
The woman, 27, is suspended from Birmingham Children's Hospital after the sudden death of a child.
Struggling families need earlier support before they reach crisis point, warns a major review.
Official guidance recommends quarantining for those who have had unprotected direct contact with the virus.
Despite the threat of a 15-year jail term, some Russians are refusing to be silenced by the Kremlin.
Thousand of fans went on the pitch after City beat Aston Villa 3-2 to win the Premier League title.
The charity Birthrights conducted a year-long investigation into "racial injustice" in maternity care.
The rising cost of energy, transport and childcare is forcing families to make tough choices.
Almost 700 train services are temporarily removed after a pay row triggered a wave of driver shortages.
The civil servant is expected to publish her findings on lockdown breaches in government in the coming days.
Sayad Khodai, a senior figure in the elite Quds force, was reportedly shot dead in his car by two gunmen.
She is seen as one of the founders of stencil art, famous for her graffiti of female figures in Paris.
Calls for action on the cost of living crisis and Manchester City's dramatic Premier League victory lead the papers.
Weather presenter Carol Kirkwood is spotted with a "giant rock" on her finger as she reveals engagement.
Paws aboard! A pet-friendly service premiers on the iconic train as calls grow for easier pet travel.
The renowned physicist reflects on whether civilisation, like us, exists in other galaxies.
UK inflation is rising at 9%, its fastest rate for 40 years, and could go even higher.
Images capture life below one of the UK's best known road structures on eve of its 50th birthday.
A selection of striking images from our readers around the world.
Geraldina Guerra tracks cases of femicide in Ecuador and maps victims' lives online so people can learn about their life as well as their death.
YouTuber, Max Fosh, says the "prank" is to put smiles on faces and is sorry for any confusion caused.
The England captain's golden boot and his MBE are among the items on display.
After starting her career on the track as a grid girl, Laura Jones is set on driving her own car.
Liam is non-verbal and communicates with his teammates using a mixture of symbols, signs and speech.
Companies supplying major manufacturers fail to meet promises to share land, joint BBC investigation finds.
Climate "doomers" believe it’s far too late to do anything about climate change - but they're wrong.
Three and half years late and at least £4bn over-budget, Crossrail is finally about to open.
A government grant to encourage people to replace their boiler with a heat pump begins in April.
Capt Kidane Cousland is helping ensure Rastafarians can express their faith while serving in the military.
BBC News reporter Daniel De Simone on his courtroom fight to reveal how an MI5 agent abused women.
Brian McCormack created dissolvable products after struggling to undertake a regular cancer check.
Politics will now be greener, more feminine, and more emphatically Australian, writes Nick Bryant.
Gene drive development makes a genetically modified gene that spreads widely within populations.
The BBC goes on patrol with the Taliban's "moral police", whose job it is to enforce hard-line rule.
Eve Senior's photograph after the Manchester Arena bomb five years ago was seen around the world.
Shagufta Ahmed's first job was to get justice for her father, a lecturer murdered after he blew the whistle on a colleague.
As the UK spent countless hours online during lockdown, how much has it changed us?
Forty years after it opened, the legendary nightclub is credited with changing music and Manchester.
We are facing an unusual and unprecedented monkeypox outbreak but how worrying is it?
A veteran politician, Anthony Albanese will lead the first Labor government in almost a decade.
Manchester City's manager says his side "are legends" after securing their fourth Premier League title in five seasons.
Emma Raducanu says she is "learning to be effective" on clay as she makes the final preparations for her senior debut at the French Open on Monday.
Justin Thomas stages a remarkable fight back to beat Will Zalatoris in a play-off and win the US PGA Championship at Southern Hills.
Match of the Day pundits Ian Wright and Alan Shearer analyse Manchester City's stunning late comeback to win the Premier League title, highlighting the performance of Ilkay Gundogan, who scored two goals off the bench.
Aston Villa sign French midfielder Boubacar Kamara from Marseille on a five-year contract.
Who transformed a club and who is the finest player in the world? Find out in Garth Crooks' Team of the Season.
UK inflation rises to its highest rate for 40 years in the year to April, jumping to 9% from 7%.
How long is UK inflation likely to remain high, and what can the government do to fight back?
People working and living in rural Norfolk talk about the cost of living crisis.
The company says it has to act to cover higher costs, including wages, energy and fuel expenses.
Big increases are due next April but charities say soaring prices mean people need the money now.
There are ways the chancellor could tackle the strain on people's pockets - but what do they cost?
Brian Turner, who lives alone after the death of his partner, is trying to live on £642 a month.
Why is the government facing growing pressure to announce a windfall tax on oil and gas companies?
Chain Trevor Sorbie says they are now spending thousands more each month.
As prices rise to a 40-year high, BBC News NI hears from families struggling to make ends meet.
We asked people across the country how they are coping with the rising cost of living.
Labour are calling for a windfall tax on the profits of oil and gas companies.
BBC Newsnight launches its Global Tracker to assess the impact of the cost of living across across the world.
Miners in eastern Ukraine on how a difficult job has become even more dangerous.
The conflict has become a grinding and bloody affair, with both sides making gains and losses.
Drivers describe evacuating people from Russian-held areas under threat of mines and military attack.
Ukraine wants to exchange them for Russian prisoners of war, but some in Russia want them put on trial.
Russian forces are continuing their slow advance in eastern Ukraine after using heavy firepower to weaken defences there.
Olena Zelenska opens up about the war, and President Zelensky says only talks can end the conflict.
Russia occupies Europe's biggest nuclear plant and now wants to sell power from it back to Ukraine.
Dmitry Skurikhin has listed the Ukrainian towns attacked by Russia on the side of his shopping centre.
Moscow says it has destroyed a drone with a laser, but Kyiv says it can't mask battlefield failure.
The government has launched two schemes to let Ukrainian refugees come to the UK.
Russia wants to sell energy from a seized plant and a man paints anti-war slogans on his shop.
The fast food giant says the new owner of its 850 Russian restaurants will operate them under a new brand.
The 21-year-old serviceman has pled guilty to killing her husband in a village in Ukraine's north-east.
UN chief Antonio Guterres warns that developing countries face disaster due to rising prices.
The social media platform says it will put false claims from official accounts behind warning notices.
Katerina spent more than two months beneath the besieged Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Ukraine.
If Russia has carried out war crimes in Ukraine how could Putin or his army generals be prosecuted?
1. How to say no to pointless meetings. The corporate world loves meetings. For employees whose schedules are chock full of them, the sentiment is more complicated: Every hour dedicated to discussing work is time spent not actually doing it. While breaking the cycle of too-many meetings can feel daunting - especially if you’re not the boss - it is possible. 2. The Queen’s Speech. This year’s speech contained details of almost 40 proposed bills. These included a Public Order Bill, to grant the police more powers to stop protesters blocking roads and other infrastructure; a Media Bill, to privatise Channel 4; a Genetic Technology Bill, to enable more gene editing of plants and animals; and a Transport Bill, to create a state-run agency to simplify and improve UK railway services. The Government plans to give councils the power to force landlords to rent out empty shops. It also said that it would overhaul the Human Rights Act – to give more democratic oversight to the “expansion of the rights culture” – and introduce a Brexit Freedoms Bill, to make it easier to amend and repeal retained EU laws. The Guardian 3. No plans for an emergency budget. The National Institute of Economic and Social Research says rising food and energy bills could cause a further 250,000 households to “slide into destitution” next year, taking the total number in extreme poverty to 1.5 million. The think tank has called for a boost to benefits of £25 a week, and a one-off payment of £250 for the poorest households. A No. 10 source said there were no plans for an emergency budget. Rather than making big changes to tax and spending plans, ministers were considering various ways they might ease the cost of living by tweaking regulations – they might, for instance, require vehicle owners to only get MoTs every other year. BBC 4. The most popular day of the week. The middle child of the workweek is finally getting its chance to shine. Wednesday has overcome the indignity of its “hump day” phase and turned into the most popular day of the hybrid workweek — 46% of office workers were at their desks on Wednesdays in March, The Wall Street Journal reports. You might alternatively know it as Wellness Day, Whiskey Wednesday or Woof Day (for dog owners), as employers and neighbouring businesses roll out all the stops for workers who’ve left their homes. Mondays, by comparison, drew an attendance rate of just 35%. When is the best day to work in the office? Let us know in our latest poll. 5. The benefits of a brisk walk. A lifetime of brisk walking can knock years off a person’s biological age, a study has found. Researchers at the University of Leicester examined genetic and other data on 400,000 adults, with an average age of 57, included in the UK Biobank. Around half reported walking at an average pace, classed as three to four miles per hour; one in 15 walked at a slow pace (less than 3mph); and four in ten said they were brisk walkers (more than 4mph). The researchers found that faster walkers, regardless of how much they exercised, had longer telomeres – the “caps” at the end of chromosomes that protect them; these shrink over time and are regarded as a strong marker for biological age. The difference in telomere length between the fastest and slowest walkers was said to be equivalent to 16 years of age-related difference. Daily Mail |
6. Our next meeting is at Tesco. What if your desk was next to the baked beans and tinned tomatoes? That could be the reality as Tesco has announced a deal with flexible office operator IWG. Starting at its New Malden location in London, the supermarket chain will offer 30 co-working spaces, a meeting room and 12 private desks. It's part of a boom in non-traditional working spaces, with property firm JLL estimating that by 2030 as much as 30% of the UK office market could be flexible working spaces. These new offices join other community spaces that have sprung up on high streets around the country to replace stores that closed during the pandemic. Metro 7. The rise of the silent meeting. Many organisations know that employees sometimes fear speaking up in meetings, while others may just prefer to stay quiet. Research shows that the same two people can monopolise the entire hour of a six-person meeting – making it impossible to have fruitful discussions that span a wide variety of viewpoints. This is why the "silent meeting" has become so popular. It requires participants to stay silent for a certain amount of time, allowing them to add questions and comments to a document for later discussion. It, in essence, allows everyone to be heard. Editor 8. Oil giant overtakes Apple. Apple has lost its position as the world’s most valuable company after it was usurped by Saudi Arabian oil and gas producer Aramco. The oil giant traded near its highest level on record yesterday, reaching a market capitalisation of about $2.4 trillion (£1.9 trillion), while the iPhone maker fell 4.4% in New York to $147.53, for a valuation of $2.3 trillion. 'Even if the move proves short-lived and Apple retakes the top spot again”, the role reversal “underscores the power of major forces coursing through the global economy”. The Telegraph 9. Jubilee pudding announced. A lemon and Swiss roll amaretti trifle will be the official pudding of the Queen's Platinum Jubilee celebrations. The dessert – made with layers of lemon curd and custard, St Clement’s jelly, a mandarin coulis, and amaretti biscuits – was inspired by the lemon posset served at the Queen’s 1947 wedding to Prince Philip. Jemma Melvin, who made the dish, won the nationwide competition to craft a new pudding to commemorate the Queen’s 70-year reign. Some 5,000 people, aged between eight and 108, entered the baking challenge. BBC 10. The bottom line. Should smacking be illegal in the UK? NSPCC revealed that more than two-thirds of adults in England say that physically disciplining a child, for instance by smacking them, is wrong. 64% would like England to follow Scotland, and more recently Wales, in making smacking children a crime; by removing the defence of “reasonable punishment”. Daily Mail |
Weather presenter Carol Kirkwood is spotted with a "giant rock" on her finger as she reveals engagement.
The renowned physicist reflects on whether civilisation, like us, exists in other galaxies.
Liam is non-verbal and communicates with his teammates using a mixture of symbols, signs and speech.
After starting her career on the track as a grid girl, Laura Jones is set on driving her own car.
Two former foster children say their experience shaped their decision to help others.
Chef and campaigner Jamie Oliver has been protesting over delays to the government's obesity strategy.
Why is the government facing growing pressure to announce a windfall tax on oil and gas companies?
Kate and Charlie say they've already stopped socialising, and have nothing else to cut back on.
Among the tens of thousands of Rangers fans in Seville are the grandsons of the Ibrox legend.
A police officer outlines to the home secretary difficulties with the cost of living for workers.
The monarch made a surprise visit to Paddington station, ahead of the opening of the much delayed train line.
Dan hosted his final edition of BBC Breakfast this morning, six years after joining the programme.
Within a week, Sean Dilley was told in two Tesco stores he wasn't allowed to take in his guide dog.
Hull's Roy Gelder had not seen John Peach since the pair parted at the end of World War Two.
The prime minister described the EU as being "over-zealous" in its application of the post-Brexit trade arrangements.
A host of stars including Tom Cruise, Katherine Jenkins and Omid Djalili were also in attendance.
Melanie Barratt wants to become the first blind woman to cross the English Channel solo.
Sam Ryder met Eurovision commentator Graham Norton backstage and the two shared a hug.
The business secretary says it would be "self-defeating" if the EU went into a trade war.
The stone helped guide allied pilots into wartime airfields in use in Belfast during the war.
Aimee says the book will help her son understand why he "should be proud" of his heart surgery scar.
Eurovision host Rylan Clark tells us what to watch out for on Saturday night.
A student inspired by a BBC TV show about 19th Century lesbians wears Victorian clothing full-time.
Ros Atkins explains why the issues surrounding a key part of the UK’s Brexit deal with the EU are not resolved.
Des Paul Lee from Derbyshire died unexpectedly while on holiday in Spain.
Residents on Anglesey, in Wales, are split on the proposals for a new nuclear reactor on the island.
Ahead of the final on Saturday, the BBC put Sam Ryder's Eurovision knowledge to the test.
The monarch has mobility problems and has had to cancel a number of recent public appearances.
Jemma Melvin from Southport, Merseyside made the official pudding for the Queen's Platinum Jubilee.
Willow's parents drove her to hospital and were told she should not have been moved due to her injuries.
The Queen was absent from the State Opening of Parliament for the first time in 59 years.
The You, Me and the Big C presenter is receiving end-of-life care at home for bowel cancer.
At the age of 13 Luke woke up in horrific pain and a decade on his condition is still undiagnosed.
The levelling up minister says the cost of living issue does not require an emergency budget.
Michelle is the only girl to win gold in the UK's 10 categories of World Maths Day Global Challenge.
Prince Charles stands in for the Queen for the first time to open a new session of Parliament.
How a meal while Covid restrictions were in place became a political headache for Sir Keir Starmer.
The Labour leader says he will stand down if he is fined over the so-called Beergate allegations.
Stars of the small screen gather in London to celebrate the Bafta TV Awards 2022.
Staff at a £14m recycling facility help manually sort through 85,000 tonnes of waste each year.