Covid-19: Deteriorating Long-Term Health Conditions 1.30pm Sir
Robert Neill (Bromley and Chislehurst) (Con) I beg to move, That
this House has considered people with deteriorating long-term
health conditions during the covid-19 pandemic. It is a pleasure to
see you in the Chair, Mrs Cummins. I thank the Backbench Business
Committee for allowing time for this debate on what I believe is an
important topic: dealing with the deterioration in people with
long-term...Request free trial
Covid-19: Deteriorating Long-Term Health Conditions
1.30pm
(Bromley and Chislehurst)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered people with deteriorating
long-term health conditions during the covid-19 pandemic.
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mrs Cummins. I thank
the Backbench Business Committee for allowing time for this
debate on what I believe is an important topic: dealing with the
deterioration in people with long-term conditions during the
covid-19 pandemic. On several occasions in Westminster Hall and
the Chamber, we have discussed the various impacts of the
pandemic on the health service and various sections of society,
but this issue has not been highlighted before, so I am grateful
for the opportunity. I thank hon. Members who have supported the
debate.
It is worth remembering that we are dealing here with a range of
conditions, and I refer to my entry in the Register of Members’
Financial Interests. As Members know, I have a family interest in
rehabilitation for survivors of stroke, which I will certainly
touch on. However, we are not simply talking about stroke. There
are many other conditions that affect people, including
cardiovascular conditions, neurological conditions such as
multiple sclerosis, and cystic fibrosis—to name but a few. They
have all been affected in one way or another by the consequences
of the pandemic. That is why a number of the organisations who
support people with such conditions—I am grateful to various
charities, to which I will refer in a moment—have come together
to assist us in bringing together some information for the
debate, which we think needs greater public airing.
There are hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people in
the UK with long-term conditions, which range from stroke and
dementia to Parkinson’s and spinal injury. They have all been
particularly affected, and often acutely affected, by the
pandemic. Sadly, some people have lost their lives during the
pandemic, and we must be honest and recognise that. Some people
may be clinically vulnerable as a result of their condition. In
other cases, people will be more vulnerable because of other
factors that are linked to their condition. In both
circumstances, however, they have suffered because of the effects
of the pandemic, and we need to turn that situation around.
We all know that, for many people in society, the lockdowns and
other restrictions that we had to have meant social isolation and
the suspension or adaptation of things that they were used to
doing. However, the pandemic has had a much greater impact on
people with long-term conditions than on the rest of us, because
it meant missing out on crucial support from informal carers—the
family and friends who come in and help—and fewer opportunities
to use the cognitive, physical and social abilities that are so
important for rehabilitation. Trying to keep one’s mobility going
is one example. If someone is unable to do that for a number of
months, it is inevitable that the situation can deteriorate and
the adverse effects of the condition progress. That is a real and
measurable impact.
Some conditions are progressive, meaning that they get worse over
time, whereas others are not. However, even where they do
progress over time, it does not mean that the level of
progression of the condition cannot be arrested and delayed with
support and therapy. It can make a difference for everyone.
Of course, there is an impact on mental health as well as
physical health. For example, the Stroke Association’s research
suggests that 69% of stroke survivors feel more anxious and
depressed than before the pandemic. Similarly, people suffering
from MS and other neurological conditions have found it tougher
during the pandemic. Some 29% of people with MS have had
appointments cancelled or delayed, and 53% said there had been a
reduction in specialist support.
The British Heart Foundation has raised particular concerns, to
which I am sure we will return, about delays in diagnosis and
treatment for people with heart conditions. That includes
preventive measures—diagnosis and then drugs that can prevent
worsening cardiovascular conditions.
The situation is similar, too, for people in the UK living with
cystic fibrosis. It is a smaller number—some 10,800 in the UK—but
again, they are particularly vulnerable. Many found that
specialist staff with respiratory expertise were being redeployed
elsewhere, which created challenges for the specialist units
dealing with them. People have had real difficulties right across
the board.
The pandemic also meant the suspension of many community
rehabilitation services. That is important, because those
services are often delivered by a range of therapists. In the
case of stroke, for example, that will involve physiotherapists,
speech and language therapists, clinical psychologists and
occupational therapists. For other conditions, people will have
dieticians, podiatrists and others. Community rehab services
underwent an enormous change in the pandemic, and with many staff
being redeployed elsewhere, we need a strategy for getting them
back. We need a strategy right across the piece for recovery from
the pandemic in relation to these long-term conditions. I have
made calls in this House in the past for a long-term strategy and
plan to deal with stroke, but the same applies to many of these
other conditions too, and they all ought to be linked
together.
In the case of stroke, about half of stroke survivors had therapy
appointments or home care visits cancelled, and of course many
people—this applies to other conditions too—felt unsafe going
into hospital for appointments, so we need to be catching up
fast. Virtual therapy can work in some cases. For example, my
wife’s speech and language therapy was able to be done online to
some degree, but she cannot do the physiotherapy online in the
same way, which leaves a significant gap. If I may, I will start
with stroke and then move on to the other conditions, simply
because stroke is the one that I am most familiar with.
The rehabilitation for stroke survivors is just such an important
part of the pathway. We sometimes think of it as something that
happens only in the first weeks and months after a stroke. That
is not the case. Research increasingly shows that, with good
rehab, people can continue to improve over a significant number
of years after their stroke. Unfortunately, we are not delivering
the level of services for the length of time that we would wish
and that the Government want to deliver them for. NHS England’s
national stroke service model outlines the aspiration for all
stroke survivors to receive rehab support for as long as they can
benefit from it. It should not be time limited but, as of April
2021, 58% of services were time rather than needs based. That
does not seem to have improved; the situation has been made
harder by the pandemic.
Of course, not only is rehabilitation important for the
individual’s quality of life but it makes a cost saving. If we
could get more people on the stroke pathway receiving early
supported discharge rehabilitation, that could save about £1,600
over five years. That may not seem a vast amount, but when we
think about the significant number of stroke survivors in this
country, it is a really worthwhile saving, even in relation to
that one condition.
We have done great work in improving acute stroke care, but what
we have not done at the same pace is keep up with the rehab and
life after stroke. That has been the Cinderella end of the
service, and I think that that is true for many other conditions
too. There was a lack of consistent provision even before the
pandemic, and unfortunately the pandemic has made that situation
worse.
I will quote one stroke survivor’s carer referring to what
happened after their family member’s stroke in early 2020:
“My mum has severe dysphasia and with no speech therapy for 5
weeks while with me, and limited speech therapy while in
hospital, her progress is not what it should be. This is severely
impacting on her recovery and wellbeing.”
I know personally the importance of consistency in speech therapy
and other matters. A stroke survivor says:
“I have felt my mobility worsen as my usual exercise activities
were not available”.
Nobody disputes that some restrictions were necessary. What I am
saying now is that we need to have an urgent plan, with funding
behind it and a set of measures and goals, and a means of
measuring attainment of those goals, to ensure that we catch up
across the piece.
The latest snap figures suggest that we are struggling to meet
even our own aspirations. Just one third of community rehab teams
meet treatment time targets. Over 43% have waits of 15 days or
more and, alarmingly, stroke survivors wait, on average, 10 weeks
to see a psychologist. One of the things that people really do
not appreciate about strokes is the significant psychological
impacts that can occur. Unless we get the psychological issues
resolved as best we can, that has an impact on the survivor’s
ability to get the maximum benefit from the other therapies
available. That is why it is really important. There is a real
opportunity to join those various things together, to allow
people to regain the skills that they have lost, and to hone and
keep the skills that they retained after their stroke, or other
condition. That would bring both social and economic benefits for
all.
Community rehabilitation services for all these conditions have
been hugely overstretched. Just 17.3% of stroke patient received
the guideline recommended levels of support in 2021. We have
discussed in the House before the real problem with a workforce
strategy. Allied health professional representative bodies have
all said that they are willing to step up to the plate, but they
need the numbers. It is particularly difficult to get speech
therapists, neuro- psychologists and so on. We need to do more on
that.
I recognise that the Government are doing a lot more to improve
things in many areas of the NHS, but we need to do that on
rehabilitation as well. In addition to the other benefits that I
listed, rehabilitation ultimately means fewer visits to GPs, less
delayed discharge, and less demand, in the end, for acute care in
the health sector and for social care as people get older and
struggle with other issues. It reduces demand right across the
piece.
The 2021 paper “Moving forward stronger” had contributions from
some 20 charities and professional bodies representing a range of
conditions. It was headed up by the Alzheimer’s Society, which
called for a fully funded national rehabilitation strategy to run
for two years, and for the NHS to appoint a national clinical
lead to implement it. I welcome the fact that NHS England has
appointed Jennifer Keane as its first director of rehabilitation.
That is good news. The devolved Administrations do not yet have
one; I hope that they will soon follow that example, and that
this debate will enlighten some of the priorities that I hope the
new director will have in drawing up her programme of work. We
ought to have strategies for rehabilitation in local areas, as
well as at a national level, to ensure that things are delivered
on the ground. We have part of it but, although we have the
director, we do not as yet have the strategy for her to work to
and implement. That is the bit that I hope the Minister will
assure me is coming next.
I referred to strokes, but I will touch briefly on some other
conditions. I mentioned MS, which affects about 130,000 people in
the UK. If we look at neurology overall, about one in six people
in the UK is living with a neurological condition of one kind or
another. Again, management throughout the pathway can really
improve outcomes for people with those conditions. I mentioned
the number of MS appointments that were cancelled. One in four
people surveyed by the MS Society had not seen an MS nurse or
neurologist in the past 12 months but needed to, so there is a
glaring gap in provision.
I talked about a workforce strategy. Here is another area of the
workforce. Adjusting for population, France and Germany have over
seven neurologists for every two in the UK. We need to up
recruitment into those specialist skills. That is a significant
difference from our two largest and nearest comparative western
European advanced economies. There should not be that level of
divergence between us and France and Germany.
An audit of 51 UK MS services in 2020—while the pandemic was
going on, but before the whole consequences had worked their way
through—found that, on average, neurologists had caseloads of
1,815 patients with MS. The recommended caseload is 615, but the
average caseload is nearly three times that recommendation,
demonstrating the need to redouble our efforts on workforce. Some
64% of professionals said that it was not only recruitment that
was an issue, but also staff leaving the neurology workforce. We
need a strategy for recruitment and a strategy for retention.
For stroke services, when my wife was in the rehab unit, we could
see quite a marked turnover of staff. They were good people, but
we were unable to keep them, unfortunately, even in a trust with
a specialist unit and rewarding work, very close to London. The
situation is probably even harder in other parts of the
country.
For many people with cystic fibrosis, the isolation has been
particularly acute, because of their particular vulnerabilities.
They had to shield as they were at acute risk. That has made it
harder to bring forward their return into society. The Cystic
Fibrosis Trust awarded 713 covid-related grants between April and
September 2020, including 101 due to loss of work, and 96 due to
financial difficulties, because people were unable, due to the
need to shield and the lack of support, to carry on as they were
otherwise doing. We cannot condemn people to that twilight
situation for very much longer.
Finally, I turn to cardiovascular conditions. I am plucking out
only four conditions, but there are others. We could talk about
Alzheimer’s and dementia, and many other things—perhaps other
hon. Members will.
The British Heart Foundation suggests that in the first year of
the pandemic England saw around 5,800 excess heart and
circulatory disease deaths—some because of medical factors, but
some because of the difficulty in getting acute treatment. Beyond
that, there are 61,000 people in England who had been waiting
more than six weeks for an echocardiogram—a heart ultrasound—at
the end of November 2021, which is 20 times than before the
pandemic. The Minister may have more up-to-date figures, and I
hope she will be able to tell us that they are coming down, but,
if not, we need a strategy to make that happen.
Analysis from the Institute for Public Policy Research found
470,000 fewer new prescriptions of preventive cardiovascular
drugs were issued between March and October 2020 compared with
the previous year. That potentially translates into 12,000-odd
extra heart attacks over the next five years or so that might
otherwise be preventable. If people are not diagnosed and given
the preventive drugs, the risk of acute attack becomes that much
higher.
NHS England’s statistics show that the number of people in
England waiting more than six weeks for a diagnostic
echocardiogram had climbed to 64,962—very specific—at the end of
September. The key point is that that is 44% of those waiting.
The number fell slightly by November, to 61,000, and I wait to
see how much more it has fallen by now. At the end of February
2020, there were 3,238 people waiting. That is a massive jump,
demonstrating the scale of the mountain we have to climb to get
back to where we are before the pandemic. At the end of December
2021, in all, some 300,000 heart patients were waiting for care
of one kind or another, be that emergency, urgent, elective or
routine, in so far as anything is routine in such treatment, and
some 29% had been waiting for more than 18 weeks.
I know the Government do not want that to be the case. They have
real ambitions to reduce such waiting times, as I think all
parties in this House do, but the point of this debate is to
highlight how significant the issue is to make sure it is no
longer the bit of the health service that gets forgotten about
because it does not grab the headlines in the same way that
waiting lists for acute care, operations and other things do. It
is just as profoundly important for people’s lives, the lives of
their families and for the community as a whole. That is why I am
grateful for the chance to raise these issues.
I hope the Minister will respond and set out what the Government
intend to do by way of a specific strategy and set out a
timeframe, its objectives, how it will be implemented, how its
success will be measured, how it will deal with the workforce,
and how funding will be made available. I hope that we will have
a useful debate going forward, Mrs Cummins, and I am grateful for
the time to put these matters before the House.
1.51pm
(York Central)
(Lab/Co-op)
It is always a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Mrs
Cummins. I thank the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
( ) for opening the debate and
for putting a lot of material as well as a lot of data before us
to consider, which is incredibly useful. I am also indebted to
the Backbench Business Committee for allowing today’s debate to
go ahead.
Even pre-pandemic, there were many challenges for people with
long-term health conditions and their management. There was a
really good focus on the acute phase, but as people moved into
the more chronic phase of their illness, the amount of
rehabilitation and support individuals received waned. It was
dependent on geography, where someone lived, and on how many
in-person interventions they had. Through that time people’s
baselines lowered as their function decreased, but it did not
need to decrease. That is why it is so important to look at the
issue today.
I echo the remarks of the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
on prevention. Of course, prevention is always better than cure,
and having a strong public health strategy is crucial. In the
acute and early intervention phases, many people missed out
during the pandemic. We think about delays in diagnosis, the
scale of treatment that people had because clinicians were placed
elsewhere, and the value of input. We have talked about strokes
today, and people having fewer rehabilitation sessions and less
intervention from some of the leading clinicians, which meant
they did not leave hospital at the same level that perhaps they
did pre-pandemic. We need to pick that up now.
Early discharge has put more pressure on achieving a good
baseline for somebody to move into the more chronic phase, the
longer phase, of their rehabilitation. We know that once somebody
goes home they do not have the physio nagging them every day and
telling them to do certain things, so their function deteriorates
unless there is good community intervention, which is what I want
to focus my remarks on today.
We are talking about a broad range of
conditions—neurodegenerative and other neurological conditions.
The hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst set out some of
those, but we can think about motor neurone disease, where time
is simply not on your side, or Parkinson’s, where intervention is
really important to ensure people maintain function.
We have learnt a lot about respiratory conditions over the last
two years with covid, and suddenly lungs have come into central
view. Cystic fibrosis has been mentioned. Chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease is a condition that really does need good
management in the community. There are cardiovascular,
psychological and other conditions. We must remember that
comorbidity is an issue that impacts on and intersects with many
conditions. Somebody who has a combination of COPD and
Alzheimer’s will often not remember or be able to steer the
management of their condition. As a result, they are perhaps more
susceptible to getting an infection and then finding it difficult
to clear their lungs or to follow whatever treatment is
prescribed, so they are more at risk and early morbidity is a
serious risk factor. Therefore, we need to consider these issues
in that context.
As I said, intervention at the acute phase of a disease can be
intense, but it is about what happens next. We know that often
there are not enough rehabilitation beds available to continue
someone’s treatment. I have always argued that the convalescent
stage is also really important for people to build their
confidence, which is often what is needed after the acute stage.
That is where the biggest challenge lies.
As the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst outlined, some
services have been able to be delivered through new mechanisms,
such as Zoom, that simply were not there before. However, as a
physiotherapist myself who spent 20 years working in this area, I
must say that I would find stroke rehabilitation very difficult
on Zoom, and anything involving respiratory medicine as well,
because it is all about diagnosing and treating people through
the physiotherapist’s hands. Body-to-body contact is absolutely
crucial in the development of interventions. Clearly, the lack of
it has impeded people’s rehabilitation and had an impact on it.
It is not just physiotherapy or occupational therapy that are
affected; other services, from dietetics right through to
psychological therapies, are also affected. For somebody who is
already impaired, face-to-face contact is vital, particularly if
they are neurologically impaired and have just had a new
diagnosis. Therefore, the risks of a patient regressing and not
reaching their baseline, and then regressing further from that,
are even greater.
The NHS is in some ways now coming under greater pressure than it
did during the covid period. My concern is that the focus,
politically and clinically, will be on the elective list and
those numbers—we will drive up those numbers for sure and the
Government will look at them—and will move on to dealing with
acute care as it appears and to dealing with the elective
backlog. GPs will of course make the same call, saying, “Look at
our waiting lists, look at what is happening here.” Consequently,
people with long-term conditions will be squeezed out of the
system. That is why I am really grateful to the hon. Member for
securing this debate. People absolutely need intervention.
Without it, their progress and even their functions will
decrease, and that will put even more pressure on both social
care and the health system. The debate today is therefore really
timely, allowing us to consider the new pathways that need to be
created in order to support people with long-term conditions.
They have been the poor relation for some time and we cannot let
that situation continue.
In the last decade or so, Labour in particular has been looking
at pathways that could be developed, such as the expert patient,
which enabled people to have control and management of their own
disease. Enabling the patient to lead wherever possible is really
important. New technology has come on board. Under this
Government there has been a particular focus on how new
technology can help to provide support, measure things and move
medicine forward. All those interventions are absolutely welcome,
but they should not detract from the importance of the physical
interventions that are necessary. We must ensure we maintain that
baseline, so that if somebody does regress, we can give them an
injection of rehabilitation to get them back up again to their
normal functioning. It is really important to do that in a timely
way.
I very much look at this issue from a physical perspective
because of my professional background, but I recognise that
people with other clinical expertise and competencies will look
at their particular field and the need that particular types of
intervention. As the hon. Member said, it is right that people
have the correct balance between physical and psychological
health, and they have to be brought into one space. Sadly, if
someone has a physical diagnosis, the psychological aspect is
often left behind, because doctors are looking at the primary
root of someone’s condition. We must look at people far more
holistically than we do currently.
I therefore want to set out a four-stage rehabilitation service
to support the physical and psychological needs of people living
with chronic ill health. Taking that approach forward will need
funding and a workforce plan, which the Chair of the Health and
Social Care Committee, the right hon. Member for South West
Surrey (), has been incredibly powerful
in calling for. I see a concept in which the first phase looks at
assessment and measurement, the second at self-management, the
third at therapeutic interventions, and the fourth at the
psychosocial support, which is also needed.
First, interventions clearly need to be individualised. Everybody
is unique in their presentation. We need to recognise that there
is an opportunity to develop the service not only in domiciliary
settings, but in rehab settings and, for some, in group settings.
We have lost some of the collective healthcare that is important
for not only the socialisation of health, but the encouragement
from one patient to another. We have to capture that again.
Often, a patient will be encouraged by seeing somebody else doing
what they want to do and that will spur them on to go that little
bit further.
Secondly, we have to look at patient management and how people
enter services. It should be a given that patients will continue
with their interventions once they leave formal healthcare
settings. We need to make sure there is a continuum of regular
assessment and monitoring. For some individuals, some of that
assessment and monitoring can be done at home, but some of it
will need external intervention.
Thirdly, regular support may not always require an intensive
burst of intervention—sometimes it will—but if it can enhance
function, it does need to be examined. I looked at some
statistics provided by the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy.
Only 15% of people with lung disease deemed eligible for
pulmonary rehab are able to access it, which is quite shocking
and we really need to address that. Some 50% of people eligible
for cardiac rehab cannot access it. From running cardiac rehab
classes, I know how people gain confidence from rehab to do
things they never thought they would be able to do. They no
longer live in fear, but live a confident life.
One in five people receive post-hip fracture rehab on discharge.
I know of many cases where all the money is spent on repairing
somebody’s hip or getting them a new hip, then getting them up,
standing and walking in hospital, only for them to go home and
just sit in a chair. Those patients then become fearful, which
means social care has to come in, costing the NHS and the care
system. It also means that somebody loses their independence,
which is the biggest cost of all. This issue needs to be
addressed.
Some 44% of people with a neurological condition do not access
the services they need. We have a big amount of catching up to
do. The biggest thing is that if somebody loses their confidence
there is a rapid decline. We must remember that many of these
people are elderly and live on their own. They do not have the
interventions and the injection of hope that they need. We are
talking about life-changing events—people’s whole world is
reoriented. We need to make sure that patients maintain social
connection, where possible, and are able to access that
support.
Waiting lists for elective treatment have become so long. I
cannot remember if we are at 6.2 million people or more, but with
those kinds of figures many people will need additional
support—for example with their diet, or they may be less
mobile—so as not to trigger other thresholds that further delay
their surgery. It is important that people do not become
sedentary and that they have the support they need. If people
have a lung disease, it is important that they do not increase
the damage to their lungs, lose function or become
psychologically impaired, because it is then harder to regain
function. We do not want to see people spiralling, which can
happen very quickly. Once people get into that place—which is not
a great place to be—it is much harder to get people back, so let
us really focus on that area.
Fourthly, I want to talk about people living with chronic
conditions. Often, people get locked into a space where their
life has changed so much that they become more isolated. They
lose those social connections, and they also lose their ability
to move forward. That might be because, for instance, they have
lost their speech, or they might not have the same ability to
communicate with people in all sorts of ways. We need to look at
how we bring social prescribing into this agenda, as well as the
voluntary sector and community support, which is necessary. I
want the Minister to look at different pathways to bring that
whole family of measures together. Often, we have isolated that
into the various parts of someone’s body or mind, as opposed to
looking at the person holistically.
Of course, if someone is more isolated, they may experience more
loneliness and that impacts on anxiety, depression, motivation
and function. People’s skills and confidence then decline even
further. We need to ensure the programme has the resources it
needs. People are whole beings, and we need to recognise that in
our health systems. For too long, we have talked about arms and
legs or lungs and brains, but we do not talk about people, and it
is people who need that support. If we can look at such a model,
we need to think carefully about how we socialise our health
system.
I have been looking, in a completely different context, at
fostering. There is a programme called the Mockingbird programme.
I do not know if the Minister has heard of it, but groups and
different people come and support the family. It may be an
individual, a partner and their carer, or a family unit. They get
that more community- based support. In the context of fostering,
it is different families, so there is that concept of a community
raising a child. Why do we not look at that for later in life for
people with chronic conditions and for how we can provide
support? Carers are often with their partners for weeks at a time
with hardly any social interaction, and that can be quite telling
if someone has an acute psychological condition as well.
Much more can be done for carers, as well as patients, as we move
forward. We need a strategy, a workforce plan and funding. In
this new world of integrated care partnerships, we have an
opportunity to deliver that. July is day one. That is the moment
to break out of the past which has let down people with long-term
health conditions and move into a new era. I very much hope the
Minister will be able to bring that forward.
(in the Chair)
I aim to start the Front- Bench speeches no later than 2.28
pm.
2.08pm
(Carshalton and Wallington)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to serve with you in the Chair, Mrs Cummins. I
congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and
Chislehurst ( ) on securing the debate and
thank the Backbench Business Committee for granting it. I join
colleagues in thanking a coalition of charities and organisations
that have come forward to support us with research and briefings
in advance of the debate, particularly the “Moving forward
stronger” policy paper.
Prior to being elected in 2019, I also had a background working
in the national health service. Never in my wildest nightmares
could I have imagined so early on in the job, after leaving the
NHS, that we would be dealing with a global health pandemic on
the scale of covid-19. It has permanently changed the way we look
at and plan health and care services in the UK. In the London
Borough of Sutton, where my constituency of Carshalton and
Wallington is situated, 600 lives were tragically cut short due
to covid-19. I am sure that that number would have been higher
had it not been for the dedication, bravery and care of our local
health and social care services.
I know that hon. Members across the House have the deepest
gratitude and thanks for the unsung heroes. They were not just
our doctors and nurses, but associated health professionals,
pharmacists, volunteers and all those who stepped up to do their
part. Part of the reason why I launched the Carshalton and
Wallington unsung heroes scheme was to recognise their
dedication. Unsurprisingly, our local health and care volunteers
and staff featured heavily among the hundreds of nominations that
I received. I cannot possibly name them all, but I would like to
thank the St Helier Hospital eye treatment team; Reena, Sanja,
Ravi and other local pharmacists; the head of occupational health
at Epsom and St Helier University Hospitals NHS Trust; and of
course the staff at vaccination centres across Carshalton and
Wallington.
At the time of the outbreak of the pandemic, there was very
little public discourse—understandably, as we were grappling with
something that was unprecedented—about the long-term indirect
impacts of the pandemic on our health and social care system. I
know that I am not alone in receiving thousands and thousands of
cases from constituents during the opening weeks of the pandemic
and at its peak, when there were way too many incidences of
people with long-term and pre-existing conditions experiencing
disruption to their care. Many of them experienced much faster
deterioration than would be usual or expected, and I hasten to
add that it was through no fault of health and social care staff;
it was simply because of the situation that we faced.
Some of the constituency cases that I heard of involved people
with long-term cardiovascular problems who were unable to get
treatment, spinal cord patients who were not able to be housed
appropriately, and people with dementia and Alzheimer’s who were
cut off from the social interactions that were crucial to keeping
their cognitive and communication skills alive. As an officer of
the all-party parliamentary group on dementia and someone who has
had personal experience of dementia in my family, I would like to
focus on this area.
In the London Borough of Sutton there are over 2,400 people
living with dementia. Based on recent trends, it is estimated
that well over 3,000 residents over the age of 65 will be living
with dementia by 2030—an increase of approximately 25% in a very
short space of time. There are almost 1 million cases of dementia
nationwide. People with dementia were badly hit by the pandemic,
as indeed were many people with long-term conditions. Dementia
was the most common pre-existing condition for people who died
from covid-19: people with dementia accounted for more than a
quarter of all covid-19 deaths in England and Wales during the
first wave of the pandemic.
However, the effect of the pandemic on people living with
dementia goes far beyond the statistics. Tragically, they have
also seen accelerated progression of their conditions, for a
number of reasons. We know that social contact is very important
for people living with dementia, but it was of course
restricted—again, for a very understandable reason. That has
exacerbated the issues for people living with dementia. For
people living in care homes, where more than 70% of residents
have a form of dementia, the restrictions were particularly
serious, given that the Office for National Statistics estimates
that 97% of care homes were closed to visitors at one point.
People with many long-term conditions, including dementia, rely
on rehabilitation services to maintain their skills and
abilities. When provided with the right support, rehabilitation
services can help people living with dementia to maintain their
cognitive, social and emotional skills, as well as meeting their
physical needs and any other related conditions. As mentioned by
my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst and the
hon. Member for York Central (), those services were not
able to meet everyone’s needs at the height of the pandemic. That
was particularly true for people living with dementia, whose
condition often makes it difficult for them to engage digitally,
even if the service could be provided that way, which means that
many people living with dementia have not been able to preserve
their skills in the way that they could have done. That is
exactly what happened to my constituent’s mother who is living
with dementia and saw a dramatic deterioration during the first
wave of the pandemic, suffering severe memory loss by the time
she could meet her family again.
For those living with dementia, interaction with family is not
just a nicety. It actually forms an integral and formal part of
their care and treatment plan, as there is a causal link between
lack of social interaction and the worsening of the condition. As
we now emerge from restrictions and come out the other end of the
pandemic, the long-term impact on the NHS, the care sector and
people living with dementia will continue. I welcome the
determination shown by the Department of Health and Social Care
in dealing with the elective backlog. It is a mammoth task.
I also want to congratulate my own local NHS trust—Epsom and St
Helier University Hospitals NHS Trust— for the work it has done.
Previously, I welcomed the announcement of £500 million both to
upgrade Epsom and St Helier hospitals and build another hospital
in the London Borough of Sutton. I particularly want to applaud
the trust’s ingenuity. As soon as it realised the scale of the
pandemic, it had the foresight to amend its plans for the
development of the new hospital to ensure that it can
future-proof itself against future pandemics.
I believe we need to see determination from the Department to
deal with the backlog of deterioration that we have seen among
those with long-term conditions. I join colleagues and the
coalition of charities and organisations in support of that
national rehabilitation strategy for everyone who has seen their
long-term condition progress throughout the pandemic. If planned
properly, the rehabilitation strategy is an opportunity to reduce
pressure on other services in our health and social care
system.
Colleagues will have heard plenty of examples of people in their
constituencies ending up in hospital needing round-the-clock care
for entirely avoidable reasons, such as a fall. If we help people
maintain the skills they have, they will be less likely to
require support from acute care. The Alzheimer’s Society
estimates that up to 65% of emergency admissions for people
living with dementia could be avoided. Both rehabilitative and
memory services are under significant pressure, and the waiting
lists are still getting longer. That means that we need
strategies to deal with the backlogs. With the right planning, we
can not only overcome these issues but deliver better, more
personalised support, because people living with dementia deserve
nothing less.
2.17pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs Cummins,
and I seem to be doing so regularly. I am pleased to participate
in this debate. I want to thank the hon. Member for Bromley and
Chislehurst ( ) for bringing it forward and
for setting the scene with the detail and information to help us
participate. I am pleased to see the shadow spokesperson, the
hon. Member for Denton and Reddish (), and the Minister in their
place.
We often parley in this Chamber. Indeed, the Minister, the two
shadow spokespersons, myself and others here, including the hon.
Member for York Central (), are always willing to
come to these debates. I am my party’s spokesperson for health,
so I am always pleased to speak in health debates. People may say
that I speak in every other debate, but that is by the way. If I
am spared another hour, I will speak in the next debate as well.
Members of Parliament in a small party find that they have more
portfolios than most. I have got a lot of issues, and that is why
my participation in debates is so frequent.
During the pandemic I repeatedly spoke about the impact on
schoolchildren and those who were ill. My fears have
unfortunately been realised. We have children with issues
catching up on basic education. We have a raft of people who are
undiagnosed or misdiagnosed, and treatable conditions have
escalated. As the hon. Member for Carshalton and Wallington
() has done, I want to thank
all health workers—doctors, GPs, pharmacists, nurses, care
workers. I also want to thank family members, who gave up a lot
of time to look after family members who were unwell. Pharmacists
have also been mentioned, and it is important to place on the
record our thanks to them. It is because of their industrious
efforts that we have all been able to get to the other side of
this pandemic.
I would also like to thank the Minister and the Government for
what they have done. Covid and the vaccine roll-out enabled us to
move toward what I always hoped we would see, and which the Prime
Minister has been keen on—a normal life, where we do not react to
covid but learn to live with it. That is where I want to be, and
I believe it is where the people want to be as well.
There are those who suffer from long-term deteriorating health
conditions who have not received the necessary treatment and
care. In some areas, people will have had a poorer quality of
life because of covid.
I am always reminded of one gentleman in particular, who is a
minister of the church in Newtownards—we call him Pastor Mark. He
took covid early on and is very fortunate to be in this world. He
was ill for a long period of time. He is a young man with a wife
and a young family. He suffers from long covid, the deteriorating
effects of which are very clear to him. Today he does not have
the stamina and energy that he once had. He tires easily. He
refers to brain fog. I am not sure what that means, but I
understand when he tells me. These are some of the repercussions
of the pandemic. The sad fact is that covid has robbed us of so
many, and we must rebuild where we can.
Some of those with severe health problems were in a queue to
receive treatment. For some, delays were part of the reason for
the numbers of those who passed away. I recall with sadness
people I knew who were on a list to get an operation or a
treatment. They were put to the back of the queue because of
covid, and they are no longer here today. That operation is lost
and the opportunity for treatment was not given. I cannot say
that it would have prolonged those lives, but it would have given
a better quality of life and would maybe have added a few years.
We must think of all those people who were not able to get the
help they needed.
The hon. Member for Carshalton and Wallington spoke about
dementia. We had a debate on dementia in Westminster Hall some
time ago. He is right. Probably because of my length of time as
an elected representative, I know lots and lots of folk who, over
the last period of time, have developed dementia and Alzheimer’s.
I see the detrimental effect on their wellbeing and on their
families—how dementia and Alzheimer’s robs people of their
quality of life and their knowledge of their family members.
A wee lady passed away just this week. Her daughter phoned me on
Sunday and let me know. I have known her all my life—she was 94
or 95 when she passed away. She took dementia and she came home.
Some things people do remember. One thing her daughter told me on
Sunday was, “Jim, she bought the Chronicle every week”—that is
our local paper—“and when she saw your picture, she knew it was
you, though she might not have known that I was her daughter.”
Some things rob people of the very core of their life, and that
concerns me.
More than 150,000 had their lives cut short by the virus. As the
Alzheimer’s Society, Macmillan, Stroke Association, Age UK and
many others have highlighted, across the UK, many people with
pre-existing long-term health conditions have deteriorated faster
than usual since the pandemic began. The increased rate of
deterioration is due to the effects of having covid-19, as well
as the measures taken to contain the virus, such as lockdown to
reduce social contact and the suspension of rehabilitative
services.
During the first wave of the pandemic, maybe professionals who
provide rehabilitation were deployed to acute services for
covid-19 patients. We understand the logic behind that, but there
is an impact and there are side effects, which we are pointing
to. Community rehabilitative services moved to primarily offer
virtual support. As a result, rehabilitation services were unable
to provide the same level of support that they did pre-covid.
Community services are vital in helping to support people with
long-term conditions. The mental wellbeing of those undergoing
treatment for cancer, MS and heart conditions, and of disabled
people, was greatly impacted, which gives us some cause for
anxiety and concern.
The question for the Minister today, and for my Government, is
where to go next. I support the aims of the organisations that
produced “Moving forward stronger” and its specific
recommendations, three of which I will cover in the timescale
that you have indicated, Mrs Cummins. First,
“fully fund a national two-year rehabilitation strategy that
ensures people with significantly deteriorated long-term
conditions get the therapeutic support they need”.
That is really important. The second is to
“appoint a national clinical lead to implement this
rehabilitation strategy”
and thirdly, to
“ensure local partners—such as local authorities and Integrated
Care Systems…develop and deliver their own localised
rehabilitation strategy, and that each ICS has a regional
rehabilitation lead.”
When the Minister responds, I have every confidence that she will
be able to reassure us that the things we are asking for
today—collectively, but from different parts of this great United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland—will be
addressed.
I know that the Minister has regular contact with the Minister
back home—Robin Swann of the Northern Ireland Assembly. I think
that is important. I am a great believer in the Union, not
because I come from Northern Ireland and am a Unionist, but
because I believe in the Union for England, for Wales, and—with
great respect—for Scotland, with equal passion and concern. I
would therefore ask the Minister what talks she has had with the
Minister back at the Assembly.
I will give a quick plug for those who are waiting for cataract
operations, and those who had glaucoma. Do you know what really
annoys me, Mrs Cummins? It annoys me that some people have lost
their eyesight because they have not had the care within the time
when they should have had it. Maybe the Minister can give some
reassurance on that.
I finish with this: these are things that I absolutely stand
behind. I ask the Minister, to address the possible reasons why
Government will not stand behind and implement the “Moving
forward stronger” recommendations —although I hope that she will
reassure me otherwise. We have people with a quality of life that
can be improved with the right strategy, and the document lays a
foundation to build on as we seek to repair that which has been
decimated—through no fault of Government; it was covid-19 that
did it. We are taking the approach that we must live with covid;
those people have lived with the side effects it has had on their
illnesses, and that cannot be allowed to continue. With that in
mind, I very much look forward to the Minister’s response.
2.27pm
(Coatbridge, Chryston and
Bellshill) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mrs Cummins. I, too, am
grateful to the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst ( ) for leading this important
debate for us today.
I will start with a quote from a doctor in my constituency of
Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill, who was working throughout
the pandemic in University Hospital Monklands’ accident and
emergency department. He told me:
“People are presenting with conditions that are unfortunately too
severe for us to treat. Covid has caused appointments to be
missed and regular health checks to be postponed. The simple loss
in social contact with healthcare professionals has created a
lasting impact that we are only just beginning to realise.”
Sadly, due to the pressures on our hard-working healthcare
professionals and the measures required to prioritise resources
towards those contracting covid-19, many of our regular NHS
services have been paused or delayed. That disruption and
continued backlog will indeed take time to be addressed fully—we
know that—but our foremost thoughts must be on how we support our
constituents whose long-term conditions continue to
deteriorate.
Undoubtedly, the reality is that the greatest support package
that any Government can give the sector is direct investment. I
am proud to say that, once again, Scotland is showing the way,
with the Scottish Government in Holyrood making the Scottish NHS
the best-funded health service in the United Kingdom.
In February 2021, the former Health Secretary in Scotland, , announced a new community
living change fund of £20 million to deliver and redesign a
service for people living with long-term illness and complex
needs, including intellectual disabilities and autism, and those
enduring mental health problems. We know that there are many
conditions that we could highlight, as the hon. Member for
Bromley and Chislehurst ( ) did in his opening remarks,
and that there will be a legacy of mental health implications for
us all to tackle in the wake of the pandemic.
That £20 million funding is the beginning of the Scottish
Government’s implementation of the Feeley review—the independent
review into social care in Scotland, which delivered many
recommendations for the reform of social care in Scotland. The
Scottish Government understands that we need not only to make up
for what has been lost over the pandemic but to make healthcare
provision even better than it ever has been before. We must
ensure that nobody who is ill or suffering feels it best that
they do not ever go to a hospital; we can never have a repeat of
that.
The new Scottish Budget 2022-23 delivers record funding of £18
billion for the health and social care portfolio, which will be
used to support the remobilisation of services, as well as
delivery on the priorities relating to prevention and early
intervention. This is a 20% increase in NHS frontline spending,
which equates to £183 per person in Scotland and is 12% higher
than the £163 of investment per person planned for England in the
coming year. On top of that, the Scottish Government will of
course abolish all dentistry charges, eye examination costs and
non-residential social care charges for those in need of our
support.
My question to the Minister is this: these are simple changes
being made through targeted investment decisions, so where is the
difficulty in applying such a scheme in England and Wales? The
only answer that I can determine is that there is no such
difficulty, and that there is simply a complete lack in
prioritisation of the NHS and a lack of political will to
safeguard the most precious resource that these four nations have
to offer.
I had the privilege recently of witnessing another of the
Scottish Government’s new schemes and strategies to achieve early
diagnosis when I visited Mackie Pharmacy in my constituency. They
are one of many pharmacies across Scotland that are taking part
in a campaign to promote local pharmacies as the heart of
first-contact healthcare services and provision. The development
of this “pharmacy first” scheme will relieve the pressures on GP
practices and on our accident and emergency departments, by
allowing for the diagnosis and treatment of common ailments on a
more localised basis.
In addition, the constant contact that our pharmacies have with
our communities allows them to identify issues even before people
themselves are aware of them. During my visit to Mackie Pharmacy,
one assistant told me how she noticed that an elderly lady who
regularly comes into the store was not her usual self. After a
few exploratory questions about how the woman was feeling and
then noticing some changes in her over the course of a few days,
the pharmacist recommended an admission to hospital and it was
found that she had a serious heart condition. That visit to the
pharmacy that day saved that lady’s life. That is how prevention
post-pandemic can and should happen. Schemes such as “pharmacy
first” will play a vital role in helping us to better support
those with long-term conditions.
The Scottish Government are caring for our elderly population in
other ways as well, by delivering a new deal for our care sector.
The independent Feeley review into social care in Scotland
delivered many recommendations for reform. The review estimated
that implementing its recommendations, including a national care
service, would cost £660 million. The Scottish Government are
going further, increasing social care investment by over 25%
during this Parliament, which is equivalent to over £840
million.
Among the recommendations of the Feeley review are the creation
of a national care service and the scrapping of non-residential
social care charges, and we are going to deliver those things.
While the UK Government delay, the SNP are taking action right
now in Scotland to deliver a modern social care service that is
fit for the 21st century. Why not match our ambition or our
approach?
I believe that the crux of the matter is that the Government here
in Westminster cannot be trusted with the protection of the NHS.
How do we protect those who are deteriorating with long-term
health conditions after the severest pandemic that this country
has witnessed in recent history, when the Tories are geared
towards creeping privatisation in England while forcing
hard-working families to pay more in national insurance and
income tax to access what healthcare remains public?
It must also be noted that even when England’s healthcare
provision is so reliant on immigrant workers, the Tories create a
“hostile environment” in attempting to drive away the workers
they rely on so much. Some workers in England have even left the
NHS to work for multinational companies such as Amazon that pay
their staff better than the NHS does and have better conditions.
These facts speak for themselves.
While Scotland pushes forward with new ideas to deliver a health
and social care service fit for the 21st century, the UK
Government continue merely to paper over the cracks of their own
mismanagement and continue to pursue policies in other areas that
actively harm healthcare provision in these countries.
The pandemic is an opportunity for Governments all over the world
to look again at the way that things have always been done. I
sincerely hope that this UK Government will regard the pandemic
as an opportunity finally to look after our NHS and all those in
desperate need of its support.
2.34pm
(Denton and Reddish)
(Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs
Cummins.
I, too, congratulate the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
( ), both on securing this debate
through the Backbench Business Committee and on the powerful and
detailed way he opened the debate today. I particularly thank him
for sharing his and his wife’s experiences of rehabilitation and
recovery from a stroke.
The last two years have placed extraordinary pressures on our
healthcare systems, social lives and livelihoods. To protect the
NHS, we were forced to make unprecedented decisions and put in
place measures to stem the tide of covid-19 infections. We are
now in a far better position, and the vaccine roll-out has
allowed us to reclaim the freedoms and liberties that we were
forced to forgo. However, in the wake of the pandemic, we now
face a new challenge—one that will impact the public health of
the country for generations to come.
As Members from both sides of the Chamber have passionately
conveyed, we face a crisis with long-term healthcare and
deteriorating conditions. As health leaders have noted, during
the pandemic many professionals who provide rehabilitation
services were deployed to other acute services for covid-19
patients. That resulted in reduced support for those with
long-term pre-existing health conditions, and worse prognoses as
a result. Examples of long-term conditions that have been
particularly hard hit are included in the excellent “Moving
forward stronger” report, which has been referenced by several
Members.
The report, co-authored by charities and organisations including
the Alzheimer’s Society, the Stroke Association, Macmillan Cancer
Support and Age UK, paints an incredibly stark picture of the
current situation in long-term care and rehabilitation. The
Alzheimer’s Society outlines an almost 6% fall in dementia
diagnosis rates. That puts individuals at risk of further
deterioration, as reduced diagnosis ultimately results in reduced
access to care. Diagnosis rates are also highlighted by Macmillan
Cancer Support, which notes in the report that, as a direct
result of the pandemic,
“there are more people being diagnosed at a later stage with more
complex rehabilitation needs.”
Diagnosis is just one part of the problem. Cancer waiting times
have been in freefall since 2010 and have now reached record
levels. When Labour left office, 80% of patients who received an
urgent GP referral for suspected cancer were seen for their first
treatment within 62 days, which is above the target. Under
successive Conservative Governments since 2010, that figure has
plummeted. The NHS performance standard of 85% has not been hit
since 2014. Right now, almost 30% of patients are having to wait
anxiously for longer than two months to be seen for suspected
cancer that may or may not be spreading.
That trend is also made clear by the Stroke Association, which
highlighted that in 2019-20 only 34% of stroke survivors received
guideline levels of physiotherapy and that only 19% received the
right amount of speech and language therapy. Is the Minister
aware of these statistics, and what is her Department planning to
do to address them? Make no mistake: ignoring rehabilitation and
long-term care has a massive impact on patients and the NHS more
broadly. If we do not provide people with the proper treatment as
soon as they need it, they will rely on the health system more
and more. Put simply, rehabilitation is preventative.
The “Moving forward stronger” report makes several clear
recommendations to the Government. I would be grateful if the
Minister gave an assessment of these in her response. In
particular, I would be interested—as I am sure other Members
would—to hear her thoughts on the recommendation to ensure that
each integrated care system has a regional rehabilitation lead
and that a national clinical lead is appointed to implement a
national rehabilitation strategy.
I think there is a consensus across the Chamber that we need to
get a grip on long-term health conditions and that these issues
have probably been neglected for far too long. They had not been
brought into such public view before covid-19 hit, but it is
important that we work across parties to ensure that they are
dealt with.
I want to touch on something that the hon. Member for Strangford
() mentioned: long covid, which is something that I
suffer with. Recent statistics show that there are now 1.5
million long covid sufferers in the UK, with over 685,000 people
living with symptoms for more than a year. I can tell the hon.
Gentleman that brain fog is not fun for a politician. Seeing the
words, but not being confident that you have grabbed them and put
them in the right order, is really quite debilitating and hits
your confidence hard. I have struggled with it, and I know many
other people struggling with brain fog and other symptoms. I say
to the Minister that the number of people with long covid is
growing. Unless we urgently tackle the condition, I fear that we
will face extraordinary pressures on our workforce and, indeed,
on the healthcare system. Will she reassure long covid sufferers
that her Department takes the condition seriously and will do
everything it can to provide the requisite support and research
to tackle it?
Finally, I want to focus on the mental health crisis, which is
one of the issues to come out of the pandemic. There is no doubt
that the lockdowns affected people’s mental health. In England,
an estimated 10 million people have additional mental health
support needs as a direct consequence of the pandemic. Two thirds
of them had pre-existing mental health conditions that have been
worsened by the pandemic, so perhaps the Minister could tell us
what action the Government are planning to take to help those
people.
Mental health care in this country needs a real injection of both
political vigour and resources. It needs urgent attention, and
those who access treatment at the moment experience, on average,
a three-and-a-half-year gap between the recognised onset of
illness and the start of treatment. In order to provide some
solutions, the next Labour Government will guarantee mental
health treatment within a month for all who need it, as well as
recruit 8,500 new staff so that 1 million extra people can access
treatment every year by the end of our first term in office. This
is an ambitious but wholly necessary plan, which will not only
revolutionise care, but meaningfully address the impact of the
pandemic on our nation’s mental health.
I thank again the hon. Member for Bromley and Chislehurst for the
way that he introduced the debate, and I thank other Members for
contributing to it. The one thing that comes out of this—it was a
compelling case put by Member after Member—is that we need a
proper strategy to reform long-term care in this country. We will
support the Government in doing that, but we need action now.
2.43pm
The Minister for Care and Mental Health ()
It is a real pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mrs
Cummins, and to follow the hon. Member for Denton and Reddish
(), who showed no symptoms of
brain fog in his eloquent speech. He has my personal assurance
that we will definitely focus on both research into long covid
and its treatment.
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
( ) for raising this very
important issue, and for his proud advocacy for patients with
many different long-term conditions who rely on NHS services,
particularly those who have had a stroke. I extend my best wishes
to my hon. Friend’s wife, Ann-Louise, who I am sure informed much
of his powerful speech. Many of the experiences we have heard
about will resonate with many of us. My father had a stroke a
couple of years ago, and rehabilitation has been vital to his
recovery, which is a long road that he is still on.
I was deeply moved to hear of the difficulties that the pandemic
has caused people with deteriorating long-term conditions, many
of which have been outlined. I want to reassure all hon. Members
that we remain committed to making sure that everyone has access
to the care and support that they need and deserve. We know we
have to catch up after the impact of the pandemic.
My hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst mentioned
spinal cord injury. I attended the all-party parliamentary group
on spinal cord injury yesterday to hear about the concerns and
the impact that the pandemic has had on people with the
condition, and what more we need to do to respond to it.
We know that covid has had a significant impact on the health and
care system, including on rehabilitation services. It has had a
real and profound impact on people with rehabilitation needs and
their treatment. I am very sorry for any undue suffering that
that has caused. We remain committed to making sure that everyone
has access to the care and support that they need and deserve.
Throughout the pandemic, we have worked to maintain access to
health services in what has been an extremely challenging
environment, but we recognise that getting that support at the
right time is vital for people’s health. That is why we protected
priority services across England during the pandemic, which
included rehabilitation and post-acute services, for people who
had survived a stroke, and their families and carers.
Continued service delivery was in part supported by innovative
methods of care—we have talked about a few of them—throughout the
pandemic. NHS England and Improvement supported people with
long-term conditions by providing safe and person-centred
assessments and diagnosis via remote methods, or in face-to-face
consultations when appropriate. Providers innovated and rolled
out remote consultations using video, telephone, email and text
message services, and health services implemented new models of
care with effective triage processes to make sure that patients
received the care appropriate to them and in outpatient settings
closer to home.
Clinical teams used and will continue to use virtual
rehabilitation services alongside face-to-face contact to ensure
that every patient gets the treatment and support that they need.
Almost half of stroke survivors have received virtual care since
the pandemic began, transforming their experience of the health
system. Over 80% reported positive or very positive experiences,
as my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst
outlined, but we know that remote consultations are not suitable
for everyone or for every situation, as eloquently outlined by
the hon. Member for York Central (), who has experience in
this matter. We will continue working to make sure services are
suitably tailored to meet patients’ often complex needs.
For example, NHSE&I has worked with memory assessment clinics
to capture best practice on remote consultation and virtual
diagnosis of dementia, which is vital, as mentioned by my hon.
Friend the Member for Carshalton and Wallington (), to promote its use. It
has published guidance to help enhance best practice in dementia
assessment and diagnosis, and to support a personalised approach
with choice over the delivery of remote consultation and
diagnosis.
There has been further guidance for a range of conditions to help
health systems adapt to the challenges of the pandemic, including
the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance on
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and the Association of
British Neurologists guidance to help healthcare professionals
prioritise neurological services.
People with different long-term conditions may also need
emotional and psychological support, as has been mentioned by
many hon. Members, and that is why NHS mental health services
stayed open throughout the pandemic, and why local areas
continued to offer talking therapies—remotely in many cases—with
a face-to-face option if appropriate. We are investing in a
mental health recovery action plan, which will help us to provide
more appointments, which, sadly, were missed during the pandemic.
That will help us catch up.
We are committed to ensuring that those who need it are given
outstanding and tailored care with choice, control and the
support that they need to enable them to live independent lives,
and we are committed to ensuring that people find adult social
care fair and accessible. A lot of reforms are coming forward in
this area. We recently introduced our strategy for the social
care workforce in our “People at the Heart of Care” White Paper,
which is supported by at least £500 million to develop and
support the workforce over the next three years.
As highlighted by the “Moving forward stronger” report,
rehabilitation services were particularly affected by the
pandemic. The health system has long recognised the importance of
rehabilitation. Many hon. Members mentioned how important that is
to lifelong conditions and how important it is to enable people
to avoid more acute illness later on, requiring more services
from the health service. Specific commitments are set out in the
long-term plan, which include the expansion of pulmonary
rehabilitation services over 10 years from 2019, new and
higher-intensity care models in respect of stroke rehabilitation,
and the scaling up of cardiac rehabilitation to prevent up to
23,000 premature deaths.
Following the publication of the national stroke service model in
May 2021, NHS England and NHS Improvement have committed to
creating integrated stroke delivery networks across England,
bringing together health and care services across the whole
stroke pathway, from prevention to rehabilitation. As my hon.
Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst mentioned, linking
those services is vital. More than 20 integrated stroke delivery
networks are now operational, bringing together health and care
services across the whole stroke pathway. Over £3.3 million has
been dedicated to the establishment and ongoing delivery of those
networks, which have already brought about some improvements to
the co-ordination and direction of how the stroke care pathways
across England are delivered.
The NHS is committed to delivering personalised, needs- based
stroke rehabilitation to every stroke survivor who needs it, and
we recognise the vital role of multidisciplinary teams,
comprising occupational therapists, speech and language
therapists and physiotherapists, in assessing, diagnosing and
treating issues concerning different daily activities, speech and
cognitive communication. Community rehabilitation services
continue to benefit from extra investment, with £4.5 billion of
investment in primary medical care and community health services
by 2023-24 and productivity reforms set out in the long-term
plan. The long-term plan committed to the rolling out by 2024 of
new two-hour urgent community response and two-day reablement
ambitions, which will improve the responsiveness of community
health services to people’s needs across the country. We
anticipate that the wider package of investment in community and
intermediate healthcare will eventually free more than 1 million
hospital beds, allowing health systems to better support those in
need.
Underlining our commitment to improving rehabilitation services,
the NHS has created the new role of national director for
hospital discharge and rehabilitation, which was rightly called
for. Jenny Keane, who was appointed to the post in December 2021
and started recently, will lead a team of 60 people responsible
for hospital discharge and rehabilitation. Her team within NHSE
is already taking forward important work in this area, including
a programme to identify the optimum bed-to-home model of care for
non-acute rehabilitation services. That will support the
implementation of the discharge-to-assess policy, and improve the
delivery of timely and high-quality care in home settings.
Ultimately, that will empower more people to recover and maintain
their independence following an unplanned event or a period of
acute care.
The programme will estimate the capacity for bedded non-acute
rehabilitation care that integrated care systems will require for
their populations. Systems will be supported to shift towards new
rehabilitation models through a range of guidance, frameworks and
tools. I anticipate that rehabilitation will also benefit from
the wider reforms set out in the Health and Care Bill,
reorienting systems towards co-operation and strengthening NHS
action to reduce health inequalities. Rehabilitation will also
benefit from the plans that we have set out in the integration
White Paper, under which patients will receive better, more
joined-up care.
Looking ahead, the NHS published its delivery plan for tackling
the covid-19 backlog of elective care last month. The plan sets
out a clear vision for how the NHS will recover and expand
elective services over the next three years, including how it
will support patients. We plan to spend more than £8 billion
between the next financial year and 2024-25. That is in addition
to the £2 billion elective recovery fund and £700 million
targeted investment fund already made available to systems this
year to help to drive up and protect elective activity. However,
my hon. Friend the Member for Bromley and Chislehurst is right
that we must ensure that the voice of rehabilitation services
does not get lost in that considerable investment.
That funding could deliver the equivalent of around 9 million
more checks, scans and procedures, and it will mean that the NHS
in England can aim to deliver around 30% more elective activity
by 2024-25 than it was delivering before the pandemic. A
significant part of that funding will be invested in staff, in
terms of both capacity and skills. The delivery plan also
contains some targets to ensure that by March 2025 people will
not wait longer than a year for elective care.
I am finding the Minister’s response very helpful and supportive
of what we are trying to do, but I asked a specific question in
relation to those who are waiting for eyesight-saving operations.
We need to ensure that they do not lose their eyesight because of
the delays. If the Minister is able to give me a response today,
that will be great, but if she cannot, I am happy for all of us
to receive a response by letter.
I thank the hon. Gentleman for his intervention and I am very
happy to respond by letter. However, I do know—I have had
conversations about it—that these prioritised electives will be
prioritised. Somebody whose sight can be saved through an
operation would, I imagine, be a key priority for our NHS
colleagues.
At the October 2021 spending review, the Government announced a
further £5.9 billion of capital funding to support elective
recovery, diagnostics and technology. That funding will drive
investment in technology to improve patient experiences of care
and help patients manage their experience.
The NHS has been working on rolling out 44 community diagnostic
centres, which will massively increase diagnostic activity. As we
take the road to recovery, we are also reforming and transforming
how care and health services are delivered for patients,
including through dedicated surgical hubs and more convenient and
efficient community diagnostic centres.
Finally, I want to thank hon. Members for the points that they
have made in the debate.
I am very grateful for the Minister’s detailed response and for
her commitment to trying to improve these matters. She referred
to a delivery plan for recovery of elective services, but is not
the logical thing to ensure that the voice of those with
long-term needs and of rehabilitation is not lost, and that we
also have a specific delivery plan for rehabilitation and for
catching up on the backlog? I did not hear mention of that. Are
we going to have that?
I mentioned the work that Jenny Keane will be doing following her
recent appointment. She will be responsible for work on
rehabilitation and discharges, as well as other areas covered by
NHS continuing healthcare and the better care fund. That work is
ongoing but does not include a specific commitment at this point
to a strategy, as outlined.
Can the Minister tell me why not?
I think it is only fair to say that, obviously, Jenny Keane has
just started her work in this area—it is very new—but I know that
she will be dedicated to ensuring that we make progress on the
plans that I have set out. I hope that they reassure hon. Members
that we will continue to support people who are living with
long-term conditions and, by learning the lessons from the
pandemic, ensure that they have access to the right services, at
the right time, to enable them to live the fullest and happiest
life they can. A lot of work is ongoing. We need to get behind
that work and, obviously, support the team who are looking to
deliver it. I thank everybody very much for their
contributions.
2.58pm
I am very grateful to all those who participated in this debate,
from both the Front and Back Benches, for the tone of the debate
and their contributions. I particularly appreciated hearing about
the personal experience of the shadow Minister, the hon. Member
for Denton and Reddish (). All of us bring our
experiences to bear on these matters, and that is hugely
important.
I welcome the Minister’s commitment—I do not doubt it—politically
and personally. I am glad that we have a director in place. May I
just gently say that perhaps the first task that the director
should be given is actually to produce a strategy? A number of
excellent initiatives have been referred to, but we need
something to pull them all together and join them up. The
Minister knows as well as I do that the way government works is
that if we do not have something that gives us a proper framework
and a proper set of measures to deliver on and something to hold
people’s feet to the fire with—even for those with the best of
intentions—things do get lost, so I urge her to take away that
message. With the director, one part of the solution has been put
in place, but we need a framework and a strategy for that
director to work to. I am sure that many of us here today will
happily work with the Minister, her officials and the NHS to help
to deliver that. But I hope that she will not think that that is
enough—there is still more to do.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered people with deteriorating
long-term health conditions during the covid-19 pandemic.
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