Auteur Sujet: jpjm Deaths, black mould, failing staff: social housing doesn t have to be this  (Lu 42 fois)

Morrisshot

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Uhpl O Dwyer case must shame coalition into action on extradition
 There never was an official description of dereliction and destitution. The social security  safety net  is whatever sum the government of the day pays, with no definition of what its supposed to cover. Even though Labours tax credits greatly raised the level, no minister ever got trapped into defining the details of what a baseline might look like.After massive benefit cuts a stanley thermos nd freezes, despite rising rents and living costs, how could this government explain how someone is supposed to live on the current 拢85 a week for an adult, or 拢67 for u stanley quencher nder-25s  Lee Andersons claim that 30p stanley cup  is ample for a days food only megaphoned how out of touch a Tory deputy chair can be, as he rubbished  do-gooders  running food banks he said no one needs. Most ministers these days make sure they know the price of a pint of milk and loaf of bread, but as for that miserable 拢85 a week, how to spend it is a matter for individual choice, they say.Today, the full array of medical royal colleges, as well as healthcare and childrens organisations, join the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and Trussell Trust in writing to the prime minister calling for an  essentials guarantee  so universal credit covers basic survival.Their letter says:  Every day, we see people unable to afford enough food because their incomes are simply too low. We hear heartbreaking stories from people who are forced to miss hospital appointments because they cant afford the bus fare, from people who are missing or reducing their medication Hdis The US is facing an eviction tsunami. We must cancel rent before it s too late
 A severely disabled baby boy at the centre of a life or death legal dispute between his parents is living  on a knife edgequ stanley cup ot; and would not benefit from an operation to help him breathe, his leading consultant told the high court today.Baby RB s father has asked a specialist to assess next weekend whether a tracheostomy 鈥?creating an opening in the neck to deliver air to the lungs 鈥?would allow him to be taken off his hospital ventilator and returned home.But Dr F stanley termos , a consultant in paediatric intensive care, told Mr Justice McFarlane today that the little boy was  not a candidate  for tracheostomy.He would still be dependent on artificial ventilation and, should it become necessary to withdraw the breathing tube in an emergency, he would suffer far greater distress than if he were in hospital on a life support machine.Dr F said the case of Baby RB was very unusual because he had been on life support since within an hour of his birth on 10 October last year. In most other cases of such severity, parents decided that life support should be withdrawn and, with palliative care, the child died, he said.Doctors caring for the boy, who are backed by his mother, are asking the judge to rule that his ventilator should be switched off  in stanley canada  his best interests . They say he will lead a  miserable, sad and pitiful existence , even if surgery allows him to be returned home to one of his estranged parents.Baby RB was born with congenital myasthenic syndro