Del.icio.us Links

links for 2009-08-26

  • The number of U.S. citizens in Britain fell 3.8 percent to 126,000 in the 12 months through September, according to the Office for National Statistics. The trend probably continued this year, with the Confederation of British Industry estimating the U.K. financial industry will lose about 45,000 jobs in the first nine months of 2009, or 4.3 percent of the total.

    Americans are heading home as Britain plans a 50 percent tax rate for those who earn more than 150,000 pounds ($248,000) a year and employers cut benefits for workers living abroad, reducing the allure of London. That comes a year after the U.K. said foreigners who have lived in the country for more than seven years must pay 30,000 pounds annually or give up the special status that shields overseas income from British taxes.

    (tags: Britain UK taxes)
  • Contrary to the insistence of Pentagon officials this week that they are not rating the work of reporters covering U.S. forces in Afghanistan, Stars and Stripes has obtained documents that prove that reporters’ coverage is being graded as “positive,” “neutral” or “negative.”

    Moreover, the documents — recent confidential profiles of the work of individual reporters prepared by a Pentagon contractor — indicate that the ratings are intended to help Pentagon image-makers manipulate the types of stories that reporters produce while they are embedded with U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

  • New Labour's answer to everything these days is a glossy brochure and a "nurse consultant". More millions to be wasted on glossy presentation and plausible process. More large salaries to be paid to officious nurses to go round telling others how to do their jobs.

    What is really needed is better pay, better incentives and better working conditions.

  • The huge extent to which the NHS needs foreign doctors to treat patients out of hours is revealed today.

    A third of primary care trusts are flying in GPs from as far away as Lithuania, Poland, Germany, Hungary, Italy and Switzerland because of a shortage of doctors in Britain willing to work in the evenings and at weekends.

    The stand-ins earn up to £100 an hour, and one trust paid Polish and German doctors a total of £267,000 in a year, a Daily Mail investigation has found.

  • After weeks of excruciating pain, Mark Wattson was understandably relieved to have his appendix taken out.

    Doctors told him the operation was a success and he was sent home.

    But only a month later the 35-year-old collapsed in agony and had to be taken back to Great Western Hospital in Swindon by ambulance.
    To his shock, surgeons from the same team told him that not only was his appendix still inside him, but it had ruptured – a potentially fatal complication.

    In a second operation it was finally removed, leaving Mr Wattson fearing another organ might have been taken out during the first procedure.

    The blunder has left Mr Wattson jobless, as bosses at the shop where he worked did not believe his story and sacked him.