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Government to cover travel costs of children with cancer

Source: Department of Health and Social Care published on this website ednesday 4 February 2026 by Jill Powell

Children with cancer will have their travel costs paid for, with a new government support package worth up to £10 million a year.

For every parent of a child with cancer, each day presents real challenges, not only in confronting the disease itself, but also in managing the considerable demands and costs associated with transporting their child for specialist treatment.

More than a third of these families must travel over an hour to reach hospital. There are 13 expert centres caring for children with cancer across England, with many young patients and their families face long and frequent journeys, sometimes several times a week, over many months or even years.

The financial burden can be significant, with petrol costs, train fares and lost earnings making an already difficult time, even harder. For some families, it could mean money that means heating their home for fewer hours, or going without fresh, nutritious food at dinner time. These are choices no parent should ever be forced to make.

This commitment sits alongside decisive action to transform cancer care for children and young people; including improving hospital food, ensuring medical psychosocial care during treatment, expanding genomic testing, and detecting cancers earlier when treatment is most effective.

The upcoming national NHS food standards review will ensure young cancer patients have access to high-quality, child-friendly food, including outside mealtimes.

The government will also improve the experience of those children who have to stay in hospital. The NHS and Starlight’s Play Well toolkit will help services deliver high-quality play provision for children, while youth support coordinators will help teenagers and young adults with education, emotional support and fertility concerns.

Furthermore, mental health support will be standardised for all young cancer patients during diagnosis, treatment and long-term follow-up, recognising the experience of cancer often surfaces years after treatment ends.

Taken together, these measures will ensure that when a child faces cancer, their family can focus on what matters most, being by their side and helping them get well.

This follows a series of reforms announced as part of the National Cancer Plan, including measures to improve access to specialists in rural and coastal communities, a crackdown on illegal underage sunbed use, improved bowel cancer screening to catch thousands more cases earlier and a new partnership to support England’s 830,000 working-age cancer patients to remain in employment during and after treatment.

Ofsted launches children's social care survey

Source: Ofsted published on this website Tuesday 3 January 2026 by Jill Powell

Ofsted, on Monday 2 February, issued its annual children’s social care survey for the following social care providers:

  • residential special schools
  • further education colleges with residential provision
  • children’s homes (includes secure children’s homes and residential special schools registered as children’s homes)
  • fostering agencies (includes independent fostering agencies and local authority fostering services)
  • adoption agencies (includes voluntary adoption agencies and regional adoption agencies)
  • adoption support agencies
  • residential family centres
  • boarding schools
  • supported accommodation

Ofsted highly value the responses they receive. They help to both inform future inspections and build a national picture of people’s experiences with their respective providers. We have a blog post explaining how we use the responses.

The survey will close on 22 March 2026.

Social care providers

Ofsted has sent online survey links to all relevant registered managers and responsible individuals or nominated persons.

Read our guidance for providers for more information

How to complete the survey

Ask your school, college, agency or centre for a link to the survey. Alternatively, if you want to give your views, you can call Ofsted on 0300 123 1231 or email socialcarepitsurvey@ofsted.gov.uk.

Financially motivated sexual extortion: guidance for further education professionals

Source: UK Safer Internet Centre (UKSIC) published on this website Friday 30 January 2026 by Jill Powell

Globally there has been an increase in reports of children and young people being victims of financially motivated sexual extortion, often referred to in the media as ‘sextortion’. 

The National Crime Agency’s CEOP Education, in partnership with UK Safer Internet Centre, have created guidance for further education settings in response to this threat. The guidance comes with:

A letter to distribute to parents and carers

A poster for display across further education settings

The guidance will help further education professionals to: recognise and understand financially motivated sexual extortion, raise awareness and help seeking behaviours amongst young people, give suitable messaging and support to parents and carers, support victims of financially motivated sexual extortion.
 
Do you work with over 18s?
Find our guidance for higher education professionals, created in collaboration with Revenge Porn Helpline, here.

Serial killer convicted over 1999 murder and kidnap

Source: Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) published on this website Monday 2 February 2026 by Jill Powell

A serial killer who murdered five women in 2006 has pleaded guilty to murdering another teenager seven years earlier.

The 1999 murder of Victoria Hall had remained unsolved for more than two decades.

After a failed attempt to kidnap a 22-year-old woman on 18 September 1999, Wright kidnapped and murdered 17-year-old Victoria the following day.

Wright, now aged 67, has today pleaded guilty to kidnap and murder before his trial at the Old Bailey was due to begin.

He also pleaded guilty to the attempted kidnap of the then-22-year-old woman.

Samantha Woolley, a specialist prosecutor who led the CPS case against Wright, said: 

"Justice has finally been achieved for Victoria Hall after 26 years.

“The meticulous work we have carried out with Suffolk Police, supporting their restarted investigation over the past six years and working hard to build this case to court, has resulted in Wright admitting his guilt.

“This outcome should make plain that time does not preclude a successful prosecution; we will doggedly pursue justice for the victims of non-recent crimes, no matter how many decades have passed.

“Our thoughts remain with Victoria’s family, and all those who loved and cherished her at this incredibly difficult time. 

"We also hold in mind Emily Doherty and her family, and anyone else affected by this tragic case.”

Steve Wright will be sentenced at the Old Bailey on Friday, 6 February.

In February 2008, Wright was convicted of murdering five women in Ipswich. He was sentenced to a whole life order.


MHRA issues new guidance for people using mental health apps and technologies

Source: Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) published on this website Wednesday 29 January 2026

New advice on using apps and other digital tools to support mental health is being published by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) today (27 January), as part of free online resources developed with NHS England for the public, parents, carers and professionals who use or recommend these tools.  

More people in the UK, particularly young people, are turning to digital tools for mental health support. From symptom-tracking apps to virtual reality therapies, these products are now widely available and often used alongside NHS and community care, but it is not always clear which are reliable, safe or right for an individual. The new guidance aims to help people make more informed choices and know what to do if something doesn’t feel right.

MHRA Chair and professor of primary care at the University of Oxford, Professor Anthony Harnden, said:

“When someone turns to a tool to help with their mental health, they need to know it is safe, effective, and built on reliable evidence. Our aim is to give people clear, practical advice they can use in everyday life, so they understand what good looks like and when to speak up if something doesn’t feel right.

“As a GP, I’ve seen how patients can benefit from accessing digital tools alongside traditional forms of care. This guidance supports better conversations between clinicians and patients and helps everyone ask the right questions about whether a tool is right for them.

“Digital mental health technologies are not a replacement for professional healthcare. Anyone experiencing mental health difficulties should seek support from trained professionals.”

Five things to check before using a digital mental health tool:

1. What is it claiming to do?

Does the product offer general wellbeing support, or does it claim to diagnose, treat or manage a mental health condition? Claims about medical benefit should be clearly explained and supported by evidence.

2. Who is it for?

A tool built for adults may not be suitable for teenagers or children. Age and intended users should be clearly stated.

3. Is there evidence it works?

Trustworthy products will explain how they have been tested or evaluated, for example in a clinical study. Be cautious of products making big promises without clear supporting information.

4. What happens to your data?

These tools often collect very sensitive personal information. You should be able to easily find out how your data is stored and used.

5. Is it is regulated as a medical device?

Some digital mental health technologies are classed as medical devices, for example those claiming to diagnose, treat or manage a mental health condition. These must meet safety standards and display a CE or UKCA mark. People can look for the marking and check whether the product is registered using the MHRA’s online public register. This gives you extra reassurance, as it means it meets UK safety standards, is registered with the MHRA and is monitored once in use.

Not all digital mental health technologies are regulated as medical devices – some are instead classed as wellbeing or lifestyle products. This does not necessarily mean they are unsafe, but they may not have been through the same checks.  

If a regulated digital mental health technology causes harm or distress, you can report concerns to the MHRA Yellow Card scheme.

What the new resources offer

The new online resources use short animations and real-world examples to show what safe, well-evidenced digital mental health technologies look like in practice, and explain how to report concerns through the MHRA Yellow Card scheme so action can be taken to protect others.

The guidance is aimed at anyone using these technologies, as well as parents and carers, and includes professionals who often recommend them, including teachers, nurses, GPs and mental health practitioners. 

The resources have been developed by the MHRA in partnership with NHS England’s MindEd Technology Enhanced Learning programme as part of a Wellcome-funded project to support the safe and effective use of digital mental health technologies.

Since its start in 2023, the MHRA, in collaboration with the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has focused on proportionate regulation and evaluation in the fast-moving area of digital mental health technologies, working closely with people with lived experience, mental health specialists, developers and international partners.