Education (Student Fees, Awards and Support)(Amendment) Regulations
2017 Motion to Regret 3.29 pm Moved by Lord Clark of
Windermere That this House regrets that the
Education (Student Fees, Awards and Support) (Amendment)
Regulations 2017, which pave the way for students of nursing,
midwifery and allied health professionals to receive loans...Request free trial
Education (Student Fees, Awards and Support)(Amendment)
Regulations 2017
Motion to Regret
3.29 pm
Moved by
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That this House regrets that the Education (Student Fees,
Awards and Support) (Amendment) Regulations 2017, which
pave the way for students of nursing, midwifery and allied
health professionals to receive loans rather than
bursaries, have already been seen to discourage degree
applications by a quarter, at the same time as Brexit has
already reduced European Union migrant nursing and
midwifery registrations by over 90 per cent; and that these
factors risk turning an increasing problem in the National
Health Service into a chronic one that potentially puts at
risk safe levels of staffing (SI 2017/114).
Relevant document: 26th Report from the Secondary
Legislation Scrutiny Committee
-
(Lab)
My Lords, it is particularly appropriate that the final
debate of the Parliament in this House is on a matter of
such concern to the British people: our National Health
Service. If there is one group of people who always top the
approval ratings among the British people, it is nurses. I
will not say where we politicians are.
It is widely accepted that the National Health Service
provides real value for money. In fact, we get health on
the cheap in this country. We spend less on health than any
other member bar one of the G7 nations, and I am not sure
that that can continue for much longer. I think we will
have to spend more on health, with our ageing population
and the growth of what is technologically possible.
In a sense, we have been helped in this debate by the
report of a Select Committee of this House on The Long-term
Sustainability of the NHS and Adult Social Care. It draws
to our attention how we have failed over the years to have
long-term planning for organising staff. We must remember
that approximately 150,000 people work for the health
service. It is a fascinating organisation. It is a
labour-intensive organisation—which applies in one way to
nursing—married to and working alongside cutting-edge
technology and science. It works, and we must continue to
ensure that it works. The key is the staff at every level.
Anyone who follows the press or talks to doctors, nurses or
the other health professionals knows that our National
Health Service is in deep trouble and is functioning safely
only due to the work level of the staff and their intense
dedication to the service in which they work. That cannot
continue indefinitely. Repeatedly, the royal colleges of
nursing, midwifery and all the other medical disciplines
tell us that we are getting towards breaking point. The
strain is intense; the morale is low.
Let us take just nursing. Currently, we are about 24,000
nurses short—I think there is no disagreement with that.
That affects not only our National Health Service but
another big issue at the moment, the after-care service. A
number of care providers, nursing providers and Care
England have contacted me to say that they have had to
close beds because they cannot get nurses to staff them. We
tend to neglect that, and I mention it only in passing
today because I want to concentrate on the health service.
I gather that the Government have had a report available to
them in March which is not yet public which suggested, on a
worst figure scenario—I emphasise that—that by the early
2020s we would be not 24,000 but 42,000 nurses short.
Morale is not helped by the fact that nurses were not well
paid to start with. They are highly qualified. All nurses
are now graduates. They have to do professional work.
Increasingly, they are doing work traditionally done by
doctors. They are able and skilled do it, and we benefit
greatly from that. The 1% annual pay increase which they
have had to accept since 2010 is having a massive effect on
morale, especially when people are having to work so hard.
We get by only because we import nurses from overseas. We
have traditionally done that—I am not just blaming the
Government in this case—but the problem is now acute. Of
those nurses from overseas, 20,000 originate from European
Union countries. Despite effort and pleading by me and
others, we cannot get the Government to commit to those
20,000 people who work so hard in our National Health
Service being allowed to stay in Britain. That will be easy
to do: we need only to tweak the residency rules. That
could be done without causing any problem, yet it would be
of great benefit in retaining those nurses. I believe that
we should offer them permanent residency in this country,
as they have dedicated so much effort to providing
healthcare for our population but, at the end of the day,
we must train more home-grown nurses. The supply is there,
because for every person who is accepted on to a nursing
course at university, twice as many people apply. There is
the quality and quantity of individuals who want to train
nurses. The reason why they are not is because the
Government have insisted on a cap on the numbers.
Universities are not allowed to accept more nurses than has
been agreed with the Government. By imposing this cap, we
are exacerbating the problem.
I challenge the Minister that we are only really talking
about saving money. That is what is dominating the
Government’s approach to the training of nurses.
To recap a little, the bursary system that has been
developed meant that nurses who went into training did not
pay fees. The quid pro quo was that most of them went on to
work in the care services or the National Health Service.
That system worked well and was fully subscribed. Under the
proposals we are debating today, those individuals will
have to pay £9,000 per year in fees for three years which,
with their living costs, will mean that nurses enter their
profession not well paid and with £50,000 minimum hanging
on their shoulders. I doubt that that is a sensible
approach.
We must accept that nursing students’ courses at
universities are very different from most courses. It is
not just lectures and library work. At least half the time
of nurses in training is spent on the job, on clinical
training. In most hospitals, most patients could not
determine who is a student nurse and who is a qualified
nurse, because student nurses are doing the work of trained
nurses, except in a few technical, specialist areas.
-
(Con)
I am most grateful to the noble Lord. On his point about
the number of nurses who previously got bursaries and about
financial controls on the bursaries, what proportion of
those applying were unable to get bursaries and, therefore,
unable to get training places?
-
As I understand the question, anyone accepted on to the
course got a bursary—so they all got the bursary. I am
pretty sure that I am right on that. But the point I was
making about the course being different was not only that
it is more intensive and about working on the job—the
course is also longer. The average course length at
universities for nursing, midwives and allied health
professionals is 39 weeks a year, much longer than the
average student course. So it is a different course; they
have no opportunity, or little opportunity, to do any
extra-curricular work, because of the nature of the job.
Yet while they are working on wards, they work as a team.
In essence, the Government are insisting—for, I think, the
first time in decades—that nurses pay for working in the
health service. They are paying £9,000 a year to work as
unpaid nurses. That is absolutely scandalous. Even before
the new system came in, going back 50 years, you were
accepted on a nursing course and went to the hospitals
where you were trained. There was a mixture of blocks in
the hospital and working on wards; that is how it
traditionally went, but the nurses did not have to pay to
perform those tasks. It is outrageous that this Government
are insisting that nurses should pay for their own
training.
The Government’s justification for this change is to
increase the number of nurses being trained, which we all
welcome—we all want the number of nurses to be increased.
It would help in so many ways. Virtually every hospital now
survives by using agency nurses, paying far more by the
hour than the NHS staff nurses get paid. We could save
billions of pounds if we had sufficient nurses to staff our
NHS and aftercare services. So what I am arguing for makes
financial sense. The Government say that they are prepared,
if nurses pay for their own education—and this is perhaps
the point that the noble Lord was making—to lift the cap,
so the universities could train as many students as they
want. I hope that works; I want the system the Government
are proposing to work. But then we come to the problem that
it is easy enough for the universities to expand their
lectures and provide library facilities; the difficulty
comes when the National Health Service has to provide
mentors, tutors and practical oversight of students when
they work on wards and in clinical situations. There is no
provision, as far as I can see, by the Government to
provide extra money to hospital trusts to perform that
critical part, which is at least half the cost of nurse
training.
I want the proposal to work but it is highly risky. We are
dependent on nurses from the European Union—and the latest
figures are that there was a 90% fall in the registration
of nurses from European Union countries since last
December, which is an ominous sign. Then we have the
figures from the Government, which show that the number of
applicants to health courses was down by 23%. I accept the
Government’s point that those were applicants, not people
who had actually been accepted on to a course. What worries
me is that, if it follows through, and if the Government do
not get students prepared to enrol at universities, we will
find that we make no inroads at all into the shortage of
24,000 nurses.
3.45 pm
I believe that the Government’s approach is a high-risk one; when
you have such a large shortage, there must be other ways to deal
with it. Why can we not for a number of years lift the cap on
universities and say, “Look, train as many as you possibly can.”?
If the Government are not prepared to drop the scheme, why do
they not say to nursing students who go on to spend a number of
years working in the NHS, low paid as it is, that they will write
off their tuition fees? That would be one way around it; it is
belt and braces, I accept, but I do not believe we can risk what
the Government are proposing. It is high-risk indeed, and that is
why it should be debated, as it is now. It is interesting and
important that we have a full debate on this issue.
-
(CB)
My Lords, I declare my interests as outlined in the
register and I believe that this afternoon I am the only
registered nurse in the House. Nursing is the largest
profession in the UK, with some 500,000 people on the
professional register. It is vital that the international
shortage of nurses and allied health professionals is
recognised and that more investment is given to meet the
demands for healthcare in the future. I agree with the
noble Lord, , about
the need to spend more on health and social care—but not
necessarily with his solutions.
There is a need for at least three pathways to becoming a
registered nurse. As a profession, we have supported the
introduction of an associate nurse route, which should
enable people to be paid while learning and working and to
proceed ultimately, if they wish, to train for the register
through a sophisticated apprenticeship-style route. We have
the pilots in progress at the moment. The second important
development in the NHS’s recent five-year plan is support
in principle for a graduate entry route similar to Teach
First, to be known as Nurse First. This is likely to be
piloted in mental health and learning disability branches
this autumn and would provide an alternative route into
nursing.
The third route, which the majority of students follow, is
a three-year university programme with clinical placements
within both the NHS and other health care providers. The
emphasis on hospital placements is not nearly as important
at the moment as the need to ensure that students have
experience in community settings and care homes—many of
which are in the independent sector—because that is where a
lot of people are cared for now, as well as at home. I
therefore do not believe that we should reinstate the
bursary, as we know that a lot of people applied to go to
university because the bursary was there and we had a very
high drop-out rate in year 1—I was a dean when that was
happening, so I speak from experience. There were also some
who completed the course but never had any intention of
going into clinical nursing. They wanted to go into HR or
to become an air stewardess—neither of which I think is a
bad thing—but used the bursary structure to get their
degree as an entry into those programmes rather than with
the intention to spend a lifetime caring.
It would be preferable to invest in the three methods of
education leading to registration and to seriously consider
giving a bursary for the third year of training when—I
agree with the noble Lord, Lord Clark—most students give a
huge amount to the NHS and are often pretty
indistinguishable in their final six months from a
registered nurse. I also fully support consideration of the
concept of forgivable student loans following a period of
employment in the NHS on qualifying, rather like those
granted to some nurses and medics sponsored by the forces
during their education provision.
The other thing I want to draw the House’s attention to is
that there are 500,000 nurses in the four countries that
make up the United Kingdom and that we have invested very
little in return-to-nursing programmes and in encouraging
them back to work. That action might be the fastest route
to getting more registered nurses back into practice.
Finally, I support the concept that the noble Lord has just
addressed. Public sector salaries have been significantly
tightened in the last few years and there is a definite
case that initial starting salaries in the NHS for nurses
and allied health professionals should be increased to
recognise that they will be expected to repay their student
loans from 2020. As a woman, I get very fed up with hearing
both in this House and the other House that very few nurses
will have to pay back much of their loan because they do
not earn very much. That is not the right approach.
I urge any future Government to invest further in health
and social care in order to recruit and retain healthcare
professionals. Currently, the ratio of women to men in
nursing is nine to one and has remained unchanged for many
years. We spend significant time and money on recruiting
female engineers; perhaps we should do similarly to
encourage more men into nursing and the allied health
professions—but I accept that this will be possible only if
there is fair remuneration for nurses’ work and funding for
continued professional development, as currently happens in
medicine. I believe that what I have outlined would be a
more strategic approach to the challenges that we face than
the straightforward reintroduction of bursaries in the
first two years of university programmes leading to
registration.
-
My Lords, I rise briefly as I realise that Members opposite
are anxious to get away to campaign for their leader in the
forthcoming general election. Thirty years ago, as a junior
Minister responsible for health in the Scottish Office, I
was asked to support something called Project 2000 and the
move that all nurses should be graduates. As a junior
Minister, I thought it was a rather silly idea. I could see
that there might be a case for having some health
professionals with degrees, but getting rid of the old
state registered nurse system seemed to me a huge mistake.
However, the chief nurse was a particularly formidable
person and my Secretary of State did not agree with me.
Over the last 30 years, some people have argued that we
needed people who would do not the less important—these are
some of the most important tasks—but the more menial tasks,
such as emptying bedpans, spending time with patients and
providing the general care that was so much a part of the
health service, and that you did not have to have a
university degree to achieve that. I very much hope that
the Government will think about that again. The noble
Baroness, Lady Watkins, has almost got there—I do not mean
that in a rude sense—in terms of offering a path forward
which might address this problem, but I do not believe that
everyone needs to be a graduate.
The reason that I interrupted the noble Lord to ask him how
many of the people who applied to become nurses ended up
doing a degree and becoming a nurse was because I knew the
answer to my own question, which is that it is a small
proportion. The noble Lord’s speech contained a number of
very important points with which I agreed. We will have to
train more nurses as a result of leaving the European
Union. That is clearly important. We will have to train
more nurses because of the demands upon the health service.
However, it seems to me that what the Government are
proposing in these regulations, which is to remove the cap
and to provide the funding through a loans scheme, will
provide for that and address the problem.
Whether the Government are prepared to consider the
admirable suggestion of the noble Baroness, Lady Watkins,
that there may be a case at a stage in a nurse’s career
when they have served the health service for a longer
period for forgiving the loans is another question. The
Economic Affairs Committee has looked at the
representations we have received on student loans and I
would not be surprised if that did not represent a better
deal for the taxpayer than continuing with the repayment
where people are not receiving substantial salaries. So,
while I think that the noble Lord has identified some real
issues, I very much hope that noble Lords will not vote for
this Motion, which would set us backwards and not provide
the opportunity for more nurses to be trained and brought
into our health service. I also hope that the Government
will consider whether it is absolutely necessary for people
to have university degrees in order to perform nursing
duties in our health service.
-
(Con)
My Lords, in the absence of a voice from the Opposition
Benches I will briefly intervene in the debate. I declare
an interest as a visiting professor at King’s College
London, which has a major role in medical education through
Guy’s and St Thomas’.
The noble Lord, Lord Clark, is of course right about the
importance of nurses and about the lack of a suitable
supply of nurses in the old regime. We heard a very
constructive intervention from the noble Baroness, Lady
Watkins. I say to the noble Lord, Lord Clark, that nurses
should not be worried about a model of fees and loans with
graduate repayment. We went through all these concerns when
we shifted mainstream higher education into fees and loans.
In the first year, there was a decline in applications—but
that stopped as soon as the students understood that they
were not paying up front, and that it was a repayment
scheme where they would pay back only if they started to
earn more than £21,000 a year, and through PAYE. In other
words, the so-called debt was nothing like a bank overdraft
or a credit card debt; it was repayment through the income
tax system if they were earning enough. That tackled their
concerns, and since then we have seen an increase in the
number of students applying to university.
My second point very much follows on from the excellent
intervention of my noble friend Lord Forsyth. The reason we
are short of nurses is that successive Governments have
rationed the number of nurses. They have done that because
nursing places have been financed out of public expenditure
and the way to control public spending was to control the
number of nurses. Back in 2004-05, we funded 25,000 nurse
places a year. That has been in steady decline under
successive Governments for a decade and is now down to
around 17,000.
If we look at the evidence of what has happened in the past
decade, there is no prospect under any Government of having
more nurse places under the old system. A crucial part of
these reforms is to remove the cap on places so that we
will have more nurse places under the new system. The new
system delivers more cash to cover nurses’ living costs
during their nursing education. It delivers more money per
nurse through the fees and loans system for universities
providing nurse education and it removes the cap, thus
providing the NHS with more trained nurses in total. That
is a constructive reform of the NHS. It is progress on
tackling the long-standing problems in nursing to which the
noble Lord, Lord Clark, drew attention—and it is why I fear
that this Motion is misconceived.
4.00 pm
-
(LD)
My Lords, this is a terrible time for the Government to
undertake a highly risky revision of the funding of student
nurses. We are already short of nurses, as the noble Lord,
Lord Clark, told us, and of course midwives, and the
imminent Brexit has already made that worse with, as we
have heard, a 90% drop in the number of applications from
EEA nurses. In addition, we are losing nurses due to
overwork and poor morale.
The Government’s so-called consultation focused only on
implementation rather than looking carefully at alternative
ways of funding nurse training to ensure both fairness and
a stable increased supply of nurses. The excellent speech
by the noble Baroness, Lady Watkins of Tavistock, clearly
demonstrates that there are many different ways of doing
that, and I am not convinced that the Government have taken
all those proposals into account. They ought to stop in
their tracks and look at all those alternatives before
going ahead with this regulation. We are still waiting for
information about how or whether the practice placements
will be funded, wherever that is—in the NHS or in the care
services. As we have heard, nurses have to do 2,300 hours
in a clinical placement. This requires considerable
resource input from the hospitals or care placements, and
most hospitals are already in deficit. Without proper
resources there is no way that the system can accommodate
10,000 extra student nurses, even if, as we all hope, the
Government are right and universities do offer that many
additional places.
I understand where the noble Lord, , is coming from.
Clearly, the tuition fees and loans system has not put off
students on most university courses. However, nurses are
different from other students, so it is not a given that
they would respond like students on other courses to the
need to take out loans and pay fees. They are more
predominantly from lower socioeconomic groups and have a
higher proportion of mature students with family
commitments. They spend nearly half their course time in
supernumerary placements in hospitals and have a higher
number of contact hours and weeks than other students. That
makes it more difficult for them to get a part-time job to
fund their living expenses, as other students can do.
Indeed, because they are not highly paid, it has been
calculated that the vast majority of them—I apologise to
the noble Baroness, Lady Watkins—will not have paid off
their student loans over 30 years, so they will be written
off. It makes me sad to have to say that but it is a fact.
Some even have other student loans from other courses that
they have previously undertaken. So this strategy of the
Government will not necessarily save much money in total
but will simply shift the debt off the books, which I
suppose was the objective of the exercise.
The Government have been very hasty. Instead of arbitrarily
removing the bursaries we need a thoroughgoing
investigation into the factors affecting nurse recruitment
and retention, because the latter is a very important
factor. It is no use filling up the bucket if there is a
great big hole in the bottom—and in this case there is.
Retention of student nurses to the end of their course is
poor, and retention of nurses and midwives beyond the first
two years after qualification is also poor. Therefore, not
for the first time I ask the Minister whether he will
ensure that attrition data is collected in a consistent way
so that we can identify those settings that are good at
keeping their students, nurses and midwives and those that
are not. We can then learn from the best practice and
spread it.
The impact of the Government’s plans on admissions, student
numbers and quality and on the stability of the qualified
workforce is yet unclear, and the Government have not said
how they intend to monitor the impact on the workforce.
Without a solid evidence base this policy should not go
ahead. I therefore support the regret Motion in the name of
the noble Lord, Lord Clark, and call on the Government to
think again.
-
(Lab)
My Lords, when, in February, I was granted a topical
Question on this subject—which, incidentally, I very much
appreciate my noble friend Lord Clark raising—the Minister,
the noble Lord, Lord O’Shaughnessy, chose to characterise
my opposition to the Government’s damaging proposal as a
sign that I did not support the policy of student loans. He
was being disingenuous because, when student loans were
first introduced by a Labour Government in 1988, those
studying for nursing, midwifery and allied health
professions were specifically excluded.
As tuition fees rose and student loans followed, successive
Governments—Labour, coalition and, until now,
Conservative—maintained that exclusion. We do not need to
ask why. My noble friend Lord Clark and other speakers in
this debate have made it quite clear that students building
a career in those professions are quite unlike the wider
student population. Perhaps the most revealing statistic on
that—I will not repeat the others—is that 41% in those
categories are over the age of 25, compared with 18% of the
total student population. That sets them apart. As the
noble Baroness, Lady Walmsley, has just said, they are
unable to support themselves as other students can do, and
often need to do, during their studies because of the hours
required of students in nursing, midwifery and allied
health professions.
However, none of that was taken into account by the
Government—a Government anxious to make only “savings”.
Worse, despite having those facts set out before them, they
have declined to alter the course on which they are so
dogmatically set. As my noble friend Lord Clark said, the
nursing workforce already has severe shortages—up to 25,000
and rising—and already we know that fewer nurses from the
EU are coming to work here and that by 2020 nearly half the
workforce will be eligible for retirement.
So what do the Government do? They end the established
practice of providing nursing students with bursaries and
tell them to take out loans that will leave them with debts
of at least £50,000 by the time they qualify. I heard what
the noble Lord, , said about
loans—it is an argument that he repeated during the passage
of the Higher Education and Research Bill. None the less,
it is a fact that for those seeking to study for nursing,
midwifery and allied health professions on the basis that
they would have a bursary, it is quite a shock to find that
that is not the case. Those going through school and going
to university for what one might term more mainstream
courses have known all along that that would be the
situation. This is a sudden shock brought about by the
Government, and it will have a detrimental effect on those
wanting to study.
We like to think that, whenever we need the NHS, it is
there for us and our families, but we are naturally anxious
when we or our loved ones need to spend time in hospital,
and we require an adequate number of nurses for that
treatment. The Government are failing the NHS. A further
example was provided just today when, in response to my
noble friend , counsel’s opinion was that
the Government are acting illegally by not compelling NHS
England to treat the required 92% of patients within 18
weeks. My noble friend has submitted a Motion—for
those noble Lords who are interested, it appears on page 4
of House of Lords Business—and I think that that highlights
the fact that the Government are cavalier in the way they
are allowing patients to be treated.
As we heard in February, the applications for nursing
courses starting in September last year were down by some
23%, and the latest data available for March show that that
decline is continuing. Although the ratio of applicants to
training places is still 2:1, the fall in the number of
applications could compromise the quality of candidates
applying, as well as geographical provision, which of
course is important in the long term. Moreover, it could
deter prospective students once they understand fully the
implications of the student loan system.
, the general
secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, said:
“The nursing workforce is in crisis and if fewer nurses
graduate in 2020 it will exacerbate what is already an
unsustainable situation. … The outlook is bleak”.
Those are her words. She is the general secretary of the
Royal College of Nursing—she should know. The National
Health Service Pay Review Body in its 29th report said
that,
“The removal of bursaries for student nurses could also
have a disruptive impact on supply or the quality of
supply”,
and that,
“the removal of the incentive of the bursary could have an
unsettling effect on the number and quality of applications
for nursing training places”.
They, too, should know. Why are the Government certain
that, as always, they have a monopoly on wisdom? Why do
they think they know better than the professionals in the
NHS?
We should also ask why the Government are doing it. They
have given two reasons. The first is the claim that it will
add an extra 10,000 nurses up to 2020. But as I have said,
far from encouraging additional training places by that
time, cutting NHS bursaries will discourage many from
becoming a nurse, midwife or allied health professional
because of the fear of debt. The House of Commons Public
Accounts Committee said in its report entitled Managing the
Supply of NHS Clinical Staff in England that,
“the changes could have a negative impact on both the
overall number of applicants and on certain groups, such as
mature students or those with children”.
If the student numbers are not there, higher education
institutions will be worse off because of the decline and
the need to finance access bursaries under the Office for
Fair Access guidance.
The Government’s proposal also stated that it will ensure
sustainable funding for universities, but as yet there has
been no indication of an increase in funding that the
Government provide for clinical placements. Yet a study by
London Economics, a leading policy and economics
consultancy used by the Department for Education, found
that higher education institutions would be worse off by
around £50 million per cohort. Approximately half of that
decline will be as a result of the decline in student
numbers to which I referred. As a result, there is a real
danger that some universities may decide to stop running
some health-related courses altogether if they are deemed
to be unsustainable. That is related to another government
objective—to widen access to nursing training. I want to
make clear that we are not opposed to that, but not at the
expense of the traditional route through university.
The Government have also said that scrapping NHS bursaries
will save the Treasury money. But there will in fact be no
cost savings to the Exchequer because most nurses will not
earn enough to repay the entire loan and the decline in
numbers entering nursing will increase agency nursing
staffing costs to cover shortfalls. London Economics also
estimated that, with those increased agency costs to cover
staffing shortfalls, there will be more than an additional
£100 million cost by trusts per cohort wiping out any
potential cost savings.
These proposals should not be proceeded with, at least
until the Government have published the results of the
second stage of their consultation on these measures—a
point made and expanded on by the noble Baroness, Lady
Walmsley. That consultation has been delayed and of course
we will not see it now until the other side of the
election, if we see it at all. That is entirely
unsatisfactory. It is confirmation of what is no more than
a leap into the dark. That is no way to treat the career
development of some of our most valuable public servants.
These changes are high risk at a time when the NHS is
ill-equipped to manage such risk. We support the Motion in
the name of my noble friend Lord Clark because it is a risk
that should not be taken.
I end by responding to the rather dismissive jibe by the
noble Lord, Lord Forsyth. Yes, we are keen to get on with
campaigning for the leader of the Opposition. That is what
we will do to encourage the people of the UK to an elect a
Government that will properly fund the NHS and properly
value its dedicated staff. Bring it on.
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The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of
Health (Lord O'Shaughnessy) (Con)
My Lords, I thank all noble Lords who have contributed to
this debate and congratulate the noble Lord, , on his
prescience in scheduling this debate several weeks ago. He
clearly has admirers in the Leader of the Opposition’s
office if they have taken his proposal and put it in their
manifesto. I leave it to others to judge whether having a
policy adopted by is a good thing or not.
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Noble Lords
Oh!
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While the noble Lord may have been prescient and
influential, I fear that on this issue he, the and the Liberal
Democrat party are wrong. They are wrong because the system
that we are introducing for student nurses matches that
experienced by other undergraduate students—a system that
has been the primary driver of the big expansion of higher
education and improved participation among disadvantaged
young people—and wrong because of the fears of the impact
of Brexit that he has evoked. I thought that the was in favour of
leaving the European Union, although having heard the
tortured exposition of Labour’s policy earlier this week
that is anyone’s guess. But I reassure the House that this
Government not only understand the difficult choices that
need to be made to ensure that our NHS has the resources
and personnel that it needs to thrive, but, if we are
fortunate enough to be re-elected, intend to make a success
of Brexit and, as immigration is reduced, to bring more of
our domestic workers into the NHS to meet the challenges
ahead.
I join other noble Lords in paying tribute to the amazing
work that more than 2.5 million people working NHS and care
systems do every day, often in challenging conditions. They
represent values to which we all aspire—service, hard work,
compassion—and are an inspiration to us all. There can be
no person in this country who does not have cause to give
them thanks for their expertise and commitment.
The Government are taking action on several fronts to
support that workforce so that it can deliver excellent
patient care through flexible working, good leadership,
expanded routes into practice and new career structures. As
part of these changes, from August 2017 new full-time
students studying pre-registration nursing, midwifery or
one of the allied health subjects will have access to the
standard student support system for tuition fee loans and
maintenance loans.
These reforms will enable more money to go into front-line
services—around £1 billion a year to be reinvested in the
NHS. Additionally, they will help to secure the future
supply of nurses and other health professionals in several
ways, such as by removing the cap, identified by my noble
friend as being a feature
of the current system, so that more applicants can gain a
place. Universities will be able to deliver up to 10,000
additional training places. The changes also enable a
typical provision of a 25% increase in living-cost support
for healthcare students and puts universities in a stronger
financial and competitive position so they can invest
sustainably for the long term. The noble Baroness, Lady
Watkins, in her excellent and of course expert and
well-informed speech, also pointed out that it removes a
perverse incentive of the current system where it is the
sole degree that is subsidised in that way. That brings
with it a number of benefits, including addressing the
issue identified by the noble Baroness, Lady Walmsley, of
the retention on courses of people who are fully committed
to taking part in a nursing career.
Successive Governments’ reforms to student finance have put
a system in place that is designed to make higher education
accessible to all, as my noble friend pointed out in his
excellent intervention. This has allowed more people than
ever to benefit from a university education and has spread
more fairly the burden of costs between society at large
via the taxpayer and the individuals who benefit
financially from the degree course. As a consequence,
disadvantaged people are now 43% more likely to go to
university than in 2009, and for the last application cycle
the entry rate for 18 year-olds from disadvantaged
backgrounds is at a record high: 19.5% in 2016, compared
with 13.6% in the last year of the Labour Government in
2009. That is what we mean by a country that works for
everyone. It is precisely because of these positive effects
that moves towards a loan-based system have been supported
by political parties across the House. They were introduced
by a Labour Government, extended by a Conservative and
Liberal Democrat Government and taken on by this
Conservative Government.
Turning to the applications for nursing and midwifery
courses, the latest data published by UCAS on 6 April show
around a 22% fall in the number of applicants to nursing
and midwifery courses in England compared with the same
point in the 2016 application cycle. However, as my noble
friend pointed out, in
previous cases when fees have been introduced application
numbers have gone down but rebounded in future years. The
same UCAS data also show that since January there have been
more than 3,000 additional applicants for nursing and
midwifery places, taking the current total to more than
40,000 applicants for around 23,000 places in England. The
chair of the Council of Deans of Health, Dame Jessica
Corner, has commented on the situation, saying:
“It is to be expected that there would be fewer
applications in the first year following the changes to the
funding system, but we would expect this to pick up in
future years”.
The Chief Nursing Officer, Jane Cummings, said:
“Despite the drop, the level of applications received
suggest that at a national level, we are still on track to
meet this target in England although we need to monitor
this very carefully. We are also introducing a number of
opportunities to support future applicants including
additional routes to become a graduate nurse”.
Based on all of the information available, Health Education
England is confident that it will still fill the required
number of training places for the NHS in England.
On the issues raised around Brexit, future arrangements for
student support after the UK leaves the EU will need to be
considered as part of wider discussions about the UK’s
relationship with the EU. However, the Government have
confirmed that EU students starting their courses in
2017-18 or before will continue to be eligible for student
loans and home fee status for the duration of their course.
On numbers of non-UK nurses, it is correct that the Nursing
and Midwifery Council has seen a reduction in the number of
registration applications from nurses in the European
Union. At the moment, it is unclear whether the drop is
attributable to the introduction of more robust language
testing by the NMC, rather than as a result of the decision
for the UK to leave the EU. The drop in the number of
applications is balanced by a reduction in outflows from
the profession, meaning that, while monthly fluctuations
continue, the number of EU-born nurses is broadly the same.
Indeed, slightly more nurses from the EU are working in NHS
trusts and CCGs than in June 2016, the time of the
referendum.
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Will not the figure that the Minister has just cited be
significantly skewed by the immigration skills charge,
where, for every overseas person coming in on a type 2
visa, the NHS will have to pay £1,000? Will that not have
an effect on nursing figures?
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I am not going to speculate on the impact of that. What I
can tell the noble Lord is that, despite the scare stories
that numbers will have been affected, there have been more
EU-based nurses in the past year. That is the point that I
wish to get across.
The real issue at stake is whether the number of staff in
the NHS is increasing to meet the growing demands on it,
and here the Government have a strong record. Over the past
year, the NHS has seen record numbers of staff working in
it. The most recent monthly workforce statistics show that,
since May 2010, there are now over 33,000 more
professionally qualified full-time equivalent staff in NHS
trusts and clinical commissioning groups, including over
4,000 more nurses.
Health Education England’s Return to Practice campaign has
resulted in 2,000 nurses ready to enter employment and more
than 900 nurses back on the front line since 2014. There
has been a 15% increase in the number of nurse training
places since 2013, plus the introduction of up to 1,000 new
nursing apprenticeships and the creation of nursing
associate roles—the kind of non-graduate nursing roles that
my noble friend Lord Forsyth pointed out as being such a
crucial part of the mix. These all form part of our plan to
provide an additional 40,000 domestically trained nurses
for the NHS. These new and additional routes into the
nursing profession will allow thousands of people from all
backgrounds to pursue careers in the health and care
sectors and, critically, allow NHS employers to grow their
own workforce.
I will end as I began. I believe that this regret Motion is
misguided. The extension of the loan-based system to
nursing and midwifery training is a natural development of
reforms that have received cross-party support,
successfully expanded higher education, dramatically
improved the participation of disadvantaged groups and
provided a fairer distribution of the costs of funding
higher education.
Despite the pessimism of some, the decision by the British
people to leave the European Union, which this party
respects, has not had a material impact on the workforce.
Furthermore, and paid for in part by the resources freed up
by our changes to student finance, this Government have put
in place a series of programmes that have successfully
increased the number of staff in the NHS and provided more
training places than ever, allowing us better to grow our
own workforce among UK residents.
The true source of regret is that the Opposition have used
this opportunity to run scare stories about both the impact
of sensible funding changes we have made and the impact of
leaving the European Union on the NHS workforce. I urge all
Members of this House to vote against the Motion.
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My Lords, I have listened very carefully to the Minister. I
wanted to be persuaded; I am not persuaded. I believe that
the Government are taking a big risk. They have gambled
before. It may not be known, but in 2011, 2012 and 2013,
they reduced the number of nurses in training because they
thought we had sufficient. As a result, several thousand
nurses were short-trained in those three years, because the
Government got the figures wrong. I believe that they have
got figures wrong again. It is a big risk that we do not
need to take. It is unfair on the nurse’s career, but, most
of all, it is unfair to potential patients in the National
Health Service. I want to test the opinion of the House.
Division 1
27 April 2017 4.22 pm
Division on ’s Motion.
Content: 121 Not Content: 159 Content: 121 Not Content: 159
Motion disagreed.
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