People infected with coronavirus can have their self-isolation period reduced from 10 days to seven by taking two lateral flow tests.
04.12.2021 - 13:09 / dailyrecord.co.uk
The massive Euromillions £121million jackpot will rollover after no lucky ticketholders scored the winning numbers in last night's draw.
Whilst no one won the grand prize, six players took home the second prize of £138,366.60 for matching five numbers and one Lucky Star number.
What this means is that the top prize will rollover to Tuesday's draw which could see one very lucky UK ticketholder take home a life-changing £121million worth of winnings.
The draw on Tuesday will air at 8:45pm on the
People infected with coronavirus can have their self-isolation period reduced from 10 days to seven by taking two lateral flow tests.
The star of the new Spider-Man film has revealed he is a huge Gerry Cinnamon fan in a Hollywood interview.
When the festive season rolls around, Manchester food venues step up to the plate to offer their own take on the traditional Christmas dinner, and the results are some pretty incredible creations.
Lateral flow home test kits are unavailable on the UK Government website, as people wait to book a coronavirus vaccine.
A Scottish university's new test for coronavirus has been proven to be more than 99 per cent accurate in official UK government medical tests.
Travel restrictions have been tightened as more cases of the Omicron variant have been reported across the world.
We all know that nothing says Christmas quite like scraping the filling out of a mince pie and piping it into a miniature wheat pillow.
All travellers arriving in England will be required to take a Covid-19 pre-departure test from 4am on Tuesday, Health Secretary Sajid Javid has said.
Health Secretary Sajid Javid has urged Christmas party-goers to take a Covid test before heading to festive events.
Meghan Markle’s lawyer has denied allegations that the Duchess of Sussex bullied palace staff before she stepped back as a senior member of the British royal family. In the second installment of the controversial BBC docuseries "The Princes and The Press," attorney Jenny Afia said there were "massive inaccuracies" in the allegations published by the U.K.Times in March, the U.K.’s Express reported on Tuesday.