logo
South London hospital staff set to strike over 'Mickey Mouse' contracts

South London hospital staff set to strike over 'Mickey Mouse' contracts

The workers, all now directly employed by the NHS, are calling for the same pay and conditions as colleagues on the national Agenda for Change (AfC) framework, which sets standard rates for most NHS staff. UVW says that despite being brought back in-house more than four years ago, they still receive lower pay, less annual leave, inferior pensions and no enhancements for night or weekend work.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nurse needed for UK's most remote inhabited island with just 50 residents
Nurse needed for UK's most remote inhabited island with just 50 residents

The Independent

time24 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Nurse needed for UK's most remote inhabited island with just 50 residents

The most remote inhabited island of the UK is searching for a new nurse – the only medical expert there. The current nurse on Fair Isle, which has around 50 residents, is leaving later this month, and NHS Shetland is advertising for a replacement. 'A high degree of personal resilience is required to undertake this remote island post,' the advert warns. Fair Isle, which is halfway between the Shetland mainland and Orkney, is only three miles long and a mile-and-a-half wide, with just one shop but no pubs. Owned by the National Trust for Scotland, Fair Isle is known for its 'amazing resident and migratory birdlife, dramatic landscapes and equally dramatic weather, as well as world-famous knitwear'. A two-bedroom traditional stone-build house is available for the new nurse to rent, and ferries and planes to and from the mainland are both weather-dependent, the job advert says. Four years ago, Fair Isle advertised for a headteacher for its primary school, which had just three pupils. The full-time post has a salary range of £41,608 - £50,702, with a 'distant island allowance' of £2,482. A relocation assistance of up to £8,000 is also available, the advert shows. The successful candidate will be responsible for the entire population, from newborns to people up to the age of 90, and may have to provide some personal care as there is no island-based social care provision. NHS Shetland describes the role as a 'unique opportunity to become a truly integral part of a forward-thinking, determined, resilient and hardworking remote island community'. The Sumburgh Coastguard helicopter serves as the island's ambulance, but the nurse is the only medical professional on Fair Isle. Clinical support and supervision is available from the community nursing team and GPs at Levenwick on the mainland. Applications are open until the end of the month. One island resident, Eileen Thomson, told the BBC's Good Morning Scotland: 'I think it could be the most amazing opportunity for the right kind of person. 'It's always a bit of a concern not having somebody here as we're the remotest inhabited island in the country,' she said. "We're lucky we've had some amazing nurses over the last few years, we always love to welcome new people into the community.' She said island life did not suit everyone. 'We're in the far north, the weather isn't that great in the winter, transport isn't that easy, and you do have to be a really confident clinician. You are the person looking after everything, you are the man on the ground, so to speak. 'For someone who's experienced, for someone who is looking for a challenge - but a wonderful challenge - I think it could really be the perfect role.' Fair Isle has more puffins than people, although numbers of the black-and-white birds have fallen. The latest estimate was between 10,000 and 20,000.

Art charity 'buzzing' to move into new £75m Gloucester campus
Art charity 'buzzing' to move into new £75m Gloucester campus

BBC News

time25 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Art charity 'buzzing' to move into new £75m Gloucester campus

An art charity has said it is "absolutely buzzing" to be part of a £75m city centre university campus that officially opened its doors on Shape, which works with the NHS to deliver all kinds of art as prescriptions, has a new home in the University of Gloucestershire's City building, which will be a hub for 1,200 students and staff, was transformed from the old Debenhams in Gloucester's King's Cox, from Art Shape, said the charity would now be able to expand its work linking creativity with wellbeing. "It's been amazing... to meet so many new partners and different organisations that we're going to be working alongside," she said. The charity has been running in Gloucestershire since 1993. Ms Cox said: "We take an integrated approach to wellbeing, where your medical and clinical health can be really well supported by having creative and expressive practice alongside that. And there's a lot of evidence and research to support that thinking."The new campus will host education, psychology and social work Space has moved into its Arts, Health and Wellbeing Centre, on the first floor, next to teaching Cox said: "People can experience first-hand the benefits of creative health practices, but also learn how to apply these things within their education and medical training.""I'm absolutely buzzing," she added. "It's such a gorgeous building." Alex Cottrell, head of external relationships at the University of Gloucestershire, said City Campus had been designed as a "community campus" rather than a space only for students."All of our campuses are open, but this one in particular has been designed to integrate the local community, our students, local experts and other stakeholders," she the county public library due to move in later this year, the university says the building will become a hub not just for students, but also for local charities, businesses and the wider community.

I'm A Celeb winner admits using fat jab Mounjaro in candid interview – before issuing warning to other users
I'm A Celeb winner admits using fat jab Mounjaro in candid interview – before issuing warning to other users

The Sun

time25 minutes ago

  • The Sun

I'm A Celeb winner admits using fat jab Mounjaro in candid interview – before issuing warning to other users

ACTOR Christopher Biggins has revealed he is using weight loss jab Mounjaro after having surgery on his knee. The panto star, 76, said: "I'm on Mounjaro … and I think it's good. 1 "I mean, I had a new knee put in, and I needed to lose weight because of the pressure on the knee." Biggins also claimed that "they're now finding out that this drug can cure a lot of other things" and added that "we don't know the side effects" of it yet. Weight loss jabs have been hailed as transformative by health leaders. The phased NHS roll-out of Mounjaro to patients in England started in June for people with a body mass index (BMI) over 40 and at least four co-morbidities. Over the next three years, about 240,000 patients are expected to be eligible for the treatment. A number of celebrities have used medication, such as Ozempic, in a bid to control their weight, including former X Factor judge Sharon Osbourne. Wegovy and Ozempic are semaglutide drugs, while Mounjaro is another weight loss treatment called tirzepatide. Chef Heston Blumenthal recently warned that weight loss drugs will have a negative effect on the food industry.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store