Guidance: Use of clay in slurry lagoons or irrigation reservoirs: RPS 91
When you can use waste clay in slurry lagoons or irrigation reservoirs without an environmental permit for a waste operation. read more
When you can use waste clay in slurry lagoons or irrigation reservoirs without an environmental permit for a waste operation. read more
Evidence requirement R083: Seasonal impacts of activities read more
Evidence requirement R104: Standard methods read more
Evidence requirement R103: Social baseline read more
The NHS is to employ more cancer specialists, to speed up cancer diagnoses and get more people into treatment more quickly. The specialists will be trained in areas where there are shortages. It is part of Health Education England’s new Cancer Workforce Plan.
Announcements of extra provision include:
The plan is part of a campaign to make sure patients are diagnosed quickly and get better access to innovative treatments that can improve survival rates.
Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt said:
The NHS has made amazing progress in diagnosing and treating cancer – it’s incredible that 7,000 people are alive today who would not have been had mortality rates stayed the same as in 2010.
We want to save more lives and to do that we need more specialists who can investigate and diagnose cancer quickly. These extra specialists will go a long way to help the NHS save an extra 30,000 lives by 2020.