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Man charged after seven people hit by car in Derby
The pedestrians were seriously injured when they were hit by a black Suzuki Swift on Saturday night.
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GP shocked by bowel cancer diagnosis at 49 urges changes to screening
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Almost half of primary teachers in England see pupils with eating disorders, survey finds | Education
Almost half of primary school teachers are seeing pupils with eating disorders “at least occasionally”, rising to four in five at secondary level, according to a survey by the UK’s largest education union.
The findings emerged in a poll of 10,000 teachers in English state schools about pupils’ mental health, which also revealed “overwhelming” exam anxiety in secondaries and dwindling numbers of counsellors to support students.
Asked whether they had observed children showing signs of an eating disorder in the past year, 45% of primary teachers and 78% of secondary teachers said they had seen it at least occasionally.
Of those, 4% at primary level said they saw evidence of eating disorders “regularly”, compared with 14% of secondary teachers and 20% in special schools and pupil referral units.
The National Education Union (NEU) poll also revealed that two-thirds (68%) of secondary school teachers who responded regularly encountered absenteeism linked to students’ mental ill-health.
Three-quarters (76%) regularly saw their students experiencing social difficulties, while the number of teachers complaining that their school did not have a counsellor rose from 29% to 40% in three years.
The rise in mental health problems among children and young people is well documented. A study published in the Lancet last year reported a 65% increase in annual hospital admissions between 2012-3 and 2021-2 for children and young people aged five to 18 with mental health concerns. Increases were “particularly steep” for eating disorders, rising from 478 to 2,938 over the same period – an increase of 515%.
The consultant paediatrician Dr Lee Hudson said eating disorders had become more common but pointed out that the term covered a wide spectrum of conditions, not just anorexia.
He said young children could have early anorexia or avoidant/restrictive food intake disorder (Arfid), characterised by limiting food type or quantity. “Eating disorders have become more common. We know it’s going up, but we don’t know why,” he said.
Almost half of teachers (48%) who responded said they regularly witnessed chronic anxiety among pupils, while almost a third (31%) saw students living with social isolation.
Daniel Kebede, the NEU general secretary, said: “Schools are unable to keep pace with the obvious acceleration in the levels of mental health support needed by young people. Demand clearly outstrips the available resources. In many cases, this rules out early and timely intervention for students.
“Teachers are crying out for nurses, mental health leads, and quicker access to child and adolescent mental health service support in schools. The majority tell us they have none of these. The rest tell us they do, but it isn’t enough.”
The NEU, which is holding its annual conference in Brighton this week, is due to debate the “violence and behaviour crisis in schools” on Wednesday. The motion calls for the establishment of a violence in school taskforce to monitor trends and develop policy.
A survey conducted before the conference found 66% of teachers said bad behaviour by pupils was regularly disrupting learning – almost exactly the same as in 2024 (67%), but significantly higher than in 2022 (48%).
The poll found disruption because of behavioural issues was worse in primary schools and special schools or pupil referral units, where 70% and 69% of teachers respectively said behaviour impacted negatively on lessons regularly or all the time, compared with 60% at secondary level.
Teachers told the NEU their ability to manage behaviour was being hampered by a lack of resources and understaffing, particularly for special educational needs.
One unnamed respondent said: “Due to unmet Send needs and insufficient specialist provision, staff are increasingly required to manage complex behaviours without adequate support or intervention from senior leadership.”
Another identified extreme views on social media as a contributing factor. “Increasing exposure to concerning attitudes and beliefs on the internet: misogyny is clearly having a huge effect, especially as a female teacher when dealing with the behaviour of male students.”
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Bosnia and Herzegovina v Italy: World Cup playoff goes to penalties – live | World Cup 2026 qualifiers
Key events
PENALTIES: Bosnia and Herzegovina 4-1 Italy. Bajraktarević aims for the bottom right … and though Donnarumma guesses correctly, and gets a hand to it, the ball squirts in! Bosnia and Herzegovina are going to the 2026 World Cup!
PENALTIES: Bosnia and Herzegovina 3-1 Italy. Now it’s Cristante for Italy. Another must-score. But he clatters a rising shot down the middle off the underside of the bar, and back out! Italy on the brink! Yet again!
PENALTIES: Bosnia and Herzegovina 3-1 Italy. Alajbegović, 18, steps up. Bottom left. Donnarumma the wrong way. Cool as. He’s 18!
PENALTIES: Bosnia and Herzegovina 2-1 Italy. Tonali whistles a fine spot kick into the bottom left. How Italy needed that.
PENALTIES: Bosnia and Herzegovina 2-0 Italy. Tabaković, whose equaliser took us all here, is up next for the hosts. One step, two steps, and a sweep into the top right. Donnarumma went the right way, but had no chance!
PENALTIES: Bosnia and Herzegovina 1-0 Italy. Esposito first for the Azzurri. He does the tippy-toes … then skies it. Advantage Bosnia and Herzegovina!
PENALTIES: Bosnia and Herzegovina 1-0 Italy. Tahirović up first. He whips a perfect penalty into the bottom left, having sent Donnarumma the wrong way.
Sergej Barbarez and Gennaro Gattuso embrace. That’s nice to see, ahead of certain heartbreak for one of them. Fireworks explode in the background, a constant rhythm as both teams prepare to meet their fate. Bosnia and Herzegovina to go first.
Bosnia and Herzegovina aren’t happy about the referee whistling before one last free kick could be launched into the Italian box. But there were only about two seconds remaining anyway. However, that’s the least of their concerns, because Dzeko landed awkwardly after that Frattesi challenge, and he’s really hurt his shoulder. He stays down for some time, before finally getting back up. But he’s holding it gingerly. An ice pack on it now. An unwelcome extra twist for the hosts.
FULL TIME, EXTRA TIME: Bosnia and Herzegovina 1-1 Italy
Nope! The whistle goes before the free kick can be taken. Penalties it is!
ET 30 min +1: A long ball into the Italian half. Donnarumma comes miles out of his box to kick clear. Dzeko dribbles back into Italian territory. Frattesi unceremoniously takes him out. Yellow card. Time for one last free kick, launched into the Italian mixer?
ET 30 min: Sixty seconds between Bosnia and Herzegovina, Italy, and penalties.
ET 29 min: … the ball’s worked back to Tahirović, on the edge of the D. He threads a shot inches wide of the right-hand post. Not sure Donnarumma was getting to that! That’s Bosnia and Herzegovina’s 30th attempt on goal. Italy have taken nine.
ET 28 min: Esposito clears the corner. But the hosts come straight back at Italy, Burnić released into acres down the left. His low cross is hooked out by Mancini. That had to happen, because Dzeko was waiting in the middle, six yards out. Then from the corner …
ET 27 min: Burnić crosses poorly from the left. Cristante’s clearance is no good, and Burnić gets another go. His low cross this time forces Mancini into the concession of a corner.
ET 25 min: Demirović is replaced by Hadžiahmetović, a defensive move by the hosts. Nobody wants to fall at the final hurdle now.
ET 24 min: Tonali zips down the left flank and is crudely flipped into the air by Katic’s sliding challenge. That’s cynical, late, and worthy of the booking Katic receives.
ET 23 min: Frattesi eventually gets back up. Then there’s some nonsense before the corner. Then after it’s finally taken, and half-cleared, Alajbegović dribbles a poor shot straight at Donnarumma, and the pressure on Italy is released. For a moment.
ET 21 min: Alajbegović batters a shot into Frattesi’s back. Then Burnic deflects the ball off the same white shirt. It goes out for a corner. Before it can be taken, Frattesi goes down to catch a breath.
ET 19 min: Bajraktarević whips a vicious cross in from the right. Dzeko, under surveillance from Mancini, can’t get to the ball at the far stick. Goal kick. The tension is almost unbearable. Goodness knows what it feels like if you support one of these sides.
ET 17 min: Dedic crosses from the right. Bajraktarević attempts a scissor kick that goes wide. Italy counter, and Esposito spins into space on the edge of the box. His low shot is deflected wide right by Muharemović. Nothing comes of the corner.
ET 16 min: Alajbegović sends a couple of Italians off to the shops for a copy of La Gazzetta dello Sport with a cheeky drop of a shoulder. The cross isn’t all that, though.
Bosnia and Herzegovina get the second half of extra time going. Penalties loom in the middle distance.
“The really, really gutting thing is; Wales could absolutely have beaten this Italy,” sighs Matt Dony. “Ah well. Always next time. Again.”
HALF TIME, EXTRA TIME: Bosnia and Herzegovina 1-1 Italy
Italy still fuming over the lack of a red card for Muharemović. Donnarumma spoiling for an argument, and maybe even a fight, with someone in the Bosnia and Herzegovina camp. He’s dragged away before he can make things worse for Italy.
ET 15 min +2: … and nothing comes of the resulting corner. That’s as dangerous as Italy have looked all night.
ET 15 min +1: … sends a low drive witlessly into the wall. But Italy recover the rebound. Palestra skedaddles down the right and crosses long. Esposito rises at the far stick and heads goalwards from a tight angle. But Vasilj parries at point-blank range! What a save!
ET 15 min: The free kick, then, to the right of the D. Tonali stands over it. And …
ET 14 min: Not that the Italian bench is letting it lie quite yet. Performative discussions continue.
ET 13 min: Nope. Muharemović is spared. Just a yellow, due to Burnic being right next to the incident. Italy aren’t happy, as you can imagine. But that decision is going to stand.
ET 12 min: Tonali goes long. A sweet pass down the middle. Palestra gets in between, and ahead of, both Muharemović and Burnic. Muharemović extends a leg and clips his man. A free kick … and a sending off?
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