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Chamber and committees

Official Report: search what was said in Parliament

The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.  

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Dates of parliamentary sessions
  1. Session 1: 12 May 1999 to 31 March 2003
  2. Session 2: 7 May 2003 to 2 April 2007
  3. Session 3: 9 May 2007 to 22 March 2011
  4. Session 4: 11 May 2011 to 23 March 2016
  5. Session 5: 12 May 2016 to 5 May 2021
  6. Current session: 12 May 2021 to 18 July 2025
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Displaying 3405 contributions

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Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Maternity Services (Moray)

Meeting date: 30 March 2022

Sue Webber

The cabinet secretary mentioned that model 4 was a bridge to model 6, but that in itself could take up to two years to establish. As the cabinet secretary will know, and as we have heard already today, getting to model 4 will require substantial investment in both recruitment and the existing workforce.

Given the existing and long-standing recruitment and retention issues in the health boards, what immediate steps will the cabinet secretary take to ensure that the workforce is in place in time? Importantly, can the cabinet secretary confirm that the two years for the establishment of model 4 is the very limit of the time that it will take and not a target?

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid)

Portfolio Question Time

Meeting date: 30 March 2022

Sue Webber

I am pleased that the Scottish National Party Government, despite having described our plan for Covid recovery, “Back to Normality: A Blueprint for Living with Covid” as “reckless”, has accepted, in its updated strategic framework, a large number of our recommendations.

Chief among them is the ending of mass testing in Scotland and its replacement with a programme of representative sampling. Although that is a welcome development while we learn to live with Covid, it means that 7,000 test and protect employees might have their contracts terminated early. Given the acute and unrelenting staff shortages across Scotland’s NHS, what assessment has the cabinet secretary made of the possibility of redeploying those workers to other parts of our health service?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Alternative Pathways to Primary Care

Meeting date: 29 March 2022

Sue Webber

You say that you hope that people are having a good experience, cabinet secretary, but I note that in its response to our consultation Healthcare Improvement Scotland suggested that an increase in social prescribing was dependent on continuous monitoring. Are you aware of the monitoring that is being undertaken? If so, how extensive is it?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Alternative Pathways to Primary Care

Meeting date: 29 March 2022

Sue Webber

Cabinet secretary, one third of the respondents to the committee’s public survey said that their experience of social prescribing was either bad or very bad, with some saying that they would be insulted to be directed to those services. A common theme among respondents was that they could have found the same or better information elsewhere. You get a bit of a sense of frustration in those responses. What needs to happen to ensure that these pathways are perceived as—and, indeed, are—more valuable and credible to the public?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Alternative Pathways to Primary Care

Meeting date: 29 March 2022

Sue Webber

We spoke earlier about some of the changes to services, including to the telephony system for GPs. The adoption of digital health and care information has accelerated through the pandemic, but has the quality and quantity of resources kept up with demand? Are the relevant websites easy to navigate, including for those who have only a limited digital understanding?

I am trying to figure out whether we are keeping up with the technological development that is needed. I am thinking back to an article that was in The Scotsman the other week about an app on which people can access test results, make appointments and so on. That is not available to us in Scotland, but NHS England has such an app available now. I wonder why there is not a bit more cross-border sharing of that technological development.

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Alternative Pathways to Primary Care

Meeting date: 29 March 2022

Sue Webber

I want to follow up Evelyn Tweed’s point about the role of the receptionist. Some of the papers talk about gatekeepers, but they are also called signposts or gateways. I realise that that is all about positive versus negative language, but the point is that the people accessing these MDTs still have to contact a particular individual, and that is often still the bottleneck that causes the frustration. How might we overcome that?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Alternative Pathways to Primary Care

Meeting date: 29 March 2022

Sue Webber

I have one more question. What assessment have you and your team made of provision of GP out-of-hours services during the pandemic?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Alternative Pathways to Primary Care

Meeting date: 29 March 2022

Sue Webber

Hello, cabinet secretary, and thank you for coming this morning.

As you know, recruitment and retention in general practice continues to be a critical issue as we recover from the pandemic, but even before Covid, the Audit Scotland reports were showing that the Scottish Government’s plan to increase the GP workforce by 800 by 2027 is on course to be all but wiped out by the number of doctors who are expected to retire or change their working patterns. What needs to happen to improve retention among general practitioners?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Alternative Pathways to Primary Care

Meeting date: 29 March 2022

Sue Webber

We know that screening saves lives and that early detection saves lives. A lady who is over 70 has contacted me, and she is desperate to get a breast screening. Due to some medication that she is on, there is a significant increase in the risk of her getting breast cancer, yet she has been denied that. What can we do? She should be able to access treatment and screening equally with anyone else, specifically given the risk factor that has clearly been identified. How can we help this lady in particular?

Health, Social Care and Sport Committee

Alternative Pathways to Primary Care

Meeting date: 29 March 2022

Sue Webber

I understand what you are saying.