With the NHS facing rapidly depleting staff numbers, can disaster be avoided? Olivia Bridge explains what is causing this problem and whether the government's actions so far - in particular the decision to exclude doctors and nurses from Tier 2 Visa caps - are enough to address it
The Prime Minister recently appeared surprised to hear that most non-EEA migrants with temporary lea...
The NHS and social care systems are turning 70, and for almost as long as they have existed, there h...
The world is often said to have prepared for the wrong kind of pandemic, anticipating a new strain o...
Talking about the NHS as if it is a single organisation is both inaccurate and unhelpful, writes Oz ...
In less than a month, the NHS created 33,000 extra beds to accommodate COVID-19 patients. Now they l...
In the aftermath of the Second World War, Britain showed the world that a universal health care syst...
Aims Equipment and skills in intensive care have advanced dramatically, and early rehabilitation and...
Despite being in decline, the quality of mental health services is largely absent from public debate...
For over a year, people’s lives were disrupted on an unprecedented scale by COVID-19. Now, as govern...
Furloughing is hardly sustainable over time. Differentiated policies are needed to protect existing ...
Melanie Henwood and Bob Hudson consider the recent guidance around visits to care home residents. Th...
Clare Wenham outlines six reasons why abolishing Public Health England in the middle of a lethal pan...
Siva Thambisetty (LSE) reflects on the ongoing failure to increase countries’ access to COVID vaccin...
Recent healthcare reforms in England, combined with financial austerity, have accelerated both the c...
The UK’s vaccination programme has been a rare success during the pandemic. Lucy Thompson, Rebecca F...
The Prime Minister recently appeared surprised to hear that most non-EEA migrants with temporary lea...
The NHS and social care systems are turning 70, and for almost as long as they have existed, there h...
The world is often said to have prepared for the wrong kind of pandemic, anticipating a new strain o...
Talking about the NHS as if it is a single organisation is both inaccurate and unhelpful, writes Oz ...
In less than a month, the NHS created 33,000 extra beds to accommodate COVID-19 patients. Now they l...
In the aftermath of the Second World War, Britain showed the world that a universal health care syst...
Aims Equipment and skills in intensive care have advanced dramatically, and early rehabilitation and...
Despite being in decline, the quality of mental health services is largely absent from public debate...
For over a year, people’s lives were disrupted on an unprecedented scale by COVID-19. Now, as govern...
Furloughing is hardly sustainable over time. Differentiated policies are needed to protect existing ...
Melanie Henwood and Bob Hudson consider the recent guidance around visits to care home residents. Th...
Clare Wenham outlines six reasons why abolishing Public Health England in the middle of a lethal pan...
Siva Thambisetty (LSE) reflects on the ongoing failure to increase countries’ access to COVID vaccin...
Recent healthcare reforms in England, combined with financial austerity, have accelerated both the c...
The UK’s vaccination programme has been a rare success during the pandemic. Lucy Thompson, Rebecca F...
The Prime Minister recently appeared surprised to hear that most non-EEA migrants with temporary lea...
The NHS and social care systems are turning 70, and for almost as long as they have existed, there h...
The world is often said to have prepared for the wrong kind of pandemic, anticipating a new strain o...