The Official Report is a written record of public meetings of the Parliament and committees.
All Official Reports of meetings in the Debating Chamber of the Scottish Parliament.
All Official Reports of public meetings of committees.
Displaying 8272 contributions
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 1 November 2022
Edward Mountain
Thank you, cabinet secretary, for attending what has probably been your shortest meeting at a committee for a long time, with as few questions as you could probably hope for.
10:04 Meeting suspended.Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 1 November 2022
Edward Mountain
I have just remembered what Monica Lennon wanted to ask you, so I will defer my question so as not to tread on her toes, until I see whether she has asked it.
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 1 November 2022
Edward Mountain
I apologise profusely.
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 1 November 2022
Edward Mountain
It is difficult, Monica. We are talking about the design and construction of ferries. If you want to put that question to Pentland Ferries, I suggest that this particular session might not be the place to do so.
Helen Inkster and Gordon Ross have made it clear that safety will be designed into their boats as a prerequisite, because their passengers are important. I am happy to let you develop the point outwith this session, but I think that you are pushing on an area that I am not sure is relevant to this part.
10:45Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 1 November 2022
Edward Mountain
Minister, are you satisfied that all of those points are covered?
Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 1 November 2022
Edward Mountain
Gordon, you talked about having unrestricted tickets and laying on additional ferries for ambulances. How do you cover that financially? Is that just a beneficial service that you provide?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 1 November 2022
Edward Mountain
I go back to the problem of the missing safety valves. It appears that there was a long-term need for those valves. When Tim Hair was appointed, at vast expense, he took on a new warehouse and carried out a complete stock check that confirmed that all the parts were there. Obviously, he missed those valves. Was Tim Hair an expensive, £2 million mistake?
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 26 October 2022
Edward Mountain
I pay tribute to all our front-line staff in the NHS. Whether the treatment is routine or emergency, they never falter.
Last year, my personal contact with the NHS allowed me to see how hard its staff work. However, it is clear to me that our front-line staff do not have the resources that they need. That means that there are too many patients who struggle to be seen, to get diagnosed and, worse still, to get prompt treatment.
Overworked GPs often cannot see patients in person. Carrying out a diagnosis on a computer is a risky business. GPs need to see patients and, although Near Me and other online portals might work, being told that you have cancer on a telephone in your parliamentary office sucks, as does waiting 10 days for a full-hour appointment.
As the NHS comes under increased pressure and faces crisis management, there is a real danger that human care will be the first thing that is sacrificed. It is the personal approach—the bedside manner—which patients need and staff want to deliver, that suffers.
Not providing the resources to allow staff to deliver that care is in itself a dereliction of duty—your duty, cabinet secretary.
We all recognise the pressures of Covid, but the health service was under extreme pressure before Covid. Every winter, we face the inevitable and predictable rise in the number of patients. Every year, the Government guddles around trying to find solutions, and every year it says that it is listening and learning. The trouble is that, although it might have been listening, it certainly has not heard and it certainly has never learned.
Cabinet secretary, you will say that your winter plan will result in the recruitment of 1,000 extra staff and will provide £120 million extra to provide help at home. Where exactly are you going to get the staff from and—
Meeting of the Parliament
Meeting date: 26 October 2022
Edward Mountain
Sorry.
Where exactly will the cabinet secretary get those staff from, and how will the additional funds provide the care at home that is so desperately needed?
Another perennial problem that the Government has failed to address is that of delayed discharges. The Government promised to eradicate delayed discharges in 2015, but successive health secretaries, including the current one, have failed miserably to address them. The numbers remain at almost a record high. In NHS Highland, there has been a 32 per cent increase in delayed discharges in this year alone.
One word covers that: failure—this Government’s failure. Every treated patient in hospital who is waiting for a social care package is preventing another patient on the waiting list from getting treatment. Longer waits and delayed treatment result, without doubt, in outcomes that are less than optimal. The Government’s failure on delayed discharges is now very much the cabinet secretary’s failure.
Across Scotland, waiting times in A and E are going up, cancer waiting times are going up and nurse vacancies are going up. They are all going in the wrong direction—up. The real question is: when will the health secretary stop dragging our NHS down, which seems to be the only thing that he is capable of doing?
15:42Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee
Meeting date: 25 October 2022
Edward Mountain
Are you finished, Mark?