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2025

Новости за 16.01.2025

Bridget Jones’s seductive boss ‘would be HR nightmare today’ - The Times

Top Stories (uk) - Google News (ru) 

  1. Bridget Jones’s seductive boss ‘would be HR nightmare today’  The Times
  2. “Shall I Tell You What I’ve Always Thought Of You?” Renée And Hugh Reunite For British Vogue’s February Issue  British Vogue
  3. Renee Zellweger: Bridget Jones's relationship with Hugh Grant's character was inappropriate  The Telegraph
  4. Bridget Jones characters would face 'stern' rules over workplace romance today, says Renee Zellweger  Sky News
  5. Renée Zellweger: Bridget Jones characters would... Читать дальше...

Stone Age people made sun stone 'sacrifice' to banish 'darkened sun' after a volcanic eruption, archaeologists say - Livescience.com

Top Stories (us) - Google News (ru) 

  1. Stone Age people made sun stone 'sacrifice' to banish 'darkened sun' after a volcanic eruption, archaeologists say  Livescience.com
  2. Ancient society may have carved 'sun stones' to end volcanic winter  New Scientist
  3. Ancient, engraved stones may have been buried to summon the sun  Science News Magazine
  4. Ancient Stones Were Mysteriously 'Sacrificed' – We Finally Know Why  ScienceAlert
  5. Neolithic Europeans sacrificed stones to beg the sun to return  Popular Science

Hospital patients dying undiscovered in corridors, report on NHS reveals - The Guardian

Sports - Google News (uk) 

  1. Hospital patients dying undiscovered in corridors, report on NHS reveals  The Guardian
  2. 'I have nightmares of dead bodies': Patients dying and undiscovered for hours in hospital corridors  Sky News
  3. Nurses reveal ‘horror’ of A&Es so full they have to watch patients die  The Telegraph
  4. Health and Social Care Secretary's statement: winter 2025  GOV.UK
  5. Labour slapped with damning 460-page report laying bare true scale of NHS crisis  Express

The NHS must treat its ‘corridor care’ crisis as a wake-up call

The Independent 

Editorial: The results of a nurses’ survey show that patients are routinely receiving care in hospital corridors and waiting areas. The situation is appalling – but health service managers must now examine how their problems are caused not so much by underfunding as by disorganisation