Loveandrock/Shutterstock
Former health secretary Matt Hancock told the COVID inquiry that the UK’s pandemic planning was ‘completely wrong’. An expert looks back to early 2020 to assess this statement.
Autistic people often don’t receive the correct healthcare to meet their needs.
toodtuphoto/Shutterstock
A review of government services has found that autistic people are being failed in health, education, employment, poverty and housing.
Filipchuk Maksym/Shutterstock
The company’s woes show the risks of privatising one of life’s necessities.
Disney / Lucasfilm/ Lifestyle Pictures / Alamy
Despite opening to mixed reviews, the final instalment is a classic Indiana Jones caper that doesn’t disappoint.
david.costa.art/Shutterstock
New research shows that placental mammals survived the mass extinction that killed the
dinosaurs.
EPA-EFE/Alberta Wildfire
The populist right has made hay with social tensions climate change is likely to exacerbate.
For many GPs, having fewer opportunities to engage directly with patients has led to a loss of professional satisfaction.
A.B. Putra/Shutterstock
The new NHS workforce plan for England promises a 50% increase in GP training places by 2031. But the challenges GPs are wrestling with go much deeper.
The Zizi Show by Jake Elwes at the new phase of the V&A’s photography museum.
Victoria & Albert Museum London
Surveying photography’s past, present and future, the new Photography Centre will cement the status of the medium as a leading form of expression in contemporary visual culture.
Hananeko Studio/Shutterstock
Adults are more likely to go walking, running or to fitness classes than take part in the team sports they played at school.
Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England.
Bradley Cooper / Alamy Stock Photo
Tax cuts could help reduce inflation without destabilising the banking sector and piling the pressure on mortgage holders
Michael Gove claimed in 2016 that ‘people in this country have had enough of experts’.
Associated Press/Alamy
Our research highlights three key reasons for declining trust in experts, and how to regain their authority in future.
People putting their houses up for sale are starting to see signs of falling prices.
William Barton/Shutterstock
Falling property prices affect much more than people’s wealth.
Stephen Lawrence (left) and his brother, Stuart.
James Boardman Archive / Alamy Stock Photo
Stephen Lawrence was murdered 30 years ago, but new developments remind us how much impact the case still has today.
A view of the seafloor from the Deep Rover 2 submersible.
Jon Copley
The recent tragedy was an outlier; deep-diving submersibles have an outstanding safety record.
Studio Romantic/Shutterstock
In a new study, we evaluated the effects of the 2021 COVID vaccine mandate introduced for staff in elderly care homes in England. Here’s what we found.
gnepphoto/Shutterstock
Misconceptions about sexuality and religion could put asylum seekers facing deportation to Rwanda in danger.
The Thames is placed in a straitjacket long before London.
photocritical / shutterstock
In praise of messy rivers.
England captain Ben Stokes (second right) speaks to Stuart Broad during day four of the first Ashes test match.
PA Images / Alamy Stock Photo
Bazball is aggressively attacking, highly entertaining and piles pressure on opponents by scoring runs quickly.
Music therapy is well-placed to provide support in addressing trauma and promoting wellbeing.
Rawpixel.com/Shutterstock
Music therapy offers a flexible and accessible way of supporting wellbeing and addressing traumatic experiences.
Proxima Studio/Shutterstock
Did you choose a thriller from four years-ago to watch on your own or were you guided there by subtle tactics?