Victims and families can bring High Court action on contaminated blood products
The case concerns imported blood-clotting products which caused haemophiliacs and others to be infected with HIV and hepatitis.
The case concerns imported blood-clotting products which caused haemophiliacs and others to be infected with HIV and hepatitis.
Experts previously warned resistance to antimicrobial drugs could cause a bigger threat to mankind than cancer.
The Prince and Suits actress Meghan Markle have been dating for just over a year after meeting through friends.
The billionaire warned that political uncertainty over funding and research has put future gains in jeopardy.
Friends and colleagues of the princess honour a ‘truly extraordinary woman’
Both women were “commoners” who married into the royal family.
Fans of Diana are likely to mark her anniversary at her former home Kensington Palace.
The Prime Minister said the treatment of haemophiliacs and other patients with infected blood products was an ‘appalling tragedy’.
The Prince was also learning about the university’s work in combating some of the world’s most pressing health issues.
At least 2,400 people are thought to have died as a result of receiving contaminated blood products.
GCMAF took centre stage on prime time television last night, as popular-magazine programme The One Show came to Guernsey.
USERS of the cancer 'wonder' drug GcMaf have not been given the protection they deserve, the regulator which has banned its UK production has said.
MAY I please respond to Deputy Mike Hadley's latest letter on GcMaf? He now at last admits there are scientific papers published about GcMaf, but says they are not in mainstream journals.
DAVID NOAKES, the chief executive officer of Immuno Biotec claims there is a conspiracy to close his company down because its cure for cancer (sic) threatens the large pharmaceutical companies. Mr Noakes was once a candidate for leadership of UKIP and believes the European Union is itself a huge conspiracy.
THE sale of its storage and packing facility in St Martin's has left the Tumaini Fund less than two weeks to find a new site to store donated equipment for orphans in Tanzania.