuable staff time so that they can focus on patients are a step in the right direction.

    While it’s really positive that even more hospitals are now offering services through the NHS App, trust leaders know that not everyone has access to or feels comfortable using technology. That’s why it’s welcome that alongside paper letters and phone calls, the NHS is offering more support to help elderly and more vulnerable patients access online health services including via the NHS App.

    Rory Deighton, Acute Director at the NHS Confederation, said:

    Investing in digital technology and infrastructure in the NHS is vitally important to the government’s ambition of moving from an analogue system to a fully digitised one. This will be crucial in the ongoing improvements to NHS productivity, as well as meeting patient demand and providing safe and quality care.

    The NHS App offers the potential to increase patient access, integration, and efficiency across the health service. It can help to reduce duplication and save the time of staff on admin tasks and things like repeat prescriptions.

    This is why it is so important that funding in the App as well as the wider digital transformation agenda continues long term.

    Planned NHS App upgrades are set to include the ability for patients to choose from a wide range of providers through the app, book tests at convenient locations, such as their local community diagnostic centre and receive test results quickly through the app, before choosing the next step.

    The app drive is part of the government’s wider ambitions to shift NHS services from analogue to digital and cut waiting lists under its Plan for Change. With a total of 3 million additional appointments already delivered 6 months early, the government is exceeding its own targets and driving down waiting lists at pace, which have fallen for 6 months in a row and by 219,000 since July 2024.

    The milestone follows the government’s announcement that 4.5 million tests, checks and scans were carried out in community diagnostic centres (CDCs) between July 2024 and February 2025, a 50% increase on the previous year. Alongside this, NHS waiting lists in the areas with the highest economic inactivity have been slashed by almost 50,000 between October 2024 and February 2025 – a number larger than Stamford Bridge stadium.

    Dr John Dean, Clinical Vice President of the Royal College of Physicians, said:

    We welcome the continued rollout and improvements to the NHS App with the aim of putting patients in control of their own health. A focus on incrementally building functionality in the NHS App to support patients to manage their own healthcare will lead to better, more connected digital systems that work better for staff and patients, freeing up time and increasing productivity.

    We are keen to work closely with NHS England and the government to ensure that the NHS App is rolled out and improved in ways that most benefit patients and clinicians. It is also vital that we ensure sufficient mitigations are put in place so that those without access to the app are not excluded from accessing the same quality of patient care.

    Rachel Power, Chief Executive of the Patients Association, said:

    It’s very encouraging to see how digital tools like the NHS App are giving patients greater power over their healthcare, from managing appointments to accessing important health information. The NHS figures showing 1.5 million prevented missed appointments and 1.7 million staff hours saved demonstrate just how transformative this innovation can be.

    While this digital progress is vital and the 20% increase in hospital participation is welcome, we must also ensure no one is left behind. Digital access remains a barrier for many, so we welcome the initiative providing support for online health services at 1,400 libraries across England. This kind of practical support needs to remain a key priority as services continue to modernise.

  • NEWS STORY :  UK Government Caps Branded School Uniform Items to Ease Financial Burden on Families

    NEWS STORY : UK Government Caps Branded School Uniform Items to Ease Financial Burden on Families

    STORY

    Millions of families across England are set to benefit from lower school uniform costs, following new government measures to cap the number of branded items schools can require. Under the proposals, schools will be limited to insisting on no more than three branded uniform items, with ties exempt from the limit. The change, part of the wider Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, is expected to help around 4.2 million children across 8,000 schools and save families up to £73 million a year.

    Currently, parents are spending an average of £442 each year on secondary school uniforms and £343 on primary school uniforms. The new rules aim to allow parents to shop around for cheaper options, rather than being forced to buy expensive branded gear from specific suppliers. The Education Secretary, Bridget Phillipson, said:

    “Looking smart at school shouldn’t cost the earth, and no parent should be forced to choose between buying family essentials and a school shirt or tie.”

    The bill also includes funding for free breakfast clubs in all state-funded primary schools, meaning families could save up to £500 a year when both policies are combined.

    Charities have welcomed the move. Lynn Perry MBE, Chief Executive of Barnardo’s, said high uniform costs can negatively affect children’s attendance and wellbeing, with some families even sending their children to school in ill-fitting clothes or keeping them at home.

    The reforms follow concerns that some schools have been adding more and more branded items, despite previous guidance encouraging them to keep costs down. A government survey found one in five schools had increased branded requirements in the last year alone. Ministers say the new limits will ensure that school uniform costs are kept reasonable and that no child misses out on education because of the cost of kitting up.