Egypt hosts Mid-East peace talks

Peace Road in Sharm el-SheikhThere is widespread pessimism about the first direct peace talks in 20 months

Israeli and Palestinian leaders are to hold a second round of peace talks in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

On Monday US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said it was time for both sides to get “down to business”.

She also reiterated that Israel should extend its partial moratorium on new settlement construction in the West Bank, which expires on 26 September.

The Palestinian Authority has said it will walk out of the negotiations if building on occupied territory resumes.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday that he could not extend the moratorium, but would not allow thousands of planned homes to be built.

“We will not freeze the lives of the residents,” he said.

However, the chief Palestinian negotiator said there could be no “half solutions”.

“If it chooses any kind of settlement building, this means that it has destroyed the whole peace process and it would be fully responsible for that,” Saeb Erekat told the Associated Press.

On Tuesday, Mrs Clinton will hold separate talks with Mr Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, and then host a trilateral meeting.

Another three-way meeting will take place in Jerusalem on Wednesday.

As she flew to Egypt, Mrs Clinton said: “It’s time to get down to business.”

She also sought to counter those who say the first direct talks in 20 months are not likely to lead to a final status agreement.

“For me, this is a simple choice – no negotiations, no security, no state,” she said. “There is no prospect for success in the absence of direct negotiations.”

The secretary of state described the first round of talks in Washington on 2 September as positive, but made it clear that both the Israelis and the Palestinians now had to refrain from doing anything that could interfere with the negotiations.

This included not ending the moratorium on settlement construction, she added, echoing recent comments by President Barack Obama.

Mrs Clinton also suggested that the Palestinians could make a gesture that would help Mr Netanyahu sell an extension to the Israeli public.

“This has to be understood as an effort by both the prime minister and the president to get over the hurdle posed by the expiration of the original moratorium in order to continue negotiations,” she said.

“There are obligations on both sides to ensure that these negotiations continue.”

Senior US officials said that the settlement issue could become moot if the two sides were able to move quickly in their discussions about the borders of a future Palestinian state.

The BBC’s Kim Ghattas in Sharm el-Sheikh says it is an approach the US tried last year to encourage the Palestinians to come to the negotiating table with no success, and it is unclear if it will now help keep them there.

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Blair receives US Liberty Medal

Tony BlairMr Blair was awarded the US Congressional Gold Medal in 2003

Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair is to be awarded one of the US’s highest private honours for his role in the Northern Ireland peace process.

Mr Blair will be given the Liberty Medal by the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia on Monday.

The award comes as Mr Blair has cancelled promotional events for a new autobiography amid protests by critics of his role in the US-led Iraq war.

Officials with the centre acknowledge Mr Blair is a contentious choice.

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The Liberty Medal is to be awarded to Mr Blair on Monday evening by former President Bill Clinton. Mr Blair has already been awarded the Congressional Gold Medal by the US government.

Mr Blair is currently serving as envoy for the international Quartet of Middle East peace mediators, the US, UK, EU and Russia.

“Freedom, liberty and justice are the values by which this medal is struck,” Mr Blair said in a statement.

Selected Previous winners2009 – Film director Steven Spielberg2008 – Former Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev2007 – Singer and campaigner Bono2006 – Former US Presidents George HW Bush and Bill Clinton2005 – Ukrainian leader Viktor Yushchenko2004 – Afghan President Hamid Karzai2003 – US Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor2001 – UN Secretary General Kofi Annan1999 – South Korean Leader Kim Dae Jung1996 – Jordan’s King Hussein and Israeli PM Shimon Peres

“Freedom, liberty and justice are the values which I try to apply to my work on governance in Africa and on preparing the Palestinians for statehood.”

The National Constitution Center is an independent, non-profit organisation that promotes understanding of the US constitution and its contemporary relevance. Recipients of the Liberty Medal receive $100,000 (£65,000).

“There is always an element of controversy when you pick people at the forefront of change,” said president David Eisner.

“They are usually very controversial figures. We understand… how differently Tony Blair appears to be viewed by many people in the UK as compared with many people in the US.”

On tour to promote his new book, Mr Blair has attracted hostile protests from British and Irish anti-war protestors angered at his role in supporting the US-led war in Iraq.

A spokesperson for National Constitution Center said organisers were not aware of any planned protests.

Past US honourees include Thurgood Marshall, the first black Supreme Court justice, and former US presidents Jimmy Carter, George Bush Sr and Bill Clinton.

There have also been more eclectic recipients in director Steven Spielberg, singer Bono and DNA pioneers James Watson and Francis Crick.

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Police warn over cuts in spending

Newly-qualified police officersPolice numbers are expected to fall as a result of public spending cuts

Senior police officers want protection from the worst of the public spending cuts so forces can deal with any rise in social and industrial tension.

Police Superintendents’ Association president Ch Supt Derek Barnett will outline this call at the body’s annual conference in Cheshire on Wednesday.

He will say a “strong and confident” police force will be needed in the face of government austerity measures.

Home Secretary Theresa May will be in the audience at the conference.

Mr Barnett is set to say: “In an environment of cuts across the wider public sector, we face a period where disaffection, social and industrial tensions may well rise.

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A special BBC News season examining the approaching cuts to public sector spending

The Spending Review: Making It Clear

“We will require a strong, confident, properly trained and equipped police service, one in which morale is high and one that believes it is valued by the government and public.”

In his speech, Mr Barnett is expected to talk about the inevitability of widespread disorder on the streets but he insists the comments do not refer to the impact of spending cuts.

The Police Federation, which represents rank-and-file officers, last week warned that crime and anti-social behaviour were likely to increase if the police had to reduce officer numbers as a result of spending cuts.

The federation forecast that as many as 40,000 posts might have to go across England and Wales over the next four years.

How four forces could be hitLancashire – 600 fewer officers over four yearsWest Midlands – 1,000 officers to go as part of cost savings totalling £140mKent – 500 officers to be cut over four yearsHampshire – 120 officers to go per annum over four years through natural wastage

Source: Police Federation estimates

Police strength is currently near record levels of 144,000 officers.

The home secretary is also expected to address the conference on Wednesday.

Mr Barnett says it would be police officers who would be called on to restore order on the streets, not community support officers, special constables, police staff, journalists or politicians.

“It is a fundamental duty of government to ensure the security of the nation,” he will say.

Superintendents will warn that if numbers are cut they face being asked to do more with less.

But Mr Barnett will argue that police should embrace opportunities for reform, including slashing bureaucracy and waste, and a shake-up of the historic model of 43 separate forces.

The conference will also debate the proposal for police commissioners for each force in England and Wales and discuss the role of social media in fighting crime.

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Losing the plot

Many in India have embraced Christianity to escape the age-old caste oppression of the Hindu social order, but Christianity itself in some places is finding it difficult to shrug off the worst of caste discrimination.

In the town of Trichy, situated in the heart of the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu, a wall built across the Catholic cemetery clearly illustrates how caste-based prejudice persists.

Those who converted to Christianity from the formerly “untouchable” Hindu caste groups known as Dalits are allocated space for burial on one side of the wall, while upper-caste converts are buried on the other side.

The separating wall was built over six decades ago.

“Caste discrimination is rampant in the Catholic Church”

Father Yesumariyan Jesuit lawyer, Dalit campaigner

“This violates the Indian constitution. It is inhuman. It’s humiliating,” says Rajendiran, secretary general of Periyar Dravidar Kazhagam, a small socio-political group that has announced a protest demanding the removal of the wall.

The Catholic Church in India says it does not approve of caste discrimination. But it says it is helpless in resolving this issue.

“The burial ground is owned by private individuals, so we are not able to do anything about this. Even the local bishop is not going to the cemetery to perform rituals,” says Father Vincent Chinnadurai, chairman of the Tamil Nadu state Commission for Minorities.

He says there is a new cemetery in the town, where bodies are buried without any discrimination.

Yet burials continue to take place in the controversial cemetery, presided over by Catholic priests.

For centuries Hindus from different castes have been cremated or buried in different places, according to their caste.

This practice is fading in the big cities and towns, but in some places in rural Tamil Nadu, caste-based graveyards are still in operation.

Dalit women in DelhiDiscrimination against Dalits persists in all strata of Indian society

Dalit Christians are demanding more proactive steps from the Church to remove the wall.

Father Lourdunathan Yesumariyan, a Jesuit, practising lawyer and Dalit-Christian activist, says the Church has the legal power to remove the wall.

Even though the cemetery is on privately owned land, he says, a recent high court judgement ruled that the Church has full responsibility as it administers the graveyard.

“The failure to remove the wall only helps cement caste feelings,” he adds.

Some years ago two Catholic priests demolished a small part of the wall.

But the influential land-owning upper-caste Christian group rebuilt it.

The Church is meanwhile accused by critics of refusing to give “just representation” for Dalits in its power structure, even while it campaigns for a separate quota for the Dalit Christians in government jobs.

Fr Yesumariyan says: “In Tamil Nadu, over 70% of Catholics are Dalit converts. But only four out of 18 bishops are from the Dalit-Christian community.

“In many places influential caste groups have lobbied and made sure that only the person belonging to their caste is being appointed as bishop in their diocese.”

He says that in places where Dalit Christians are the majority, they often struggle to get the top job.

Even though the archbishop of Tamil Nadu region is a Dalit Christian, he has been unable to improve the situation much for other members of his community in the Church.

In recent years a fixed number of jobs and seats have been earmarked in Catholic-run schools and colleges for members of the Dalit-Christian community.

Indian Catholic priest hands out the EucharistThere are estimated to be more than 17 million Catholics in India

But this is being challenged in the court on the grounds that “there is no caste in Christianity”.

Fr Yesumariyan continues: “The Indian constitution says it has abolished untouchablity. But it is everywhere. In the same way, the Catholic Church says there is no caste bias but caste discrimination is rampant in the Church.

“There are hardly any inter-caste marriages among converted Christians. Until recently, Church-run magazines carried matrimonial advertisements containing specific caste references. Only after our protest they stopped it.”

A few churches in Tamil Nadu have even been closed after Dalit Christians demanded a share in the administration.

“We say there is no caste in Christianity,” says Fr Chinnadurai. “But in India, Christianity was not able to get rid of caste.

“Those who converted to Christianity brought their caste prejudices with them. We are trying our best to get rid of them.”

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Plane crash in Venezuela kills 15

breaking news

A plane has crashed in eastern Venezuela with 47 people on board, the country’s transport minister has said.

The aircraft, belonging to the state airline Conviasa, came down shortly after taking off from Manuel Carlos Piar Airport, outside Ciudad Guayana.

The director of the Civil Protection agency in the Guayana region said there were survivors. Unconfirmed reports said there were at least 23.

The plane was flying from Ciudad Guayana to Porlamar on Isla Margarita.

Officials said there had been 43 passengers and four crew on board.

The aircraft came down about 10km (6 miles) from the airport at about 1020 (1450 GMT), near the suburb of Puerto Ordaz, they added.

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School entry shake-up considered

School pupilsThe proposal is being considered for academies and the government’s new free schools

Ministers are considering allowing some schools in England to change their admissions procedures to favour children from poorer families.

The proposal could result in academies putting those who receive free school meals ahead of those who live nearby.

The idea is being discussed by the Department for Education.

A source close to Education Secretary Michael Gove says it is designed to reduce the gap in achievement between poorer children and better off pupils.

The source told the Press Association: “The central aim of the government’s education policy is making opportunity more equal.

“As part of our commitment to helping every child do better we’re introducing a pupil premium, which will mean more cash for the poorest children in all our schools.

“And we’re exploring how schools which wish to target their efforts on helping the poorest can be helped.”

Mr Gove is understood to have asked his department to “examine the feasibility” of introducing the admissions policy for the government’s new free schools and academy schools only.

BBC UK affairs correspondent Tom Symonds says competition for good schools is fierce and admissions procedures are often critical to a child’s chances of getting a place at the school of their choice.

Separate proposals for the pupil premium will mean less-well-off children attract higher funding, so schools taking more of them would see their incomes increase.

It would see up to £2,000 of extra funding made available at a school for each child who is eligible for free meals.

The government is expected to consider the plan for several more months before formally launching it.

Last month, Barnardo’s said schools should be required to take pupils in different ability groups in equal numbers to help poorer students succeed.

The children’s charity claimed its proposal, known as “fair banding”, could reduce social segregation in the school system.

It has long been argued that middle class parents are more able to “play” the admissions system than those from poorer backgrounds.

Mr Gove has said England has an “unbelievably complicated” schools admissions system, and a fair-banding system “had a role to play” in future.

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‘Better dialogue’ call on science

Lord Sainsbury (AFP)In the past, the public has felt as if they are being forced to accept changes, says Lord Sainsbury

The scientific community should have a more grown up dialogue with the public, according to former UK Science Minister Lord Sainsbury.

He said that distrust of scientific ideas was not due to a failure by the public to understand the issues.

Instead, it was because they felt they were being forced to accept changes they had not been consulted over and seemed to offer them no benefit.

Lord Sainsbury is to speak at the British Science Association festival.

The festival runs from the 14-19 September at Aston University in Birmingham, UK and Lord Sainsbury will talk in his capacity as president of the British Science Association.

He will refute suggestions that people in Britain are anti-science.

But according to Lord Sainsbury, there is concern that the pace of current scientific advance is too fast for government to keep up with through effective oversight and regulation.

“[The public] understands risk all too well and if there is no benefit to them then why take any risk at all, however small?”

Lord Sainsbury Former UK Science Minister

“When I was first Minister of Science and Innovation there was an initiative called the ‘public understanding of science’,” he explained.

“This was based on the assumption that if people knew more about science they would automatically look more favourably on science. But unfortunately this is not the case.”

A study done a number of years ago of the then 15 European Union countries found that those nations scoring lowest on scientific understanding were in general the most unequivocally enthusiastic.

“We should not be surprised by this finding. A good education in science should lead people to ask questions about the impact of science,” according to Lord Sainsbury.

He also rejects the view given by some scientists that the public’s distrust of new ideas and technologies is due to people not understanding risk.

He said: “[The public] understands risk all too well and if there is no benefit to them then why take any risk at all, however small?”

“I remember Lord May saying at the time when the row about GM products was at its height: ‘As soon as a GM product is invented, which if you take a tablespoon of it each morning, you will be slim and witty all day, this whole issue will go away’.”

What is important, according to Lord Sainsbury, is for government to assess the risks of new technologies effectively, and to keep the public properly informed.

“People become very angry if they feel that the government is not doing this job properly or is in any way hiding the facts from them.”

According to Lord Sainsbury, public debate on stem cells is an instance which has been handled well.

He said that the scientific community had identified potential problems and ethical issues well in advance and had engaged the public in what he called an open and honest debate.

Conversely, with GM crops, the technology had already been foisted on the public and a debate ensued after it had been rejected.

“To improve the level of that debate I also think that the Government should now ask, say, the Royal Society and the Academy of Medical Sciences to review openly and publicly the current position on GM technology so that the Government and the public can make up their minds on this issue on the basis of the best scientific advice.

“And if this is done I believe it will be seen that plant biotechnology is another case of a new technology which can help the world solve one of its most difficult problems.”

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Tough security for Rangers clash

Rangers fans confront police in 2008Hundreds of fans rioted in the city in 2008

Tough security measures are in place for the 4,500 Rangers fans travelling to Greater Manchester for the Champions League clash against Manchester United.

Police are determined to prevent any repeat of trouble which broke out in 2008 when supporters visited in their thousands for the Uefa Cup final.

Only fans who travel with official club coaches are being allowed tickets for the group match at Old Trafford.

The coaches will stop in Wigan before a police escort takes them to the ground.

Assistant Chief Constable Ian Hopkins, of Greater Manchester Police (GMP), said he hoped the large scale operation would reassure people there would be no repeat of previous trouble.

“I don’t think it’s an over reaction,” he said.

“I think it’s a measured plan with both clubs, who I have to say have been excellent and have put safety ahead of commercial interests in the restrictions that we have asked for around tickets.

Assistant Chief Constable Ian HopkinsAssistant Chief Constable Ian Hopkins urged fans to drink responsibly

“Undoubtedly that is going to lead to fewer ticket sales, but I think it is about reassuring people that we mean business and we’ve got confidence that this plan will work.”

An extra 250 officers will be on duty around the city for the duration of the group-stage match.

As part of attempts to combat any drunken behaviour, police are urging off-licences to close early and asking pubs and bars to make sure they have door staff.

Supporters will be free to explore Wigan, but they are being urged to keep drinking to a minimum.

“I would ask those people to behave responsibly and not drink too much,” added Mr Hopkins.

“The real hook for them is that Rangers have been absolutely clear that if people are drunk or have drunk excessively, when they get on the coaches they won’t be given their match tickets – so it is in their best interests to behave sensibly.”

Manchester United v Rangers kicks off at Old Trafford at 1945 BST.

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Call for licensed cannabis sales

Cannabis at a medical marijuana shop in Los Angeles (AFP)Suppliers could be licensed to distribute branded products, Prof Pertwee argues

Policymakers should consider allowing the licensed sale of cannabis for recreational use, says one of the UK’s leading researchers of the drug.

Professor Roger Pertwee is to make the call in a speech at the British Science Association festival in Birmingham.

He is expected to say that radical solutions have to be considered because he believes the current policy of criminalising cannabis is ineffective.

“I’m talking about harm minimisation,” he told BBC News.

The dismissal last year of Professor David Nutt as the previous government’s leading drugs adviser showed it was in no mood to consider relaxing the status of cannabis as an illegal class B drug.

It is a view shared by the current government, but Prof Pertwee, an expert on cannabis-like chemicals, is to tell scientists that he, like Professor Nutt, believes it is a policy that is doing more harm than good.

“Ideally, recreational cannabis would be banned but that’s not going to happen”

Professor Roger Pertwee Aberdeen University

“At the moment there is an awful lot of harm caused by what we have at the moment, with children going to a drug dealer or they try and grow it themselves and then they get into trouble with the law,” he said.

The University of Aberdeen researcher added: “And by dealing with criminals they may well go on to other drugs as well”.

Instead, Prof Pertwee argues, one option policymakers should consider is the setting up of a committee to license the sale of recreational cannabis.

“You would have to think about licensing a suitable supplier and have retail outlets and the next step would be to have marketable, branded products that someone wants to use. At the same time it’s got to be as safe as possible,” he explained.

Prof Pertwee said licensed products should not be sold in cigarette form – so called “joints”.

Manufacturers should instead develop products that avoid lung damage.

One delivery mechanism he said should be considered is known among drug users as a “volcano”, which heats cannabis to produce a vapour without burning it.

This avoids the burnt products of cannabis that are carcinogenic.

These products should be withheld from high risk groups, he said, especially young people under the age of 21.

Successive governments have resisted efforts to decriminalise cannabis for recreational use.

Even the change in classification for the drug from “B” to the supposedly less harmful class “C” made by the then Home Secretary David Blunkett in 2002 was reversed in 2009.

So how does Professor Pertwee respond to the suggestion that what he is asking for is politically unrealistic?

He said: “What’s the alternative?”

“Ideally, recreational cannabis would be banned but that’s not going to happen so we’re now in a situation where there is quite a lot of harm done by recreational cannabis and what we’ve got to do is think about a way of reducing that harm”.

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University handed £1.3m donation

Robert M Buchan (left) with university principal Prof Steve ChapmanMr Buchan hopes the new chair will keep Scotland at the forefront of sustainable energy engineering

A gold-mining tycoon is donating £1.3m to a Scottish university to boost research into sustainable energy.

Canada-based philanthropist Robert M Buchan is giving the cash to Heriot-Watt in Edinburgh, where he studied more than 40 years ago.

The money will fund a top-level post in sustainable energy engineering, with a view to keeping Scotland at the forefront of the field.

It is the largest donation Heriot-Watt has ever had from an individual.

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The announcement came in the same week as the launch of the Whitlock Energy Collaboration Centre at Carnegie College in Fife, which Mr Buchan also gave £650,000 to establish.

Mr Buchan, who originally came from Rosyth in Fife, obtained an undergraduate degree in mining from Heriot-Watt in 1969.

In 1993, he founded Kinross Gold, a small gold mining company which went on to become the third-largest primary gold producer in North America.

After retiring as chief executive in 2005, he was one of the founders of Katanga Copper, the developer of one of the world’s largest copper deposits.

Mr Buchan said: “I believe in giving forward rather than giving back. It may sound like a small difference, but it reflects a desire to focus on what is needed in the future.

“The chair in sustainable energy engineering will focus attention on research and study in an area which, it is my hope, will keep Scotland at the forefront of this rapidly-evolving discipline.”

University principal Prof Steve Chapman commented: “This is a wonderfully generous donation by one of our most successful alumni, which will be used to fund a key post in line with the university’s strategy of appointing top-level candidates to address key challenges facing the world today.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cuts fear for disabled children

Wheelchair userCharities are warning about “lifeline services” being lost for families with disabled children

Local authorities should refrain from “panic” cuts to services, charities for disabled children have warned.

The Council for Disabled Children says some families are seeing “lifeline services” stopped with little warning.

Losing services such as a few hours’ respite break for parents can have a huge impact on families, it warns.

The charity’s director, Christine Lenehan, says councils seem to be making knee-jerk decisions ahead of anticipated spending cuts.

Every Disabled Child Matters – a campaign run by Contact a Family, the Council for Disabled Children, Mencap and the Special Educational Consortium – asked families with disabled children to report on cuts to local services.

It found that some local councils were stopping services at short notice, even before they had received any cuts from central government.

It suggests that financial fears about the future are pushing councils to make “premature” cuts.

“There is panic and uncertainty over cuts… local authorities are worried about a lack of direction,” says Ms Lenehan.

“My biggest concern is about knee-jerk reactions. Families have told us that services they rely on have been stopped with only a week’s notice.”

“We are deeply concerned that disabled children and their families are losing vital support that they see as a ‘lifeline’”

Christine Lenehan Council for Disabled Children

The report highlights the anxieties of families losing very specialised and localised support services.

These can be clubs for children with mental or physical disabilities, respite opportunities for families, help for voluntary clubs and funding for support staff.

The withdrawal of such services can have a devastating impact on families, says Ms Lenehan.

She says that short breaks – providing somewhere for children to go for an afternoon once a month or so – can be the difference that allows families to keep going.

But she says local authorities in some areas are considering cutting up to 75% of short breaks, as part of their planning for anticipated spending cuts.

The report, Close to Crisis: Frontline Service Cuts for Disabled Children, shows responses from families.

For example, it gives the reaction to the loss of a Saturday club for disabled children: “To lose this would just mean another blow for us in coping with the stress that families deal with on a day-to-day basis.”

Ms Lenehan says: “We are deeply concerned that disabled children and their families are losing vital support that they see as a ‘lifeline’.

“This report shows that local areas are making the decision to cut services in anticipation that there will be no funding for front-line services when the Aiming High for Disabled Children programme comes to an end in March 2011.”

Shadow Education Secretary Ed Balls said: “This is a really worrying report, which suggests local authorities are assuming the worst will happen in the spending review and already cutting back on much-needed services to the most vulnerable children in our community.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Incontinence services condemned

Incontinence bagOne in five adults suffers from incontinence

Millions of people in the UK with bladder and bowel problems face a “life sentence” of suffering because of the poor quality of care, say doctors.

A Royal College of Physicians audit of services in England, Wales and Northern Ireland said diagnosis and treatment was often poor or non-existent.

It blamed inadequate training and bad organisation and said incontinence should be given a higher priority.

The government said the audit would be a spur to offering higher quality care.

The audit looked at the cases of more than 18,000 people with incontinence, making it the most detailed evaluation of its kind in Europe.

One in five adults suffers from incontinence, a condition that causes great distress but which health staff and patients often find difficult to discuss.

The authors concluded that services often fail to meet the standards set out by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE).

Dr Adrian Wagg, clinical director of the National Audit of Continence Care, said bladder and bowel incontinence causes ill health, depression and social isolation, costing the NHS millions of pounds.

“Although these are treatable conditions, people of all ages, and vulnerable groups in particular continue to suffer unnecessarily and often in silence with a life sentence of bladder and/or bowel incontinence.”

Case Study

Tim Harvey, 50, from Berkshire, has suffered from urinary incontinence for three years. He is now a trustee with the Bladder and Bowel Foundation charity.

“I honestly believe that unless a person actually suffers with the condition you can never really begin to image the horrendous psychological impact it has.

“If we can go some way to understanding this ‘taboo’ subject by raising awareness of the condition, we will be helping those who suffer in silence to come forward, unashamed, and able to seek help.”

The report said there was evidence that healthcare professionals often failed to ask about incontinence in people at greatest risk, particularly older people, who may be too embarrassed to raise the problem themselves.

It also said they may fail to assess the impact of incontinence on quality of life.

The audit found that only 50% of patients in mental health and care home settings had a treatment plan for urinary incompetence.

It describes provision of training as “patchy”, occurring in fewer than half of acute hospitals. The authors said identifying, assessing and treating incontinence must be included in all health care professional training.

And they said patients should be better informed about the causes, and the fact that incontinence can often be cured.

The report also said the “great majority” of continence services are poorly integrated across different settings, such as GP surgeries, care homes and hospitals – resulting in disjointed care for patients. Overall compliance with national guidance from NICE was “very variable”.

The audit said the Department of Health in England should ensure that improving services for bladder and bowel problems – based on NICE guidelines – was a priority.

In response, Michelle Mitchell, charity director at Age UK, said: “Incontinence affects more than 1.5 million over-65s, destroying people’s quality of life and leading to isolation, loneliness and depression.

“Yet despite the seriousness of the condition, this report shows continence is not a priority for health service, leading to patchy and poor quality care.”

She warned that as the UK’s population ages, this will be a growing problem.

“Although incontinence disproportionately affects older people, the fact that the over 65s are receiving second-class treatment for the problem compared to other age groups is another shocking example of age discrimination in the NHS.”

The Patients Association chief executive Katherine Murphy said its attention had been drawn to this issue through its helpline.

“Continence problems are a silent epidemic with symptoms that can be very distressing and drastically reduce the quality of life of a sufferer.

“Many millions of people are affected and this report shows yet again that too many of them are suffering unnecessarily and not getting the help they need.”

A Department of Health spokeswoman said the audit showed a “distressing lack of response to patients’ views and needs, a lack of expertise in commissioning continence care, and a lack of integrated care.

“The government’s White Paper puts patients at the heart of the service, and will strengthen clinically-led commissioning.

“This audit will be a powerful spur, to enable patients and clinicians to deliver the quality of care patients have a right to expect.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Primary one class size cap plans

ClassroomCouncils have been unable to cap class sizes at a reduced level

Plans to bring in a legal limit of 25 pupils in primary one are expected to be announced later by the Scottish government.

The proposed cap is some way short of an SNP manifesto promise, which pledged classes in the first three years of primary would be capped at 18 pupils.

The proposed new limit would have clout as it would be set in law.

Previous plans to reduce class sizes have failed because schools could not legally say classes were full.

Families refused a place were often successful when they went to court to appeal against decision not to allow their child to attend on the basis of class sizes.

Under current rules each teacher can have up to 30 pupils in their class.

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