Will Goddard, who is thought be Britain's most premature surviving baby, is now a bright, happy boy of 10.
In the News
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March 27th, 2008
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March 27th, 2008
Video games must be given cinema-style age classifications to stop children accessing graphic images of sex and violence, a Government adviser will announce today.
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March 27th, 2008
Video games will be forced to carry cigarette-style health warnings under proposals to protect children from unsuitable digital material.
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March 27th, 2008
The first national strategy for child internet safety, including a streamlined system for classifying computer video games and codes of practice for social networking sites, will be set out today in a ground-breaking report for government.
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March 27th, 2008
Key points from the executive summary
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March 27th, 2008
Prime minister Gordon Brown today backed Dr Tanya Byron's proposals for a national strategy for improving child safety online, saying internet service providers had to take more responsibility for what children can access on their computers.
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March 27th, 2008
Its opponents say it sanctions 'the ultimate incest', and will create monsters. Its supporters see only the hope it offers to the ill and infertile. The embryology bill is so divisive that Gordon brown has taken the unusual step of allowing MPs a free vote. So what are the key issues, and who is lobbying on each side? Aida Edemariam reports
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March 27th, 2008
An American married man, who used to be a woman before having gender reassignment surgery, has sparked shock and disbelief after claiming to be five months pregnant with a baby girl.
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March 27th, 2008
Hundreds of children are surviving after being born within the legal abortion time limit, official figures reveal.
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March 27th, 2008
The proposal by the National Union of Teachers to allow every state school pupil to have religious instruction in their own faith is a tricky one. It provoked immediate hostility from head teachers who warned that it could open the floodgates to extremist preaching in schools and some church leaders who argued religious instruction should be confined to the religious institution the pupil's family attends.