Now do this put-the-text-back-together activity.
This is the text (if you need help).
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has announced plans to crack down on what he has labelled Britain's "sick note culture". The leader believes there are too many people in the UK claiming welfare benefits because of mental health issues. He said welfare payments were a drain on the economy, and the number of people not working was creating labour shortages. The number of sick notes issued by doctors has risen sharply since the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. The most common diagnoses being given by doctors are related to mental health and behavioural disorders. Sunak said: "We need to change the sick note culture, so the default becomes what work you can do not what you can't."
Mr Sunak has emphasised the need to get people back into employment. He said: "We need to be more ambitious about helping people back to work, and more honest about the risk of over-medicalising the everyday challenges and worries of life." He added: "Half of people becoming inactive over the last year cited depression and anxiety." Opponents of Sunak's plans say his government caused the current crisis. The mental health charity Mind said: "The truth is that…services are at breaking point following years of underinvestment." The opposition Labour party called Sunak's plans, "another front for their culture wars". It said the government was "tone deaf, shameless and irresponsible".
- What did Rushi Sunak say people were claiming welfare benefits for?
- What did Rishi Sunak say was a drain on the economy?
- What does people not working create?
- What caused a sharp rise in the issuance of sick notes in the UK?
- What are the most common diagnoses on doctors' sick notes?
- What does Mr Sunak want people to get back into?
- What did Mr Sunak say people are over-medicalising?
- Who did the government's opponents blame for the current crisis?
- What did a charity say about services?
- Who said the UK government was tone deaf?
Back to the sick note culture lesson.