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Try refreshing your browser, or Letters to the editor: What going to the Beijing Olympics says about us as a people Back to video
So the bureaucrats in the COC say, “Boycotts don’t work?” That’s irrelevant. What is relevant is what it says about us as a people that we would be willing to approve and participate in an event held in a brutal dictatorship that suppresses freedom and places anyone who does not have the state as their first loyalty in re-education (concentration) camps. That includes not only the Islamic Uyghurs but countless Christians, both Catholic and Protestant; those who practice Falun Gong; and anyone who has a loyalty beyond the Chinese Communist Party and its ghoulish dictator President Xi Jinping.
‘Little evidence’ Signs of Safety improves practice or children’s outcomes, finds pilot evaluation
What Works chief says local authorities considering adopting practice model used by two-thirds of councils should pause for thought, however consultancy behind model say evaluation results reflect implementation problems
Photo: Fotolia/aquarious83men
There is “little evidence” that the Signs of Safety (SofS) model – used in some form by two-thirds of English councils – leads to better social work practice or reduced risks to children.
One of the researchers – the head of What Works for Children’s Social Care – said the findings should give councils considering adopting SofS pause for thought, however MTM said they reflected problems of implementation, rather than with the model itself.
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NEW YORK, Feb. 5, 2021 /PRNewswire/ The Galien Foundation announced today an upcoming webinar series that will explore the critical role digital technologies play in today s life sciences, specifically in clinical trials and the development of the COVID-19 vaccines.
(PRNewsfoto/The Galien Foundation)
On Wednesday, February 17, 2021 at 12:00pm-1:00pm EST, The Galien Foundation will host the first session, The Impact of Digital Technologies in Transforming and Accelerating Vaccine Trials, Development and Delivery: Lessons from COVID-19. Moderated by Jessica Federer, Managing Director, Huma, Former Chief Digital Officer, Bayer, the panel includes Rachel Berria, MD, PhD, Vice President and Medical Head, US Biopharmaceuticals AstraZeneca; Marie-Pierre Hellio Le Graverand, MD, DSc, PhD, SVP, Head of Clinical Development and Operations, Pfizer; Terry Murphy, COVID-19 Clinical Development Relaunch Leader, VP, Global Head Enabling Business Infor
By Bradley Young
Dursley Male Voice Choir member Simon Bilous presenting a mock cheque to Pauline Chidlaw from Stroud District Foodbank Dursley Male Voice Choir have raised more than £1,000 for Stroud District Foodbank through sales of its lockdown concert DVD. Communicating only via Whatsapp, the choir members individually recorded themselves using mobile phones before editing those recordings into a complete performance. The money will help the foodbank to support the increasing number of families who are struggling during the pandemic.
Watch below: Dursley Male Voice Choir sing Dream a Little Dream of Me, featured on the DVD. “We’re really chuffed, we started singing the songs soon after we went into the first lockdown to keep the choir alive,” said choir member Simon Bilous, who suggested the project.