Health and Social Care ministers were answering questions in the
Commons. Subjects covered included... Grenfell Tower: Mental
Health Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Trust Health
and Social Care Services Routes into Nursing Children
and Young People: Mental Health Children’s Health
Maternity Transformation Programme NHS...Request free trial
Health and Social Care ministers were answering questions in the
Commons. Subjects covered included...
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read below.
Grenfell Tower: Mental Health
-
(Kensington)
(Lab)
1. What steps he is taking to support the mental health
needs of survivors and the wider community affected by the
Grenfell Tower fire. [903771]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health
(Jackie Doyle-Price)
I am very grateful to have the opportunity to pay tribute
to the NHS staff who continue to work tirelessly to support
the victims of the fire and their families. So far, more
than 4,000 contacts have been made. Over 400 adults are
currently in treatment and 96 have completed their
treatment.
-
We have heard the Minister’s words and a litany of numbers.
I have two further questions. First, is she considering
long-term funding for mental health services around
Grenfell, which will be needed, and need to be planned for,
for possibly up to five years? Secondly, is she addressing
the severe shortage of acute beds for those suffering
mental health crises, which was mentioned earlier,
particularly as there is an entire ward under lock and key
at the Gordon Hospital due to lack of staff funding and a
huge need for acute beds there?
-
The hon. Lady is quite right to press me on these issues.
Clearly there is going to be ongoing trauma, and we need to
pay attention to that and make sure that there are adequate
resources. I can assure her that this is very high on the
list of priorities for the ministerial group. We have
committed £23.9 million of national Government funds to
address survivors’ needs, with additional expenditure on
wider support. The autumn Budget committed a further £28
million to help support victims. I can also assure her that
I am in regular contact with Central and North West London
NHS Foundation Trust to make sure that we are doing our bit
to address this need.
Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Trust
-
(Great Grimsby)
(Lab)
2. If he will make an assessment of trends in the time
taken between referral and treatment for patients at
hospitals in Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation
Trust in the past 12 months. [903772]
-
The Minister of State, Department of Health and Social Care
(Stephen Barclay)
In the past 12 months, the average waiting time for
patients to start consultant-led treatment at hospitals in
northern Lincolnshire and Goole was about nine weeks. We
recognise that some trusts face particular challenges with
their waiting lists due to rising demand. That is why a
package of support, including a system-wide improvement
board, has been established within the trust.
-
The statistics that the Minister has given are very
interesting. The Library has said that there is an average
wait of 32 weeks—far longer than the nine weeks that he
mentioned—and that it is six weeks longer in 2017 than it
was in 2016. This is happening on his watch. What is he
going to do? My constituents do not accept that it is good
enough.
-
I think the hon. Lady prepared her follow-up before hearing
the answer. There is an improvement board established
within the trust, chaired by NHS Improvement, that is
tasked with reducing waiting times and ensuring that the
standard is improved. Currently, the average time waited is
11 weeks for out-patients and seven weeks for in-patients.
-
(Cleethorpes)
(Con)
Will the Minister give an assurance that the support that
NHS Improvement is giving to the trust will continue? He
will know that this is the second time that the trust has
been in special measures, and clearly we need continuing
support. Will he also assure us that he will visit the
trust—a promise that was made by his predecessor?
-
My hon. Friend is right to point out the need to give
support to this trust. That is why a wider package of £1.6
billion of funding has been given to the NHS to improve
accident and emergency and elective care performance.
Alongside that, we have specific work through NHS
Improvement to address some of the particular issues that
he alluded to in his trust.
-
(Kingswood)
(Con)
rose—
-
(Congleton)
(Con)
rose—
-
Mr Speaker
Order. We might hear from the hon. Member for Kingswood
(Chris Skidmore) later, but I say to him in all friendly
courtesy that while Kingswood no doubt has a great deal to
be said for it, as does Congleton, both have one thing in
common, and that is that they are a very long way from
northern Lincolnshire.
Health and Social Care Services
-
(Thornbury and Yate)
(Con)
3. What steps he is taking to integrate local health and
social care services. [903773]
-
The Minister of State, Department of Health and Social Care
(Caroline Dinenage)
The fact that the Department has been renamed the
Department of Health and Social Care reflects both their
interdependence and our commitment to achieve co-ordinated
care tailored to individual needs. The better care fund is
a national integration programme that helps the NHS and
local government to deliver better, more joined-up
services.
-
I thank the Minister for that answer and welcome her to her
place. The proposal to build a community health centre in
Thornbury and Frenchay is an essential part of joining up
health and social care in South Gloucestershire. Will the
Minister join me in highlighting the importance of
Thornbury health centre and in pressing South
Gloucestershire clinical commissioning group to make
progress with the project as quickly as possible, after
years of unnecessary delays?
-
I thank my hon. Friend for raising that important issue. He
is right to do so, and proposals such as those for
Thornbury health centre are crucial for ensuring that
health and social care are truly integrated and centred
around each individual in the community. I am advised that
South Gloucestershire CCG remains committed to progressing
those plans as soon as possible and that the local NHS
expects to be able to provide an update on plans next
month.
-
(Kingston upon Hull West
and Hessle) (Lab)
The Minister will be aware of the situation surrounding
pain infusion treatment for patients in Hull and East
Riding. Many of the 86 patients who lose that treatment
will require increasing levels of social care. Consultants
have even written letters to the CCG to say that if that
treatment is removed, there is an increased risk of
mortality for those patients. Will the Minister meet me
urgently to discuss that and write to the CCG to ask it to
urgently review its decision in the light of the evidence
from consultants?
-
Of course blanket bans on treatments are unacceptable, and
decisions on treatments should always be made locally by
doctors, based on clinical assessment. I understand that
those patients will be offered an alternative, more rounded
service and that the CCGs have arranged for each patient to
meet their consultant to discuss their treatment. Where
there is evidence of rationing, we expect NHS England to
ensure that CCGs are not breaching their duties.
-
Sir (Mid Sussex)
(Con)
Does my hon. Friend agree that the integration of health
and social care is so important to the future success of
the NHS that everything needs to be done to speed up the
programme to integrate them better? Will she join me in
encouraging a speedier approach to that method in Surrey,
Sussex and Kent?
-
My right hon. Friend is absolutely right. The better care
fund is already having a fantastic impact in the area. We
are developing metrics for assessing progress on
integration by local area, particularly at the interface of
health and social care. We need to proceed with this as
rapidly as possible, and I am sure that with his backing,
that will happen in his local area.
-
(Halton) (Lab)
It is of course very important that we see integration of
the two services, but the fact remains that there is just
not enough money. Over a year ago, one of the Minister’s
predecessors praised my authority in Halton for the work it
was doing in this area, but Halton is now on the brink in
terms of the money it has and its ability to deliver its
statutory duties. There is simply not enough money, and the
Government keep trying to avoid that.
-
We have provided £2 billion of extra funding over the next
three years to help councils commission high-quality
services, in addition to giving councils access to up to
£9.25 billion of dedicated social care funding by 2019-20.
-
(South West
Bedfordshire) (Con)
Will the Minister look at the benefits of independent
living schemes such as Priory View, pioneered by Central
Bedfordshire Council, which bring reduced hospital
admissions and reduced demands on social care through
greater socialisation and more use of exercise classes?
-
Independent living schemes can keep people living
healthier, more independent lives for much longer and
provide the comradeship and camaraderie that keep people
active and healthier. My hon. Friend is right to raise
their importance, and the Government very much support
them.
-
(Eastbourne) (LD)
With reference to the integration of health and social
care, the Minister may be aware that I have two outstanding
respite and rehab homes in Eastbourne called Milton Grange
and Firwood House. They are both under threat of closure by
the county council, which says that central Government are
not giving it enough money. Those homes serve a crucial
purpose in supporting the local hospital. Will the Minister
agree to meet me and representatives from the county
council to work out a way to find the funds to keep both
those vital homes open?
-
The hon. Gentleman is absolutely right to stand up for the
good-quality respite in his local area. The Care Act 2014
requires local authorities to shape local markets and
ensure that they give a sustainable, high-quality local
offer. I would be more than happy to meet him to discuss
that further.
-
(Leicester South)
(Lab/Co-op)
I welcome the Minister to her place. One model of
integration that has aroused considerable concern is the
so-called accountable care organisation model. Many are
concerned that that means greater private sector
involvement, and given legitimate worries about Carillion
going bust, Capita not being able to support GPs and Virgin
suing the NHS, those concerns are well founded. Can the
Minister rule out any private sector involvement in ACOs?
Will she also delay laying the relevant regulations to
establish an ACO until after the two judicial reviews and
the NHS England consultation?
-
The hon. Gentleman is right to raise this. NHS England is
consulting on that at the moment, and I can confirm that no
regulations will be laid until that consultation has been
completed.
-
I am extremely grateful to the Minister for offering us
that clarification. May I therefore ask her about funding?
The integration of health and social care needs more
funding, yet the NHS is going through the biggest financial
squeeze in its history and social care has been cut by
billions since 2010. A few moments ago the Minister said
that the funding is adequate, but if the funding is
adequate across health and social are, why are delayed
discharges of care up 50%, and why did NHS England say on
Friday that for the rest of this year the A&E target
has in effect been abandoned?
-
We recognise that there are pressures on our social care as
the population ages. In the short term, we have of course
made the extra £2 billion of funding available to local
authorities; in the medium term, we need to make sure that
best practice is observed across all local authorities and
NHS trusts; and in the long term, we will be coming forward
with a Green Paper on social care later this year.
Routes into Nursing
-
(Hitchin and Harpenden)
(Con)
4. What steps he is taking to broaden routes into nursing.
[903774]
-
The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (Mr
Jeremy Hunt)
The NHS needs more nurses, which is why we are making big
changes for new entries into the profession, including the
new nurse associate role and new nurse degree
apprenticeships.
-
I am glad to hear that the Secretary of State values the
degree apprenticeship as a way to provide further routes
into nursing, but will he consider working with the
Treasury and across the Government to increase the funding
that educational establishments receive from the Institute
for Apprenticeships for nursing courses, to further
incentivise universities and colleges to offer more places
on those courses?
-
Mr Hunt
I thank my hon. Friend for his excellent question. It will
strengthen my hand with the Department for Education, which
decides what levels of funding are made available from the
Institute for Apprenticeships. It has actually given us the
highest level of funding, at £27,000, but we never say no
to more.
-
Ms (Wallasey) (Lab)
But will the Secretary of State admit that he made a basic
error by scrapping nurse bursaries, which has led to a 23%
fall in the number of people applying to nurse courses? Why
does he not look at that if he wants to widen the entrance
into nursing?
-
Mr Hunt
I am not sure whether the hon. Lady was listening to the
answer I just gave, but the truth is—
-
Ms Eagle
I always listen to you.
-
Mr Hunt
I am most grateful. That is a very rare compliment, so I
shall savour it. I would gently say to her that the point
about nurse degree apprenticeships is that it is possible
to transition into nursing from being a healthcare
assistant without any fees being paid at all. That is why
it is a huge and highly significant change.
-
Mr Speaker
As the hon. Member for Wallasey (Ms Eagle) is sporting what
appears to me to be a very fetching suffragette rosette, it
is perhaps timely to record that in the great success our
national health service has been under successive
Governments, I think I am right in saying, as things stand,
that well over 70% of the people who make it great are
women.
-
(Totnes) (Con)
Following the recent inquiry by the Select Committee on
Health into the nursing workforce, we absolutely welcome
the new routes into nursing, including the new role of
nursing associate. However, one of the issues highlighted
strongly was the need to retain our existing nursing
workforce as well as to recruit into it. Will the Secretary
of State comment on that?
-
Mr Hunt
My hon. Friend speaks very wisely—we do need to be better
at retaining our existing workforce. I think that is why
the Treasury has given me extra latitude in negotiations on
the pay rise—those discussions are currently happening—but
we also need to be much better at flexible working and at
recognising the challenges people have in their ordinary
working lives.
-
(Linlithgow and East
Falkirk) (SNP)
Unlike in Scotland, where student nurses receive free
tuition and a nursing bursary of over £6,500 a year, nurses
in England now face debts of £50,000 on graduation. Owing
to that, training applications in England have dropped by a
third since 2015, and the new nursing apprenticeship
attracted only 30 trainees against a target of 1,000. Will
the Secretary of State not accept that he got it wrong, and
reinstate the nursing bursary?
-
Mr Hunt
I am interested to hear the hon. Gentleman say that,
because we have published a draft of a workforce strategy
in this country, but I notice that Audit Scotland says that
in Scotland there is a lack of a long-term strategic plan
for the workforce. I gently say to him that there are
workforce pressures across the United Kingdom. We have a
plan to dramatically increase the number of nurses that we
employ in the NHS, and I am sure many people in Scotland
would like to see the same there.
-
The Secretary of State has claimed that the removal of the
bursary would fund 10,000 extra training places, but the
first 5,000 will start only this autumn and the nurses will
qualify only in 2021. With more than 36,000 nursing
vacancies in England, more nurses leaving than joining and
a 90% drop in EU nurses coming to the UK because of Brexit,
exactly who does he expect to care for patients in the
meantime?
-
Mr Hunt
As we discussed earlier, we are broadening the routes into
nursing from just traditional higher education courses,
including nurse apprenticeships and people being able to
train on the job over four years in a hospital. We hope
that a whole group of healthcare assistants who currently
find it difficult to get into nursing can become nurses. I
think that would be very welcome in Scotland as well.
-
(Kingswood)
(Con)
Will the Secretary of State update the House on progress
made in reducing the cost of agency nurses so that the
money can be reinvested in full-time nursing?
-
Mr Hunt
I am happy to do that. It is one of the great successes of
NHS Improvement, which should be celebrated, that it has
brought down the amount spent on agency nursing by £1
billion in the last couple of years. That is a huge
achievement. Every penny of that goes back into frontline
care.
-
(Warrington North)
(Lab)
The Government cut the number of nurse training places in
2010, and when they scrapped bursaries applications from
mature students suffered particularly. What is the point of
blaming trusts for hiring agency staff when the Government
simply do not train enough nurses to fill the vacancies?
-
Mr Hunt
Perhaps I should set the record straight for the hon. Lady.
We have 52,000 nurses in training—more than was ever the
case under the last Labour Government, who were planning to
cut nurse training places by 6%. We are planning to
increase them by 25%. That shows our commitment to nursing.
-
(Ellesmere Port and
Neston) (Lab)
Yesterday, the Royal College of Nursing reported on the
total failure of Government policies to increase the
nursing workforce. As we have just heard, the Government
hoped to recruit 1,000 trainees to the nursing
apprenticeship, but ended up with just 30. This year, the
number applying to university to study nursing has so far
fallen by a staggering 33%. We have a workforce crisis
exacerbated by badly thought out policies, so is it not
time that the Secretary of State admitted that scrapping
the bursary was a mistake?
-
Mr Hunt
I have a great deal of respect for the hon. Gentleman, but
that is not the first time that he has presented a somewhat
incomplete picture of what is actually happening. In the
last five years, we have 15,700 more nurses, and the reason
for those vacancies and for the pressure is that, as he
knows very well, under the last Labour Government we had
Mid Staffs, which was a crisis of short staffing that this
Government are putting right. That is why we want to
recruit those extra nurses.
Children and Young People: Mental Health
-
(Chippenham)
(Con)
5. What steps he is taking to improve mental health
provision for children and young people. [903775]
-
(Charnwood)
(Con)
8. What steps he is taking to improve mental health
provision for children and young people. [903780]
-
(Angus)
(Con)
13. What steps he is taking to improve mental health
provision for children and young people. [903785]
-
The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (Mr
Jeremy Hunt)
This week is Children’s Mental Health Week, and still too
many children and young people wait too long for their
mental health provision in the NHS. That is why, by the end
of next year, we will have invested an extra £1.4 billion,
meaning that 70,000 extra children and young people are
seen every year.
-
A constituent’s 14-year-old son suffers severe obsessive
compulsive disorder, resulting in self-harm. Treatment
options have failed and his doctor recommends an intensive
residential programme, but as Ministers are aware, places
are very limited. He has been waiting seven weeks and
counting, with 24-hour parental support and supervision.
What more can be done to ensure that that boy and other
adolescents who are in desperate need of help get that help
before it is too late?
-
Mr Hunt
I thank my hon. Friend for raising that issue, and I
understand that in that particular case clinicians are
meeting this week to resolve those issues. She is right: we
need to expand the number of beds available for children
and young people. They are at a record level—1,440, and
that went up by another 81 last year—but more needs to be
done, which is why we published our children and young
people’s mental health Green Paper.
-
I have been approached by a number of my constituents in
Leicestershire who are concerned about the wait between a
referral to child and adolescent mental health services and
the allocation of a named caseworker and formal treatment.
Will my right hon. Friend enlarge on how the steps that he
is taking, which he has set out, will help to reduce such
waits in Leicestershire and across the country?
-
Mr Hunt
I am happy to do that. The simple truth is that it is a
tragedy for every child who has to wait too long to access
mental health care, because half of all mental health
conditions become established before the age of 14. If we
do not nip them in the bud, they can get a lot worse. What
are we doing? We are setting up a whole new service inside
schools to spot such problems earlier and we are going to
introduce a waiting time target for CAMHS appointments.
-
In 2016-17, 65% of young people in England with eating
disorders started urgent treatment within one week of
referral. What has been done to ensure that the target of
95% by 2020 will be reached? Does the Secretary of State
share my belief that waiting time targets are a vital tool
for improving eating disorder treatment and should be in
place in all parts of the United Kingdom?
-
Mr Hunt
I absolutely agree with that. I join my hon. Friend in
supporting the introduction of waiting time targets in
Scotland and other parts of the United Kingdom. How are we
doing so far? In terms of the need for urgent treatment for
eating disorders, we are hitting 79%, so we are on our way
to the 95% target and we want to get there as soon as we
can.
-
(Liverpool, Wavertree)
(Lab/Co-op)
I listened very carefully to what the Secretary of State
said about the additional funding that is supposed to be
reaching the frontline, but the Young Person’s Advisory
Service, which is the main service for young people’s
mental health in Liverpool, has seen a £757,000 cut—a cut
of 43%—in this financial year. There are now 412 children
in Liverpool waiting more than 28 weeks for an
assessment—not even for treatment. It is absolutely
shocking. How can he stand there in young people and
children’s mental health week and say that everything is
rosy?
-
Mr Hunt
I did not; I said the opposite. I said that we need to do a
lot more and I told the House what we are doing. If the
hon. Lady looks at what is happening in her own clinical
commissioning group, she will see that the proportion that
is spent on mental health has gone up from 12.3% to 13%.
She will see that this Government have done a huge amount
on mental health. In 13 years, Labour did not have any
waiting time targets for mental health and did not
introduce parity of esteem—a whole range of things that are
now happening and that she should support.
-
(Luton North)
(Ind)
Will the Government commission more extensive research into
the causes of mental ill health among children and young
people, both pre and post-natal, with a view to preventing
as much ill health as possible?
-
Mr Hunt
We are absolutely going to do that. We have a big programme
of expansion in perinatal health support, because there is
a lot of evidence that pressures on mothers around the time
of birth transmit to their children and can leave lasting
damage.
-
(Westmorland and Lonsdale)
(LD)
Specialist mental health crisis care for young people in
south Cumbria is available only between the hours of 9 and
5 from Monday to Friday. Does the Secretary of State agree
that in the light of the Care Quality Commission’s recent
damning report of the partnership trust, that is not
acceptable? Will he join me in asking the Morecambe Bay CCG
to ensure that there is out-of-hours and weekend care for
all people?
-
Mr Hunt
I am happy to look into that issue. The hon. Gentleman’s
colleague, the right hon. Member for North Norfolk (Norman
Lamb), did a huge amount to set up crisis care provision
around the country. We need to build on that for the simple
reason that, if we are to have parity of esteem, people
need to be able to get help in a mental health crisis, just
as they are if something goes wrong with their physical
health.
-
(Cheltenham) (Con)
Does my right hon. Friend agree that, as well as improving
the treatment of adolescent ill health, everything possible
needs to be done to prevent crisis from occurring in the
first place? Does he agree that we need more research into
why we are seeing a surge in Cheltenham and elsewhere in
the world, so that clinicians can best tailor their
response?
-
Mr Hunt
This is something that my hon. Friend has thought a lot
about. A particular area of concern is the growth in mental
health problems in young women between the ages of 18 and
24. We are looking carefully at whether that relates to
social media use, which is an additional pressure that many
of us did not face when we were that age. I thank him for
his campaigning on this issue.
-
(Lewisham West and
Penge) (Lab)
19. The figures show that, on average, children and young
people have to visit their GP three times before a referral
is made for a specialist mental health assessment.
Sometimes, they then have to wait six months for treatment.
In Lewisham, the CAMHS budget is being cut, which is likely
to result in even longer waiting times for treatment. The
right hon. Gentleman said that these waiting times are a
tragedy, but how bad do things have to get before the
Government take action? [903791]
-
Mr Hunt
With respect, we are taking action. Last year, spending on
mental health went up by £575 million and four out of five
CCGs increased their mental health spend by more than their
overall spend. This year, all CCGs will do that. That will
apply in Lewisham, as it will everywhere else in the
country.
-
(Stoke-on-Trent South)
(Con)
Under plans announced by NHS England, child victims of
sexual assault in Stoke-on-Trent would have to travel as
far as Birmingham to receive the vital support that they
need. Will the Secretary of State agree to look urgently
into the proposals to remove child sexual assault referral
services from the city?
-
Mr Hunt
I will happily do so.
-
(Dewsbury) (Lab)
Research by the Children’s Commissioner revealed that the
spend on children and young people’s mental health services
varied by CCG from 0.2% to 9%, resulting in services in
some areas being described as “shockingly poor”. Can the
Secretary of State therefore explain the reason for the
variation, and will he commit today to matching Labour’s
pledge to increase the proportion of the mental health
budget spend on CAMHS services?
-
Mr Hunt
The hon. Lady is right to shine a light on that variation,
and that is why this Government have introduced Ofsted
ratings for all CCGs—to make sure that we understand. It is
not just in children and young people’s mental health, but
in all mental health where we see that variation.
Specifically when it comes to children and young people’s
mental health, she will be pleased to know that last year
overall spending went up by 20%, and the Green Paper that
we published announced an additional £300 million in
investment.
Children’s Health
-
(Paisley and
Renfrewshire North) (SNP)
6. What plans his Department has to improve children’s
health. [903776]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health
(Jackie Doyle-Price)
This Government want to see all children and young people
get the best start in life. We are implementing a wide
range of policies to improve child health, including the
most ambitious childhood obesity plan in the world,
transformation of children’s mental health and maternity
services, improving immunisation rates and tackling child
sexual abuse.
-
The Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health recently
praised NHS Scotland’s innovations to improve children’s
health. The Scottish initiative Childsmile, which is now 10
years old, has greatly improved children’s dental health,
reducing fillings by 24% and cutting annual dental
treatment by £5 million. It is good that the UK Government
have finally set up trial sites, but with multiple dental
extractions under general anaesthetic up by 11%, why is
this initiative not being rolled out to all children in
England?
-
The hon. Gentleman is right to highlight that, and we are
always keen to respond to any representations made on this
very important issue. We are also very keen to learn from
the other nations about this area, because it is clear that
the more we can do with early intervention in childhood,
the better we protect people’s long-term health. I will
look more specifically into that.
-
Dr (Sleaford and North
Hykeham) (Con)
As a children’s doctor, children’s health is very important
to me, and the case of children’s doctor, Dr Bawa-Garba,
worries me and doctors up and down the country. In NHS
practice, I have seen the adverse effect on reflective
practice and the impact that it has on staff morale.
Ultimately, that will impact on patient safety. I know that
the Secretary of State shares my concerns, and I ask him to
tell the House what he is going to do about it.
-
My right hon. Friend the Secretary of State will be
addressing that in a little while. The whole issue of
reflective learning is important. We should not, through
this case, prevent people from being honest about the
experiences that they have had.
-
(Blaenau Gwent) (Lab)
20. Energy drinks packed with caffeine have been connected
to problems with children’s health. Tesco, Asda and Aldi
have banned the sale of these drinks to under-16s, so will
the Government do the same? [903793]
-
We are becoming increasingly conscious of drinks with
additional unnatural stimulants and their impact on
people’s health generally, but obviously that becomes more
acute with children’s health, so we will look more closely
at it. I am glad that the hon. Gentleman has highlighted
the initiatives that have been taken by individual
retailers, because it is up to them to implement good
practice.
-
(East Worthing and
Shoreham) (Con)
Does my hon. Friend agree that the best way to achieve
strong health and good mental health for children is at the
very earliest stages and through forming a strong
attachment between that child and their parent in the first
1,001 days from conception? If so, why is there not more in
the mental health Green Paper about perinatal mental
health?
-
The Green Paper very much focuses on what we are doing in
schools, but my hon. Friend is absolutely right. He
highlights the earliest of early intervention, and one
reason why we are investing so much more in perinatal
mental health is to ensure that the bonds between mother
and baby are as strong as they could possibly be.
-
Mrs (Washington and
Sunderland West) (Lab)
Following the question from my hon. Friend the Member for
Blaenau Gwent (Nick Smith) and the Minister’s answer, may I
revisit the issue of energy drinks? She might know that a
500 ml can of energy drink contains 12 teaspoons of sugar
and the same amount of caffeine as a double espresso, yet
energy drinks are being sold for as little as 25p to
children as young as 10, and around one in three young
people say they regularly consume them. Given the health
risks associated with energy drinks, will she tell me more
about what steps she and her Department are taking to
reduce energy drink sales to and consumption by children?
-
The hon. Lady will know that action against sugar is very
much part of the childhood obesity plan that the
Under-Secretary of State for Health, my hon. Friend the
Member for Winchester (Steve Brine), is taking forward, but
there is a lot more we can do to address the concerns about
caffeine, which I know is high on his “to do” list. We will
no doubt have more exchanges on this subject in due course.
Maternity Transformation Programme
-
(Glasgow Central)
(SNP)
7. What progress his Department has made on implementing
the maternity transformation programme. [903779]
-
The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (Mr
Jeremy Hunt)
Our ambition was to halve the number of maternal deaths,
neonatal deaths, neonatal injuries and stillbirths by 2030,
but because of the progress we have made with our maternity
safety programme, we have brought that forward to 2025.
-
I am glad to hear that progress is being made. The World
Breastfeeding Trends Initiative’s 2016 report highlighted
several gaps in access to breastfeeding support, including
deficiencies in clinical training and a lack of integration
between the NHS and voluntary sector services. What can be
done through the maternity transformation programme to
ensure that women can access, and health professionals can
provide, the best-quality infant feeding advice right
across the country?
-
Mr Hunt
The hon. Lady is absolutely right to highlight that area.
It is one of six high-impact areas we are focusing on
throughout the country. We are making progress, but we know
we could do a lot better.
NHS Trusts: VAT Status
-
(Bristol South)
(Lab)
9. If he will hold discussions with the Chancellor of the
Exchequer on the VAT status of NHS trusts. [903781]
-
The Minister of State, Department of Health and Social Care
(Stephen Barclay)
There are no plans to hold discussions with the Chancellor
of the Exchequer on the VAT status of NHS trusts.
-
I am grateful for that reply, although I suggest it ought
to be reconsidered. NHS trusts desperate to avoid financial
difficulties appear to have found a new magic money tree:
setting up wholly owned subsidiaries to avoid paying
substantial amounts of tax to the Treasury. Rather than
encouraging this tax dodging and further fragmenting the
NHS, why do the Secretary of State and his friend the
Chancellor not either ban this practice or agree to let
them all have the VAT exemptions?
-
The Department wrote to all NHS and foundation trusts in
September 2017 to remind them that tax avoidance schemes
should not be entered into in any circumstances, but the
hon. Lady makes a slightly strange point. She seems to be
arguing that NHS hospitals are, in essence, paying too much
tax to the Treasury, rather than having that money within
the NHS. These subsidiaries are 100% owned by trusts
themselves.
-
Sir (Christchurch)
(Con)
The Government have already legislated for but not
implemented a proposal to introduce a £95,000 limit on exit
payments for public servants in the NHS. Would it not be
sensible, in the meantime, to charge NHS trusts VAT on any
exit payments in excess of £95,000 to deter this waste of
public resources?
-
I admire how the VAT element of the original question was
brought into a discussion of exit payments. As my hon.
Friend will be well aware, I visited the issue of exit
payments frequently as a member of the Public Accounts
Committee, and I am happy to discuss it further with him.
National Food Crime Unit
-
(Tiverton and Honiton)
(Con)
10. If he will increase funding for the Food Standards
Agency’s national food crime unit. [903782]
-
The Minister of State, Department of Health and Social Care
(Caroline Dinenage)
The Food Standards Agency’s national food crime unit is
crucial to protecting consumers from serious criminal
activity that impacts on the safety of their food and
drink. I understand that the FSA is exploring options for
the unit’s future funding, and a decision is expected in
late spring.
-
The FSA is answerable to the Department of Health and
Social Care for food safety, but there are a lot of
assurance schemes that do not really answer to anybody and
which the FSA needs to be able to bring together. That is
where the crime unit could do a really good job, so
anything the Minister can do to get that money and get the
crime unit up and running would be very good.
-
I thank the Chair of the Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs Select Committee for his advice. I know that he is
keen and astute on this subject. Ensuring that food
businesses meet their safety responsibilities is, of
course, one of the FSA’s most important roles. It is
developing a new regulatory model and actively engaging
with third-party assurance scheme owners to determine how
information and data can be shared and more effectively
used by regulators.
-
Mr (Huddersfield)
(Lab/Co-op)
May I send a brief message of congratulation to the
Secretary of State for his rapid response to President
Trump’s remarks about the values of the NHS?
As chair of the Westminster Commission on Autism, let me
now ask the Secretary of State a serious question. We are
about to produce a report on the fake medicine that is sold
to families with an autistic child. When the report is
published, in the next few days, will the Secretary of
State act very quickly to stop this dreadful trade?
-
Mr Speaker
I am not quite sure that that is altogether related to the
main question.
-
Mr Sheerman
It is related to the Food Standards Agency.
-
Mr Speaker
Possibly. Anyway, it was a worthy effort, and I will give
the hon. Gentleman the benefit of the doubt. Let us now
hear from the Minister.
-
As the hon. Gentleman was so very charming to the Secretary
of State, we will of course look into the issue.
Hospitals in Special Measures
-
(York Outer)
(Con)
11. What recent progress he has made on improving the
performance of hospitals in special measures. [903783]
-
The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (Mr
Jeremy Hunt)
It is five years today since the landmark publication of
the Francis report on the Mid Staffordshire Foundation NHS
Trust. Since then the NHS has made a huge number of
changes, not the least being that 34 trusts have gone into
special measures and 19 have come out. I particularly
congratulate the West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust on
coming out of special measures in January and securing a
“good” score for its caring: that was a fantastic
achievement by its staff.
-
Given that York’s local health service is in special
measures, the additional funds in the Budget to deal with
winter health pressures were very welcome. I am pleased to
say that York NHS has already received a tranche of those
funds, but the remainder of its share has not been
released, although discussions with NHS Improvement are
ongoing. Will the Secretary of State undertake to look into
the situation, as a matter of urgency?
-
Mr Hunt
I will happily do so.
-
Ms (Camberwell and
Peckham) (Lab)
The Secretary of State will be aware of the importance of
King’s College Hospital to my constituents. In 2009 it was
rated “excellent” and one of the top hospitals in the
country; now it is missing its A&E waiting time targets
and a key cancer treatment target, there has been a
fourfold increase in the number of cancelled operations,
and it is in special measures. The Government must take
some responsibility for that. They must not wash their
hands of it. Will they step up to the plate and help King’s
by, for instance, giving it the resources that it needs?
-
Mr Hunt
Let me reassure the right hon. and learned Lady that we do
not wash our hands of any trusts that go into special
measures. The point of the special measures regime is to
highlight where Government intervention is necessary. I
know the right hon. and learned Lady will agree that a huge
amount of very fine treatment happens at King’s every
single day, but it is having profound issues in relation to
the management of its finances and some of its waiting
times, which is why we are doing everything we can to
support it.
-
Mr (Kettering)
(Con)
With a high delayed-discharge rate of 10%, Kettering
General Hospital, which is in special measures, has 60
patients on any one day who have completed their treatment
and await their transfer into the community.
Northamptonshire County Council has been given millions of
pounds, via the better care fund, but it is simply not up
to the job. What can be done in those circumstances?
-
Mr Hunt
I am well aware of the pressures at Kettering. It is a very
busy hospital, and it has undergone a number of changes of
management. However, I can reassure my hon. Friend that a
big improvement package is there to support it, and that we
want to take it out of special measures as soon as
possible.
-
(Dulwich and West
Norwood) (Lab)
The previous chair of King's College Hospital NHS
Foundation Trust resigned because he had concluded that the
funding provided for King’s had placed the trust in an
impossible position. The current interim chair has said
that the proportion of GDP spent on health and social care
needs to rise to match that in other European countries if
our NHS is to be sustainable. When will the Secretary of
State heed the warning cries and commit the funding that
King’s and, more widely, our NHS need in order to deliver
care to our constituents?
-
Mr Hunt
We spend 9.9% of our GDP on health. The European Union
spends 15%, and the richer EU countries spend 9.6%—slightly
less than us, on average. We are able to spend more because
this Government put the economy back on its feet.
Pharmacy Services
-
Mrs (Mid Derbyshire)
(Con)
12. What plans he has to expand the services provided by
pharmacies to assist GPs. [903784]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health
(Steve Brine)
It is good to be back.
As I have repeatedly said at the Dispatch Box, pharmacies
are a vital frontline service for our NHS, with over 1.2
million health-related visits every day. Community
pharmacies have again stepped up during this winter period,
and I thank them for their hard work. They have vaccinated
more than 1 million people against seasonal flu since
October. The Government are committed to ensuring that
pharmacies and pharmacists are further embedded in the
wider health service.
-
Mrs Latham
I thank the Minister for that answer. Will he come to Derby
to meet a constituent who has pharmacies that are working
very hard to keep patients out of hospital, therefore
saving the NHS money through their innovative ideas?
-
Yes, I will do that. I think we have a provisional date in
the diary in early March. We continue to promote the
Pharmacy First scheme. Next month we will launch the £2
million Stay Well pharmacy campaign to continue to promote
the idea of community pharmacy as the first port of call
for many minor health concerns. I am out and about visiting
pharmacies—I was at one last week—and I will be very
pleased to come to see my hon. Friend.
-
(Rochdale) (Lab)
21. The Minister will be aware that a disproportionate
number of GPs are currently heading towards retirement.
Therefore, support for primary care services is vital. What
practical steps can be taken to increase the use of
pharmacies and to seek alternatives to GP services more
generally? [903795]
-
As the hon. Gentleman knows, there are a record number of
training places. We know that one of the main reasons why
GPs leave general practice is retirement, which is why we
have put in place comprehensive measures to ensure that we
meet our commitment to deliver an extra 5,000 GPs in the
NHS by 2020. GP career plus, the GP retention scheme and
the national GP induction and refresher scheme will all
help get to valuable experienced GPs back into our NHS,
doing the valuable work our constituents so benefit from.
GP Services
-
(Bexhill and Battle)
(Con)
14. What steps he is taking to increase the capacity and
availability of GP services. [903786]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health
(Steve Brine)
We recognise the acute shortages in general practice, which
is why we remain, as I said in my previous answer,
committed to delivering the additional doctors in general
practice by 2020. Millions of patients have already
benefited from being able to access evening and weekend GP
appointments. We expect everyone in England to have access
to this by March 2019.
-
I am fortunate to work very closely with the GPs in my
constituency. It would be appear that, for a variety of
reasons, younger GPs are not as likely to buy into the
partnership model as their predecessors. Does the Minister
agree that we need a mixed model of both private
partnership contractor and direct NHS state provision if we
are to get GPs to the places where the public need them?
-
My hon. Friend works very closely with the GPs and
commissioning groups in his constituency and they value him
greatly as a local MP. We back the partnership model. As
the Secretary of State said last month at the Royal College
of General Practitioners, we believe in its many benefits
as the cornerstone of primary care. That is why we are
embarking on a new piece of work to explore other models
with the British Medical Association and the RCGP, which
have kindly agreed to work with us on this, and to look at
the partnership model in the context of primary care at
scale.
-
Several hon. Members rose—
-
Mr Speaker
Dr Williams, you wanted to speak a moment ago; have you
abandoned the idea?
-
Dr (Stockton South)
(Lab)
indicated assent.
-
Mr Speaker
Very well.
-
(Houghton and
Sunderland South) (Lab)
NHS figures continue to show an alarming decline in the
number of family doctors working across the north-east,
which is why I am supporting the University of Sunderland
bid to establish a new medical school. Does the Minister
accept that prioritising training places in areas of
greatest need is the best long-term solution to the crisis
facing general practice?
-
There are record numbers in training, and I take note of
the hon. Lady’s bid for the training school. One reason the
Department and my brief have placed such importance on
recruiting new GPs into the NHS in England and on making
sure that people can stay working in the NHS in England is
that we see general practice, rightly, as the cornerstone
of the health service.
Topical Questions
-
(Broxtowe) (Con)
T1. If he will make a statement on his departmental
responsibilities. And you wear it well, Mr Speaker.
[903796]
-
Mr Speaker
I do not know whether the right hon. Lady is referring to
my age, a proposition on which I think the House would have
to divide, or the rosette. [Interruption.] Yes, I thought
she meant the rosette.
-
The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care (Mr
Jeremy Hunt)
On the day that we mark the 100th anniversary of giving a
voice to women, I want to update the House on concerns in
the medical profession that we may not be giving a voice to
doctors and other clinicians who want the freedom to be
able to learn from mistakes. The House will know that, as a
Government Minister, I cannot comment on a court ruling,
but it is fair to say that the recent Dr Bawa-Garba case
has caused huge concern, so today I can announce that I
have asked Professor Sir Norman Williams, former president
of the Royal College of Surgeons and my senior clinical
adviser, to conduct a rapid review into the application of
gross negligence manslaughter in healthcare.
Working with senior lawyers, Sir Norman will review how we
ensure the vital role of reflective learning, openness and
transparency is protected so that mistakes are learned from
and not covered up, how we ensure that there is clarity
about where the line is drawn between gross negligence
manslaughter and ordinary human error in medical practice
so that doctors and other health professionals know where
they stand in respect of criminal liability or professional
misconduct, and any lessons that need to be learned by the
General Medical Council and other professional regulators.
I will engage the devolved Administrations, the Justice
Secretary and the Professional Standards Authority for
Health and Social Care in this vital review, which will
report to me before the end of April 2018.
-
I thank the Secretary of State for that answer—or rather,
for that statement—and also for the robust tweets that he
makes on that and many other issues. Would he be amenable
to the idea of following on Twitter the Oliver King
Foundation? On the foundation’s advice, I have written to
all the schools in Broxtowe urging them to install
defibrillators. This is an important project. What
assistance is the Department of Health giving to such an
admirable charity and such an excellent project?
-
Mr Hunt
It is a fantastic charity. The boy concerned would have
been 19 very shortly. It is a very sad story. I thank my
right hon. Friend for her campaigning on this issue. We do
indeed need to ensure that we have atrial fibrillators
everywhere necessary to prevent these tragedies.
-
(Worsley and Eccles
South) (Lab)
I welcome the review that the Health and Social Care
Secretary has just announced. I also welcome the addition
of social care to his role and the Government’s belated
realisation that social care should be a Cabinet-level
role, as Labour recognised with its shadow Cabinet in 2010.
Yesterday, the Alzheimer’s Society reported that care homes
were turning away people with advanced dementia—or even
evicting them, sadly—because care providers do not get
enough money from local authorities to cover the cost of
their care. Will the Health and Social Care Secretary now
be arguing with Treasury colleagues for the funding that is
so badly needed to ensure that people with dementia are not
evicted from care homes due to a lack of funding?
-
Mr Hunt
The hon. Lady always speaks powerfully about the social
care system. One of the key parts of the social care Green
Paper that we are currently working through is on market
stabilisation. We have seen a number of care homes go
under, although the number of beds overall has remained
broadly stable, but our particular concern is, as she
rightly points out, people in the advanced stages of
dementia who might not be able to get the care that they
want. This is a key focus of our work.
-
(North Warwickshire)
(Con)
T7. I have had concerns highlighted to me over the national
cancer patient experience survey in the light of the
introduction of a new national opt-out model. Can the
Minister confirm that the survey will continue to deliver
the same high-quality data annually and can he tell me when
a final decision on its format is likely to be made?
[903802]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health
(Steve Brine)
I have listened carefully to cancer charities, clinicians
and patients on the importance of the cancer patient
experience survey. I have been clear that, whatever form
the CPES takes as a result of the changes to how
confidential data is shared, we want the survey to continue
with a methodology as close to that of the current survey
as possible.
-
(Blaenau Gwent) (Lab)
T2. Last week at PMQs, the Prime Minister made an
inaccurate statement about the emergency health services in
Wales. The chair of the UK Statistics Authority concluded
that the Prime Minister’s comparison was not valid.
Comparisons on the performance of our NHS are important, so
will Government Ministers check their partisan figures in
future? [903797]
-
The Minister of State, Department of Health and Social Care
(Stephen Barclay)
It is interesting, looking at the comparisons, to see that
the NHS in Wales appears to have changed a number of them
in order to make it more difficult to compare performance
between England and Wales. The more scrutiny there is of
the performance in Wales—where clinicians say that the best
performance often equates to the worst performance in
England—the more we will see the need for serious changes
in the way in which the NHS delivers its services in Wales.
-
(Sutton and Cheam)
(Con)
In Sutton, we have hugely exciting plans for a London
cancer hub, working with the Royal Marsden Hospital and the
Institute of Cancer Research, on a single campus to provide
a global centre for cancer innovation that will in turn
provide a huge boost for our local economy, including
13,000 new jobs. Will the Minister join me in Sutton to see
the opportunity at first hand? Will he also tell us how
such a project can help to deliver on our Government’s life
sciences strategy?
-
I am keen to visit my hon. Friend in Sutton, so let us fix
a date as soon as we can. Cancer survival rates are at an
all-time high, but I like the idea of a one-stop shop, and
the hub that he talks about could be very exciting.
-
(Enfield North) (Lab)
T3. The delivery of sustainability and transformation plans
is too dependent on the NHS estates strategy, as discussed
in the Naylor review, and there is great concern that our
NHS assets will be sold off quickly, cheaply and without
transparency to make up for Government underfunding. Will
the Minister agree to pause the process to accommodate the
urgent need for parliamentary scrutiny? [903798]
-
The King’s Fund has said that STPs offer the best hope for
the NHS and its partners to sustain and transform the
delivery of healthcare, so the King’s Fund endorses this
recommendation. As the right hon. Lady will know, we
announced an additional £325 million of capital funding in
the spring Budget to invest in local areas, and in the
autumn Budget we committed an additional £10 billion
package of capital investment over this Parliament.
-
(Mid Norfolk)
(Con)
Last week, our former colleague Tessa, now Baroness, Jowell
gave an inspiring speech about her battle with brain
cancer. At this first Health questions after that speech, I
am sure that colleagues will join me in paying tribute to
her work and will agree that she spoke with courage, grace
and the desire to make her suffering prevent others from
having to go through the same. Will the Secretary of State
assure me that last week’s report from the brain cancer
research taskforce, which I set up as a Minister, will be
taken seriously in the Department and that everything will
be done to ensure that brain cancer, which has been
something of a Cinderella for years, receives the support
and funding that it deserves so that Tessa’s words were not
in vain?
-
I thank my hon. Friend for his work in this job on this
subject. The Secretary of State was in the other place to
listen to ’s speech, and I read it and watched it back. It
was a moving and brave piece of work. We take this matter
seriously. My colleague Lord O’Shaughnessy has the report,
which we are going through line by line, and he and I will
jointly chair a roundtable on the subject in the next few
weeks.
-
(Birmingham, Selly Oak)
(Lab)
Will the Secretary of State give an assurance that any
accountable care organisations that he establishes will not
be able to use commercial confidentiality excuses to evade
scrutiny under freedom of information legislation?
-
Mr Hunt
Public money is public money, and Members have a right to
know how it is being spent, so we will absolutely ensure
that those contracts are signed in a fair way.
-
Mr (Forest of Dean)
(Con)
As the Secretary of State carries out his social care
funding review, I urge him to look carefully at whether we
should look again at implementing the Dilnot commission’s
proposals. Given that we legislated for them, they are the
only way that we are going to tackle the issue with the
sufficient urgency.
-
Mr Hunt
At the heart of the Dilnot proposals was the idea of risk
pooling—that there is a randomness in the illnesses that
affect us in the later years of our life which we would
want, as a society, to do something about. I will confirm
what the Prime Minister said in the election campaign: we
will consult on a cap on social care costs.
-
(West Lancashire)
(Lab)
T4. I am shocked that my local hospital, Southport and
Ormskirk, has unused bed and theatre capacity despite the
huge winter crisis and the pressures on the NHS locally. In
that same trust last night, the Virgin-run walk-in centre
had a computer glitch and told people, “Either go to
A&E or come back tomorrow.” Has the Department made any
assessment of the number of beds and theatre hours that
could have been sourced to relieve winter pressures and
save lives? [903799]
-
The hon. Lady highlights an important point about the
variance in performance between trusts and how we look at
some of the lessons from, for example, Lords Carter’s work
on efficiency, rotas and how to maximise the value of
funding. I am happy to consider her specific point, but she
is right that how we manage the patient pathway, in
particular the 43% of hospital beds occupied by 5% of
patients, is a key challenge.
-
Mr (South West Devon)
(Con)
For the first time ever in Devon and Plymouth, GP practices
are struggling to recruit new doctors and new partners in
particular and are spending a fortune on locums as a
result. The Government have a plan to fix the situation by
2020, but what more can be done in the meantime to ensure
that my constituents can access primary care services?
-
Mr Hunt
There are two things. First, we have succeeded in
increasing the number of medical school graduates who go
into general practice—a record 3,157 this year. Secondly—I
know this from my conversations with GPs in my hon.
Friend’s constituency—we are doing what we can to
reinvigorate the partnership model. Since meeting those
GPs, I have agreed with the Royal College of General
Practitioners and the BMA that we will carry out a formal
review of how the partnership model needs to evolve in the
modern NHS.
-
(Eltham) (Lab)
T5. Does the Secretary of State agree that it would be
wholly unacceptable if, as a consequence of creating
accountable care organisations, private companies gained
control of strategic decisions on local health services?
[903800]
-
Mr Hunt
I point the hon. Gentleman to what the King’s Fund says,
which is that accountable care organisations and integrated
care systems make a “massive difference” in care to
patients. The King’s Fund is not a pro-Government
organisation; it regularly holds the Government to account
at election time and throughout the year. Not just the
King’s Fund but Polly Toynbee and many other people are
saying that.
-
(Corby) (Con)
It is very positive that Corby clinical commissioning group
has announced that core urgent care services will be
protected in Corby, along with the announced new GP access
and new primary care facilities, but will the Minister join
me in keeping a close eye on the CCG as it designs the new
access arrangements? People need to be able to access those
urgent care services at the right place, at the right time
and without delay.
-
My hon. Friend is right to draw attention to the funding
going into Corby, and it is a tribute to his campaigning as
a constituency MP that there is such progress on that
measure. I am happy to look at the specific issue. It is
important that the CCG continues to consult both Members of
Parliament and the public as it takes that work forward.
-
(Portsmouth South)
(Lab)
T6. GP services are in crisis. Practice after practice is
closing, and more GPs leave the service every day. When
will the Secretary of State finally listen to the chair of
the BMA’s GP committee, who says that current GP funding is
“nowhere near enough”? [903801]
-
Mr Hunt
We have been listening to the Royal College of General
Practitioners and the BMA, which is why last year funding
for GPs went up by £314 million and why it will be going up
by £2.4 billion over the five-year period, which is a 14%
real-terms increase.
-
Several hon. Members rose—
-
Mr Speaker
There really is a magnificent array of rosettes on both
sides of the Chamber, which today—today only—I will allow
to influence me.
-
(Chelmsford) (Con)
This is a very proud day to be a woman in this House. In
mid and south Essex there are plans for a hyper-acute
stroke unit at Basildon Hospital. Will the Secretary of
State or one of the Ministers confirm that that will be an
improvement of services for my constituents in Chelmsford,
and not a downgrade?
-
I am very happy to confirm my hon. Friend’s observation. It
is absolutely about improving services. This proposal for a
new hyper-acute stroke unit in Basildon will ensure there
are specialist nurses and doctors available to manage
patients at all times, which very much draws on the lessons
from London, where we consolidated stroke services and
where health outcomes were improved and lives were saved.
-
(North West Durham)
(Lab)
T8. Valerie and Colin Hindmarch in my constituency were
prescribed Primodos at eight-weeks pregnant. Their child,
Colin, would have been 50 on 12 February. However, he died
at five weeks old with multiple congenital abnormalities.
Most of Valerie’s medical records are missing. When will
the Secretary of State grant a judge-led public inquiry to
get justice for this couple and all the other survivors?
Crucially, will he acknowledge that the victims’ trust and
confidence can only come through this judge-led public
inquiry? [903803]
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health
(Jackie Doyle-Price)
The hon. Lady will know that we are currently implementing
the findings of the expert working group, and we are
continuing our discussions with the all-party group to see
how much further we can go in answering people’s questions
and in responding to these moving cases, one of which she
has just explained to the House. Obviously I would be happy
to have further discussions with any hon. Member who wants
to discuss it with me further.
-
(Telford) (Con)
In Shropshire we have had four years of confusion on the
future of our two hospitals. Will the Secretary of State
tell the people of Shropshire whether there is Government
funding for the proposed reconfiguration of the county’s
hospitals?
-
As my hon. Friend will be aware, we announced further
funding in the Budget and the autumn statement. On the
specifics of Telford, which she has raised on a number of
occasions, I am very happy to have further discussions with
her.
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(Bishop Auckland)
(Lab)
T9. In my constituency Shildon medical centre and half of
the Richardson Community Hospital are empty, yet patient
services are being cut because the rents charged by NHS
Property Services are too high. When will the Secretary of
State sort out this waste of resources? [903805]
-
I am not aware of the specific case the hon. Lady
highlights, but I am happy to look at it and to understand
why she feels the rents are disproportionately high. This
relates to the point I made earlier in response to the hon.
Member for West Lancashire (Rosie Cooper), which was about
the variance in the system and how we ensure that we obtain
best value for money. The reality of the debate on health
is that the Labour party simply sees it in terms of how
much is put in, whereas Conservative Members recognise that
we need to both invest more in the NHS and make sure we get
the best outcomes. That is the key dividing line between
the parties.
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(Redditch) (Con)
For six years, the people of Redditch have endured a
painful consultation on their hospital, the Alex, which has
dragged on and on. As a result, they have lost maternity
and children’s emergency services, even though nobody
wanted that when they were consulted. People have taken the
pain, but when will they get the gain? When will they see
the urgent care centre? When will the £29 million be spent
on the Alex?
-
There are good plans in place for getting Worcestershire
Acute Hospitals NHS Trust and the Alex, specifically, out
of special measures. A package of support is in place to
enable the trust to improve its quality of care. Delivery
of the acute service redesign plan is a key driver to
sustaining services in the medium term and £29.6 million of
STP funding has been agreed to support that.
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(East Ham) (Lab)
At the weekend, NHS England, as my colleagues have pointed
out, gave up on the key A&E waiting time target. Does
the Minister agree that it is very important that when
people go to A&E they do not have to wait longer than
four hours, as more than 2.5 million did last year? Whose
responsibility is this delivery failure?
-
Mr Hunt
I have great respect for the right hon. Gentleman, but he
is saying something that is a big exaggeration. What the
NHS has committed to is that by the end of the year coming
up more than half of the trusts in the country will meet
the A&E target and that we will go back to meeting it
across the whole country in the following year. So we are
absolutely committed to this target. We recognise there are
real pressures, which is why it is going to take time to
get back to it, but we will get there.
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Mr (Ludlow) (Con)
I congratulate the Secretary of State on securing the £10
billion capital commitment in the Budget at the end of the
last year to spend on the NHS. May I take advantage of my
position on these Benches to urge him for the next
allocation of STP funding to adopt the advice of my hon.
Friend the Member for Telford (Lucy Allan) and ensure that
the Shrewsbury and Telford Hospital NHS Trust gets the
Future Fit funding it needs?
-
May I, first, pay tribute to my hon. Friend for the work he
did in the Department and the high esteem in which he was
held by those working in the NHS? On Shrewsbury and
Telford, I very much appreciate the importance of the
reconfiguration of the trust. We expect a decision shortly
on that, although I am not in a position to announce it
today.
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(Manchester Central)
(Lab/Co-op)
The Secretary of State will be aware of the huge disruption
at the Manchester hospitals this week because of problems
with water supplies and a big water leak. He might also be
aware that Emmeline Pankhurst’s home is on the site of the
Manchester hospitals. What conversations has he had with
United Utilities and other water companies to ensure that
we have safe, constant supplies of water to our hospitals,
so that these disruptions do not happen?
-
Mr Hunt
I know that NHS Improvement is aware of that situation and
that important conversations are going on to improve the
resilience of all our hospitals, including those in
Manchester. However, I am happy to write to the hon. Lady
on the issue.
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Several hon. Members rose—
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Mr Speaker
I will call the hon. Member for East Worthing and Shoreham
(Tim Loughton) if his question is shorter than his tie.
-
Lipoedema affects 10% of women in this country, many without
a diagnosis, so why are an increasing number of my
constituents saying they cannot get any therapeutic
interventions funded by the CCG? Will the Minister meet a
delegation of those people and other hon. Members similarly
affected?
-
Yes, of course I will meet my short-tied hon. Friend with the
delegation he requests.
-
Several hon. Members rose—
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Mr Speaker
We are well over time, but I do not want the hon. Member for
Strangford (Jim Shannon) to feel isolated or excluded. Let us
hear it.
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(Strangford) (DUP)
Child suicide calls to Childline are at a record high among
girls—it is at 68%. Despite that, the NHS spends only 11% of
its budget on mental health issues. Will the Minister
indicate what he is going to do to prevent child suicides?
-
Mr Hunt
We are very focused on reducing all suicides. As the hon.
Gentleman will know, we have a plan to reduce suicide rates
by 10%, and last week we announced a plan to reduce
in-patient suicides to zero, which is a big aspiration to
which the NHS in England is certainly committed. We are very
committed to this agenda.
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