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Safety leaflet on topical corticosteroids and withdrawal reactions to help patients and their carers to use these medicines safely.
This leaflet has been produced to assist in the identification of injurious weeds as prescribed in the Weeds Act 1959.
When you need a licence, when you can burn and how to burn safely.
How to stop harmful weeds spreading onto land used for grazing livestock or growing crops, how to dispose of them and how to report them if they’ve spread.
Topical steroid products are safe and highly effective treatments for the management of a wide range of inflammatory skin diseases but have important risks, especially with prolonged use at high potency. In the coming months, as a result of regulatory...
Restrictions on burning crop residues, and the rules you must follow when you burn to protect the environment and avoid causing nuisance.
How to identify, stop the spread and dispose of Japanese knotweed in England.
Study carried out to identify and characterise new plants able to protect crops against striga under dry conditions
How to stop the spread and dispose of invasive non-native plants that can harm the environment in England.
What you need to do if you keep, grow, find or sell certain invasive plant species and your responsibilities to prevent their spread.
The T6 exemption allows you to chip, shred, cut or pulverise waste wood and plant matter to make it easier to store and transport, or to convert it for use.
The D8 exemption allows you to burn plant tissue waste, wood packaging and packing material waste at a port when a Plant Health Notice has been issued, to prevent the spread of plant diseases.
How to deal with waste, including hazardous waste, and prevent pollution.
The D7 exemption allows you to burn plant tissue and untreated wood waste from joinery or manufacturing in the open air.
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