- Asked by: Paul Sweeney, MSP for Glasgow, Scottish Labour
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Date lodged: Monday, 03 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Maree Todd on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government how many of the 1,000 additional dedicated roles committed to support community mental health resilience in its 2021-22 Programme for Government it has funded to date, broken down by NHS board.
Answer
As a result of the difficult decisions which had to be taken through the Emergency Budget review, recruitment of the 1,000 additional roles to support community mental health resilience, ensuring every GP Practice has access to a mental health and wellbeing service has not yet commenced. We have already prioritised significant investment to build mental health capacity in primary care through Action 15 of the Mental Health Strategy 2017-2027 and the Primary Care Improvement Fund.
We remain committed to improving mental health service provision in primary care settings. We are therefore working closely with stakeholders, including the Mental Health in Primary Care National Oversight Group, to develop plans to best use the resource available across the system in 2023-24, and in future years to improve support, assessment and treatment in primary care settings.
- Asked by: Douglas Lumsden, MSP for North East Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Thursday, 30 March 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Tom Arthur on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government whether it will guarantee funding for Men’s Sheds for the remainder of the current parliamentary term.
Answer
The Scottish Government supports Mens Sheds in a number of ways, and has made the Scottish Mens Sheds Association (SMSA) an offer of £75,000 funding for 2023/24 which has been accepted by their Board. This funding will help them build a sustainable business model and develop a future fundraising strategy for 2024/25 onwards, that can attract a wider range of funders independent of Scottish Government support.
The Scottish Government has provided £570,000 to the SMSA since 2016/17, and a further £150,000 to Age Scotland. This £720,000 investment has helped the movement grow in Scotland to over 200 sheds today. Funding has also been provided to individual Mens Sheds including £111,709 in 2021/22 from the Communities Mental Health and Wellbeing Fund for Adults.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Cunninghame North, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Thursday, 20 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Jenni Minto on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government whether it is giving consideration to establishing an endometriosis specialist treatment unit in Ayrshire.
Answer
The role of specialist endometriosis centres in Scotland is to provide coordinated, multidisciplinary treatment to individuals with complex symptoms of endometriosis and to those requiring complex surgery. Most individuals with endometriosis can be treated by a gynaecologist with training of endometriosis within secondary care.
From 2014-2016 a specialist working group of expert clinicians and representatives from patient groups and Endometriosis UK was established to consider how service provision for endometriosis might be improved. The group recommended the optimal approach for effective treatment of people in Scotland with complex endometriosis was three specialist endometriosis centres. The three centres are in Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Glasgow and are operational.
- Asked by: Kenneth Gibson, MSP for Cunninghame North, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Thursday, 20 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Jenni Minto on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government what information it holds on how many women are currently living with endometriosis in the NHS Ayrshire and Arran area.
Answer
This is a matter for NHS Ayrshire and Arran. The information requested is not held centrally.
- Asked by: Ash Regan, MSP for Edinburgh Eastern, Scottish National Party
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 19 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Natalie Don on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government how the £50 million investment in play parks and facilities will be distributed across all 32 local authorities.
Answer
The following table shows the remaining £50 million play park allocation for each local authority. This information can also be found on the Scottish Government website Renewing Scotland’s play parks - gov.scot (www.gov.scot) .
Local Authority | 2023-24 | 2024-25 | 2025-26 |
Aberdeen City Council | £373,000 | £559,000 | £932,000 |
Aberdeenshire Council | £616,000 | £924,000 | £1,539,000 |
Angus Council | £220,000 | £330,000 | £550,000 |
Argyll and Bute | £157,000 | £235,000 | £391,000 |
City of Edinburgh Council | £811,000 | £1,216,000 | £2,027,000 |
Clackmannanshire Council | £93,000 | £139,000 | £231,000 |
Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Council | £62,000 | £93,000 | £156,000 |
Dumfries and Galloway Council | £291,000 | £437,000 | £728,000 |
Dundee City Council | £243,000 | £365,000 | £609,000 |
East Ayrshire Council | £224,000 | £336,000 | £561,000 |
East Dunbartonshire Council | £202,000 | £303,000 | £505,000 |
East Lothian Council | £218,000 | £327,000 | £545,000 |
East Renfrewshire Council | £204,000 | £306,000 | £509,000 |
Falkirk Council | £289,000 | £434,000 | £723,000 |
Fife Council | £681,000 | £1,022,000 | £1,703,000 |
Glasgow City Council | £1,028,000 | £1,542,000 | £2,570,000 |
Highland Council | £488,000 | £732,000 | £1,219,000 |
Inverclyde Council | £126,000 | £189,000 | £314,000 |
Midlothian Council | £197,000 | £295,000 | £492,000 |
Moray Council | £188,000 | £282,000 | £469,000 |
North Ayrshire Council | £231,000 | £347,000 | £578,000 |
North Lanarkshire Council | £635,000 | £952,000 | £1,586,000 |
Orkney Islands Council | £51,000 | £77,000 | £128,000 |
Perth and Kinross Council | £291,000 | £437,000 | £728,000 |
Renfrewshire Council | £307,000 | £461,000 | £768,000 |
Scottish Borders Council | £234,000 | £352,000 | £586,000 |
Shetland Islands Council | £61,000 | £91,000 | £151,000 |
South Ayrshire Council | £189,000 | £283,000 | £472,000 |
South Lanarkshire Council | £597,000 | £896,000 | £1,493,000 |
Stirling Council | £168,000 | £253,000 | £421,000 |
West Dunbartonshire Council | £157,000 | £235,000 | £392,000 |
West Lothian Council | £369,000 | £553,000 | £922,000 |
Total | £10,000,000 | £15,000,000 | £25,000,000 |
- Asked by: Donald Cameron, MSP for Highlands and Islands, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 18 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Paul McLennan on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government what action it has taken in relation to its commitment in its strategy paper, A Scotland for the future: the opportunities and challenges of Scotland's changing population, to "work with the housing sector to make self-build homes a mainstream delivery option".
Answer
We are supporting people who want to self-build through the extension of the Self-Build Loan Fund for up to five years from November 2022, with a further £6m recyclable loan funding available to borrowers.
National Planning Framework 4 (NPF4), adopted and published by Scottish Ministers on 13 February 2023, also supports new homes that improve affordability and choice, and address gaps in provision, including self-provided homes.
The Planning (Scotland) Act 2019 introduced a requirement for planning authorities to prepare and maintain a list of persons who have registered interest with the authority with the intention of acquiring land in the authority's area for self-build housing. A planning authority is required to publish the list and have regard to this list in preparing their local development plan. Subject to Parliamentary approval, these requirements will come into force from 19 May 2023. We are preparing further guidance on these requirements, informed by stakeholders, as part of the Local Development Plan guidance to be published shortly.
- Asked by: Tess White, MSP for North East Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 18 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Jenni Minto on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government whether an assessment has made been of the distance women have to travel to access obstetrics and gynaecology services in rural and remote areas in Scotland, and, if so, what the median travel distance is, and how many consultant obstetrician and gynaecologists have been recruited across all NHS boards in each of the past five years.
Answer
We recognise the challenges facing remote and rural NHS Boards in balancing paramount safety considerations with the delivery of care as close to home as practicable. Work is ongoing to ensure that services are developed in a flexible way, recognising local population needs and geographic challenges. We expect NHS Boards to engage constructively with local communities in this and understand that there is significant community engagement work already underway across remote and rural NHS Board areas.
Figures for median travel distance for obstetric and/ or gynaecology services are not collected centrally. The requested Information on how many obstetrics and gynaecology consultants have been recruited across all NHS Boards in each of the past 5 years can be found on the TURAS NHS Education for Scotland workforce statistics site at: NHS Scotland workforce | Turas Data Intelligence . NHS Boards are responsible for planning and delivering local services, including maternity services. This includes planning where those services should be located, based on local population need and any geographic challenges, and staff recruitment.
- Asked by: Finlay Carson, MSP for Galloway and West Dumfries, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Thursday, 06 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Mairi Gougeon on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government what steps it is taking to halt the reported decline in pig farming.
Answer
The last couple of years have seen input prices increase for pig farmers in Scotland. Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine has seen feed and fuel costs for pig farmers increase significantly. Through the UK Agricultural Market Monitoring Group we are working with other administrations to monitor the farmgate price.
It is positive that in recent months we have seen an uplift in pig prices but we recognise that many pig farms will still be making a loss per pig. We will continue to monitor the situation and engage with representatives of the sector.
We consulted, alongside the UK Government, Welsh Government and Northern Ireland DAERA, on the contractual practices in the UK pig sector to understand whether contract reform could provide greater certainty to both pig producers and processors.
In 2021 and 2022 via the Pig Producers Hardship Support Scheme the Scottish Government provided funding to producers who had been affected by the temporary closure of the Quality Pig Processors plant at Brechin and the loss of the plant’s export licence to China. There were three tranches of the scheme deliver over £1.8 million in support.
- Asked by: Mark Griffin, MSP for Central Scotland, Scottish Labour
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Submitting member has a registered interest.
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Date lodged: Wednesday, 05 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Paul McLennan on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government what its position is on each of the recommendations in the Temporary Accommodation Task and Finish Group: final report.
Answer
The Scottish Government wants to reverse the rise in the number of households in temporary accommodation, and will prioritise action on the recommendations considered to have the biggest and most immediate impact on reducing this number. The Scottish Government will publish its response to the Temporary Accommodation Task and Finish Group’s recommendations in due course.
- Asked by: Craig Hoy, MSP for South Scotland, Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party
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Date lodged: Tuesday, 04 April 2023
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Current Status:
Answered by Michael Matheson on 27 April 2023
To ask the Scottish Government whether it has introduced a "Once for Scotland" Patient Management Pathway, as committed to in the Endoscopy and Urology Diagnostic Recovery and Renewal Plan, published in November 2021, and, if so, whether it has reduced demand for (a) new endoscopy by 7,000 and (b) surveillance by 4,000.
Answer
National qFIT guidance for primary and secondary care was published in May 2022. Where this has been fully implemented, NHS Boards have evidenced a 70% reduction in colonoscopy urgent suspicion of cancer demand. National investigation guidance for iron deficiency anaemia, post-acute diverticulitis and oesophageal varices pathways have also been published and are currently being implemented by Health Boards. The National management guidance for haematuria has also been revised.
Furthermore, an IBD Surveillance Strategy has been developed and is being implemented by Health Boards.