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We have a special report on influencers being offered thousands for sex. Well be getting the inside track on a business brainwave that aims to use tech to reduce healthcare waiting times. Today is said to be bluemonday the gloomiest day of the year but what do you do to lift your mood when you get the blues . Let us know just use the hashtag bbcworklife. Hello and welcome to worklife. We start with new research that shows those who carry out care work are not being adequately reward for their time. Oxfam says its a situation which exacerbates the gap between rich and poor, and that extreme inequality is trapping millions of people in poverty around the world. Oxfam says that although estimates of the wealth of the world s poorest have been revised upwards this year, half the world s population continue to live on less than 5. 50 a day, and women in particular get a raw deal. It says women and girls are putting in 12. 5 billion hours of unpaid care work globally every day, such as looki ....
Police appeal for help in tracing wanted man with links to Wigan borough wigantoday.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wigantoday.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
WATCH: Hayling Island fundraiser whose brother was murdered to take on challenge for domestic abuse portsmouth.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from portsmouth.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Yeovil welcomes back buses and taxis to its revamped town centre somersetlive.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from somersetlive.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Paolo Macchiarini misled the world over his breakthroughs in regenerative medicine, but why did most of the institutions that supported him bear no responsibility for hosting a rogue stem cell surgeon? It’s time for them to launch full and independent investigations, argue John Rasko and Carl Power
By 2008 it looked like a medical revolution was under way. Before us lay a new world, where any injured organ could be replaced with one custom-made in the laboratory. Leading us there was the charismatic Italian surgeon Paolo Macchiarini, who’d begun replacing damaged windpipes with tissue engineered ones. Each was made of a scaffold and seeded with the patients’ own stem cells, which were meant to turn it into a living, functioning organ. The era of “regenerative medicine” was upon us.
But early 2016 woke us from this dream. Swedish television broadcast Experimenten , a blistering three part investigation into Macchiarini,1 exposing him as a charlatan whose enginee ....