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Chamber and committees

Public Petitions Committee

Meeting date: Thursday, June 28, 2018


Contents


Continued Petitions


Diabetes (Continuous Glucose Monitoring Sensors) (PE1619)

The Convener

The next item on the agenda is consideration of continued petitions. We last considered PE1619, by Stuart Knox, on access to continuous glucose monitoring at our meeting in March, when we agreed to write to the Scottish Government, national health service boards, the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network and the petitioner. Responses have now been received and are included in our meeting papers.

Members will recall that we agreed to invite the Scottish Government to provide evidence on the petition. It was anticipated that the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport, Shona Robison, would be in attendance for today’s evidence session. However, as members will be aware, the cabinet secretary resigned from her position on Tuesday this week and therefore will not be present at our meeting today. We record our thanks to Shona Robison, who has been willing to engage with the Public Petitions Committee on her responsibilities as cabinet secretary and we wish her well in her new role.

I am however pleased to welcome from the Scottish Government Professor Jason Leitch, national clinical director for healthcare quality and strategy; Gillian Gunn, team leader with the strategic planning and clinical priorities team; and Richard Shearer, senior policy officer in that team. Thank you for attending. You have up to five minutes to make an opening statement if you wish to do so, after which we will move to questions from the committee.

Professor Jason Leitch (Scottish Government)

Thank you for having us. Forgive the short-notice change of personnel.

I will outline the position and will then be happy to take questions as best I can. I know how difficult it can be to manage diabetes. I am a dentist and oral surgeon. I am a clinician and have been for 26 years. With that in mind, we must ensure that health technologies have clear evidence of their safety and clinical and cost effectiveness with appropriate evidence-based guidelines on their use.

Before we go further, perhaps I should clarify the difference between two technologies, although I am sure that members have grasped this over their months of looking at the subject. The technologies are continuous glucose monitors and flash glucose monitors—FreeStyle Libre is the example that the committee has been looking at. They are two different types of device. Without going into technical details, continuous glucose monitors have a strong evidence base. They provide alarms and warnings of impending hypoglycaemic attacks and can be used in conjunction with insulin pumps. FreeStyle Libre, a flash glucose monitor, cannot be used like that. It does not provide real-time continuous glucose monitoring or alarms.

We took the step of referring the topic to the Scottish health technologies group, which is an organisation that looks independently at the available evidence clinically and cost effectively. The current position is that seven NHS boards have included FreeStyle Libre in their local formulary. I look forward to the advice statement from the health technologies group, which I expect in July, to assist the remaining NHS boards to identify how they might best consider adoption of the technology in an open, equitable and manageable process.

We have encouraged those boards who have introduced it to share their experience with other boards, and we have asked those boards to ensure that they accurately record the introduction of all diabetes devices into our Scottish care information diabetes collaboration, which is one of our best e-health and technology systems, to help to inform that developing evidence base.

I am happy to take any questions.

The Convener

Thank you. I welcome Emma Harper MSP for this item.

One of the issues that the committee heard during its fact-finding visit on the petition last year was that there had been delays in NHS boards receiving the initial £2 million funding during 2017-18. Can you respond to that?

Professor Leitch

I will let Gillian Gunn deal with the delay, although I would put that word in inverted commas. The funding was for continuous glucose monitoring and pumps, not for flash glucose monitoring. They are two different things. The funding that went to the NHS boards was for continuous glucose monitoring and insulin pumps.

You talked about putting the word in inverted commas. Are you arguing that there was no delay?

Professor Leitch

No. I simply do not know, which is why I wanted you to ask Gillian Gunn.

Gillian Gunn (Scottish Government)

There has been no delay in issuing the funds that were announced and committed to by ministers. The funds went out on time for the beginning of the 2017 financial year and again in this financial year.

Somebody has got it wrong then. There has not been a delay.

Gillian Gunn

There has been no delay in the Scottish Government issuing the funds to all health boards as described in the director’s letters of last year and this year.

The Convener

We received evidence from NHS Forth Valley that it had to revise how it planned to spend the allocated funding because VAT was not included. Can you clarify that and say whether the guidance is sufficiently clear about the actual funding that is available to health boards?

Gillian Gunn

The funding that was allocated to the boards for insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitors did not include VAT. Boards have funded the VAT from their own resources. The funding for insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitors is to buy the technologies and to increase the amount of people receiving CGMs and insulin pumps.

10:00  

So if we want to quantify what the £2 million means, we would have to calculate what the boards would have to find for the VAT.

Gillian Gunn

There are differences in how the boards fund the technologies. The amounts that have been given will depend on which technologies they buy for individual people. A range of continuous glucose monitors is available, and a range of insulin pumps. Boards will purchase the ones that are most appropriate for the individuals that they see.

The Convener

If the Scottish Government is providing funding, would it not be reasonable for it to factor in how much extra it costs to deliver the technology? To me, it does not seem to be reasonable to say, “We are giving you this amount of money to address a problem but, as a consequence of that, you will have to find more money.” Presumably, when there is not much money, most health boards will have to incorporate the cost of VAT into the amount that they have been given and therefore there might be a reduction in the number of people who will be able to be helped.

Professor Leitch

The boards have the money to spend as they want on this subject. Let us be careful not to confuse that with what the petition is about, which is flash glucose monitoring.

The Convener

I am not confusing the issue. Please forgive me. I understand what the difference is, because we have been given the evidence on that. I am asking whether, when the Scottish Government provides funding, it calculates the VAT implications at that point, and whether it therefore gives a transparent report on how many people will be able to be helped by the moneys that are being provided.

Professor Leitch

The money would come along with a commitment and a target for the number of people who would get insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitoring. Such numbers are public and published, and we are on target to meet them.

That includes the cost of VAT, then.

Professor Leitch

Correct.

Are you suggesting that NHS Forth Valley is mistaken in thinking—as it has stated—that it was getting X amount of money to provide X amount of support, but then discovered that it had to pay the VAT as well.

Professor Leitch

I am suggesting not that it is mistaken but that the money that it got to meet its target—for want of a better expression—for continuous glucose monitoring and insulin pumps has enabled it to reach its target. That will have to include VAT.

It included VAT. So when NHS Forth Valley says that it did not realise that, it is wrong.

Professor Leitch

No. I am sure that it is telling the truth in saying that it did not realise that. I am not suggesting that it is lying.

Is it just ill-informed?

Professor Leitch

Perhaps there is a misunderstanding between the two organisations—us and it.

Is it unusual for VAT not to be factored in?

Professor Leitch

Many of the technologies that are purchased by the national health service include VAT. When we give money for a specific purpose or technology such as this—which we do not do very often, as we give boards a block grant to spend for the health of their populations—that money comes with aims and targets for each board to meet. That has to include the whole costs of the technology.

So your targets were informed by the costs with VAT.

Professor Leitch

Correct.

So it is not the case that health boards would separately have to find the money for VAT, which is what we heard earlier.

Professor Leitch

That is my understanding. I am happy to talk to NHS Forth Valley and correct any confusion.

The Convener

It seems to me to be a significant issue. We seem to have had two separate messages from the evidence that we have had already.

Let us move on to Angus MacDonald’s question, and we will come back to that point.

Angus MacDonald

Good morning, panel. I have taken on board your clarification regarding funding for continuous glucose monitoring. When the committee was on its fact-finding visit to Dumfries and Galloway a few months ago, we discussed the cost of using glucose monitoring technology compared with that of traditional pinprick blood tests. We heard from diabetes sufferers and pharmacists that there was not much of a cost difference, but a consultant whom we met suggested that there was. That suggestion took account of access to peripherals, such as testing strips. Can you clarify for us what cost analysis you have undertaken on the costs of pinpricking compared with those of continuous glucose monitoring and flash glucose monitoring?

Richard Shearer (Scottish Government)

Because of the population that continuous glucose monitoring is targeted at, the most important thing is matching the technology to the individual. We know that it costs more, but that is because of the additional features, such as the alarms and the ability to be linked to a pump. On that basis, the cost analysis is more to do with what it costs to deliver. We know that there is an offset against it.

With flash glucose monitoring, there is a point at which it costs the same as, or less than, finger pricking, and that point is between eight and 10 finger pricks a day. For someone who does fewer than eight finger pricks a day, flash glucose monitoring costs marginally more, whereas it costs marginally less for people who do more pricks than that because, with flash, there is a fixed cost. Regardless of how often someone scans, the cost of scanning does not increase, but if they finger prick, there is a cost attached to each test strip.

Maurice Corry

Good morning, panel. The 2017-18 guidance that was provided to NHS boards on future funding said that there would be an increased emphasis on continuous glucose monitoring devices, but the more recent 2018-19 guidance does not contain a similar statement. Why is that? What other guidance might NHS boards be provided with as regards future funding for such devices?

Richard Shearer

The initial letter went out at a time when we planned to initiate fewer CGM devices in the first year than we ended up initiating. After that letter was sent out, discussion took place with boards, which had identified marginally fewer people for insulin pumps than they had been able to identify for CGM devices, so we ended up funding roughly 50 per cent more CGM devices in the first year than we had planned to. We are now on a trajectory of initiating about the same number of devices, or slightly more, each year rather than the increasing trajectory that we had originally planned on.

Professor Leitch

It is important with all new technology such as CGM to use it with the appropriate people. Only quite a small number of people benefit from that much more expensive technology—people who have regular hypoglycaemic attacks and who cannot notice when their blood sugars are going off, for want of a better expression. Although continuous glucose monitoring is slightly more invasive in nature, it is very useful in that small group of people, because we can link it technologically to the insulin pump to control their insulin.

Gillian Gunn

The phased approach for continuous glucose monitors is enabling us to make sure that we have a workforce that has the appropriate skills. That is an important part of the introduction of new technologies.

Is it the eventual ambition to end pinprick testing?

Professor Leitch

Do you mean globally?

No, not globally.

Professor Leitch

With the present technologies that are available, it would appear that pinprick monitoring will continue for the foreseeable future until cheaper and easier-to-use technology becomes available.

But if we discount the issue of cost, pinprick testing would be recognised as less than optimal for people.

Professor Leitch

Indeed. If the diabetes community—patients, families and medical staff—can find a technology that fulfils that purpose that is non-invasive, that will be a big change. We appear to be in a period of technological advancement that is moving us towards that.

Richard Shearer

CGM, for example, requires calibration through finger pricking on a daily basis, and the Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency has rules on finger pricking and driving. In future, as Jason Leitch said, we hope to have a non-invasive approach, but at the moment all the technology that we have still requires the use of finger pricking.

From reports that I have read, I understand that we are not that far from non-invasive technology being available—I am talking about a matter of a couple of years. Is that correct?

Richard Shearer

Are you referring to the artificial pancreas?

Well, in layman’s terms, I am talking about not having to pinprick.

Richard Shearer

That is potentially the case, but the artificial pancreas is still at an early testing stage. As with all technology, we would expect it to go through comprehensive clinical trialling. There would then be the issue of roll-out, and manufacturers would have to be able to achieve the required scale of numbers. The clinical appropriateness of any technology for particular sub-groups of the condition would also have to be considered.

Rona Mackay

Professor Leitch, you said in your opening statement that the Scottish health technologies group is undertaking a national appraisal of FreeStyle Libre as there is a lack of published data about the clinical and cost effectiveness of flash glucose monitoring. Will you explain why FreeStyle Libre was added to the Scottish drug tariff if there is insufficient information about its clinical or cost effectiveness?

Professor Leitch

The Scottish drug tariff is a different bar from the bar for getting into formularies. The tariff requires safety and no detriment, but it does not take account of clinical or cost effectiveness. It is the first step towards delivery as a prescribed medicine or device. The next step is that local formulary committees in boards make a decision—yes or no—for their local formularies. That is informed by local evidence from inspectors, pharmacists and clinicians, but we try to help nationally by doing national investigations using the SIGN guidelines; we use the SMC for drugs and the Scottish health technologies group for devices. In this case, that has happened pretty quickly. It joined the tariff in November, and in July we will get a report from the health technologies group, which will give us more evidence—or combined evidence—that will allow us to go back to boards and continue the journey.

So a drug is added to the drug tariff before all of that has been scoped out.

Professor Leitch

Correct. It is the same as in the other UK countries. Each country has its own drug tariff. For medicines, you get European approval, then individual country approval in the drug tariff, and then it is added to formularies. In England, the regional clinical commissioning groups decide what is in the formularies, and in Scotland the health boards decide.

You said that the appraisal is due to be published in July. Have you had any engagement with the group on the findings so far? Do you have an indication of what they might be?

Professor Leitch

I do not. The group deliberately acts independently. It is part of Healthcare Improvement Scotland, but it takes independent evidence from independent witnesses. I am led to believe that I will get the findings in the next few weeks.

Rachael Hamilton

I have had letters from constituents about FreeStyle Libre. In April, I received a letter from Shona Robison, which states:

“the Scottish Government is committed to increasing the access to Continuous Glucose Monitors (CGM), which when used in combination with insulin pump therapy, has been clinically proven to significantly reduce NbA1c levels and hypoglycaemic episodes.”

The 2017-18 guidance that was provided to NHS boards stated that there was increased emphasis on continuous glucose monitoring devices, but the 2018-19 guidance—the most recent guidance—does not contain a similar statement. Why is that? What other guidance have NHS boards been given on funding, given that the guidance for the two years differs?

Richard Shearer

In the second letter—the 2018-19 letter—we sought not to repeat the 2017-18 letter, in order to make it simpler for boards. The principles were established in the first letter and the first round of funding. We sought to clarify the similarities with the first year—the target group is the same—and set out the funding, in order to reduce the scale of the correspondence.

Professor Leitch

To be clear, I add that we still believe what was in the first letter. We believe that continuous glucose monitoring connected to insulin pumps is appropriate for a small number of the difficult-to-control group of diabetics—that is not a particularly pleasant phrase—and provides a real step-change in their lifestyles: they can live normal lives where previously they could not. We still believe that technology to be clinically effective and cost effective for that group.

Can you clarify what the future will be? You said that the treatment is appropriate for the difficult-to-control group. What is the future direction for NHS boards?

10:15  

Richard Shearer

For CGM, we review the guidance that we have issued in relation to the group that we are targeting our funding at. We do that with our national diabetes specialist nurse, who is focused on technology and is assisting boards in the roll-out and implementation of CGM and insulin pumps. That will ensure that we are still focused on the correct group. It might be that we will move on to the next priority group. For example, if we have managed to initiate CGM for as many of the hypoglycaemic unawareness group as are willing to take on the technology, we will look at the next clinically indicated group beyond that, in terms of risk.

What is the guidance to the boards on the funding part of that?

Richard Shearer

That guidance will come in the annual director’s letter. If we get to the point at which we move to the next indicated risk group, information with regard to the annual funding will be contained in the director’s letter.

Emma Harper (South Scotland) (SNP)

Good morning. I am co-convener of the cross-party group on diabetes. I have type 1 diabetes and am a pump user and an intermittent flash monitor user, so I understand the technology and how it works. I have a constituent who has a seven-year-old who is not having seizures at night any more, following the introduction of flash monitoring, and that is fantastic.

I am curious about how we support and educate the patients, nurses and staff. NHS Dumfries and Galloway has set criteria that people must meet in order to qualify for a flash monitor: they have to do six tests a day, they have to agree to the uploading of their results and they have to have attended the dose adjustment for normal eating—DAFNE—course. The process is complicated and the staff will have to be trained if they are to support people with type 1 diabetes. What are your thoughts on that?

Professor Leitch

You raise an important point about the new technologies. The patients and families have to be trained, which has implications for them and the training of the diabetes nurses and general practitioners, as, presently, the technology is provided in secondary care. Further, we have to ensure that our staff keep up with changes in those technologies. The Scottish diabetes group and third sector organisations help us with all of that.

It is absolutely correct that boards will set criteria for the inclusion of whatever that new technology is, just as they would for insulin pumps or any other device for a home-based process, such as dialysis. We will provide guidance, as we often do, either through the work of Healthcare Improvement Scotland or through the Scottish Government, in order to equalise that guidance as best we can across the territorial boards.

Emma Harper

I love the idea that technology is reducing the need for finger sticks, because that process causes people pain. However, I assume that we still have to use the finger stick process as a way to calibrate the flash monitors, which means that we will not completely eliminate finger sticking. Is that correct?

Professor Leitch

That is correct at present. I imagine that the companies are working tirelessly behind the scenes on technologies that will eventually replace the more invasive elements of diabetes care. Just now, the machines require a test to enable them to calibrate themselves. When people go for secondary care diabetes care, they have actual blood tests, not pinprick tests. In order to monitor their continuous care, blood testing is required. I cannot see that requirement disappearing soon.

Emma Harper

I assume that, as more people are introduced to CGM and flash, boards will monitor their haemoglobin A1c levels to show that there is an improvement, because long-term blood glucose control will reduce the complications that are associated with diabetes. In the long term, there will be cost savings.

Professor Leitch

That is correct, if what you say comes true. That is why the SCI-diabetes process is important. I am glad that NHS Dumfries and Galloway wants to know the data. As you will know, because you are probably on SCI-diabetes, that system monitors eye problems, foot problems and hypoglycaemic admissions. We will be able to relate that to the technology that the individual is using, which will give us more information. At present, the Scottish health technologies group can really look only at published evidence, as it does not have Scotland-wide evidence from thousands of patients, but eventually it will have that.

The Convener

I have a couple of questions to conclude the session. The committee has heard previously that the SIGN guidelines for diabetes type 1 management are out of date and have not kept up to date with technology. How do you respond to that?

Gillian Gunn

We are engaging with Healthcare Improvement Scotland to look at the SIGN guidelines. We have sought advice and are progressing that work with Healthcare Improvement Scotland and SIGN.

What is the timescale for that?

Gillian Gunn

There is no timescale at the moment. We are looking to see how SIGN guidelines may be updated. We are aware that the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guidance has recently been updated and we are looking across all the national guidance that is currently available.

Professor Leitch

I undertake to answer that question more fully. I will ask SIGN.

Sorry?

Professor Leitch

I will ask for a timescale.

It would be useful to know that. I accept that there may be a moving target but, when you say that you are going to do something, it is always helpful to have a timescale.

Professor Leitch

SIGN has a waiting list and a pipeline for new guidelines and for updating its guidelines. The one that you refer to will be in that pipeline somewhere. SIGN is also reviewing the nature of how it creates guidelines, exactly because of the pace of change in healthcare. The traditional method is to have quite a long period of evidence gathering of, sometimes, two or three years. As you say, however, the situation can move during that time, so SIGN needs a slightly more agile version. It may change its processes, which would help for diabetes care, asthma care and other issues.

The Convener

It would be useful to get more information. I understand the point that technology is a moving feast. We can be sorting a problem when there is perhaps something already developed that changes the landscape completely.

I understand that ministers have asked NHS boards to provide quarterly updates on the progress made in relation to the additional funding that we spoke about. What does that information tell you and what do you understand the continuing challenges for health boards to be in relation to how they use the funding?

Gillian Gunn

The information from boards tells us that they are on track to meet the targets that we have set. Going forward, we know that the cost of the technologies has an impact on boards, which is why we have been supporting the process nationally. We need to work with the boards as we progress through this period of funding so that they can embed the costs in their resources in future.

So the funding will be mainstreamed at a later stage.

Gillian Gunn

Insulin pumps for children are already mainstreamed. The additional funding for adult pumps is to help boards to further progress what is already mainstreamed in their budgets.

Will you continue to keep an eye on the targets and whether they have been met?

Gillian Gunn

Yes.

The Convener

Thank you very much for your responses. I appreciate that you had to come along at short notice.

Do members have any comments or suggestions for action, given what we have heard?

Rona Mackay

Obviously, we will reflect on the evidence that we have heard, which was useful. We should continue the petition until the national appraisal has been published, which will happen shortly, and then we can take stock of where we are.

The Convener

It might be worth while to invite the new cabinet secretary to come at some point to give us an update from her perspective on where we are on the issue. Part of it is about testing whether the funding is adequate to meet the targets and whether there continue to be issues around that, but there is also the issue that the guidance is behind the technology, so it would be useful to hear what progress there has been on that, as well.

We are agreeing to continue the petition. We will reflect on the evidence that we have heard and we may factor in another session with the new cabinet secretary to allow her to respond to some of the submissions that will, no doubt, follow this session. As I said, the petitioner will have an opportunity to submit comments on what we have heard today.

I thank our witnesses again. I suspend the meeting briefly to allow them to leave.

10:24 Meeting suspended.  

10:29 On resuming—  


Alzheimer’s and Dementia Awareness (PE1480)


Social Care (Charges) (PE1533)

The Convener

The next two petitions for consideration are PE1480, on Alzheimer’s and dementia awareness, by Amanda Kopel, on behalf of the Frank Kopel Alzheimer’s awareness campaign, and PE1533, by Jeff Adamson, on behalf of the Scotland against the care tax campaign, on the abolition of non-residential social care charges for older and disabled people.

As members will note from our papers, the petitioner for PE1533 continues to express concerns about how money for free personal care will be distributed to people who need it, despite having met Scottish Government officials who agreed to assess his proposals. The committee might also wish to note that regulations were recently approved by the Scottish Parliament with regard to the action called for in PE1480 to extend free personal care to people under 65 who require it, regardless of their condition.

Do members have any comments or suggestions for action?

Angus MacDonald

Given the positive progress with PE1480, in that the Health and Sport Committee recently approved regulations that address the action that was called for, which was extremely good news, we could close the petition under standing orders rule 15.7.

The Convener

I certainly thought that it would be reasonable to recognise the progress that had been made and to close that petition.

I think that there is a lot left to explore around the issues that were raised by the Scotland against the care tax campaign’s petition, PE1533. We need more exploration around the questions of the definition of care and the importance of care from a human rights perspective. For example, someone should be able to work and achieve their potential, but the care tax might prevent them from doing that, or they might deny themselves the support that they need because they cannot afford it. I found the evidence pretty compelling.

Rachael Hamilton

We might perhaps write to the Scottish Government as there are still some points that have not been addressed that were recommended, and it is unclear how the money will be distributed and whether it will go directly to the person or to local authorities. There are some unanswered questions remaining.

The Convener

Yes. The petitioner clearly feels quite strongly about the proposals that the campaign identified. If the conclusion is that the money goes to local authorities and not directly to those who need the support, there is still a question there.

Rona Mackay

I agree that we could do with some clarification on that side of it. Although it is great news that the actions have been approved initially by the Health and Sport Committee, there are still some questions that we could put on the other issue that you mentioned.

I agree. We should get all the information on the table.

The Convener

I was quite struck by the range of individuals and organisations that support PE1533 as a result of direct experience. There was a presentation by a disabled young woman who said that her student loan was factored in as part of her income against what she might have to pay for her support. We might want to further explore whether we can afford a circumstance in which people are brought together to look at such issues. Certainly, in the first stage—

In the context of our new social security powers, it would be timely to do that.

The Convener

I suggest that we write to the Scottish Government to seek an update on its assessment of the proposals from Scotland against the care tax. In previous considerations, there was an issue about cost. I do not know how confident we felt about how rigorous the assessment of costs would be; if I remember correctly, COSLA and individual local authorities highlighted that. It would be useful for the Scottish Government to reflect on that, too. It should also address the broader question of the definition of care, because people’s need for care might be not simply about personal care, but about things that they need support with in order to be able to work or whatever.

Are we agreed that we will close PE1480, recognising the progress that has been made in that regard, and that we will write to the Scottish Government to seek an update on the assessment of the proposals that the Scotland against the care tax campaign put forward?

Members indicated agreement.

The Convener

We thank Amanda Kopel. Everyone was aware of her campaign and its power. As a result of the petition that she took forward, and the compelling way in which the case was argued by the campaign, there has been progress, for which we thank her.

We will continue PE1533 in order to be fully satisfied that the petitioner’s concerns have been addressed.


A75 (Upgrade) (PE1610)


A77 Upgrade (PE1657)

The Convener

The next two petitions for consideration are PE1610, by Matt Halliday, on upgrading the A75, and PE1657, by Donald McHarrie, on behalf of the A77 action group, on the A77 upgrade. I welcome Finlay Carson to the table for consideration of the petitions, and I recognise that Emma Harper remains in position to participate in our consideration of these two petitions.

Members will recall that, at our last consideration of the petitions in March, we reflected on the evidence heard from the Minister for Transport and the Islands and agreed to write to the Scottish Government and to hauliers and ferry operators. Responses have now been received and are included in our meeting papers. Members will note from that information that the petitioner raises concerns that the information that was used to decide the standard of road for the Maybole bypass was out of date and inaccurate.

Written responses received also highlight a number of issues that we have heard repeatedly being raised by different stakeholders; those issues include the heavy goods vehicle speed limit not being appropriate, particularly on the A77, the quality of the road being poor, and competition from ports elsewhere in the UK threatening the long-term economic future of the ferry ports in the area. I was struck by the number of submissions that we received and by the substantial points that they made.

Do members have any comments or suggestions for action? Might it be worth while hearing from Finlay Carson and Emma Harper first? We can go round the table after that.

Finlay Carson (Galloway and West Dumfries) (Con)

I want to highlight the dire situation down in the south-west with both the A75 and the A77. At this time of year, some parts of the A77—as mentioned by one of the ferry operators in relation to the conditions and maintenance on the road—have trees and vegetation growing right over the white line. Instead of the A77 getting wider, which we would all like to see, it is growing narrower by feet every time that there are new leaves on the trees.

Last autumn, I drove the route with David Allan, the route manager, and I highlighted some of the areas where immediate maintenance was required. Unfortunately, that work has not been done, and we have stretches of the road that cannot possibly come up to the standards that should be required of a road with trunk road status, with regard to line of sight and visual stopping distances on corners. If nothing else, that needs to be addressed seriously. We now have lorries cutting the hedges on the verges, rather than them being cut back by contractors, and that is just unacceptable.

Emma Harper

I am interested to hear about actions moving forward, because both the A75 and the A77 are important routes for the economy of the ferry ports at Cairnryan and Stranraer and for the surrounding area. Finlay Carson has absolutely highlighted the issues. Certain parts of the road are troublesome because lorries have a hard time passing one another.

Recently, I asked the minister, Humza Yousaf, about reviewing the speed limit from 40mph to 50mph at Stranraer, at the request of a lorry-driving constituent. I welcome the review of the A9 speed cameras and the speed limit increase there. I am interested in keeping the petition open so that we can continue to look at improvements for the infrastructure in the south-west of Scotland.

Finlay Carson

We were led to believe that an additional piece of work was coming forward in the form of a review, which was commissioned in March, but it appears that that review will only feed into the national strategic transport review, so we are probably looking at three years before there are any conclusions. Realistically, we are probably looking at six years before any action can be taken on the A75 and A77, and that needs to be looked at seriously. The process needs to be accelerated, and doing the review could be slowing the whole thing down. I spoke to someone at Transport Scotland who suggested that it could be six years by the time the review is done and that, if any work is identified, by the time it went through consultation, it could be six years before any plans actually came on to the table. That is totally unacceptable.

Rachael Hamilton

On 29 March, the then transport minister committed to increasing the speed limit. However, subsequently, the Scottish Government said that there was no plan to increase the speed limit. We now have a new transport secretary—Michael Matheson. The convener will guide the committee on what we should do following comments from committee members, but perhaps it would be in our best interest to get clarification on that, given that two members have concerns about the speed limit.

Angus MacDonald

It is certainly disappointing to note the comments from P&O Ferries, which Finlay Carson alluded to, that highlight that

“the condition of both”

the A75 and the A77

“has worsened significantly”

over recent months, and that

“surface repairs have not kept up with the rate”

of

“deterioration.”

When we were down in Dumfries and Galloway on our fact-finding visit, we heard about the potential loss of the ferry ports, which is clearly a concern. It is extremely disappointing that the condition of the roads has worsened, particularly given the coverage that the petitioners have secured during the consideration of the petitions and the fact that the matter has been on the Government’s radar. I am disappointed to hear the reports and I share the concerns that have been expressed.

Maurice Corry

The two recommendations are very appropriate. We also need to bear in mind the economic angle, as the poor road conditions that have been highlighted are endangering the future viability of the economic corridor. The decision might be taken out of the Government’s hands by the commercial sector, and we do not want that to happen. That has been reflected by Emma Harper and Finlay Carson.

The Convener

It would be worth while asking the Scottish Government about the PE1657 petitioner’s specific concerns that the information that was used to select the standard of road for the Maybole bypass was out of date and inaccurate. We want a response on that point and to know what plans AECOM Ltd has to engage with both petitioners on the south-west Scotland transport study. That study will be important to inform their thinking. We can agree to do that.

Is there anything else that we could look at? The economic element has been a thread through the issue. It is not just about the roads, the frustrations of individual drivers and the risk to people who go up and down the roads; the economic impact of not being able to move more quickly on the roads is significant.

Rachael Hamilton

When AECOM Ltd, which has recently been appointed, undertakes the study and gets evidence from stakeholders on the roads, how can we be confident that Transport Scotland will consider the economic impact as part of the study? We could take our own evidence. I have just joined the committee, but Angus MacDonald said that the committee had been down to Dumfries and Galloway. Did you speak to anyone who is involved in the matter?

We had a round-table discussion.

Was the economic impact discussed?

It was.

Rona Mackay

Yes—very much so. Every time that we discuss the petitions, there seems to have been slow or no progress. Transport Scotland has said that the study is at an “early inception stage”, which raises alarm bells and suggests that it will drag on and on. We need to write to Transport Scotland to point out the worsening state of the roads and the urgency of the matter, because the ports will not wait for ever.

The Convener

We should also write to the new transport secretary to highlight that it has been an on-going issue and that we are developing a project that is not fit for purpose, which is a concern.

I wonder whether it would be worth while to have a round-table discussion in Parliament with interested groups. There is a frustration that people have identified the issue but do not know what action is being taken. Having a discussion with Transport Scotland, Government officials and stakeholders might be a useful way forward.

Finlay Carson

One of the frustrating things is that engineers have looked at some road improvements on the A75 but they were shelved for various reasons, so we know that plans for road improvements on the A75 have already been drawn up. We have heard the economic argument over and over again. I do not see that waiting six years is acceptable when we know what the answers are to all the questions.

A round-table discussion would be a great opportunity to get some answers and to ask questions about what sections of the roads have had improvements designed and engineered that are sitting on a shelf just waiting for someone to give them the nod. I have used freedom of information legislation three times to get information about how much land the Scottish ministers own along the A75 and have been knocked back every time. It was suggested that providing that information was not in the public interest. That is utter nonsense, given the number of respondents to the petition. A round-table discussion would certainly give us the opportunity to get those questions on the record and, I hope, get some answers.

10:45  

Emma Harper

It would be worth while finding out where the information that suggests that the ferry operators are considering alternative routes is coming from. I do not know whether they are. The haulage companies seem to have put out that rumour. If the ferries moved, that would be pretty devastating. I have tried to find out information about that. It would be great if the new transport secretary could take the road to get there, meet people at the ferry terminal at Cairnryan and get the views of stakeholders.

I have a question for Emma Harper and Finlay Carson. What pressure have Dumfries and Galloway Council and the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities put on Transport Scotland? We really need to involve them.

Finlay Carson

Once again, I was quite disappointed. I asked the council questions about what lobbying of the Scottish Government it had done. There has been very little. I know that it has stepped up somewhat in the past few years. The council put together a strategic plan for improvements to the A75 and the cost—I think that the plan was produced 15 to 20 years ago—and that sat on the shelf. Some of the economic arguments have already been had, and there are documents that lay out improvements and when they should be scheduled. That was on the back of the potential reduction in traffic to the ferry terminals with dual carriageways opening up at Holyhead and Heysham.

I have experience of a problem with the A83 going to Campbeltown and Rest and Be Thankful. Unless the councils—even individual councillors—push hard, they get nowhere with Transport Scotland. That is important.

Angus MacDonald

A round-table discussion would help to keep the Government’s mind concentrated on the issue; if it has not been, a round-table discussion would ensure that it is. Given the evidence that we took on the fact-finding mission, I would be keen to ensure that P&O and Stena Line are included in a round-table discussion, as their positions are significant.

The Convener

That consideration has been useful. We have highlighted the PE1657 petitioner’s concerns, and we want information on how the petitioners will be engaged with by AECOM Ltd. We will consider a round-table discussion with the relevant stakeholders, and we will take into account everything that people have said about who the relevant stakeholders are. I think that we want to write to the Scottish Government to highlight that the issue is a big one in the new cabinet secretary’s in-tray and that we would welcome any response from him.

Members indicated agreement.

I thank Finlay Carson and Emma Harper for their attendance.


Ocular Melanoma (MRI Scans) (PE1629)

The Convener

The next petition is PE1629, by Jennifer Lewis, on magnetic resonance imaging scans for ocular melanoma sufferers in Scotland. We last considered the petition in December 2017, when we agreed to write to the Scottish Government and the chief medical officer about three issues that the petitioner had identified.

The note by the clerk provides a summary of the Scottish Government’s response on the establishment and work of a group to develop guidance and recommendations on surveillance, peer-reviewed evidence and national services division policy. The petitioner and Iain Galloway have responded to the Scottish Government’s submission, and they appear to feel that no significant progress has been made on the issue. Iain Galloway has raised a number of questions that he thinks remain unanswered by the Scottish Government, and the petitioner has made a number of comments on the detect cancer early programme in the context of the petition.

The petitioner and Iain Galloway make compelling points about more needing to be done to address the concerns that they have identified. One on-going frustration is the fact that, because the incidence of the cancer is low, it does not get the attention and understanding that it merits. We can understand the frustrations of the petitioner and Iain Galloway. They see something straightforward that would support sufferers of the cancer with early identification of problems in the liver, and the Scottish Government’s response was, I felt, defensive.

I welcome members’ comments on how we might take the petition forward.

Maurice Corry

This is an interesting matter, on which I have had a prior discussion with you, convener.

I would like the Scottish Government to look at what happens in Liverpool, Sheffield and Southampton, which are all top dogs on the matter. They have got the formula right—I know that from a friend of mine whose son has had the condition and has gone through the process. It is clear that Liverpool has the right pathway for it, as do Sheffield and Southampton. Therefore, I would like to ask the Scottish Government to examine what they do and pick up on all the plus points. Clearly, those places are delivering what the petitioner asks for.

The Convener

It struck me that the Scottish Government’s argument was that the approach has not been proved or peer reviewed. However, we know that practice in other parts of the United Kingdom is different. I would have seen the point if the Government had said that its priorities were different, but it seemed to be questioning the evidence base, which would be to question the evidence base that is used in other parts of the United Kingdom. I was quite taken aback by that.

Rona Mackay

I agree with Maurice Corry. The petitioner’s comment that

“ABSENCE OF EVIDENCE IS NOT EVIDENCE OF ABSENCE”

is apt, because that approach does not lead us anywhere. More questions have to be asked about whether there is a way forward, so that the petitioner’s concerns are responded to. It is a strong petition, so we need to keep it open and take it forward.

The Convener

There is also the issue that I flagged up about whether, if a cancer is rare, the process is not the same as for more common cancers. I understand why people would be gravely concerned if that was the case, although I do not think that it would be intentional. Perhaps there is simply a lack of understanding and awareness of the issue. How the health service could address that problem is an interesting question.

Rachael Hamilton

It must be quite frustrating to know that it is possible to receive MRI-style treatment south of the border but not in Scotland. It is a strong petition because of the aspect of patients not having choice and being forced to travel. That is an anxious process for people who are already unwell.

The Convener

The petition makes the point that people would rather travel if they were going to get the most appropriate and most effective treatment. The concern is expressed in the papers that a local hospital might not spot the condition because of a lack of expertise and the cancer might progress. It is horrible to start thinking about the might-have-beens in such circumstances.

Maurice Corry

My concern is that we are not gripping the fact of what is available elsewhere. You probably remember our hearing from a gentleman who had been through the condition. I talked to him afterwards, and he absolutely reflected what I have just said.

We might want the new Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport to give evidence on the matter.

The Convener

In the first instance, we will write to the Scottish Government, asking it to respond to the questions that Iain Galloway posed, the petitioner’s comments on the detect cancer early programme and the questions about how it deals with rare cancers and the extent to which it appreciates that sufferers of the same condition in other parts of the United Kingdom expect different treatment. We could flag up that we want to hear directly from the cabinet secretary on those matters at a later stage. Do members agree to take that approach?

Members indicated agreement.

I thank the petitioner and Iain Galloway for their substantial and helpful submissions.


Mountain Hares (Protection) (PE1664)

The Convener

The next petition, PE1664, is on greater protection for mountain hares. I welcome Mark Ruskell MSP, who is here for this discussion.

When we last considered the petition, in May, we noted that the Scottish Government intended

“to explore the prevention of mass culls of mountain hares, including legislation and a licensing scheme.”—[Official Report, Public Petitions Committee, 10 May 2018; c 2.]

That intention was set out by the First Minister in response to a question from Alison Johnstone MSP.

As members will recall, those actions are in addition to the independent grouse moor review group that the Scottish Government set up to look at the environmental impact of grouse moor management practices, including mountain hare culls. The group is expected to report in the spring of 2019.

The petitioner states that he is encouraged by the action that has been taken by the Scottish Government to

“explore options to prevent the mass culls of mountain hares”

but highlights that urgent action is required to protect the mountain hare population.

Do members have any comments or suggestions for action? Perhaps it would be useful if Mark Ruskell said a few words.

Mark Ruskell (Mid Scotland and Fife) (Green)

I have a couple of comments to make. Other petitions have related to concerns about the management measures that are employed on driven grouse moors, including PE1615, by Logan Steele, on raptor prosecution and the need for a licensing regime. The Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee, on receipt of that petition, has been carrying out some good scrutiny of that issue, which is one aspect of the concerns that petitioners have about driven grouse shooting. The Werrity review, which is looking at licensing, has come out of the committee’s scrutiny work on the issue and follows its discussions with the cabinet secretary.

It is logical for PE1664 to be forwarded to the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee on the same basis, because it looks at a particular management measure that driven grouse moor estates are using that is controversial and about which there is a lot of debate. It would seem sensible for the petition to be considered in the context of the wider discussion and for the committee to feed in on the issues.

The petitioner talks about the start of the open season, on 1 August, and the more immediate issues about what will happen this year while the review is under way and there may not be the constraint on the culling of mountain hares that they want to see. Again, that is an issue that the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee may be able to consider as part of our wider evidence taking on biodiversity and the scrutiny of Scottish Natural Heritage.

Those are my thoughts. Angus MacDonald, who is on this committee, also sits on the ECCLR Committee and may have his own thoughts on the matter.

Angus MacDonald

I concur with Mark Ruskell. There is a strong argument to refer the petition to the ECCLR Committee, given that the Public Petitions Committee would simply be waiting for the Scottish Government’s reassessment of the data on large-scale mountain hare culling, which is not yet available. It makes sense to refer the petition in order to tie it in with the ECCLR Committee’s other work.

The Convener

We would expect that committee to respond once the Scottish Government’s reassessment of the data on large-scale mountain hare culling was available. If we were to refer the petition, we would highlight that as an important aspect.

Indeed.

Why was a petition lodged? Why did the petitioner not wait for the review if they thought that we would refer it straight to the ECCLR Committee?

The Convener

The petitioner would not have known what we would do with the petition.

Data is one element of the petition and, if we were to hold on to the petition, that is what we would be looking at. However, the argument has been strongly made that the petition should be considered in the context of the broader issues of the subject committee, and that approach makes sense. Once we got the information, we might simply refer it on in any case.

Do we agree to refer the petition to the committee with the long title that I can never remember? Tell us what it is, Angus.

It is the Environment, Climate Change and Land Reform Committee.

Do we agree to take that approach?

Members indicated agreement.


Multiple Births (Support for Families) (PE1683)

The Convener

The next petition is PE1683, by Jennifer Edmonstone, on support for families with multiple births. At our first consideration of the petition, we agreed to write to a range of stakeholders. Members have a paper that summarises the responses that have been received to date. The Scottish Government has set out a range of policies and initiatives that it is taking forward, which appear to be broadly welcomed by the petitioner and other stakeholders, including the Twins and Multiple Births Association—TAMBA—the Multiple Births Foundation and Home-Start. However, the stakeholders seek clarity in some areas, particularly in relation to childcare and peer support, and consider that there is room for improvement in the level of emotional support and understanding among healthcare professionals. Do members have any comments or suggestions for action?

Rachael Hamilton

The evidence mentions that the Scottish Government has the power to top up child benefit. There is also a suggestion that the Irish model of child benefit for twins, triplets and higher-order multiple births is fairer. If we write to Maree Todd, I wonder whether we could ask her to consider that in her response.

There is an argument that that element would be for the social security secretary, who is now—I have forgotten her name.

It is Shirley-Anne Somerville.

The Convener

Yes. There is a question about that, which I am interested in exploring. I was struck by the quality of the substantial evidence from Home-Start, TAMBA and the petitioner. There is a financial issue, but there is also an issue about support. Couples do not plan to have two children, and there could be an impact on their working life, perhaps if they were going to support their family by both working. That has an effect. There is also a question about support with the emotional impact.

I am interested to know how the Scottish Government sees its role in supporting some of the third sector organisations. People are referred to those organisations, but they do not necessarily have resources directed to them to allow them to do their job really well. I am sure that all of us will know, from our local areas, about the fantastic work that Home-Start does with families who are really under pressure. I am interested in the Scottish Government’s views on the issue of benefits such as child benefit, but I also want to know its view on the emotional and personal support that families require.

We should write to the Minister for Children and Young People, putting those points to her, and then take the petition on from there. We should keep it going.

We should write separately to Shirley-Anne Somerville regarding the funding issues.

The Convener

The petitioner’s point about the baby box is interesting. People will have their own views about the baby box, but the idea that the reusable stuff should be removed from it for subsequent children is interesting. I do not know whether the Scottish Government is reviewing the baby box system, although I am sure that it will do that at some point. We should ask whether it has thought through the implications for people who have more than one child at a time and whether it will amend the provision of the reusable stuff in the baby box. That is an interesting and quirky idea that the Scottish Government might want to consider.

Given that we have the circular economy bill coming up at some point, that is well worth looking at.

The Convener

Absolutely.

We recognise that there are substantial issues. They are the kind of issues that people probably have not thought about unless they have been caught up in the situation. We appreciate the response from the petitioner and from all the others who have given us such thoughtful evidence. In the first instance, we will write to the Minister for Children and Young People on the specific issue around personal and emotional support and we will perhaps get an update from the new Cabinet Secretary for Social Security and Older People on what the Government is considering in relation to support for families.

As a father of twins the first time round, I understand the issues. It certainly was a shock. We had to make some decisions about who was going to go out to work. I have a lot of empathy with the petition.

Thanks very much for that.


Private Water Supplies (PE1680)

The Convener

The final petition for consideration is PE1680, by Angela Flanagan, on private water supplies in Scotland.

As members will recall, at our previous consideration of the petition, in March, we agreed to seek the Scottish Government’s views on the action that is called for in the petition. The Scottish Government’s written submission explains that the Private Water Supplies (Scotland) Regulations 2006 were reviewed and updated as recently as last year. The Government also states that regulatory powers over the drinking water quality of private water supplies should remain with local authorities and that it does not support the petitioner’s call for an equal right of appeal in the planning process.

In her written submission, the petitioner expresses her dissatisfaction with the Scottish Government’s position on the action that is called for in her petition.

Do members have any comments or suggestions for action?

Maurice Corry

We should close the petition. I was in Ayrshire the other day, with NFU Scotland, and we had a water expert from one of the Ayrshire councils present. It was clear that the councils have a really good grip on the matter and are now implementing the updated regulations. Although that is causing some concerns for farmers in relation to their own springs, the general feeling was that there is a clear direction of travel with the local authorities implementing the regulations, so that approach clearly has some traction.

Given the fact that the regulations were reviewed and new ones introduced last year and the fact that the Government has made it clear that it will not go beyond that, we should close the petition.

Angus MacDonald

It is clear that the Government is digging its heels in when it comes to a third-party right of appeal. There does not seem to be any appetite in the Government to introduce such a right into the Planning (Scotland) Bill, but we will have to wait and see. That is one aspect of the petition that is unlikely to move forward.

The Convener

I have no doubt that a community right of appeal, as I think it is being called, will be debated during scrutiny of the bill, and the petitioner might be able to influence that. The Scottish Government’s position is clear, but how the parliamentary arithmetic works out is another question. That is where that matter would be resolved.

I can see the argument for centralising the regulation of private water supplies, but it would probably mean that the people who were responsible would be less aware of the localised nature of some of the issues, which are very different in different parts of Scotland. It is one thing to monitor closely what local authorities do and how well they understand some of the challenges that the petitioner has identified, but it does not feel to me that the solution would be to take that regulation to the centre, because the geography of Scotland is so diverse.

Rachael Hamilton

I agree. The drinking water quality regulator for Scotland has been delivering training to local government environmental health officers to ensure that they are up to date on the rules and regulations. The key point is that all local authorities are up to date with their training and know what they are doing. They have a good handle on the situation. As you say, convener, if the system was changed, perhaps the people responsible would not have a handle on the local issues.

Maurice Corry

That was demonstrated in the Ayrshire hills. We were standing at a spring and the head of water engineering from the council explained what happens. I was impressed with him. He was absolutely on the ball. The council has done it for years.

There will be local issues. One of the problems that came up in Ayrshire concerned a farmer fertilising a field and the fact that the water catchment area might change from year to year. That involves local knowledge, so one size does not fit all. There is strength in the system that we have.

The Convener

There might be an issue about the capacity of local authorities to continue. Perhaps we need to underline to local authorities the fact that the issue is really important so that, when they manage their budgets—we know that there are massive pressures on them—they realise that it matters to the health of local communities.

I have a clarification to make for the benefit of the Official Report. I should have referred to the equal right of appeal rather than to the third-party right of appeal. That issue goes back too many years.

The Convener

Absolutely. As I was the planning minister at the time, I recall that issue very well.

I think that we agree that we will close the petition under rule 15.7 of the standing orders on the basis that there is no support from the Scottish Government for the action that the petition calls for. On balance, we feel that the important regulation and the protection of people’s water are probably best done at a local level.

Members indicated agreement.

The Convener

I thank the petitioner very much for engaging with the committee and highlighting issues of concern to her community.

I wish everybody a very good and enjoyable recess, and I thank you all very much for your support in the committee’s work over the past year. We can be proud of a lot of what we have achieved. If nothing else, we have allowed people across our communities to raise issues that really matter to them and that we might not have thought of otherwise. I thank everybody who has engaged with the petitions process, our clerks and members.

Meeting closed at 11:11.