What the papers say - review for drugs laws, and jobs for PCT managers
A top lawyer is backing calls to review drug laws, reports The Independent. The Independent and the Daily Telegraph also suggest a link between breast cancer and air freshener.
And speech patterns can give clues to whether a child has autism, The Independent adds.
The BBC reports that a vaginal gel containing tenofovir has significantly cut the rate of women contracting HIV from infected partners in an experiment in South Africa.
The website also says an ex-senior civil servant is warning that a new government policy forcing a rethink on hospital reorganisations in England could cost money.
And a man with "locked-in syndrome" has begun legal action, asking the director of public prosecutions to clarify the law on so-called mercy killing, the BBC and The Daily Telegraph report.
The Daily Telegraph also reports that regular use of a mobile phone for more than four years almost doubles the chance of developing tinnitus.
The Daily Mail reports parents are furious after they were sent letters stating their children were overweight.
And the paper says NHS managers sacked following the axing of PCTs could go and work for GPs instead, under a huge ‘revolving door’ scandal.