Frwi Catching up on sleep at weekends may lower heart disease risk by a fifth 鈥?study
Ten million UK adults have been volunteering in their community during the coronavirus crisis, and most say they will carry on after the lockdown ends, according to new research.The study also found that Britons have been ex
stanley cup usa tending a financial helping hand to local businesses. More than 拢1bn was spent on services and goods that people knew they would never be able to use during
stanley cup the pandemic, including payments to home cleaners and gardeners.Since the crisis took hold, millions of Britons have been serving as an informal volunteering army , whether it is helping with grocery shopping for others, picking up prescriptions, ringing up people living alone, or helping out at a local food b
stanley bottles ank.According to the research from insurer Legal General and the Centre for Economics and Business Research, one in five UK adults 19% has volunteered their time for community activities since the start of the lockdown on 23 March.With each individual contributing, on average, about three hours of their time, the work this volunteer army is doing is estimated to have an equivalent economic value of more than 拢350m a week.The researchers said Britains community spirit has doubled down in lockdown and that these volunteers were a key part of the national infrastructure during the crisis.Nigel Wilson, Legal Generals chief executive, said: We have become a nation of volunteers during the Covid-19 crisis. And 鈥?judging by the millions who plan to continue after the lockdown 鈥?it is Ofbr Gambling watchdog plans to ban online credit card bets
My apologies to Dr Antonio Serrano for failing - due to pressure of work - to report his significant libel victory last week.I m glad to put the record straight now because, on 6 October, a high court judge awarded him 拢45,000 damages against the Daily Mail.It took him a long time to secure the award. I reported way back in April 2013 that Serrano was suing the Mail over an article by its then columnist, Kelvin MacKenzie, that defamed him. The piece, published in April 2012, was headlined A whole year of hell, thanks to a foreign doctor .His action was hotly contested by th
stanley cup e Mail s publisher, Associated Newspapers, but Mr Justice Dingemans, ruled in the doctor s favour.The judge said the article stated that Serrano had reported a patient - bus driver Kevin Jones - to the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency DVLA over alcohol problems when there was no evidence to that effect.The report to the DVLA followed a consultation between Serrano and Jones in January 2011 when Jones went to see him a
stanley cup usa bout pain from swollen legs. The DVLA withdrew Jones s bus driving and personal licences, and he lost his job.The licences were reinstated in early 2012, when
stanley cup a letter from the DVLA stated that from the information we have received you satisfy the medical standards for safe driving . Jones subsequently returned to work as a bus driver.In April 2012, Jones s father saw an article in the Mail by MacKenzie about foreign doctors working in the NHS and thought MacKenzie wo