Cancer: No more political quick fixes, please
If we want cancer survival rates that compare with the best in the world, we can’t rely on political quick fixes.
If we want cancer survival rates that compare with the best in the world, we can’t rely on political quick fixes.
940,000 patients turned to A&E because they were unable to get a GP appointment.
The NHS was in excellent shape when Labour left office in 2010; now it isn’t. For this the coalition must take at least some of the blame.
Around 7 per cent of patients had to wait in A&E for more than four hours at the end of last year – the worst figures since records were first collected in 2004/05.
We need to think about the impact that our imported NHS has on vulnerable people abroad.
Poll shows that neither Cameron nor Miliband are trusted to perform safe cuts.
Heroic announcements on public service spending cannot detract from the reality of our economic situation.
The Green Party’s leader put forward her views on education, pay and the NHS in a live debate with young voters.
The coalition’s reforms have caused massive inefficiencies, internal conflicts and confusion.
With a likely win days away, UKIP candidate Mark Reckless still has not made his NHS policy clear.